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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53788 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53788)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Elizabeth, Her Folks, by Barbara Kay
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Elizabeth, Her Folks
-
-Author: Barbara Kay
-
-Illustrator: The Donaldsons
-
-Release Date: December 22, 2016 [EBook #53788]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ELIZABETH, HER FOLKS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Ernest Schaal, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "'Nothing ever tasted so good to me in my life'"]
-
-
-
-
- _ELIZABETH, HER BOOKS_
-
- ELIZABETH
- HER FOLKS
-
- BY
- BARBARA KAY
-
- [Illustration]
-
- _ILLUSTRATED
- BY
- THE DONALDSONS_
-
- GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
- DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
- 1920
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
- DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION
- INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. JOHN'S GIRL 3
-
- II. THE STEPPE CHILDREN 16
-
- III. THE LITTLE ROOM--AND PEGGY 28
-
- IV. THE BIRTHDAY 44
-
- V. NINETY-NINE NEGROES 58
-
- VI. THE BEAN SUPPER 71
-
- VII. THE LOCKED CLOSET 87
-
- VIII. LETTERS AND THE POST OFFICE 102
-
- IX. HUCKLEBERRIES AND NEW FRIENDS 117
-
- X. PROVINCETOWN AND A WALK IN THE WOODS 134
-
- XI. LITTLE EVA 147
-
- XII. BUDDY WANTS TO KNOW 164
-
- XIII. CRABBING 180
-
- XIV. ELIZABETH IS RUDE 192
-
- XV. PICKING CHICKENS 207
-
- XVI. MOTHER 220
-
- XVII. ELIZABETH IS SCARED 234
-
- XVIII. ELIZABETH SHAKES HANDS 249
-
- XIX. RUTH 265
-
- XX. GOOD-BYE 278
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- "'Nothing ever tasted so good to me in my
- life'" _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING PAGE
-
- "'Do open it. I can hardly wait to see what
- you think of it.'" 50
-
- "'Oh! let's try them on'" 98
-
- "'I can't help being afraid of what's in this
- particular letter'" 202
-
-
-
-
- ELIZABETH, HER FOLKS
-
-
-
-
- ELIZABETH, HER FOLKS
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- JOHN'S GIRL
-
-
-A little girl in a short-sleeved, blue ruffled nightgown flung herself
-across the foot of Grandmother Swift's great guest-chamber bed, and
-sobbed as if her heart would break.
-
-Downstairs, each in an old-fashioned, valanced rocking chair before one
-of the living-room windows, Grandfather and Grandmother Swift were
-discussing the newcomer.
-
-"I think she seems real glad to be here," Grandmother was saying. "She
-looks a little pale and peaked, but we'll soon have her fed up and as
-brown as a berry."
-
-"I never see any brown berries. All the berries I ever had anything to
-do with was red or blue, but there must be berries that is brown, if you
-say so, Mother."
-
-Grandmother's amber needles flew.
-
-"She seemed real pleased at the things I had cooked up for her," she
-said, "especially the chocolate cake. She didn't more than sample the
-lemon pie."
-
-"I thought she seemed a little high-toned about her vittles. She kinder
-turned up her nose at your ginger tea, Mother. She was used to having
-her dinner at night, she said, and drunk nothing but a demi-tassy after
-it."
-
-"You hadn't ought to have begun your teasing before she was fairly in
-the house, Father--it made her feel strange. She hasn't been here for
-four years, and four years, when a child is just getting into her teens,
-is a long while."
-
-"An inch in a man's nose is considerable."
-
-Grandmother surveyed him severely over the top of her bi-focal glasses.
-
-"Speaking of noses," she said, "you be careful how you try pulling
-Elizabeth's nose or chuck her under the chin, or any such actions.
-Growing girls is particular about such things."
-
-"And I'm particular who I chuck under the chin. I'm afraid you are going
-to ruin your eyes with those glasses, Mother, you have to strain so hard
-to look over the top when you want to see anything at a distance, and
-work so hard trying to look under 'em when you want to see anything nigh
-to."
-
-He chuckled at Grandmother's sudden effort to concentrate her keen brown
-eyes within the space of the glass half-moon through which she was
-supposed to focus her knitting.
-
-"I just wanted to bind off the sleeve before the light faded," she said.
-
-"When Congress repeals this here light-saving scheme, it'll hurt your
-feelings two ways, won't it, Mother? You won't have the satisfaction of
-expressing your mind at the Administration for setting the clock back,
-and you won't have a extry hour of light to strain your eyes in."
-
-The old lady--she was seventy-five, but in a strong light when she was
-not quite becomingly dressed, which was not often, she looked
-sixty--drew her rocking chair closer to the small window, and knitted in
-silence. All the windows in that remarkable old house were small, and
-divided into little, square panes. Grandfather drew _his_ rocking chair
-closer to _his_ window, and made a great pretence of reading, but he did
-not turn or rattle his paper.
-
-"You trying to prove that your eyes is just as good as mine? Well, I
-don't know as I blame you, Father, but your glasses is out in the barn
-on the feed box. If you could read a line without 'em, I'd know the
-contents of the whole paper by this time."
-
-Grandfather Swift grinned, and unbuttoned a lower button on the
-immaculate linen waistcoat he had put on in his granddaughter's
-honour--he wore no coat.
-
-"Got back at me that time, didn't you, Mother? I always feel uneasy
-after I get the better of you till you've worked the laugh round to me
-again. Well, I thought we'd be setting up till all hours of the night,
-entertaining John's girl, and hearing all the news of the family. I
-wonder if she always goes to bed before sundown. She didn't look a mite
-sleepy to me."
-
-"She travelled all the way from New York--of course she was sleepy."
-
-"Her father brought her all the way from New York to Boston, and she
-rested there a couple of days before he put her on the Cape train. All
-she had to do was to sit among her bags and boxes till she got here.
-Three shiny black bags, she had, and as proud of 'em as if she had made
-'em herself--and a wardrobe trunk. I thought myself that all trunks was
-wardrobe trunks until she told me different."
-
-"You can't hardly judge the child till she gets settled down a little."
-
-Grandfather Swift let his paper fall to the floor. Then he picked it up
-and folded it carefully, and made a place for it on the stand between
-the two windows under the wide fronds of Grandmother's pet fern, which
-was supposed never to be displaced for such a purpose.
-
-"I did hope John's girl was going to be a little more like folks," he
-admitted.
-
-The dimity curtains in the guest chamber puffed in the light night
-breeze. An insect with the voice of a bird set up a cheerful chirping
-just under her window, but Elizabeth Swift, in a little, huddled heap on
-the four-poster bed that had belonged to her great-grandmother, with her
-head smothered in the best goose-feather pillows to shut out the sound
-she was making, was still sobbing as if she could never stop again.
-
-"They don't even speak the English language," she was saying to herself.
-"They are just countrified and ordinary, and I've got to have them for
-my grandparents just as if they were like other people, and eat great
-hunks of corn beef and drink ginger tea, and never see my parents, or my
-dear, dear brother."
-
-The goose-feather pillow got wetter and wetter until Elizabeth, still
-very miserable but quieter now, began to be concerned about the damage
-she was doing, and finally dragged herself up on the edge of the bed to
-examine it.
-
-"I mustn't do damage to property, no matter how anguished I am," she
-thought. "People's things aren't to blame, if they do say 'hadn't
-oughter,' and 'ain't,' but I don't see how my own mother and my own
-Father John could have sent me here."
-
-She groped for the second pillow, and the tears started afresh, but
-presently she began to try to stop them. The soft wind that was pushing
-the dimity curtains into the room brought with it a heavy breath of
-honeysuckle and roses. Her mind began to stray away from her immediate
-trouble.
-
-"Honeysuckle toilet water might be the very best toilet water that any
-one could have. I wonder if you couldn't make some with honeysuckle
-blossoms and wood alcohol. There's a bird going to bed in that tree.
-Maybe it's an oriole."
-
-She had never seen an oriole except in pictures, but that was one of the
-things she had wanted to come to Cape Cod for, when she had thought she
-was coming with her mother and her big soldier brother to a cottage on
-the beach, before they had realized how sick he was going to be when he
-got home from France. The bird chirped drowsily once more, and the
-insect in the grass drew its string over its bow again. She almost went
-to the window to look, but she had cried so long that she wasn't quite
-willing to think of pleasant things yet. Her head ached and her nose was
-sore, and the second pillow was almost as wet as the first. She hung
-them both over the foot-board to dry.
-
-"I suppose it is a little funny to cry quarts into old family
-goose-feather pillows. I might have cried so long I would have had to
-use a whole feather-bed, too. I wonder if Grandmother would scold me
-just as if I were a child. I told her I was going to have my fourteenth
-birthday here. I told my horrid grandfather, when he pinched me, that I
-wasn't in the habit of being teased. What would Jean Forsyth say if she
-could see me now? I guess I'll get up and put some talcum powder on my
-nose."
-
-There was a knock on the door as she began to move around the room. She
-scrambled back into bed meaning to pretend to be asleep, but her
-grandmother opened the door and came in just as if she had spoken.
-
-"Are you asleep, Elizabeth?"
-
-"No, Grandma."
-
-"I thought you might like a glass o' milk to kinder stay your stomach
-between now and breakfast."
-
-"Thank you, Grandma."
-
-"Would you like a cookie to go with it? I made up a whole jar full o'
-sugar-molasses cookies so's you could go and help yourself to them
-whenever you was a mind to. I'll set the milk right here on the stand,
-and then I'll go fetch the cookie."
-
-"Thank you for the milk, Grandmother, but I don't care for the cookie. I
-never eat between meals."
-
-"Your grandfather and I had a little spell o' argument about that
-cookie. He claimed you wouldn't be used to eating sugar-molasses
-cookies, but I thought you might of inherited your father's taste for
-them."
-
-"I have inherited a great many of Father's tastes."
-
-"Your brother Johnny, he used to like 'em, too, when he was a little
-feller. He was a real good little boy, Johnny was. He spent every summer
-of his life with me and Grandpa till he began to go to that college."
-
-"We don't called him Johnny. We called him Junior when he was growing
-up, and I called him Buddy, but now we call him John--or John Junior
-when we wish to distinguish him from Father."
-
-"Well, your grandfather and I always called him Johnny. It seemed to
-suit him. I hope he'll get well enough to get down to Gran'ma's before
-the summer is over. Gran'ma could help him to get well."
-
-"He is quite sick now, and unable to see any one at all. He is very
-devoted to me, but he is in such a weakened condition that even I wasn't
-allowed to see him. He won the D. S. C.--the Distinguished Service
-Cross, you know."
-
-"I don't know so much about this new-fangled soldiering. I lost two
-brothers in the Civil War--your great uncles they would have been. Only
-eighteen and twenty, but grown men they seemed to be in them days. Your
-father favoured my brother William more'n he did anybody on his father's
-side o' the house. Johnny, he looked like Sam when he was a little
-feller. Well, I'm real glad Johnny got home safe."
-
-"Of course, we can't be sure that he is safe yet, but the recent reports
-have been very encouraging."
-
-"Your father's proud of his boy, I guess. It was a great thing for him
-to have a grown boy to go. The next best thing to going himself."
-
-"I don't think he cared about going himself."
-
-"Did he ever say anything about not caring to go?"
-
-"I don't think I ever heard him express himself on the subject; but the
-work he was doing here, of course, was very important. Anybody who was
-connected with steel production in any way felt that they were being a
-great deal more useful on this side of the ocean."
-
-"Whatever your father was doing on this side of the ocean, I guess his
-soul and his spirit was all the way across it."
-
-"I think you are mistaken, Grandmother."
-
-Grandmother Swift looked at her granddaughter over the rim of her
-bi-focal glasses, and smiled.
-
-"It's one o' the easiest things in this world to be mistaken,
-Elizabeth," she said.
-
-Elizabeth put out her hand for her glass of milk, and began to drink it
-with a sudden meekness.
-
-"You go and set yourself in the chair by the bed, and finish your milk,
-and I'll lay back your bed for you. There's a golden robin has a nest in
-that tree, and I guess there'll be a family there pretty soon."
-
-"You mean an oriole, don't you, Grandmother? Oh, I'm crazy to see one."
-
-"Some folks calls it that. Golden robin means more to me. I like to have
-things called by their prettiest names." She was busying herself about
-the bed. "I'm going to turn these pillows over on their dry side," she
-said, as if Great-grandmother's goose-feather pillows had always one
-tear-dampened surface.
-
-"Oh!" Elizabeth said, "I--I----"
-
-But her grandmother wasn't looking at her.
-
-"Speaking o' names," she was saying, "I'll tell you a conundrum that my
-grandmother used to tell me, a real appropriate conundrum, seeing that
-it's about a namesake o' yours. See how long it takes you to guess it.
-
- "Elizabeth, Elspeth, Betsy and Bess,
- All went together to seek a bird's nest,
- They found a bird's nest with four eggs in it,
- They each took one and left three in it."
-
-"But how could they?" Elizabeth cried.
-
-"Well, they did, and now's a good chance to show how smart you are, so's
-Gran'ma needn't make any mistake about it."
-
-Something in the eyes over the bi-focal glasses made Elizabeth squirm a
-trifle.
-
-"The girls at home," she said, rapidly, "often call me Betsy. Oh, I know
-now. That's the answer. It was all one girl--Elizabeth, Elspeth, Betsy,
-and Bess--all nicknames for Elizabeth. I never heard of any one called
-Elspeth, but I'm called all the others myself."
-
-"Your great-grandmother was always called Elspeth. She always called you
-that when you was a baby."
-
-"Did she? I didn't know that I ever saw Great-grandmother."
-
-"She saw you. She loved you better than any grandchild she lived to see,
-because you was named after her, I suppose. She used to say that
-conundrum was wrote about her, because she was four or five different
-characters all in one. Elizabeth when she was feeling high and mighty,
-Elspeth when she was good, Betsy when she had trouble keeping herself
-in, and Bess when she put on her airs and graces. Bessie was a real
-stylish name in her day."
-
-"Why, I have different names for myself--Beth you know, and Betty, they
-are contractions of Elizabeth, too, but I never knew any one else who
-thought of themselves in different characters."
-
-"Your great-grandmother was quite a remarkable woman. She was your
-grandfather's mother, but she seemed like my own. You look considerable
-like her, Elizabeth."
-
-"I've always thought I resembled my own mother more than any one. She
-was an Endicott, you know."
-
-"Your great-grandmother was a Jones. The Joneses had the name o' being
-one of the likeliest families in Crocker Neck."
-
-"Did they?"
-
-"And she had the reputation of having the prettiest manners and the
-kindest ways of any girl from here to Chatham. Your father takes after
-her in that. It was the first trouble that ever come to him when his
-gran'ma died, and he took it hard. He went out behind the henhouse and
-lay there a whole night; just the way he used to when he had trouble as
-a boy."
-
-"But he was a grown man then, and I was born."
-
-"He wasn't so much of a grown man that he didn't lay and blubber all
-night. He ain't so much of a grown man now that he wouldn't do the same
-thing if he was in the same kind of trouble."
-
-"He--he didn't when we thought we had lost Buddy."
-
-Grandmother's eyes looked kindly over the tops of her ridiculous
-glasses, but all that she said was,
-
-"You come and hop into bed now. You'll get cold setting by that open
-window."
-
-"I guess I know how my own father felt and acted last winter," Elizabeth
-said, but not aloud, as she slipped between the creamy linen sheets, and
-her grandmother tucked her under the blue-and-white comfortable. She
-closed her eyes for the good-night kiss that she expected to submit to,
-but it did not come. Instead, her grandmother made her way to the door
-and stood holding it open, as she looked back to say:
-
-"Your grandfather and I are real glad to have you with us, Elizabeth.
-It's always a day of rejoicing to us when we have our own flesh and
-blood under our roof. No matter what you start out in life thinking, the
-conclusion you kinder come to, when all's said and done, is that blood
-is thicker than water."
-
-Her tone was exactly as gentle as before, but alone in the darkening
-room Elizabeth felt a slow wave of crimson mount to her forehead, and
-spread hot over her face.
-
-"Grandmother doesn't think I am very nice," she said.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- THE STEPPE CHILDREN
-
-
-"Dear Buddy:" Elizabeth was writing, "dear, dear, dear, _dear_ Buddy:
-Mother says I may write you real letters, now, all about everything,
-because you are in a condition to bear it. So I am starting in bright
-and early this morning to go into details about my existence here, and
-my rejoicings at your convalesence. (I spelled that right, I know. I am
-naturally a good speller, but I have such a poor example set by my
-brother the Harvard gradjuate, that I fall into bad ways at the
-slightest provocation.)
-
-"First let me testify that I love you best--best--best in the world next
-to and including Father John and Mother Darby. You know that already,
-but if you are like me, the things you like to be told best are the
-things you know already. You know also already how I feel about your
-being sick. Please get better and come down here quick. I want you here,
-oh! so very, very much. Father and Mother thought I had better get the
-benifit of country air, but they don't know that I can't get much
-benifit from country air while you are breathing cloriform and bandige
-lint all the time. I am not as comfortable in my mind as I should be in
-stuffy New York, in the hotel with Mother and Father. I know you will
-suspect my motives in yearning for hotel life, but it is really you and
-Mother and Father I want more even than life at the Holland House. Of
-course, I can't help feeling that if the house in Jersey is going to be
-closed and the family moved into town, though even in the dead of
-summer, that I ought to be moved with it, instead of being shoved off
-down here.
-
-"Buddy, I know you used to like it here, but I am miserable. I know you
-would think it was awful of me if you knew how I felt inside all the
-time, but I am not half-civilized or savage enough to like the primative
-way things are down here. I think girls are more sensitive and refined
-than boys and care what they eat more, and how things sound that are
-said to them.
-
-"I suppose that sounds horrid. Grandmother thinks I am horrid, though
-she is very tactful, I will say;--but Grandfather teases me from morning
-till night, and has no respect for my years. I don't see why he thinks I
-am such a child. He was engaged to Grandmother when she was sixteen, and
-that is only two years and forty-one days older than I am. But oh!
-Buddy, I wish my other grandparents had lived. I think I am all
-Endicott, really, because I feel like a stranger in a strange land.
-Children and little girls keep coming to call on me. The girls of my own
-age that I used to play with keep their distance, and I am not sorry.
-It's hard enough to be polite as it is. Life is one eternal round of
-corn beef and cabbage and fried fish hash. I hope you get plenty of
-steaks and chops and delicacies. Grandmother won't let me go in bathing
-unless I have someone to go with, and I haven't any one to go with. The
-motors whizz by all day, but Grandfather's Ford is in the repair shop,
-and so I don't get anywhere. Tennis? All the boys own the courts around
-here, and won't let the girls on them for fear they will mess them up
-for the tournaments. I don't know any girls to play with, so that
-doesn't affect me, but you can see what a good time I am having.
-
-"Well, 'a sorrow's crown of sorrow is remembering happier things.' We
-used to have good times together, Buddy, befo' de war.
-
- "Your affectionate, but very blighted sister,
- "ELIZABETH--ELIZA--ELSPETH--BESS--
- BESSIE--LIZZIE--BETSY--BETH, ETC."
-
-As she folded the closely written sheets of lilac-tinted notepaper and
-crowded them into their envelope, her grandmother's voice summoned her
-to the head of the stairs.
-
-"The step-children are here," was what she seemed to be saying; "shall I
-send them up or are you ready to come down?"
-
-"I beg your pardon, Grandmother?"
-
-"The step-children are here."
-
-"If you wish, Grandmother. It sounds just as if you said the
-step-children."
-
-"I did say the step-children. I'm going to send them up for you to amuse
-them. Go right on upstairs, children. She ain't a bear. She won't bite
-you."
-
-"I--" pant--pant--"see a bear yesterday, a dancing bear. Didn't I see a
-bear, Mose?"
-
-"Hush, babe," another breathy voice answered. "You don't want to talk so
-much when you go a-visiting."
-
-A mysterious single file of chubby children, considerably more ragged
-than dirty, made a cautious way up the steep stairs, panting as they
-came. Elizabeth led the way into the big chamber where she had been
-writing, and the three followed her solemnly. Her first instinct was to
-give them each a friendly pat, as if they were so many little dogs who
-had been running hard.
-
-"Good morning, children," she said. She was fond of children, and these
-were adorable specimens, despite their superfluous fringes.
-
-"Good morning, teacher," they answered, with unexpected promptitude.
-
-"Well, I'm not exactly a teacher, you know. I'm just Miss--I
-mean--Elizabeth."
-
-"We know who you be," the eldest, a boy, volunteered. "You'm Miss Laury
-Ann's granddaughty, that's who you be. We come to see you."
-
-"That was very kind of you," Elizabeth smiled, "but I don't know who you
-are."
-
-"We'm the step-children."
-
-"You are just about like steps," said Elizabeth, "but that seems a funny
-name to call you just the same."
-
-"'Tis our _name_," the second child, a girl with long red curls, met
-Elizabeth's eyes and subsided instantly.
-
-"S-T-E-P-P-E," the boy spelled out. "'Tain't a joke. It's our name. It's
-Parper's name and Marmer's name."
-
-"Steppe-father and Steppe-mother," Elizabeth said to herself, "and the
-Steppe children."
-
-"You have other names?" she said aloud.
-
-"I'm Moses."
-
-"I'm Mabel."
-
-"I'm Madget."
-
-"Her real name is Margery, but she calls herself Madget, and so we call
-her that. Madget means a dwarft, and she's little for her age. I'm
-nine."
-
-"I'm seven."
-
-"I'm four," said Madget.
-
-All this had so much the effect of a recitation that Elizabeth asked
-them if they spoke pieces.
-
-"I speak 'Shavings,'" Moses said. "I--I mean Excelsior."
-
-"I speak 'Baby's Evening Prayer.'"
-
-"I speak, 'Little drops o' water--little grains o' sand--make a mighty
-ocean--an' a pleasant land,'" Madget contributed.
-
-"She didn't ask you to speak it," Moses said, witheringly, "she only
-asked did you speak it."
-
-"And you went and spoke it," Mabel added, accusingly.
-
-The wail that Madget set up at being accused of this breach of polite
-usage sent Elizabeth's arms straight around her.
-
-"You must remember she's only a baby," she said.
-
-"That's what we tell her," Mabel said, "but we can't make her pay no
-attention to it."
-
-"You must pay attention to it, and take care of her."
-
-"Oh! we take care of her, all right," Moses agreed, darkly. "We gotter."
-
-"Doesn't your mother take care of her sometimes?"
-
-"No, ma'am."
-
-"Is she sick--or something?"
-
-"Yes, ma'am. She's sick o' living, she says."
-
-"What does she do all the time?"
-
-"Nothin'."
-
-"Does she have to stay in bed?"
-
-"Yes, ma'am, when she ain't up."
-
-"What does the doctor say is the matter with her?"
-
-"She don't have no doctor. She reads novels."
-
-"All the time?"
-
-"Yes, ma'am."
-
-"Who does the cooking?"
-
-"We don't have no cooking."
-
-"What do you eat?"
-
-"Bread and molasses, and doughnuts out the cart."
-
-"Don't you ever have any meat or chicken or fish hash or anything?"
-
-"When my a'nt comes we do."
-
-"Then your mother isn't really sick?"
-
-"She feels as if she was, and she says that's just as bad."
-
-"I'm going to be a hired girl when I grow up, and go out to work where I
-can make pies and cakes," Mabel said.
-
-"I'm going to be a cook on a vessel," Moses said, "and get learned how
-to make vittles."
-
-"I'm going to be a bake-cart," Madget said.
-
-"Listen to her. Don't you know you can't be a bakery cart?" Moses
-jeered.
-
-"You gotter be the one that drives it," Mabel contributed.
-
-"I wanter _be_ a bake-cart and curry the food around all the time."
-
-"All right, you may." Elizabeth spoke just in time to avert another
-tearful crisis. "What would you like to do to amuse yourselves,
-children? Would you like to have me tell you a story?"
-
-"No, ma'am," Moses said, promptly. He indicated the row of shiny
-travelling bags by the mahogany what-not. Elizabeth had long since
-unpacked them, but they were such proud possessions that she could not
-bear to put them out of sight. "I want to see what's in _that_," he
-said, selecting the hat-box.
-
-"I want to see what's in that," Mabel said, choosing the suitcase in her
-turn.
-
-Madget fell upon the overnight bag.
-
-"I wanner see that," she said.
-
-Elizabeth's laugh rang out gayly.
-
-"You are acting just like the story of the three bears," she said.
-"There isn't anything inside of the bags now, but I'll show them to you,
-just the same. This is my hat-box, see, and these silver letters on the
-outside are my initials, E. S."
-
-"There is, too, something inside," Mabel cried, as the brightly flowered
-lining was disclosed. "Trimming. Now open mine. There's trimming in all
-of them."
-
-"And a pocket, too," Elizabeth said.
-
-"Now me," said Madget.
-
-"There isn't any trimming in this," Elizabeth said, hastily, "but there
-are lots of pockets, and see, in this pocket there is a little cake of
-lovely smelling soap, and I'm going to give it to you. You can wash your
-face and hands with it."
-
-"She ain't a very good one to give soap to," Moses said. "Water makes
-her nervous."
-
-"I'll give you all a piece of soap if you'll promise to use it every
-day--the big bear and the middle-sized bear, and the baby bear."
-
-"I ain't going to be no bear," Moses said, "I was a bear in a
-canatartar. Zibe Hunt--he had me on a string, and he sang a song."
-
-"What kind of a song?"
-
- "I am an animal trainer,
- This is my polar bear.
- He comes from the far-distant mountains,
- Out of his icy lair."
-
-Mabel obliged, "And then he done some tricks," she added, "and Zibe hit
-him; and Parper licked him."
-
-"Why should your father lick him?"
-
-"For what he done to Zibe after the canatartar. He don't like to play
-bears now."
-
-"I see a dancing bear," Madget said. "Didn't I, Mose?"
-
-"You better stop talking about bears," Moses hinted, darkly.
-
-"If you'll bring the children downstairs, Elizabeth," Grandmother called
-from the foot of the staircase, "they can have some milk and cookies."
-
-Madget made directly for the staircase, and as promptly fell all the way
-into Grandmother's arms, from which position she scowled and freed
-herself.
-
-"She always falls downstairs," Mabel said, tolerantly. "It don't hurt
-her."
-
-"It does her good," Moses explained.
-
-"Milk," said Madget, "and cookies."
-
-"The little thing is really hungry," Grandmother said. "How long ago did
-she have her breakfast, Mose?"
-
-"We don't have no breakfast to our house. She wouldn't eat her bread
-because she said she was skeered of it."
-
-"Scared of it?"
-
-"Well, some of it had gray fur on it, and she was afraid it was going to
-crawl out on her."
-
-"Grandmother," Elizabeth cried, "why are these children neglected like
-this? Are they so poor or what?"
-
-"They ain't no poorer than a great many other folks. Their mother won't
-do anything for them--that's all."
-
-"But why?"
-
-"She don't like work. Mercy me! They've et a dozen cookies already. You
-fill up their glasses, Elizabeth. I stirred half a cup o' cream into the
-pitcher so's to be sure they was nourished."
-
-"Why isn't something done about them? The Charity Organization Society,
-or somebody, ought to take up the case."
-
-"The only organization society we got is the fire department. These
-children don't need putting out, they need taking in more, I should say.
-If one person in the world lays down and refuses to do what the Lord
-requires of him he puts a powerful lot o' machinery out o' gear. Mis'
-Steppe--she just refuses to do her part in the Lord's scheme."
-
-"Is she old and ugly?"
-
-"She's young and pretty if she'd fix herself up some. She come from real
-good folks, too, but when she see how hard it was to live and take care
-o' her children like other folks, she just decided to lay down, and down
-she lay. Most all of us feels inclined to shirk our responsibilities at
-one time or another, but most of us thinks better of it after a spell.
-She thought worse of it, Mis' Steppe did. Too bad you don't like
-sugar-molasses cookies, Elizabeth."
-
-"I do," Elizabeth blushed. "I was only just waiting for the children to
-get all they wanted."
-
-"They'll never do that, but they got all they can hold. You open the
-screen door, Elizabeth----Scat, out you go," she said, shooing at the
-Steppe family as if they were so many chickens, and the children
-scattered instantly, chickenwise, onto the lawn, and down the path to
-the gate. "Too much of anything is good for nothing," she concluded,
-tranquilly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Buddy, my darling, I have broken into my letter again to say that I am
-a pig--the piggiest kind of pig, and this letter to you is a piggy
-letter. I will send it because I wrote it, and because I haven't got any
-time to write another, better one. I only wish to add that in certain
-ways I am as bad as 'Mis' Steppe,' that's a good pun you see, whether
-you know who I'm talking about or not. I'm going to be a better sister
-to you, and a better daughter to Father John and Mother Darby. I've
-found out that one poor mother can do so much damage in the world that I
-don't want to be a poor--anything. Get well, and write me a letter,
-Buddy.--SISTER BET."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE LITTLE ROOM--AND PEGGY
-
-
-The golden robins woke first, and demanded their breakfast in weak,
-insistent voices. Then the blue counterpane slid to the floor and two
-ruffled blue dimity sleeves were flung out at right angles. The clear
-bell of the schoolhouse clock struck six times.
-
-"Dear me, I must hustle," Elizabeth said.
-
-She flew to the wash-stand and poured the creamy, gilt-edged bowl of the
-best room set full of well water, in which she laved and splashed. An
-aroma of bacon and coffee and the inimitable savour of raised biscuits
-helped to accelerate her progress. She sang as she dressed, but she
-thought of nothing at all but her breakfast.
-
-Her grandfather, in his shirt sleeves and sand-coloured waistcoat, was
-already at the table when she took her place there, and unfolded her
-red-fringed, damask napkin from the napkin ring that was her father's,
-and marked with his name. It was on a standard, and supported by twin
-boys, wreathed and carrying trumpets. Elizabeth always tried to hide it
-behind some dish as she ate.
-
-"Good morning, Miss Betsy."
-
-"Good morning, Grandfather."
-
-The hired girl, who was sixteen and the daughter of a neighbour, wiped
-her immaculate pink hands on a more immaculate and pinker apron, and
-took her seat opposite Elizabeth. She was an enormously fat blonde, who
-never spoke without blushing. Grandmother was bustling about with plates
-of biscuit and coffee cups.
-
-"The reason we don't have more help around the place is that Mother
-wears herself all out waitin' on them," Grandfather observed. "Judidy,
-ain't you got no control over Mis' Swift? Can't you make her set down to
-the table when breakfast is ready?"
-
-"No, sir," Judidy blushed. "She told me to set down, so I set."
-
-"Well, whenever she tells me to set down--I set, but I thought maybe you
-had more independence of spirit."
-
-"No, sir."
-
-"Elizabeth, here--she don't pay much attention to what anybody says. She
-sets all the time, so's to be on the safe side. Well, I guess we're in
-for a spell o' bad weather. I see old Samuel Swift out bright and early
-this morning, and when Samuel comes out of his hiding that means rain
-sure enough."
-
-Elizabeth shuddered. Samuel Swift was an unbelievably unkempt individual
-who lived in a hermit's shack in the woods, and was locally known as a
-"weather breeder." Whenever he harnessed his ancient mare to his
-antiquated buggy and emerged into the light of day the wind changed,
-according to neighbourhood tradition, and the fog and rain swept in. She
-quoted:
-
- "There was an old man with a beard,
- Who said, 'it is just as I feared,
- Three rats and a hen,
- An owl and a wren
- Have all made their nests in my beard!'"
-
-"That's poetry," her grandfather explained with a wink at Judidy. "Fall
-to," he said as he served the last plateful of golden eggs and crisp
-bacon. "Here's Mother with her last chore done, and we ain't more than
-half through our breakfast. If that coffee's for Elizabeth, Mother, you
-can give it to me."
-
-"I thought Elizabeth could have a little--very weak."
-
-"Not at my table," Grandfather said.
-
-Elizabeth poured a glass of milk and drank it in silence, but her
-grandfather gave her one sharp look from under his bushy brows.
-
-"I see old Samuel's crawled out," he said, turning to Grandmother. "I
-guess we'll have some wet weather, now."
-
-"He's a disgusting creature," Elizabeth said, looking resentfully at the
-jug of milk--and taking a second glass of it.
-
-"He's a kind of relation of yours. His mother was my father's cousin. I
-think he'd be better off at the poor farm, but he's so dirty, the
-selectmen kinder hate the job o' trying to get him there."
-
-"A relation?" Elizabeth cried. "Oh!"
-
-"You don't know much about your Cape Cod relations, do you, Elizabeth?"
-
-"I guess I'm a kind o' relation, too," Judidy simpered. "Everybody's
-relation on Cape Cod, I guess."
-
-"Elizabeth would be proud to have you for a relation, Judidy,"
-Grandfather said, gravely. This time Elizabeth saw the sharp glance that
-appraised her, and she turned quickly toward Judidy.
-
-"Anybody would be proud to have a--a cousin with such a lovely
-complexion," something urged her to say.
-
-"Don't!" Judidy protested. "I'm all tanned up."
-
-"I have a friend in New York, Jean Forsyth," Elizabeth said, presently,
-"whose sister married a count."
-
-"And when you get back to New York, you can tell her all about your
-cousin Samuel," her grandfather twinkled. "My, what good times you can
-have, comparing notes."
-
-"Father!" said Grandmother Swift, warningly. "You run along upstairs,
-Elizabeth, and I'll come up there as soon's I take one more swaller o'
-coffee. I got something I want to say when there ain't no men-folks
-about."
-
-Upstairs again, Elizabeth took the photograph of a deep-eyed girl in a
-silver frame out of the drawer in her wardrobe trunk and gazed at it
-with gathering woe.
-
-"Oh, dear, Jeanie," she said, "the only thing that would make me any
-less miserable in these surroundings would be to sit down and write you
-just exactly how things are, and that I can never do."
-
-"You come with me," her grandmother called suddenly from the threshold.
-"I got an idea."
-
-She led the way past the landing and tiny hall into which the steep
-stairway debouched, into the regions in the rear of the three bedrooms
-that Elizabeth was familiar with. There seemed to be a chain of small,
-stuffy rooms dimly stored with old furniture and boxes, and not all on
-the same level, and beyond them a low room, with a slanting roof, half
-chamber, half hallway.
-
-"I never knew you had all these rooms," Elizabeth said. "Why, the old
-house is enormous, isn't it?"
-
-"The front o' the house is new; it hasn't been built more'n fifty years
-at the outset, but these back chambers belong to the old house--the one
-your great-grandfather built to go to housekeeping in." She flung open a
-door that led into a little room still beyond.
-
-"Oh, what a darling, what a sweetheart of a room!" Elizabeth cried.
-"Whose was it?"
-
-"It was your Aunt Helen's room. She had it papered in this robin's egg
-blue paper, and she got a lot o' old, painted furniture, and fixed it up
-real cunning. I thought maybe you might like to do the same thing."
-
-There was only one portion of the room in which Elizabeth could stand
-upright. The roof sloped gradually until it met the partition about
-shoulder high, where two tiny, square windows, of many panes, were set;
-but the main part of the chamber, in spite of its low ceiling, was big
-enough to hold all the essentials of comfortable furnishing.
-
-"You could hunt around through the house and the attic chamber until you
-found the things you wanted to put in it, and furnish it just according
-to your taste, and nobody would ever set foot inside of it unless you
-happened to want them to. I know girls. That's what they want."
-
-"I guess you do know girls, Grandma," Elizabeth said. "I guess Aunt
-Helen must have had a good time growing up if you let her do things like
-this. I don't remember her much."
-
-"Well, that ain't so remarkable. She's lived in China since before you
-was born. I ain't never let anybody use this room, but now I kinder
-think her lease has expired. She's got daughters as big as you, and sons
-that's grown men now."
-
-"I'll be just as good to her room!"
-
-"I guess you can't help it. There's a good spirit in it. You rummage
-around in these different rooms here, and then you go up in the barn
-chamber and look till you find the things that suits you. There's a
-powerful lot of what some folks calls antiques around this place.
-Dealers and what-not is always coming around and begging to look through
-my pantry and my attic, wanting to buy all Grandmother's pretty dishes,
-and a good many that warn't so pretty, but I tell 'em all that when I'm
-ready to part with 'em I'll let 'em know."
-
-"The Washington Vase china that you use all the time is really valuable,
-isn't it?"
-
-"Well, so those collectors say. It's valuable to me, because I was
-brought up on it. Money value ain't everything. The value of a dollar is
-one thing--the joy it brings to you is another. You just rummage around
-and find the things that you like, and we'll get Grampa or Zeckal to
-move 'em up for you."
-
-"How did you ever think of such a thing, Grandmother?"
-
-"Well, your grandpa thought he hadn't seen you looking around the house
-much, and s'long's it's full o' the kind o' things that most city folks
-goes so wild about, I kinder figured you might like something to get
-your interest started. Helen, she was never very much interested in
-anything she didn't have to do with. You favour her in some ways."
-
-"I suppose I haven't seemed very much interested in the house and
-things, I've--had other things on my mind."
-
-"You've been worried about your brother, and a little homesick."
-
-"I didn't think I showed it."
-
-"You don't always have to show your feelings to Grandma. You better
-start in the barn chamber, and then work on through the house. When you
-get all the furniture you want, you can come to me and get the key to
-that closet some day." She indicated a door that might have been a panel
-set in the wall, except for the keyhole, where a knob might have been.
-"There's a closet there, that runs clear under the eaves. I guess you
-might find some fol-de-rols you would like."
-
-"It might be fun to start in the closet," Elizabeth suggested.
-
-"It might," her grandmother agreed, "but better save that till the
-last."
-
-"I will," said Elizabeth.
-
-The barn chamber, reached by a rickety stairway leading from the region
-of the stalls, from which a white mare poked a friendly nose as she went
-by, proved to be a storehouse of the most heterogeneous assemblage of
-objects Elizabeth had ever imagined. The overflow of fifty years of
-housecleaning and readjustment had been brought together under those
-dusty rafters.
-
-"Poor things," Elizabeth thought, looking about at the old settees and
-rocking chairs, broken backed and legless. "A horse in that condition is
-put out of its misery. I don't suppose they could blindfold and shoot an
-old sofa, but they might cremate it, or something."
-
-She came upon the wreck of a little old rocking chair, a child's chair,
-with a back beautifully decorated with grape clusters and leaves, and
-two limp, broken arms stuck out helplessly. These she tied up with
-strips of faded blue cambric that were lying about, and set the little
-chair gallantly rocking.
-
-There were innumerable cracked china jugs, big bowls, and strange wooden
-utensils and cabinets; beds that had been taken apart, forlorn, carved
-old posters minus springs or mattresses that were merely being used as
-pens to keep forlorn chairs and tables herded together. These things
-were all draped with dust and spiders' webs; and in a corner, from a
-pile of ancient straw, Elizabeth heard a faint, continuous rustling.
-
-"Mice!" she said, "but they can't frighten me unless they get a good
-deal nearer. Still, I guess I'll look carefully around and choose my
-nearest exit."
-
-Her first discovery for her house furnishing was a flag-bottomed chair
-with rockers about two inches long. It was perfectly preserved. It
-wasn't a child's chair, though it was very little of its age, she told
-herself. The next was a spinning wheel, which was the first one she had
-ever seen outside of a picture book.
-
-"I'm going to get Grandmother to teach me to spin on it," she said.
-
-There was a writing desk, a rosewood box with inlaid corner pieces, and
-a short-legged, square stand to set it on; and then more rustling in the
-straw sent Elizabeth suddenly downstairs again, though not until she had
-segregated her chosen furniture.
-
-"Zeckal, whoever he may be, can come and get it," she said.
-
-She went back to the little blue room under the eaves, and began a
-diagram of arrangement. Standing against the wall was a long, panelled
-picture in a black frame, that had made its appearance there in her
-absence. Elizabeth lifted it to the light and disclosed three barefooted
-ladies in flowing garments of gauze, who were standing on a light turf
-from which lilies of the valley were springing. One of these ladies was
-reclining on the breast of another, and the third was standing erect and
-aloof, with shining eyes.
-
-"'The Christian Graces,'" Elizabeth said. "For goodness' sake!" and
-beneath, the curious inscription, simulating letters cut into stone, was
-engraved in a neat, Spencerian hand, "Faith, Hope, and Charity."
-
-"For goodness' sake!" said Elizabeth, again.
-
-She turned the picture around, and found on the board at its back
-another inscription, written in a round, childish hand, "Helen Swift,
-aged eleven, hung in my room to help me to remember."
-
-"I guess I'll hang it in my room, to help me to remember," Elizabeth
-said.
-
-She was a little self-conscious about going down to dinner. She knew
-that her grandfather had found a good many things to chuckle at in her
-breakfast-table conversation. She always knew afterward just what things
-she had said that Grandfather would consider most typical of what he
-referred to as her "city manner." This time she realized that her
-allusion to Jean Forsyth's brother-in-law would be the subject of many
-sly, humorous thrusts for a long time to come. However, when she reached
-the table again, her grandfather had not yet come in, but he appeared
-almost instantly, with a tall, freckled girl hanging on his arm--a girl
-with a turned-up nose and a bronzed pigtail the size of her doubled fist
-hanging down her back.
-
-"But, Granddaddy Swift," she was saying, earnestly, "don't you see that
-I can't come and meet a brand-new city granddaughter, and sit down to a
-respectable person's dinner table, attired in a bloomer suit? Don't you
-know it isn't done in the circles in which we move? Make him let go of
-my ear, Grandmummy."
-
-Elizabeth rose shyly, and then she sat down again, but the stranger
-eluded Grandfather's masterful grip, and slipped around to her side,
-with a hand out-stretched in greeting.
-
-"Isn't he dreadful?" she said, indicating her tormentor affectionately.
-"When I heard you were here, I was going back to the cottage, to put on
-my best bib and tucker and make a proper call upon you, but Granddaddy
-wouldn't hear of it. He insisted on dragging me hither by the hair. So
-here I am--Peggy Farraday, at your service, and am very glad to meet
-you, too."
-
-"I'm glad to meet you," Elizabeth said. "I haven't seen any girls for a
-long time."
-
-"The woods down here are full of them."
-
-"Well, I guess I haven't been into the woods very much."
-
-"Elizabeth ain't a tomboy, like you, into everybody else's business, all
-day long. She stays at home with me and Gra'ma, and minds her p's and
-q's."
-
-"Well, we'll change all that. Attractive as you and Grandmummy are, you
-can't expect to monopolize her forever. Now it's my turn."
-
-Elizabeth saw that both her grandfather and grandmother were beaming at
-this tall girl's impulsive chattering. She felt her own stiffness
-relaxing under the sunny influence of the stranger's smile.
-
-"I adopted Grandmummy and Granddaddy three years ago, when I came over
-to this ducky old house, on my very first day on the Cape, to beg a pint
-of milk and a pail of water for my hungry, unkempt family. I saw that
-they were just the grandparents I was looking for, and so I took them
-on, and I've been the plague of their existence every summer since.
-Haven't I, Granddaddy? Isn't he a lamb? You know, my one ambition is to
-squeeze him to pieces, but he's so woolly and scratchy and cantankerous,
-that it's almost impossible to get your arms around him, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes, it is," Elizabeth said, crimsoning, with a quick glance at her
-grandfather.
-
-To her surprise, he took no notice of her discomfiture. Both he and
-Grandmother seemed unaware of the delicate ground upon which Miss Peggy
-Farraday had set her enthusiastic little heels.
-
-"I'm fifteen," that young lady continued, with very little pause either
-between her mouthfuls of food or of conversation--"You're fourteen,
-aren't you? I had more fun the year I was fourteen than I ever had
-before, or ever expect to have again."
-
-"I'll be fourteen next Thursday," Elizabeth said.
-
-"I took on an entirely new character the day I was fourteen. I became
-very sedate and dignified, and changed my name from Peg to Peggy. Do you
-expect to do that?"
-
-"I think perhaps I shall," Elizabeth said. "I guess my character does
-need improving."
-
-She expected some retort from her grandfather at this, but he only held
-out his hand for her plate, and heaped it high with roast lamb and
-tender green peas from the kitchen garden.
-
-"I envy you the scrumptious things you have to eat all the time over
-here. We bring our fat cook down with us. She cooks all right in town in
-the winter, but she always sulks on Cape Cod, and we have a dreadful
-time getting anything. We're not lucky enough to have Judidy."
-
-"Don't!" that flattered young lady protested. "Land, think of anybody
-feeling lucky to have me! I _kin_ cook, though, whenever Mis' Swift is
-willing."
-
-"Mother, she don't let our help do much work. She's afraid they'd get
-the habit, and kinder get in her way whenever she wanted to make a day
-of it. When she's cooking, Judidy she generally sets down and reads the
-newspaper."
-
-"I'm so fat," Judidy explained, "that I kinder make hard work getting
-around."
-
-To Elizabeth's surprise, Peggy Farraday went off into peals and spasms
-of laughter at this.
-
-"They are such loves," she explained. "They are such darlings! I adore
-the way they do things. Grandmummy--I call her that, because she was
-jealous of Granddaddy for a name--is a lot like the Peterkins in her
-domestic arrangements."
-
-"I ought to be like Elizabeth Eliza. That's my name." Elizabeth was glad
-that she had read the "Peterkin Papers" with Buddy the summer before.
-She had never met any other girl who was familiar with them.
-
-"I'll tell you later what character in fiction I think you're like. It
-takes me a while to make up my mind about things like that. I seem to
-jump at conclusions a good deal quicker than I do."
-
-"Can you always tell whether you like people or not, at first meeting?"
-
-"Yes, I can. Can't you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-Peggy looked up quickly, and then her eyes dropped to her plate and she
-began eating rapidly.
-
-"She's shy, too," Elizabeth thought.
-
-"If you'll come upstairs after dinner," she said, aloud, "I've got
-something I want to show you. You've come just in time to give me your
-advice about something pretty exciting."
-
-As she was leaving the dining room something made her turn and look back
-at her grandmother, who was smiling broadly to herself, like the
-Cheshire cat in "Alice in Wonderland."
-
-"The something I was going to show you was _her_ surprise to me,"
-Elizabeth whispered to Peggy.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE BIRTHDAY
-
-
-Elizabeth sat in her little blue room, and shivered.
-
-It was the afternoon of her birthday, and although she hadn't mentioned
-the fact to any one, she had dressed herself to do honour to the
-occasion. Every undergarment, chemise, camisole, and petticoat, was of a
-soft, flesh-tinted silk. Her dress was of the finest white muslin
-trimmed only with infinitesimal tucks and Valenciennes beading, and she
-was wearing a blue ribbon sash with a big butterfly bow at the back.
-
-"My pride ought to keep me warm," she thought, "what a pity it doesn't."
-
-Before she bought her silken lingerie she had deliberated a long time
-between that magnificence and a light blue wool sweater and had finally
-succumbed to the lure of the lacy garments which had taken every penny
-of her month's allowance and all that she was allowed to borrow on her
-next.
-
-She looked around her room with a glow of satisfaction, having only that
-morning put the finishing touches on it. She had draped the windows with
-an old-fashioned print, a blue groundwork with tiny pink roses wandering
-over it, that her grandmother had produced from an ancient chest stored
-with remnants of the popular fabrics of an older generation. The
-furniture she had chosen was mostly painted black, or a very dark stain.
-She had found another flag-bottomed chair, a twin to the first, and a
-wonderful old settee on rockers, which had a deep seat with an
-adjustable rack running along the outside of it, as if to prevent its
-being used except for the one person who chose to sit in the space that
-was clear at the end. This she had piled with cushions made from little
-square pillows that her grandmother kept for "children who came
-a-visiting." Her desk and her spinning wheel were in opposite comers,
-and a miniature organ, the keyboard of which comprised two octaves
-exactly, occupied a position under the eaves between the two farther
-windows.
-
-The morning mail had brought her a writing-case from her mother, a check
-for five dollars from her father, and a letter, her first, from her
-Buddy. She had taken a high resolution not to shed one tear on her
-birthday, and the mild faces of Faith and Charity smiled down on her as
-if to strengthen her will.
-
-"Hope looks a little teary, herself," she said.
-
-There was a sound of altercation on the stairway that led directly out
-of the passage from the dining room of her new suite.
-
-"You _shall_ come upstairs, Grandmummy, and give it to her yourself. She
-doesn't want your present by way of me. She wants it handed out, with
-your own personal and private blessing. Besides, I've got a present for
-her myself. I can't give her two presents."
-
-Peggy Farraday, with her hands sternly set on Grandmother Swift's
-shoulders, marched her firmly into Elizabeth's chamber.
-
-"Here's Grandmummy with a beautiful present for your birthday. She was
-going to send it upstairs by me, but I declined the honour."
-
-"Young folks like to open packages by themselves, without anybody
-standing around counting the Ohs and Ahs, and waiting to be thanked for
-something that may not exactly suit. If Elizabeth likes what I've made
-her, I guess she can make out to tell me so." Grandmother, entirely
-unruffled by the recent coercion to which she had been submitted, put
-down a bulky tissue-wrapped package and departed.
-
-"Isn't she funny?" Peggy said. "But do open it. I can hardly wait to see
-what you think of it. It's copied from one of mine, the only sweater
-I've ever really loved. And it's in your colour, and everything."
-
-[Illustration: "'Do open it. I can hardly wait to see what you think of
-it.'"]
-
-Elizabeth, scarcely crediting her senses, shook out from the folds of
-tissue the lovely, fleecy garment of her dreams, a wool sweater in her
-own colour of "Heaven's blue." She gave it one comprehensive glance,
-then she slipped after her grandmother, caught up with her halfway down
-the stairs, and kissed her on the nape of an astonished neck.
-
-"You're not a grandmother, you're an angel," she said, and flew back, in
-a panic, to Peggy.
-
-"Here's my present," that young lady informed her. "It's something very
-practical, but I made it myself. I thought you might like it. I always
-give away the kind of thing I adore, don't you? That's doing the very
-best you can to show love--and one person's sure to be suited."
-
-"It's a laundry bag," Elizabeth said, "and I haven't got one. You dear."
-She put out her hand toward Peggy, and missed her. Then they both put
-out their hands together, and kissed.
-
-"The beauty of this creation is that you don't have to fish down into
-it," Peggy explained. "It buttons all the way across the bottom, and can
-be dumped that way. I made the buttonholes myself."
-
-"And it's my colour, too. Have you made this since you were here last
-week?"
-
-"No, I made it the first week I came down, to be sure to have it ready."
-
-"Before you even saw me. How did you know you'd like me well enough to
-give it to me when it was done?"
-
-"I was willing to take my chances. When I heard about your brother being
-sick, and your disappointment about the cottage, I thought you might be
-feeling kind of low when you first got here. So I prepared for it."
-
-"How kind you are! How kind everybody is."
-
-"Well, don't get the weeps. See here, do you know what this bar on this
-settee was put on for? It's a kind of a cradle arrangement. Mother makes
-up baby's bed on the lower end, puts up the bar, sits herself up at the
-head, and rocks and knits. Grandmother told me. She was rocked there
-herself when she was a baby. She remembers having scarlet fever on it.
-Aren't these old things fascinating? You're an awfully lucky girl to
-have grandparents like this. Mine live in a Back Bay apartment, and are
-just like everybody else, only a lot more so."
-
-"You're a lot nicer than I am," Elizabeth said, suddenly.
-
-"Well, I don't have such nice clothes. I thought you might like this
-clo', though." Peggy stood up to be admired. "It's my best bib and
-tucker. See, this is the bib," she indicated the square of cobwebby lace
-and lawn under her bronze chin, "and this is the tucker." She turned
-around, to show its counterpart in the back. "That's really what I
-bought it for, I couldn't decide between this pink linen and a gray
-dotted swiss until I realized that this was a bib and tucker. Which of
-course settled it at once. By the way, I know something very funny."
-Peggy barely took a breath between sentences. "I wonder if you know it,
-too. My sister Ruth knows your brother John quite well. They wrote to
-each other all the time that he was abroad. I just found out that he was
-your brother by the merest accident."
-
-"You don't mean that Ruth Farraday is your sister! Why, Buddy's known
-her for years."
-
-"Can't he have known my sister for years?"
-
-"Yes, I suppose so, but it doesn't seem possible. I thought he met that
-girl in Boston."
-
-"I live in Boston. If you've got a sample of your brother's handwriting,
-I can prove to you that my Ruth is the girl. I've taken in his letters
-for years."
-
-Elizabeth produced the precious morning missive by the simple process of
-diving into the neck of her blouse. Peggy bent over the letter.
-
-"It's the same," she said. "Oh, is he going to be an awful lot better
-soon? Ruthie has been dreadfully worried, I know, though she hasn't said
-much about it. She's the still member of the family, you see."
-
-"What does she look like?"
-
-"Oh, she's darlingly pretty, with great blue eyes and long golden
-lashes, and lovely colour that comes and goes, and she dresses sort of
-quaintly. She looks well in fringes and sashes and droopy things. I have
-to wear boys' clothes, almost, to set off my peculiar style of beauty,
-but you mustn't judge Ruthie by me. She's really a star."
-
-"I think I'd like you best."
-
-"Oh, you wouldn't if you could see Ruth. You'd just call for the incense
-and get busy worshipping. Everybody does."
-
-"Has she many suitors?"
-
-"Flocks and herds of them, but she doesn't care. She's kind of booky and
-dreamy. I don't mean she doesn't play a stunning game of tennis, and
-drive a car, and all that. She was motor corps for a while, and just
-crazy to get over, but Dad wouldn't hear of it. She'll be on the Cape
-bye and bye, and you can judge for yourself--I'm going to stay to
-supper, did you know it? Your grandmother sent over and invited me
-yesterday."
-
-"I didn't know she even remembered my birthday, and now--only think!"
-
-"She said to me that you were as blue as indigo, and putting up a good
-old struggle not to be, and she wanted you to have something pleasant to
-remember. That festive sound from below stairs is Judidy taking her turn
-at the handle of the ice-cream freezer. Do you know what they make the
-ice-cream of here? Just pure Jersey cream and fruit juice. I never
-tasted anything like it in my life."
-
-"Didn't I hear something outside the door? It sounded just as if
-somebody had crept up and then crept away again."
-
-"I didn't hear anything." Peggy threw open the door like a flash. "It
-_was_ someone. More birthday surprises." She held up the package that an
-unseen hand had deposited on the threshold. "Open it quick, Elizabeth."
-
-"Why, it's the Kipling 'Birthday Book,'" Elizabeth said, "that
-red-leather edition that I've been crazy for. Who do you suppose could
-have got it for me?"
-
-"Who is there left to give you a present?"
-
-"Nobody."
-
-"Grandpa hasn't been heard from."
-
-"Grandpa?"
-
-"He's capable of anything. You don't half appreciate him, Elizabeth."
-
-"I know I don't, Peggy, but I think I'm beginning to."
-
-At the supper table they cornered him.
-
-"Well," he admitted to Peggy, "I didn't know as you was upstairs, and I
-calculated to have Elizabeth blame it on you, but seeing as I'm caught,
-I'll own up to what I can't hide. I asked that girl in the apothecary
-shop in Hyannis what was the best kind of a birthday present, and she
-said a birthday book. I thought that was likely, so I asked to see one.
-She fetched out a Longfeller book and a Emerson book, and then I see
-this one standing all alone in a corner, and I took to it right away.
-Kipling, he writes about things I know something about. So I took him."
-
-"And you are going to put your name in the book the first thing--before
-any one," Elizabeth declared: "What's your birthday?"
-
-"What day is to-day?"
-
-"The thirtieth of June."
-
-"That's it."
-
-"You don't mean that you were born on my birthday?"
-
-"I always kind o' calculated you were born on mine."
-
-When Judidy, attired in a purple and yellow silk gown over which
-she wore a black silk apron embroidered in blue forget-me-nots,
-rose to change the plates, with an expression of the most intense
-self-consciousness, Grandmother rose also, and the two exchanged
-signals.
-
-"If I understood dumb show a little better," Grandfather said, slyly, "I
-might be inclined to think that Mother had something hid out in the
-kitchen, and Judidy had an errand in the pantry, but o' course I
-probably got it all mixed up."
-
-"Well," Grandmother smiled, "seeing as the same thing has come o' the
-pantry every June thirtieth for forty-five years, it ain't anyways
-likely that you know anything about it." She bustled off to the kitchen,
-to reappear with a mound of ice-cream in which the strawberries were
-embedded, like so many perfect emeries.
-
-"I like ice-cream better than anything in the world," Elizabeth said.
-
-"I like it better than fathers and mothers and sisters and intimate
-friends, but not better than grandparents, especially not grandparents
-when one of them is celebrating its birthday," Peggy declared, "Now, I'm
-getting silly. Will somebody stop me, please? Oh, look! Look at Judidy!"
-
-That flushed and excited young woman was approaching the table with the
-air of a standard bearer. In her arms she carried a big tray lined with
-white paper lace, and on it was set a marvellous erection of cake--a big
-round of chocolate confection lettered in pink, and further adorned by
-blazing pink candles. She placed it in front of Elizabeth.
-
-"Time was when I had a cake to myself on my birthday," Grandfather
-grumbled.
-
-"The time ain't so fur off." Grandmother appeared, with a round loaf of
-fruit cake on which one candle burned brightly. "You can take the candle
-right off if you want to. I only put it on for a joke. The cake is just
-what I always bake for you."
-
-"Elizabeth can eat all the candle grease." Grandfather made an effort to
-frown, in which he succeeded only indifferently.
-
-"I made it myself," Judidy cried, as Elizabeth counted her candles,
-"fourteen, and one to grow on."
-
-"And did you make all the letters--'Elizabeth With Love?'--I think
-that's the nicest thing any birthday cake ever said on it."
-
-"I was going to put on 'Elizabeth-aged-fourteen,' and then I thought
-that the candles would tell how old you were," the blushing Judidy
-hovered over her masterpiece, "and then I thought it was better to put
-on a kind of a message. I couldn't write a very long one, but I guess
-that says just as much as a whole sheet of paper."
-
-"How did you make the letters so clear?"
-
-"With a cornycopia. You colour your white frosting with strawberry
-juice, and then you make this here cornycopia out of letter paper, and
-then you sort of dribble it along and write with it."
-
-"It looks lovely," Elizabeth said. "Thank you. Thank you, Judidy."
-
-"Don't let your ice-cream melt," Peggy warned.
-
-"You haven't let yours melt," Grandmother said, putting out her hand for
-the empty dish Peggy was waving.
-
-"I never had all the ice-cream I wanted," Peggy acknowledged, sadly. "I
-never shall have, I know I shan't, because I can't hold it."
-
-When Elizabeth made her wish, and blew out her candles, tears of pure
-delight stood in Judidy's eyes.
-
-"I've give you luck," she said. "Oh, I hope it was a good wish!"
-
-"It was the best wish anybody could wish," Elizabeth smiled. "I shall
-never forget this birthday, and this cake, Judidy, nor any of the dear
-things that have been done for me."
-
- * * * * *
-
-That night, as her grandmother tucked her into bed, she caught one of
-the kindly hands and clung to it.
-
-"That was the most beautiful sweater in all the world," she said. "Do
-you think I could go down and kiss Grandfather good-night, too?" she
-asked, shyly.
-
-"I guess it could be managed. I'll go downstairs with you, and see."
-
-And presently Grandfather, with his glasses sitting low on his nose, and
-his nose in the morning paper, was attacked from behind and kissed
-breathlessly; but when Elizabeth tried to escape, she found herself
-caught by a blue dimity sleeve, and drawn into an energetic embrace.
-
-"No, you don't," he said, placing her on his knee. "You're going to set
-here a while, and talk to Grandpa."
-
-But the eminence of his knee proved such an embarrassing vantage ground
-that he soon let her go.
-
-"Good-night," she said, slipping her hand into his. "Good-night,
-Granddaddy, dear," and she kissed him again, a real kiss this time, as
-if he were her father, or Buddy.
-
-"Well, well," he said, "well, well!" and sat holding her by the
-shoulders so long that he almost seemed to have forgotten she was there.
-Then he picked her up in his arms and carried her up the stairs again,
-tucking her into bed with a hand as accustomed as Grandma's.
-
-"Fourteen years old and letting her grandfather put her to bed the way
-he did when she was a baby. Ain't you ashamed?" he asked, playfully, in
-a tone she had never heard him use before.
-
-"No, I'm proud," Elizabeth said, and she meant it.
-
-Under her pillow was her brother's letter, and she lit a flickering
-bedside lamp to read it by before she went finally to sleep. It was a
-short letter, slanting down the paper, as he was not yet able to sit up
-in his bed long enough to write properly. He said:
-
- DEAR SISTER-ON-HER-BIRTHDAY:
-
- I'd be willing to eat a German helmet to be able to spend this
- day with you. But the U. S. base hospital--base is the word--has
- got me for the present. I send you my respects, and fourteen and
- one half kisses to grow on.
-
- For the love of Michael, don't get priggish in your old age.
- Some of your letters have made me wonder if there was nobody
- home where my sister lived, but lately they've seemed more
- the real thing. Get acquainted with your grandfather and
- grandmother. Grandfather once told me that he had come to the
- conclusion there was only one person in the world he had to keep
- an eye on, and that was himself. Good talk, Sis.
-
- Which endeth the lesson.
-
- BUDDY.
-
-As she tucked the letter back in its envelope, she realized that the
-sheet which had been wrapped around it to prevent its scrawly surface
-from showing through the transparent envelope was not blank as she
-had at first supposed; she spread it out before her, thinking to
-find a postscript to her own letter, but it was not that. It was
-evidently a sheet of a letter begun and discarded. Elizabeth had read
-it before she realized that it was not meant for her eyes to see.
-"Sweetheart--Sweetheart--Sweetheart--" it ran, "I have never called you
-this, and I have no right to call you so now, or any other name. At
-least, not for many years to come. I'm done for. I love you, and I can't
-try for you. That's something the war has done for a lot--more----" Here
-it broke off, abruptly.
-
-"Oh, Buddy, Buddy," Elizabeth cried, "I didn't mean to snoop. How
-perfectly, perfectly terrible!"
-
-It was two in the morning before she slept. She lay wide eyed in the
-darkness, thinking of her brother and Peggy Farraday's sister. It
-couldn't be anybody else--she knew that much about Buddy. For the first
-time in her life she was feeling the weight of a trouble that did not
-make her want to cry.
-
-"I guess that's what it means to be fourteen and grown up," she said.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- NINETY-NINE NEGROES
-
-
-Peggy and Elizabeth were lying on the beach in their bathing suits.
-Peggy had hollowed out a careful seat in the sand, and built arm rests
-and a slanting support for the head, which she was trying to recline on
-and enjoy. Elizabeth, who had made no such elaborate preparations for
-relaxation, was really comfortable. She was wearing a black mohair suit
-with a patent leather belt and silk stockings, and a blue rubber cap put
-on with great care, so that tendrils of soft brown hair framed her face.
-Peggy wore a rubber diving cap that made her look as if she had been
-scalped, but her blue jersey suit was trimmed with blue and green
-stripes and slashed up the side and laced fetchingly.
-
-"Did you get your birthday wish, or did you wish for a handsome husband
-in the sweet bye and bye?" Peggy asked, lazily. "I always wish for
-things that will happen right away, because I can't stand the strain of
-not knowing whether I'm going to get them or not."
-
-"I didn't wish to get anything. I wished to be something. I can't tell
-yet whether I'm going to succeed in being it."
-
-"Oh, I know--occasions like that always make you feel noble, but I hate
-to waste a wish on wanting to be a better girl. You can't tell your
-wish, and if you don't, there's nobody that can judge whether you've got
-it or not."
-
-"Can't we judge for ourselves?"
-
-"I suppose we can, but it's kind of embarrassing to award yourself
-prizes for virtue."
-
-"I know it, but in a kind of general way you have to keep tabs on your
-own piggishness, because you're the only one that can."
-
-"Did you say pig or fig?" Peggy had all of "Alice in Wonderland" on the
-tip of her tongue.
-
-"I said pig, but I guess prig was what I meant, really. You're not a
-prig--but I am."
-
-"Well, speaking of wishes," Peggy said, "do you know the very latest way
-of telling who you'll marry? You count ninety-nine niggers, twenty-seven
-white horses, and three red-heads, and then the next man you shake hands
-with, you'll marry. Let's begin and do it. I've been meaning to for a
-long time, but I wanted to wait until I had somebody to do it with.
-Those things are not so much fun alone. Kindly remove that inquisitive
-sand flea from my back. Oh! Ouch! Lots of people claim they don't bite."
-Elizabeth took the offender between thumb and forefinger.
-
-"He's a funny looking beastie," she said. "He's got a kind of solemn,
-long face."
-
-"I think he looks interrupted," Peggy said. "I guess he liked my
-flavour. Shall we start counting to-day?"
-
-"There aren't many Negroes on the Cape, unless you count Portuguese."
-
-"There are two kinds of Portuguese--black Portuguese and white
-Portuguese. We'll have to count the black ones. My mother once went to
-the Azores--that's inhabited by Portuguese, you know--she says that the
-high-class women all wear a kind of nun's costume, with a huge black
-head-dress made exactly like a pea-pod, and they are all quite
-light-skinned in spite of their black hair and eyes. Well, let's go in
-swimming."
-
-Elizabeth swam her hundred strokes, and then stood breast high, watching
-Peggy's fearless performance as that young person displayed all the
-latest spectacular swimming feats, diving and wallowing and spouting
-like a young whale. The raft, which was usually rocking in at least
-seven feet of water, had at first filled Elizabeth with terror, but
-Peggy's adventurous spirit was beginning to animate her, and she
-followed courageously when Peggy cried, "Now, the raft," and climbed up
-its slippery sides with very little hesitation.
-
-"You're an amphibious animal," Elizabeth said. "I don't just know what
-kind, but I do know what your mind is like--the way it flies around, up
-one thing and down another. It's exactly like a squirrel."
-
-"I don't know whether that's a compliment or not. Look who's here,
-Elizabeth. A little fish, see. A perfectly good fish. I wonder how he
-got here."
-
-"Is he dead?" Elizabeth asked, shrinking a little.
-
-"He's either dead or sleeping. I think he's alive. He hasn't any eyes,
-that's his trouble. Let's put him back in the water--but let's wish on
-him first."
-
-"Wait a minute," Elizabeth cried. "I know a perfectly lovely poem out of
-the Kipling book. I'll try it on the poor little thing.
-
- "Little blind fish, thou art marvelous wise.
- Little blind fish, who put out thine eyes?
- Open thy eyes, while I whisper my wish;
- Bring me a lover, thou little blind fish."
-
-"He couldn't very well open his eyes, on account of never having any,
-but I guess he got the general idea. Back you go into the water, you
-little blind fish."
-
-"You wish, too."
-
-"I did--one of my next week wishes. You know how they tell your fortune
-with cards. 'What you expect, What you don't expect, What's sure to come
-true. Next week.' My wishes are all on that principle. There goes
-fishie, swimming away for dear life."
-
-"Bring me a lover, thou little blind fish." The raft was rocking gently
-under a fleece-lined sky, and the water was blue-green and full of
-little thrills and ripples. Peggy took off her cap, and let her black
-hair stream on the breeze.
-
-"Have you ever thought much about lovers?" Elizabeth said.
-
-Peggy blushed. "Have you?"
-
-"Not about my own. That is, I mean not about anybody I ever knew or saw,
-but have you ever thought about anybody else having a lover? Any
-relation of yours?"
-
-"About Ruthie, yes, but I don't believe she would ever really care about
-that. Except in a very friendly way. All the engaged people I ever knew
-were so mushy! I can't imagine Ruth being mushy."
-
-"I never think about the engaged people I know. That isn't what I call
-being engaged--the way people _are_ engaged. I always think of the way
-people in books get engaged, and that makes it easier to imagine."
-
-"Yes, it does. That would be the only way Ruth would ever do it. But I
-don't think she would."
-
-"Do you think she would be the kind of girl to get engaged by letter?"
-
-"Well, I don't know. I don't like to think about her getting engaged.
-She's too useful around the house. You wouldn't like to think of your
-brother being engaged, would you?"
-
-"I might, if he were very unhappy."
-
-"Well, don't you worry about your brother being unhappy. The thing about
-being grown up is that you can do just about what you please. If a man
-wants to get married, he can do it, when he's as old as that."
-
-"There might be things to prevent him--health and things."
-
-"Say, I wouldn't worry about my brother and any girl if I were you. He
-isn't the marrying kind. I heard Sister tell Mother that. Mother was
-quizzing her, I guess; you know how mothers are about this suitor
-proposition. Well, Ruth said that John Swift was the one man she knew
-that was perfectly satisfied to be a friend, and a good friend to a
-girl, and that he had told her so. She said she had a perfectly
-tranquil, lovely friendship with him."
-
-"Oh, dear!" Elizabeth thought.
-
-"Buddy has got a very beautiful nature," she said aloud. "I think a girl
-of his own age would like him very much, and he would make a good friend
-to her."
-
-"Ruth would make the best little friend in the world. I think friendship
-is much more beautiful than love. I don't think I should altogether like
-it, if my sister and your brother were the other kind, and wanted to
-behave, well, you know--that way. Would you?"
-
-"I don't know," said Elizabeth, faintly.
-
-On the way home she was very silent, while Peggy chattered, but at her
-own gate she looked at her friend speculatively.
-
-"Do you know, Peggy," she said, "that there are ways in which I feel a
-whole lot older than you are?"
-
-"Are there?" said Peggy, uncertainly. "Look, Elizabeth, there's the
-third Negro. I'll bet we'll really get our fate settled before the
-summer is over."
-
-That afternoon Elizabeth took her knitting--she was making a scarf for
-Buddy, who had demanded one to bind himself round, soldier fashion,
-during the period of his anticipated convalescence on Cape Cod--and sat
-in Grandfather's chair by the living-room window. Her grandmother was
-darning stockings on the other side of the branching fern. Elizabeth's
-knitting would have progressed more rapidly if she had not been keeping
-a sharp eye on the street, in order that no Negroes should escape her.
-
-"Did you ever do any stunts to see who you would marry?" she asked her
-grandmother.
-
-"My sister and I used to hang horseshoes over the door, and the first
-one that passed under them was supposed to be the one we was going to
-marry."
-
-"Did somebody pass under?"
-
-"We did it a good many times. I remember one time we did it, and the
-first one that passed under was to be my husband, and the second was to
-be Alviry's. The first one turned out to be young Pork Joe, who was one
-o' the unlikeliest boys that ever put his waistcoat on hind-side before;
-he never would dress himself proper. I was pretty well discouraged at
-the idea of young Pork Joe for a husband, but Alviry she made me hang
-around watching for her beau to turn up, and lo and behold the very next
-person to set foot over that threshold was your grandfather. I thought I
-felt bad enough before, but when I saw John Swift's shoulders thrusting
-themselves through that door frame, I just bolted off upstairs and had a
-good cry. Alviry she wasn't pleased, either. She had her eye on Martin
-Nickerson at the time."
-
-"Maybe it was the second one you were to marry, and the first didn't
-count. Who was young Pork Joe?"
-
-"Old Pork Joe's son. He used to keep pigs to sell, and so they finally
-got calling him that."
-
-"The way they call the plumber Pump Peter. I think Cape Cod is the
-funniest place."
-
-"It ain't so different from other places."
-
-"In other places you don't associate so much with--the baker and the
-butcher."
-
-"Maybe they ain't so well worth associating with."
-
-"My friend Jeanie Forsyth is a direct descendant from the _Mayflower_."
-
-"Well, so're you. Don't you know it?"
-
-"Have we really got _Mayflower_ blood?"
-
-"Those old pewter spoons on the dining-room mantle, that you was
-examining the other day, was made from a mold that Peregrine White
-brought over on the _Mayflower_. My mother was a White, you know."
-
-"I didn't know. I guess I don't know much about anything, Grandmother."
-
-"Live and learn. Babies ain't born with any great amount of contrivance,
-nor yet much of an idea of what's what."
-
-"I've learned a lot since I've been down here."
-
-"You ain't so sure as you was about the way things was meant to be. At
-first, we're pretty sure that things was meant to be just one way, and
-that way the one we've picked out. After living along a while, we get to
-realize that the other feller has his way, too. Then we have to kinder
-arrange our ideas again."
-
-"Buddy thinks I'm a snob."
-
-"Well, what do you think?"
-
-"I--I think Buddy's right."
-
-"Well, he ain't going to be right very long if you _think_ so. When I
-was growing up, I used to have a stylish city friend that I spent a good
-deal of time with. She was the daughter of the biggest man we had had
-from these parts, and she used to spend her summers at home, in the big
-white house on Main Street--the one with the pillars and the cedar
-hedge, just opposite the post office. She used to get her dresses from
-Paris, and let me make copies of them, too, and she was courted by a
-member of the governor's staff. I don't know as she ever had a
-brother-in-law that was a count----"
-
-"Oh, Grandmother!"
-
-"Well, let Grandma have her joke--as long as she can keep Grandpa quiet.
-Well, when we was little girls, she used to love to go to my grandma's
-with me."
-
-"Not Grandmother Elspeth's?"
-
-"No, my grandmother; Grandmother White. Well, Mary's folks mostly lived
-away from here, and most of the ways and doings of home folks was a
-novelty to her. She liked to get Grandma telling about old times on Cape
-Cod. You see, when Grandmother was a little girl, her mother was
-bedridden, and the whole family was taken care of by her and a
-neighbour's daughter, a little girl called Hopey D.--I never knew what
-the rest of her name was. As fast as the babies come along, they was put
-in the old settee cradle, and she and Hopey used to have to change
-places sitting and rocking there all the time they wasn't doing
-housework. That's the same settee you got in your room upstairs. Grandma
-used to tell how the fire would go out in the old fireplace, on account
-of she and Hopey not keeping it going right. Those were the days before
-matches, you know; and she used to have to run through the woods to the
-nearest neighbour, who lived a mile away, to borrow fire and bring it
-home in a swinging pail."
-
-"Oh," Elizabeth cried. "Oh, that doesn't seem possible. I thought that
-the days before matches were way back in Columbus's time, or something."
-
-"No. I've got a piece o' flint and a tinder box upstairs somewhere that
-came from Grandma's. Supposing you had to strike a spark from a piece o'
-flint before you could get the kettle to boiling."
-
-"Supposing I had a bedridden mother, like poor Grandma White. Oh, I hope
-that Hopey D. was a nice little girl, and that she and great--no,
-great-great-grandmother had good times together."
-
-"When Grandma used to tell all those old stories to my stylish friend,
-do you know how I felt? I felt mortified at having a grandma that wasn't
-more high toned, and I used to try to get Mary not to go there, so's we
-wouldn't have no more talk about running after a pail of fire, and
-rocking babies on the old settee and such."
-
-Elizabeth bent her head over her knitting, and the colour mounted slowly
-to her forehead, but she did not speak.
-
-"So you see, girl nature is pretty much girl nature, wherever you find
-it."
-
-"I was going to write a letter to-night, Grandmother," Elizabeth said,
-after a period of silence, "and it wasn't going to be a very nice kind
-of a letter, because it--it was going to misrepresent things some. Now,
-I am going to write entirely differently, because things you've been
-saying have set me to thinking. I'd be willing to show you the letter,
-if you thought you ought to see it," she added, anxiously, but her
-grandmother only smiled.
-
-"I ain't never very particular about reading other folks' letters," she
-said. "I have trouble enough reading those I write myself, and those
-that is sent to me."
-
-"All right," Elizabeth said, in a very small voice, "I guess it's going
-to be hard enough to write it, anyway." This was the fateful epistle:
-
- DEAR JEANIE:
-
- I want to begin by correcting an impression I was snobby enough
- to give you when I first came down here. I wrote you about this
- place and my grandparents in an entirely false way. I did it
- because I was too proud to own up the truth. I was surprised and
- shocked when I got here, to find how things really were. I
- hadn't been here since I was a little girl, and then only for
- very brief visits. I imagined a kind of Farm de-luxe and a
- grandmother in real lace and mitts, and a kind of Lord
- Chesterfieldian grandfather, and all the comforts of a château.
- Instead, my dear Granddaddy and dearest Grandmother are
- just--natives. They murder the President's English, and they sit
- around in their shirt sleeves--the former, not the latter--and
- they, well, they aren't like anything I've ever known. So I got
- started pretending, in my letters to you, and kept right on. The
- "car" is an old, rattletrap Ford, and Granddaddy drives it in
- his suspenders when he wants to. The chauffeur I sort of gave
- you the impression we had is a regular, farm hired man. Our
- hired girl sits at the table with us, and she is nice, too. They
- are all nice, nice people--nicer than I am. My grandmother is
- beautiful looking. I wish you could see her. I didn't care for
- any one to see her, for a while. Now, I am getting anxious for
- everyone to.
-
- Jeanie, can you understand me or not? I'm just a prig, snob,
- liar, and I don't feel fit to live. I don't know what got into
- me. I always tell you everything, and now I deliberately did
- this awful thing, and I've got something else that I can't tell
- you, but that is not my secret.
-
- Can you love me any more? I ask this seriously, because I know
- you won't mind my humble origin half as much as the deception. I
- knew this all the time, and yet I could not seem to help the way
- I was behaving.
-
- I am afraid to read your letter in answer to this, so don't
- write me one. Let me hear from you by return mail, but don't say
- anything, not much, about this anyway. If you love me, though,
- please begin your letter by saying so. I don't deserve you for
- my most intimate friend. I've taken a new name. My
- great-grandmother's name, and I am going to live up to it. I
- took it so to be thoroughly part of my family, and to cultivate
- the old-fashioned virtues with. It's
-
- ELSPETH.
-
- P. S.--Call me by it. Everything I told you about my birthday
- was so. They did all those beautiful things for me. I slightly
- camouflaged details, but it was all the way I said, except that
- Judidy _ate_ with us. Aren't I a pig?
-
- ELSPETH again.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- THE BEAN SUPPER
-
-
-The three Steppe children stood in the centre aisle of the local
-department store, in a state of unembarrassed good humour, while Peggy
-and Elizabeth drew apart in consultation. The saleswoman busied herself
-with folding up a series of small garments that had been discussed and
-rejected by the two young shoppers.
-
-"Six dollars and thirty-three cents, and a stamp." Elizabeth counted the
-contents of her purse again, distractedly. "Your three dollars and my
-three, and the thirty-three cents we both saved on ice-cream cones, and
-the stamp makes it thirty-five. I had no idea that children's clothes
-were so expensive. We can hardly buy shoes for them."
-
-"Well, they can't go to that supper unless they have shoes. Look at
-their feet, Elizabeth--I mean Elspeth----"
-
-"I know it," Elizabeth said, colloquially.
-
-"I want to go to bean supper," Madget wailed. "I said I would go."
-
-"Hush up, Baby," Mabel warned her, "you're in a apartment store. The
-lady will throw you right out the door if you don't be good and quiet."
-
-Madget turned large, disturbed eyes on the lady indicated, and
-discovered in her calm countenance nothing to rouse alarm.
-
-"I want to go to bean supper!" she wailed, even louder than before.
-
-"We have some laced canvas shoes with rubber bottoms that are a dollar
-and a dollar and a half," the clerk volunteered. "You might get them for
-the little girls, and a pair of sneakers for the boy. We have them in
-black and brown," she added, with a hasty glance toward the grimy toes
-and scratched ankles protruding from his nondescript footwear. "We have
-stockings and socks that are reasonable, too."
-
-"Well, let's get their feet covered," Peggy said, "and trust to luck for
-the rest."
-
-Madget and Mabel were accordingly fitted to brown shoes and socks and
-Moses to black sneakers and long, black ribbed stockings. Nothing that
-could be said to him, even the argument of the financial inconvenience
-of covering his long legs, would induce him to put on socks like those
-of his sisters. It was stockings or nothing with Moses, though he was
-perfectly willing to do without them entirely.
-
-"One dollar and eight cents. Could we buy this little boy any kind of
-trousers or bloomers for that, do you suppose? You wouldn't mind taking
-a stamp to make up the difference, would you?" Peggy asked, anxiously.
-
-"Not in the least. We have some khaki bloomers that might fit him for
-seventy-five cents."
-
-"I ain't agoing to wear bloomers," Moses said, decisively. "I want pants
-or nothing."
-
-"Nothing is what you've got on now," Peggy said, severely, "or very near
-nothing. You can't go to that bean supper in rags, you know. Don't you
-want to have some cake and ice-cream, and corned beef----"
-
-"And potato salud," Mabel put in, helpfully, "and beans----"
-
-"And ice-cream and cake and potato salud," Madget droned, "and coffee
-and ice-cream and cake----"
-
-"You said that before," Moses said. "Don't you ever get tired of hearing
-things over and over?"
-
-"We can get a Butterick pattern and make him a shirt," Peggy suggested.
-
-"We can get Grandmother to give us some cambric and things to make the
-little girls dresses. See here, Moses, you've just got to have a pair of
-those bloomers. All boys wear them. You can't go to the supper if you
-don't---- Do you mind measuring him?"
-
-Moses stood up and was measured; and five dollars went into the cash
-drawer of the Hamlin Department Store, while the two girls, laden with
-their purchases, steered their young charges toward home.
-
-Grandmother produced goods enough to make Moses a blouse of brown
-striped shirting and each of the little girls a print dress. She also
-found some old petticoats, yellowed with age, but daintily made, and
-some waists with which they could be worn, complete to the very last
-button.
-
-"So far, so good," Peggy said, "but we've got to hustle to get this
-family covered before five o'clock to-morrow night. Moses' shirt is
-going to be the worst. The dresses we can mostly make on the sewing
-machine. You play around here in the yard all day to-morrow, children,
-so we can try on the things whenever we need you."
-
-They started with their dressmaking bright and early the next morning.
-
-Moses' shirt went very well, for after it was cut and basted,
-Grandmother offered to do all the necessary finishing, but Madget's
-dress kept both the girls busy almost all the rest of the day. It was a
-very effective garment, despite the fact that the seams were not
-finished. The hem was done beautifully by hand, the little sleeves were
-lace trimmed, and the pink chambray of which the dress was made hung in
-graceful folds about the small figure. Madget's toilet was very
-successful, but as for Mabel, ill luck seemed to blight her costume from
-the very start. One side of the dress was cut shorter than the other,
-both sleeves turned out to be for one arm, and there was no more
-material to cut another, and to add dismay to discomfiture, Elizabeth
-spilt a whole bottle of ink over the front breadth just as she was
-getting it ready for the machine.
-
-"I don't know what we are going to do," Peggy cried. "It's nearly four
-o'clock. We've just about got time to wash and dress them and get them
-started."
-
-Grandmother appeared at this juncture with a little white, frilly
-garment in her hands.
-
-"Here's an apron that would just about fit the oldest girl," she said.
-"I know it ain't the style to wear aprons, and this would cover all her
-new dress up, but I found it, and I just thought I'd show it to you."
-
-Elizabeth looked at it speculatively.
-
-"She could wear that for a dress," she cried. "We could just sew in lace
-at the armholes, and nobody would ever know."
-
-"Have I got to be washed?" Moses demanded. "I can wash myself, and I
-will, too. Kin I borry an old tablecloth or something?"
-
-"Here's a towel," Peggy said.
-
-"I want an old tablecloth, _too_."
-
-"You come downstairs and I'll give you one. Children takes notions,"
-Grandmother said. "He probably has an idea of some kind. You come along
-with me, Moses."
-
-Thus relieved of Moses, Peggy and Elizabeth each took a little girl and
-scrubbed and polished and combed till the result was miraculous. With
-the wonderful, red curls smoothed and a big yellow bow on top of them,
-Mabel looked like the distinctive child she was meant to be. The apron
-proved a great success.
-
-"She looks just as well as Madget, in spite of all our trouble,"
-Elizabeth said a little dolefully. "There's nothing to cry about in
-that, Madget. You want your sister to look as well as you do, don't you,
-dear?"
-
-"No, I don't," Madget answered, concisely.
-
-"She's awfully cunning, if she is bad," Peggy said, standing off to view
-the effect of her finishing touches. "She looks good enough to eat."
-
-"Ice-cream and potato salud, and beans and coffee an' ice-cream," Madget
-began, at the suggestion.
-
-"I said _you_ looked good enough to eat, Madget."
-
-"I _am_ going to eat."
-
-"Where do you suppose Moses is? It's time he was dressing."
-
-"No, he went downstairs with Grandma. There he comes now, I think."
-
-Trailing up the front stairs into the guest chamber, which was the
-centre of activities, Moses appeared, swaddled in the folds of a red
-damask tablecloth, holding his clothes in his hand. His hair was
-dripping, but from the rest of his person there emanated an atmosphere,
-even an odour, of shining cleanliness.
-
-"Want to know how I washed?" he inquired, proudly. "I went out by the
-back door, and I took off all my clothes, and then I rubbed myself all
-over with yaller soap, and then I turned the hose on till I come nice
-and clean. I don't like to take no baths in the house. You can't get the
-water to squizzling."
-
-"Well, I guess it squizzled, all right," Peggy said. "Now get yourself
-into these clothes quickly."
-
-It was two thoroughly exhausted girls that finally marshalled their
-charges into the Town Hall, where the bean supper was to take place, but
-they felt that their efforts to improve the Steppe children were
-justified by the result. Moses in a brown shirt, bloomers and stockings
-to match them, with his not unshapely feet encased in black sneakers,
-and a red Windsor tie--he had demanded red--headed the little
-procession. Then Mabel, proudly pinned into her white apron, with a
-yellow sash about her middle, and the lace frills of her improvised
-sleeves draped elegantly about her elbows, and lastly the resplendent
-Madget--a complete product in pink chambray and ribbons to match.
-
-"Their colours all swear at each other," Elizabeth said, "I never
-thought of that, did you, Peggy? We'll put Moses between. His tie
-doesn't go with pink or yellow, but there isn't very much of it, thank
-goodness!"
-
-"Where are the beans?" Mabel asked, practically, as they seated her at
-one end of a long, deal table decorated with bunches of small American
-flags--the occasion was patriotic--clustered in cups and glasses, like
-stiff-stemmed flowers, and vases of dahlias and asters and rambler roses
-flanking them.
-
-"Don't show your ign'rance," Moses said, witheringly. "It's a bean
-_supper_. You don't have no more beans than you do supper. See the
-chocolate cake, Madget, and the custid pie, and the potato salud?"
-
-"What's that yellar stuff, with leaves growing out of it?" Mabel
-inquired.
-
-"That's potato salud. Ain't you never seen potato salud before? Where
-you been all your life?"
-
-"To home," Mabel answered, literally.
-
-Madget, elevated on a wooden box with Peggy's coat thrown over it, sat
-speechless between her brother and Elizabeth. The hall began to fill
-rapidly. A young girl mounted the platform and started a few uncertain
-notes on the wheezy organ.
-
-"That's going to be the 'Star-Spangled Banner,' Peggy groaned. "We've
-got to get these children up again." But one of the bustling waitresses
-hurried to the side of the young organist, and arrested her in
-mid-career.
-
-"Don't play that," she was heard protesting. "We want to feed this lot,
-and get them out in time to set the tables twice. We haven't got time
-for them to stand up through the anthem."
-
-The young musician switched obediently to "I am always blowing
-bubbles--blowing bubbles in the air," which Moses sang with her
-nonchalantly.
-
-Plates of cold ham and corned beef began to circulate up and down the
-table. The portly waitresses, family matrons in white duck and muslin,
-enveloped in huge white aprons with long strings tied imposingly behind,
-began to pass the beans, and to distribute thick mugs of golden-brown
-coffee.
-
-Madget still gazed ahead, with unseeing eyes and quivering lips.
-
-"You eat your supper," Moses said, not unkindly, "or brother'll land you
-one when he gets you home. Ain't you thankful for all that Miss Laury
-Ann and Elizabeth and Peggy Farraday has done for you? See me eat."
-
-"See me," Mabel contributed, encouragingly, but Madget's miserable
-silence was unbroken.
-
-"Let's not pay any attention to her," Peggy whispered. "She's got stage
-fright. I don't believe she's ever been in a crowd before."
-
-"And such a crowd," Elizabeth groaned. "Where did they all come from?"
-
-"Oh, from all around. These suppers are awfully popular, because you are
-allowed to eat all you can for thirty-five cents. All these women that
-have to do their own cooking all the time are so glad to have a meal
-that somebody else gets ready. Lots of poor old hermits that live alone
-like to come and stuff themselves in a civilized manner once in a
-while."
-
-"Civilized!" Elizabeth cried, looking down at the three-pronged fork
-with which she had been vainly trying to spear her beans. "Sheets for
-tablecloths, and paper napkins, and these implements of torture."
-
-"Civilization, as my history teacher loves to remark, is all a matter of
-comparison. Don't eat with your knife, Moses, dear. Nice little boys
-don't eat with their knives."
-
-Moses looked around inquiringly.
-
-"I ain't got no spoon," he said.
-
-"Why don't you try a fork?"
-
-"I ain't never et with a fork," he said. "Forks is for women."
-
-"He's about right," Peggy said. "Look down the table,
-Elizabeth--Elspeth, I mean."
-
-A long line of men and boys, with only an occasional woman sandwiched in
-between, faced them. They were all eating steadily and industriously
-with their knives. At intervals they would stretch a far-reaching hand
-for more supplies, or nudge a neighbour, and indicate with a grunt a
-plate of food that was out of their reach. Peggy began to choke with
-suppressed merriment.
-
-"Look, look, there comes old Samuel Swift," she said. "Would you think
-they would let him in? Oh, isn't he an outrageous old creature? Who is
-he, anyway, Elspeth? Do you know? Where did he come from?"
-
-"He's a sort of--of relation of mine," Elizabeth said, bravely.
-
-"Cousin Samuel," Peggy cried. "Do you think we ought to invite him to
-come and sit beside us? Oh, dear, I wish you'd pinch me. I'm afraid I'll
-have hysterics if I don't stop seeing the funny side of everything."
-
-"I'm having--having trouble on my own account," giggled Elizabeth.
-
-"Where's Madget?" Peggy gasped.
-
-Madget's empty seat confronted them accusingly.
-
-"She got bashful, and went under the table," Mabel said. "She has those
-bashful spells. I give her a piece of bread and butter."
-
-Madget, secure from embarrassment in this seclusion, ate everything that
-her thoughtful brother and sister provided her with, impartially. Her
-pink chambray suffered from contact with the dusty floor and the butter
-and chocolate icing.
-
-"What's the odds, so long as she's happy?" Peggy cried. "That's better
-than having her cry into her plate. See Moses. Isn't he wonderful? I
-don't suppose he ever really got enough to eat before in his life."
-
-"I suppose he is wonderful," Elizabeth said, "but I wish he'd keep his
-bloomers up, or else not get up from the table when he passes food down
-to Madget. You'd think he'd feel them slipping, wouldn't you?"
-
-"It would be all right if he had something on under them," Peggy said.
-
-"I didn't think of that, did you?"
-
-"I've busted in my back," Mabel informed them, cheerfully, "I guess I've
-et so much."
-
-"I wish we'd sewed her in, instead of pinning her in," Elizabeth said,
-"but never mind. I'll take my school pin. She's lost one of the blue
-enamel baby pins."
-
-"I've got a pin down my back," Mabel said, wriggling. "Shall I git it
-for you?"
-
-"No, no, not here, dear."
-
-"I'd just as soon."
-
-"Well, we wouldn't just as soon have you. After the ice-cream comes,
-we'll go."
-
-But when this condition had been fulfilled, Madget presented an
-unexpected obstacle to their departure. She had her ice-cream in her
-hiding place, and spilled a great deal of it down the front of her
-dress. By some unique manipulation of her spoon she had managed to smear
-her hair with it also. It was not because of these casualties that she
-refused to make a second public appearance, however. She merely
-preferred not to see the light of day again, having successfully sought
-sanctuary from an intimidating multitude. Finally, Elizabeth picked her
-up, and bore her kicking and screaming from the hall, Woodrow Wilson,
-under the protection of his flag, looking down at her with some
-criticism implied in his glance, and the unfriendly crowd of Madget's
-imagination seemed to be boring a hole in her back with its composite
-gaze.
-
-"It was a relief to get Moses out without his trousers falling off,"
-Peggy declared. "Mabel's apron was entirely undone, and her hair came
-down."
-
-"Think how well their shoes and stockings looked," Elizabeth said,
-philosophically. "I'm glad we gave them a treat, but I think I should
-have lived ten years longer if the bean supper hadn't occurred. Madget's
-got an awfully shrill voice."
-
-"I can hear her yet," Peggy laughed, "'I won't come out. I won't go
-home. I won't stay here. I won't be good.' Honestly, Elspeth, it was
-screamingly funny if we wanted to look at it that way."
-
-"But we didn't do it to be funny," Elizabeth wailed. "We did it to be
-kind. Did you ever stop to think, Peggy, how different things are in
-real life from the way they are in books? In a book it would have come
-out that the children's clothes were a great success, and the children
-had a lovely time, and the two young heroines were greatly admired for
-their philanthropy. Or if it had been a funny book, the children would
-have said funny things that you could have enjoyed. In real life, you
-just get tired and hot, and things seem flat and stupid."
-
-They were walking home as they talked, with the three children solemnly
-herded in front of them. The arch of maple trees that shaded the main
-street of the town swayed softly in the breeze. The birds were still
-busy calling to each other.
-
-"I don't know that life is so much different from books," Peggy said.
-"It sometimes seems to me much more beautiful. You can't see the colour
-of the trees in a book. Walking down Main Street doesn't mean a thing if
-you read about it, but when you are doing it, you can smell the flowers
-and hear the birds sing and see the trees waving in the breeze."
-
- "I hear the wind among the trees
- Playing celestial symphonies.
- I see their branches downward bent,
- Like keys of some great instrument,"
-
-Elizabeth quoted. "They do look a little like a great harp, don't they?"
-
-"I can't say that they do," Peggy returned, candidly, "but they sound
-like one. You know a lot of poetry, don't you, Elizabeth?"
-
-"I'd like to know a lot of poetry. My friend Jean Forsyth knows almost
-all the poetry that was ever written. She is really literary, you know.
-I think she'll be a great poetess when she grows up."
-
-"I'd like to meet her some time," Peggy said. "Oh, listen to Moses." She
-beckoned Elizabeth nearer the children, who were engaged in animated
-discussion of the afternoon's festivities.
-
-"I could go back there and eat a whole pot o' beans and a plate o' corn
-beef, and a freezer of ice-cream, and a six-quart measure of coffee."
-
-"Well, why don't you go back then?" the practical Mabel inquired, "it
-was paid for you to eat all you wanted to."
-
-"I did eat all I wanted to. I was only saying how much more I could eat
-_if_ I wanted to."
-
-"I _did_ eat a freezer of ice-cream, didn't I, Mabel?" Madget insisted.
-
-"You didn't have no freezer of ice-cream to eat."
-
-"I did so. A big bear crawled under the table, and gave it to me."
-
-Mabel lifted a sisterly hand to chastise her for the sin of
-prevarication, but Elizabeth arrested the blow.
-
-"Madget knows she didn't see a big bear. She is only having her little
-joke."
-
-"A dancing bear, with a great big little monkey on its back," Madget
-offered in corroboration.
-
-"I don't like jokes," Mabel said. "I ain't agoing to have her make 'em.
-I'd rather talk about what I had to eat, and I can't if Moses and the
-baby won't give me any chance to."
-
-"I'll tell you what you do," Peggy said, "you run home and tell your
-marmer and your parper all about it. The one that gets there first can
-talk the most, you know. Now we'll go and tell Grandmummy," she added,
-as the children took to their heels.
-
-"I wonder what she'll say," Elizabeth mused. "She always says something
-that you don't quite expect, but that somehow settles things."
-
-What she did say, after listening to the complete recital of the affair
-with an almost suspiciously long face, was merely:
-
-"There's a great satisfaction in undertaking a thing and going straight
-through to the end, no matter how it comes out. What's worth doing is
-worth doing well, and I was real proud of the way you two girls stuck it
-out."
-
-"Well, that's something," Peggy said to Elizabeth, "but deep down in the
-bottom of her soul, she's laughing at us, just the same."
-
-"She's laughing at us--some," Elizabeth acknowledged.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- THE LOCKED CLOSET
-
-
- SISTER DEAR:
-
- Your epistles of late show a great improvement. I don't refer to
- the spelling and rhetoric. You are not one of these fancy
- spellers, I am thankful to state, and you subject the English
- language to only an average amount of ill treatment. What I am
- referring to is your morale. Your morale has certainly looked
- up. Your letters from the farm leave nothing to be desired,
- though they create an atmosphere of yearning for the farm, and
- all the livestock inclusively. This is a flattering statement.
- Being weakened by long suffering, I don't mind admitting right
- out in writing that I'd rather see my sister than even Old Dog
- Tray.
-
- It's good of you to return this compliment. You did in your last
- letter, you know, but I'm afraid, if you once got me down there,
- you would repent of your bargain. Even sisters have their
- limits, and, to tell you the secret that is preying on my damask
- cheek (See Bartlett's Familiar Quotations)--like the worm in the
- well-known bud--no girl but you cares a tinker's damn what
- becomes of me. No girl but you answers my letters. To be sure,
- you are the only girl I write to, but I don't think that ought
- to make a real difference, do you? You'd write your Buddy--if he
- was your Buddy--no matter what stood in the way, wouldn't you?
- If he wasn't your Buddy, you wouldn't. _Voilà l'obstacle._
- That's Sarah Bernhardt for "Aye, there's the rub," if anybody
- should ask you.
-
- All of which is complete nonsense. The general idea is that I am
- not getting well very fast, and I don't care very much if I am
- not. France was France, and I made it--Dieu merci! If I never
- make anything else, I hope I shan't do much hollering, but I,
- too, was young once, little sister. So whenever you feel it's a
- hardship to milk six cows before sunrise--as I suppose of course
- you are doing--give a thought to your bed-ridden
-
- BUDDY.
-
- * * * * *
-
- BUDDY, my own darling, dear, dear BUDDY:
-
- I love you best, best, best, which doesn't include the other
- generation, on account of its being so unflattering to our
- mutual mother and father, but is almost completely true, all the
- same. I hate to love anybody so much, because there is a hurt in
- loving all that. My hurt is in your not getting better, and not
- feeling more encouraged about it. Mother writes that your
- discouragement is worse than your sickness. Oh, dear, Buddy,
- don't be discouraged. Please, please, please don't. You _did_ go
- over to France and fight. You did get a D. S. C. that all your
- family are so proud of, their hats will hardly fit any more. You
- are perfectly lovely yourself, and better looking than any one,
- and have perfectly fascinating manners. Isn't that something?
- Any girl would be crazy about you, and if there is any girl you
- want to be crazy about you, I'll bet you could get her without
- half trying. I know that if you only wanted to be a girl's
- friend, you would be a perfectly beautiful, tranquil friend to
- her, and she would like it better to have you be that than to
- have a lover of any kind. Also I believe that if ever you wanted
- to get engaged just by letter, you could do that, too.
-
- Peggy Farraday's sister Ruth is expected down here any time. I
- believe that she is the girl you used to correspond with before
- you went to France. Perhaps you have forgotten all about her by
- this time. Peggy and I took the Steppe children to a bean
- supper. I will describe this at length anon. It made them quite
- sick. As I remarked before, I like you better than ice-cream or
- pink silk underclothing.
-
- Your Sister,
- ELSPETH.
-
-Elspeth waited anxiously for the answer to this letter, for she had
-tried to be very tactful and helpful, and to handle strategically the
-secret that she had surprised, but Buddy's answer was a blow. He wrote:
-
- DEAR SIS:
-
- I'm duly appreciative of the soft stuff. I sure do appreciate
- your letters, and I know you like the way I look. (We might be
- mistaken for twins, save for the slight accident of a few years'
- handicap.) But I'd be willing to can that Everywoman stuff, if
- it's all the same to you. Don't go getting ideas in your head
- about the girls I'm clubby with. My first letter was all a joke,
- and I gave you the credit for understanding a joke. That's all.
- Keep on the subject of the old farm, and this year's crop of
- brass tacks, and you will suit me fine.
-
- I am no better, but a lot worse. Don't, however, mention me to
- any one but Grandpa and G-ma. If any one wants to know how I am,
- say that I am aces up, and anxious to get discharged and go to
- Russia. Yes, if I can get my old job back, I might get a chance
- at Russia, and that's what I want. To get as far out of this
- country as I can get. If this letter sounds grouchy--it's
- because I am grouchy, and not that I don't like my relations. I
- do, and here's a kiss to prove it.
-
- BUD.
-
-"I don't see why a tactful letter like mine made him sore," Elizabeth
-thought, forlornly, and inelegantly. But a communication from her
-mother, a day or two later, made her understand her brothers state of
-mind and body a little more clearly.
-
- ELIZABETH DEAR:
-
- Be careful how and what you write to Junior--John, I mean. He is
- in a highly excitable condition, and little things worry him out
- of all proportion. Recently his great fear seems to be that you
- will gossip about his condition to friends of his that you may
- meet on the Cape. As far as I can find out, he has no friends
- there except his immediate family, but he says that you don't
- understand how a fellow hates to have his physical condition
- discussed, and he seems to be in terror lest you tell someone
- whom he doesn't care to have informed just what a state he is
- in. I am writing you this for two reasons: First, I don't want
- you to mind if John writes you irritably, and second, I promised
- him that I would ask you not to talk about him to any one at
- all.
-
- Your father and I are as comfortable as we can be with this
- anxiety upon our minds, but New York is very uncomfortable just
- at present, and keeping cool is an occupation in itself. I miss
- my little girl. I didn't realize, Elizabeth, dear, how many
- things you do for me, how many steps you save me, and how many
- thoughtful little things you contribute to my comfort.
-
- I know it is hard for you to be away from us, but I am so
- thankful for your brave and helpful spirit and the real
- character building that I feel you are accomplishing. Every
- letter I get I am prouder of, and so is your father. You could
- make it so much harder for us if you were not trying to get
- through the summer right.
-
- Do be careful when you go into the water, and don't ever stay in
- too long. Take plenty of wraps to the beach to put on when you
- come out. Don't let Grandmother feed you too many pies and
- cakes, but obey and trust her in every other way. She is a very
- wise woman. Mother knows in just what ways this summer is hard
- for you, and she loves you dearly--dearly.
-
- MOTHER.
-
-"I thought I had got all over the habit of crying at Mothers letters,
-but it seems that I haven't," Elizabeth said. "I know what Buddy's
-afraid of now. I shall just have to use my own judgment and try to make
-it the best old judgment I ever used in my life." She wrote again:
-
- DEAR BUDDY:
-
- I am very snubbed, but I guess I shall survive. I will can the
- Everywoman stuff, but after all, I know more about it than you
- do, even at my very immature age, because some day I am going to
- grow up to be a woman, and in spite of your very great and
- boasted superiority--_you_ aren't.
-
- I won't talk about you to any one except to G-pa and G-ma, and
- not them if you don't want me to. But I shall say that I love
- you, and why. You're a dear darling, that's why, and if I was
- cross a little bit at your letter, I got right over it, on
- account of your being such a dear, _and_ such a darling.
-
- I am glad you can sit up some. I ate a whole pint of ice-cream
- and a quarter of a chocolate cake to-day, and thought of our
- childhood days when you did the same thing. Peggy Farraday's
- sister came yesterday, and I think she is a peacherine. She
- inquired for you and I said you were getting better, and thanked
- her. Buddy, I won't say nothing to nobody that will make you out
- an invalid or not an invalid. When asked, I shall open my mouth
- wide, and say nothing, nothing, nothing.
-
- I do, I do, I do love you.
-
- ELSPETH.
-
-
-The answer to this was brief:
-
- DEAR SIS:
-
- Consider yourself patted on the back, and congratulated for
- being the nicest girl. Enclosed find two dollars which will buy
- six or eight pints of vanilla girl-exterminator, and don't,
- after taking the dose, leave a letter telling how you met your
- fate.
-
- Yours,
- The mean old Grouch, BUD.
-
- P. S. Tell Peggy Farraday's sister anything you please.
-
-It was not long after this exchange of letters that Elizabeth asked her
-grandmother for the key of the locked closet.
-
-"I thought you had forgot all about it," her grandmother said.
-
-"No, but I was rash enough to promise Peggy that she could be with me
-when I opened it, and we've been doing so many things out of doors
-together that we haven't had any other time."
-
-"Well, here it is. You can play with anything you find, as long as you
-want to, but hang the clothes up again, come night."
-
-"I will, Grandmother. I'm so excited, and I've got to go upstairs and
-twirl my thumbs until Peggy comes. Send her right up, won't you?"
-
-Waiting upstairs in her little blue room, Elizabeth began reading over
-her brother's letters, and pondering on his sudden change of mood.
-
-"When he heard that Ruth Farraday was coming down here he was afraid I
-would say something to her. Before he knew that, he was willing to be
-just as mushy as I was. I suppose being in love is a pretty terrible
-feeling."
-
-"Oh, Elizabeth-Elspeth," sang Peggy from the bottom of the stairs, "can
-I bring my sister Ruth up with me?"
-
-"Cert-certainly." Elizabeth flew to straighten the pillows on the cradle
-settee, and to pick up some stray threads from the braided rug in front
-of it. "I shall be very glad to see her."
-
-Ruth Farraday, in a rose-and-white striped satin sports skirt, with a
-fleecy, rose-coloured sweater and hat to match, made a very pretty
-picture against the background of Elizabeth's little room. "Like a rose
-against the blue of the sky," Elizabeth thought. "Her name ought to be
-Rose, anyway. How becoming she would be to Buddy's dark eyes and
-colouring."
-
-"This is the room, Ruth," Peggy said, "you can look at it for two
-minutes, and then you've got to stop looking at it, because we are
-gathered together to-day for quite another purpose, to wit, to penetrate
-the mysteries of Blue Beard's closet."
-
-"It's a lovely room," Ruth said, smiling. "I wouldn't have intruded on
-this very special occasion, except that it began to rain as I was
-bidding Peggy good-bye at the gate, and Peggy thought you would rather
-shelter me than have me run away through the flood."
-
-"Yes, indeed," Elizabeth said, "and it will be fun to have you see
-what's in the closet if you don't mind."
-
-"I shall adore it."
-
-"I adore you," Elizabeth said to herself, "already."
-
-"We'd better hurry," Peggy cried. "Ruth is getting ready to rave about
-the cradle settee and the flag-bottomed chairs. If we get started
-telling her the history of all the things in the room, we shan't get a
-look at Blue Beard's wives. Ruthie, dear, this is the key to the
-enchanted closet. Doesn't it look spooky? This house is a hundred and
-twenty-five years old, and see, all the doors have latches instead of
-knobs. Which leads us to this one particular door." Peggy linked an arm
-through that of her sister on one side and her friend on the other, "And
-presto! Here we are. Now, Elizabeth-Elspeth."
-
-"One, two, three!" Elizabeth turned the big key in the ponderous lock,
-and the door swung wide.
-
-"Blue Beard's wives' trousseaux!" Peggy said. "One hundred and one
-thousand two hundred and forty-three silk dresses of the Georgian
-period. I don't know when the Georgian period was, but I guess this is
-it."
-
-Ruth stepped inside the closet.
-
-"These things run from about eighteen fifty to the early nineties;
-mostly Victorian, if you must be educated, Peggy," she said.
-
-"I suppose I must, but look, look, look, at all these beauties."
-
-On rows of little pegs driven into the low rafters of the irregular
-triangle that formed the closet were the carefully preserved relics of
-three generations of dainty feminine finery. Dresses of taffeta and
-dimity and poplin, in all the flower-like gradations of colour that our
-grandmothers remember their mothers and grandmothers looking most
-distinguished in. Not only gowns, but capes and dolmans and dressing
-sacques, and, packed away in a barricade of old-fashioned, flowered
-bandboxes, were the bonnets and hats, and even some of the gay little
-bags and muffs that complemented the costumes.
-
-"I never saw anything so wonderful in my life," Ruth Farraday said.
-
-"Oh, let's try them on. Let's get Grandmummy to tell us about them.
-Let's dress Ruth up and take a snapshot of her. Let's----" Peggy's
-breath failed her.
-
-[Illustration: "'Oh! let's try them on'"]
-
-"Here's Grandmother now," Elizabeth said.
-
-Grandmother, making her placid way through the outer chamber, smiled,
-and held out her hand to Ruth Farraday.
-
-"Peggy's sister," she said, "well, well, it's good to have Peggy bring
-her sister along--to play in the garret."
-
-"This--this is Miss Farraday, Grandmother," Elizabeth said. "She--she
-isn't----"
-
-"Elizabeth is trying to say that I am not a little girl, but I'm not
-really so very far from it. I'm not so grown up that I want to be sent
-out of the attic now I've just seen all these lovely things. You don't
-mind if I stay?"
-
-"I'd mind if you didn't stay. You are the kind o' sight that sore eyes
-is aching for all the world over." The old woman and the girl smiled at
-each other as if they had been friends all their lives.
-
-"First, tell me who this belonged to, Grandmummy," Peggy dragged at her
-sleeve imploringly, "and then tell me who every single dress here
-belonged to."
-
-"Well, they belonged to a number of people, all told. Some of my wedding
-things is there. That rose lavender silk in your hand, Peggy, was the
-dress I appeared out to meeting in the Sunday after I was married. The
-blue silk with the black velvet ribbon scallops around the basque was
-the dress my sister Alviry wore to my wedding. She had long, pink ribbon
-streamers on her hat, a chip hat trimmed with pink roses, and she was a
-picture, I can tell you. My appearing-out hat is here somewhere--like
-Alviry's, only trimmed with little lavender plumes. I had a black silk
-trimmed with jet. That's it, that Elizabeth has her hand on. That's too
-old for me yet, but everybody had to have a black silk dress that was
-heavy enough to stand alone in those days."
-
-"What's this little love of a pink muslin with all these tiny, tiny
-ruffles on it, Grandmother dear? See these bell-shaped white
-undersleeves, and this figured pink sash, Peggy. Wouldn't your sister
-look a dream in it?"
-
-"That was the dress I wore when I give your grandfather my promise. I
-liked it better than any dress I ever had."
-
-"I should think you would have," Peggy put in, fervently.
-
-"I should have liked it best if your grandfather had never been born in
-the world. Leastways, that's what I've always said. It was the first
-dress my mother ever let me have all the say about. Dresses had to be
-chose for their wearing qualities when I was a girl. If they wouldn't
-wash and turn, year out and year in, we warn't allowed to have 'em, but
-I had set my heart on a pink muslin with dolman undersleeves, and after
-I went and nursed Grandmother White through scarlet fever, and just
-barely lived after I caught it myself, Mother said I could have anything
-I wanted as a present to get well on. Land, I begun to improve from the
-day that dress was promised me."
-
-"I should think you would have," Peggy said, again.
-
-"It was pretty brave of you to go into a house where they had scarlet
-fever, and nurse your grandmother through it," Elizabeth said. "Weren't
-you deadly afraid?"
-
-"I don't remember much about that part. My father sent me, and so I
-went, but I shall never forget the day when I first put on the dress.
-Your grandfather he was calling on my brother Jonas when I come down the
-stairs drawing my train after me. Jonas he started to stare at me, and
-then he began to say poetry. An old poem he used to say whenever he
-wanted to tease me:
-
- "Here she goes, there she goes,
- All dressed up in her Sunday clothes,
- High-heeled boots and a cashmere shawl,
- Grecian bend and a waterfall.
-
-I was so put out, I run upstairs and didn't come down again till he
-coaxed me down with the promise of a drive to Bass River by moonlight."
-
-"But how about Grandfather? You said that was the very dress he proposed
-to you in."
-
-"So t'was."
-
-"Did he propose that evening?"
-
-"No, he didn't. I was so put out at Jonas that I wouldn't have a word to
-say to your grandpa for a whole week."
-
-"That was hard on Grandfather."
-
-"He went and got another girl and took her to the Harvest Dance. Eliza
-Perkins, and she wore a mahogany-coloured silk that made her look as
-sallow as a pumpkin. I was so sorry for him that I kinder made it up to
-him. I suppose girls will always be high and mighty with the boys they
-like best. I never took the trouble to plague any other of the young
-men, but your grandfather I used to make life a burden to."
-
-"Nowadays it's the young men that are high and mighty," Ruth Farraday
-said, "they go into the service, and their uniforms turn their heads,
-and then they--forget."
-
-"I guess the young men to-day ain't so different from the men in my
-time, if you come right down to it. I guess liking is liking--just the
-same as it always was. Love will go where it's sent."
-
-"Do you believe it comes once to every man, as the saying goes?"
-
-"I know it. There's a lot of talk about loving this one and that one,
-but when you get right down to it, the second time is a pretty poor
-imitation of the first. There is natures that's different, of course,
-but true natures find their own and cling to it."
-
-"Oh, I don't know that I like that for a philosophy," Ruth said, "it's
-all right--if it isn't one-sided, but if only one feels it----"
-
-"It ain't so often one-sided as you think--the real thing ain't. If it
-ain't real--why, that's another story."
-
-"But how is anybody going to tell if it is real?"
-
-"There ain't really any way of not telling."
-
-"Grandmummy," Peggy begged, "can we dress Ruth up in your pink muslin
-and take a snapshot of her?"
-
-"Certain, but you ought to curl her hair. I made a hundred and twenty
-curls when I wore that dress."
-
-"That's where Elizabeth inherits her curly locks. Please dress up in
-Grandmother's muslin, Ruth. Don't you want her to, Grandmummy?"
-
-"It would do my heart good to see her pretty face shining out over my
-pink muslin."
-
-"If you feel like that, then you shall," Ruth said.
-
-"I have a kind o' feeling that it will bring you luck," Grandmother
-said, when the soft hair had been loosened and curled about the face,
-and the pink muslin had been hooked and buttoned and tied till it
-undulated in delicate folds and curves all about the girl's slender
-body.
-
-On the lawn under the honeysuckle arbour, on the gate post, on the front
-steps of the old house, which followed the old-time habit of facing the
-south, though the street was due north, Peggy took picture after
-picture, and Ruth Farraday smiled up at the sun like an old-fashioned
-blush rose blooming in an old-time garden.
-
-"There comes Father," Grandmother said, "let's see how much he'll
-notice."
-
-Grandfather, approaching, took in the tableau under the honeysuckles.
-Elizabeth and Peggy watched breathlessly as he made straight for the
-little figure in Grandmothers pink muslin gown and stood staring down at
-it.
-
-"I don't know who you be," he said, slowly, "nor where you got the dress
-you're wearing, but I know what you make me feel like." He swept his hat
-to his breast with a courtly, old-time bow, and bent over Ruth's little
-hand and saluted it.
-
-Then he put out his other hand to his wife and drew her arm within his.
-
-"Mother," he said, softly.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- LETTERS AND THE POST OFFICE
-
-
- JEANIE DEAR:
-
- Your letter was lovely. I forget what you are like between times
- a little, and then I look at your picture or get a letter from
- you, and know. I can hardly believe you love me, after all you
- know about me, but I guess you do. I wish I could see you, but I
- am glad you are at the Point again this summer. I tried out
- Mother about my coming to visit you, without asking in so many
- words, but her idea is that she would like to have me stay put.
- My brother may get well enough to come down here at any time,
- and when he does I want to be chief nurse and bottle
- washer--medicine bottles.
-
- I've been doing quite a lot of things. I spend a great deal of
- time with Peggy Farraday. She is very nice. Nicer than I am, but
- not as nice as you, Jeanne of Arc. She is as nice as a Peggy
- Farraday can be. She has a sister Ruth, who is as sweet as
- peaches. She is about nineteen and a half, and blonde, with big
- blue eyes and long golden lashes, and one of those soft voices
- low in the throat, with a kind of thrill in it. You know--like
- contralto singing. You would love her. I am wild about her, and
- Buddy knows her. Don't mention that to any one. It's a secret.
- If you were here I think I could hint to you some things about
- it, but I can't on paper. Somebody might read a letter some time
- that you didn't expect. Buddy is very unhappy, and writes me one
- cross letter to every pleasant one. He is afraid I shall not be
- discreet, but discreet is my middle name, to use slang. Oh, I
- long to tell you what I mean. He won't write to her and she
- won't to him, and I am trying to make them. You can see how
- exciting it is.
-
- Well, I must give you a brief résumé of what I have been doing,
- before I close. Monday we went in swimming, and afterwards, in
- the Farraday car, to Wianno, which is a very attractive summer
- colony farther up the Cape. We stopped at Hyannis and had
- ice-cream with a frozen pudding sauce. Tuesday, after swimming,
- Grandfather took us to Chatham in the noble Ford--me and
- Peggy--and we stopped at an attractive little tea room, where we
- had chocolate ice-cream. Wednesday we went swimming and then we
- walked to the adjoining town where we got some wonderful
- ice-cream sodas, three apiece. Peggy and I have each got over
- thirty Negroes. I told you how we were counting them in order to
- find out our fate. I am glad you have begun, too. I love you
- dearly.
-
- Your own ELIZABETH-ELSPETH.
-
- (Peggy calls me that. She sends her love even though she doesn't
- know you.)
-
-Elizabeth was in a letter-writing mood, and sealing Jean's letter with
-her favourite sky-blue sealing wax, stamped with her monogram signet
-ring, she opened her letter-case again. She began:
-
- DEAR DADDY:
-
- We don't write very many letters to each other this summer. At
- least, I don't write many separate ones to you, but all the
- letters that go to Mother are meant for you, too. My special
- particular efforts go to Buddy. Poor Buddy! I hope you will soon
- be able to bring him to his own grandmother's hunting ground. He
- keeps writing me about going to Russia. I guess I should want to
- go to Russia if my health was as discouraging as Buddy's. I
- worry about him, and, Daddy, dear, I worry about you. I have
- made the great discovery that a Daddy is a Daddy, and that it
- has to work pretty hard buying wardrobe trunks and Japanese
- kimonas and almond nut bars for its female offspring.
-
- When I think of you sweltering in that hot city whether you want
- to or not, I get quite upset. You have to work every day, don't
- you, whether you feel like it or not? I never thought of that
- before till last evening, and it made me a little bit ill, it
- struck me with such force. I have just never happened to think
- of it in that light. I can tell you, Daddy, it made me love you
- harder than ever, and that's pretty hard. Well, all I can say is
- that I respect you more than anybody, and I hope you are never
- sorry you got married and got this family on your hands.
-
- Now for a few words to cheer you up. Monday we went in swimming,
- Peggy and I, and afterwards in the Farraday car to Wianno. I
- guess you know all about Wianno. We stopped at Hyannis and had
- some ice-cream with frozen pudding sauce. Tuesday we swam and
- Grandfather took us to Chatham in the Grand Old Ford, and we had
- chocolate ice-cream there. Wednesday we went in swimming and
- then walked to Harwich and got three ice-cream sodas. Also we
- counted quite a lot of Negroes. I wrote Mother that we had to
- get ninety-nine Negroes etc. for a stunt we are doing.
- Portuguese count, if they are dark enough.
-
- I love you more than my old scratchy pen can tell. There goes
- the station barge, with the morning mail. So here goes I after
- it.
-
- YOUR BABY.
-
-You write an awful lot of letters, Elizabeth," said Peggy, as the two
-met at the post-office steps. "You get a lot, too. I'm not much good at
-correspondence. Did you ever write to a boy, Elizabeth?"
-
-"No, not really. Only thank-you letters and answering invitations and
-things like that."
-
-"Well, don't you ever tell, Elizabeth, because I might get teased, but
-I'm writing to a boy right now. That is, I am going to be when I've
-answered his letter. It isn't a silly boy, though, it's a sensible
-boy--a boy that knows a lot of things I want to learn about. Chester
-Reynolds, you know, that I've told you about winning the tennis cups. I
-got a letter from him last night. It isn't supposed to be very nice to
-show letters, but if you'd like to see this one, I'll bring it around
-to-morrow, and then I'll bring my answer to it, and let you see what you
-think of that."
-
-"All right," Elizabeth agreed.
-
-"Isn't it a funny thing, he is the only boy that I ever thought I'd like
-to correspond with, and now he has just sat himself down and written to
-me."
-
-"I think that's very nice." Elizabeth said. "There's a boy in New York
-that I felt that same way about. He sort of offered to send me a copy of
-'Prometheus Bound,' but I knew if he did that I should have to write and
-thank him, and I didn't know whether Mother would approve of my writing
-him like that when I was away from home, so I didn't say anything more
-about it."
-
-"What is 'Prometheus Bound,' anyway?" Peggy inquired.
-
-"Well, I think it is a kind of a blank verse poem or book, something
-like Whittier's 'Snow Bound,' but I'm not sure. That was one reason that
-I wanted him to send it--so I could find out. He was quite a literary
-boy, one of Jeanie's friends. He's very good looking, though."
-
-"I don't like literary boys as a rule, though, do you?" Peggy asked.
-"They usually wear rubbers and horn rims, and have to mind their
-mothers."
-
-"Not any friend of Jeanie's. Her friends are always all-around boys.
-They must have brains, too."
-
-"Oh!" Peggy said, impressed.
-
-The crowd on the post-office steps was beginning to thicken. The big
-bags, bulging with mail, had been passed behind the glass façade of the
-mail-box section, and behind the closed wicket that indicated the
-distribution was taking place the silent postmaster and his assistant
-worked with grim, accustomed rapidity.
-
-"Let's go and watch them put the things into the boxes," Elizabeth said.
-"It's the most exciting thing to see the letters go in. Ours is 178.
-See, here it is," she cried, as Peggy followed her into the stuffy
-office. "There's a card from Buddy already, and one for Grandfather from
-the Bass River Savings Bank, and one fat one that I can't see the face
-of that I hope is from Jean. She doesn't always wait to get answers, you
-know. She writes when the spirit moves and so do I. I've just been
-writing her."
-
-"When you go back to New York, let's write to each--I mean one
-another--like that, only I'm afraid you'll get the worst of the bargain.
-When the spirit moves me to write a letter, it mostly only moves me to
-say, 'Dear Elspeth,' or whoever it is, 'Hello! Yours frantically fondly,
-Peggy.' It's funny, when I like to talk so much, that I don't like to
-write more."
-
-"There's my thirty-first," Elizabeth whispered, as a solemn black
-chauffeur made his appearance in the post office.
-
-"My thirty-third," Peggy said, "and outside is a white horse. What a
-pity we have got to get the white horses in sequence. They are so hard
-to find, especially when you are looking for them. But when we do get
-them all, I am going to keep my hands behind me all the time, until I
-find somebody I am willing to shake hands with!"
-
-"It would be awful, after all this trouble, if we didn't shake hands
-with the right one, wouldn't it, Peggy? There goes a postcard right into
-my box. It's for Judidy. She has a young man. Did you know it? He's
-almost as fat as she is, and not nearly so good looking."
-
-"I hope she gets somebody very nice, and marries them, and has a whole
-backyard full of fat pink babies, though I don't know what Grandmummy
-would do."
-
-"Grandfather says she'd get the work done quicker if she didn't have
-Judidy to look out for, and I think perhaps she would. Isn't it funny,
-when I first came, Judidy just seemed to me like a kind of queer person
-that I felt not quite right about eating at the table with, and now
-she's my friend."
-
-The gate in the wicket flew up, and in an instant it was surrounded.
-
-"See all the mail-hungry fiends," Peggy said. "Oh, goody, Mother's got a
-letter from my cousin in Rome--and Ruth has a letter from that Chambers
-fellow."
-
-"What Chambers fellow?" Elizabeth asked, quickly.
-
-"Piggy Chambers I call him. He's got loads of money and he is very good
-looking, and he just pesters Ruthie to death."
-
-"What does she do?"
-
-"She lets him. She likes it, rather."
-
-"Oh, dear!" Elizabeth said.
-
-"You don't have to worry. She's my sister. Piggy Chambers isn't so bad.
-He's just kind of a bore, you know, and awfully fond of writing letters
-to Piggy Chambers, Esquire. Lots of grown-up fellows are like that."
-
-"She's your sister, but I love her, too."
-
-"Shouldn't think much of you if you didn't."
-
-They were on their way home by this time, and the post-office crowd had
-begun to melt away, streaming up and down the street, and into all the
-cross roads.
-
-"I wish my grandmother would let me come after the mail at night,"
-Elizabeth said. "I have to wait till Judidy or Zeke are ready to come,
-or Grandfather will take me. As if I wasn't old enough to go out after
-six o'clock alone."
-
-"It isn't your being old enough, it's the general reputation of the post
-office being a place where the crowd goes in the evening to--start
-something. You know yourself that lots of things that go on there don't
-look very well. It's such a mixed crowd, too."
-
-"As long as you behave yourself, I don't see what difference it makes."
-
-"I've thought a lot about going to the post office at night," Peggy
-said, "and I've argued a lot about it with Ruthie and Mother, and the
-conclusion that I've come to is that it's just as well to keep away. All
-the girls that aren't nice hang around there. Some of the girls that are
-nice stay away. When I grow up, my niceness is going to be so much a
-matter of course that I won't have to look out for it so hard. Just now
-I am going to obey Grandmummy's rule to 'avoid the appearance of evil'."
-
-"I guess you are just about right, Peggy," Elizabeth said after
-reflection. "Sometimes you talk a lot like Jeanie. Would you like to
-hear some of her letter?"
-
-"I should say I would, but don't read it to me unless you really want
-to."
-
-"I do," Elizabeth said, "and the reason I do is that I think you are
-like Jean in some ways. You are both of you way beyond me in the way you
-look at things."
-
-"The way I look at things is better than the way I act sometimes."
-
-"I'm inclined to be just the other way around. The way I look at things
-is worse than the way I act most generally."
-
-"I'm disobedient," Peggy said, "and sloppy weather, and always late to
-places. I do as I'm told about things like going to the post office at
-night, but not about trying to run the car or getting home on time."
-
-"I'm just the other way," Elizabeth reflected. "I wouldn't monkey with
-anything I was told not to touch, but I'd make a big fuss, if only in my
-own mind, about obeying a grown-up rule that I didn't understand."
-
-"Either way gets you into trouble at times," Peggy said, sagely. "Don't
-look round, but there are two boys trailing behind us."
-
-"What kind of boys?"
-
-"Two of the boys that were down at the Aviation Camp all last summer."
-
-"Are they all right?"
-
-"Yes, but I don't know them."
-
-"They are speaking to us. Don't look round."
-
-"_Oh, girls!_"
-
-"I suppose they'll get tired and go away."
-
-"Don't look round."
-
-"_Oh, girls!_"
-
-"Now, look here," Peggy suddenly wheeled on the two followers. "We
-haven't met you. We're not going to have you trailing around after us."
-
-The older of the two boys whipped off his hat.
-
-"I--I beg your pardon," he said, colouring. "We were only joking.
-We--we----"
-
-"It puts us in an embarrassing position," Elizabeth contributed.
-
-"Well, some of the girls, they--we----" the other boy also found
-explanation more difficult than he had anticipated.
-
-"There's a difference in girls," Peggy said, severely.
-
-"We were only going to ask you the way to the beach." The first boy's
-hair was a blazing, splendid red. Elizabeth liked red-headed boys.
-
-"I've seen you there almost every day this summer," Peggy challenged.
-
-"So've I seen you." The second boy had a wide, ingratiating grin. "We
-want to get acquainted, that's all," he admitted, "so we were pursuing
-what seems to be the usual way down here."
-
-"That isn't the way to get acquainted with us," Elizabeth said.
-
-"What is the way, then?"
-
-"Don't ask _us_." Peggy gathered Elizabeth's arm under hers, and hurried
-her along.
-
-"They are sort of nice," she admitted, when they had put several yards
-between them and the objects of their encounter. "If they are really
-nice, I suppose they will get introduced the way they ought to. If they
-aren't, well, we won't see them."
-
-"It's a sort of strain waiting to find out such things," Elizabeth said.
-
-"Read me Jean's letter, and that will take our minds off them," Peggy
-demanded, practically. "One reason that I don't like to have much to do
-with boys is that when you get thinking about them it's hard to get your
-mind on other things. If they are silly, they aren't any fun."
-
-"On the other hand," Elizabeth argued, "if they aren't just a little
-bit--silly or--something--they aren't so much fun."
-
-"Well, they have to be interested in you some," Peggy admitted.
-
-"Now I'll read you Jean's letter. We'll sit down under this tree by the
-gate. See how pretty her handwriting is. Doesn't she make fascinating
-E's and R's?"
-
-"I think there is a lot of character in handwriting," Peggy said,
-bending her head over the letter. "See this one from Piggy Chambers. He
-writes like a pig and he is one."
-
-"See this card from my brother Buddy. He writes like a perfect
-gentleman, and he is one, though I say it as shouldn't."
-
-"Oh, I've seen your brother's handwriting before, but not for a long
-time. Why don't you write him to write Ruthie? I'd a whole lot rather
-she was hearing from him regularly than from Piggy."
-
-"Has she a friendship with Mr.--Mr. Piggy?"
-
-"No, she hasn't. He just wants her to marry him, and that's all there is
-about it. If your brother is her friend, it would be the part of a good
-friend to stick around just now, if only by correspondence."
-
-"There are things about my brother that you don't understand, Peggy,"
-Elizabeth said, solemnly.
-
-"Thirty-four," Peggy said, her gaze diverted to the street, "count that
-one, Elizabeth. It may be that same chauffeur, but never mind. We don't
-know positively that it is."
-
-"Well, now for Jean," Elizabeth said, after these formalities were
-finished.
-
- ELSPETH-ELIZABETH DEAR:
-
- I've had your long letter, the one that told about the Steppe
- children (and how I laughed!), for a week, and your two
- postcards. I wrote you one serious letter in answer to a serious
- one from you, and now I'll just tell you about the way things
- are going here. It's just the same thing--sailing, teas, dances,
- bathing, and then begin all over and do it again. I like it
- all--especially the sailing--"a wet sheet and a flowing sea,"
- you know, is one of my ideals. Another ideal is getting
- realized, too. I'm learning to drive the car. I bogged it
- yesterday, and a farmer with whiskers to his knees, and a long
- rope, like the funny papers, came and pulled us out. The
- chauffeur was with me. He ought to have prevented it, but he
- said I was too quick for him. Anyhow, won't it be wonderful when
- I learn? Then you and I can "ride together, forever ride," as
- Browning says.
-
- I went into New York on Thursday, and what do you think, I went
- to see your brother Buddy. I called up your mother from the
- station and she suggested it, so I did, as we had the car and
- were going out of New York from his end of the town, anyway. I
- felt two ways about doing so. One way was, that it was hard on
- you for me to see him first, and the other way was that if you
- couldn't see him, I could represent you. He is quite a
- sick-looking Buddy, but very, very sweet and dear. I hope you
- can get him down to the Cape and take care of him. They won't
- discharge him, will they, until they get good and ready to? He
- looks a lot like you and a lot like some of those Rembrandt
- portraits of himself. I suppose it's his beard that makes him
- look so sort of shady and shadowy. He said he didn't think he
- would ever be any better, but that if he did, he hoped he could
- go to Russia. He seemed to want me to think that this and
- everything else he said was a joke. I must interrupt myself now,
- and say au revoir, because the car is waiting, and Mother is
- being very polite in it. I can see her back getting politer
- every minute.
-
- 'bye--
- JEAN.
-
- P. S. I love you.
-
-"I didn't know that your brother was as sick as all that," Peggy said.
-"Why haven't you told me so?"
-
-"He doesn't want anybody told. He doesn't want to appear like a
-confirmed invalid."
-
-"I'd like to tell Ruthie."
-
-"I--I'll tell you what you do. You take Jeanie's letter and read it to
-her. That won't be either of us telling her."
-
-"All right, I will."
-
-"I don't know what excuse you can give for having a strange girl's
-letter with you."
-
-"I won't need any excuse. I'll just say to Ruth that I've got a letter
-from a friend of yours about John Swift. She'll just grab the
-letter--that's all. I'll say you were willing."
-
-"You come around and tell me what she says afterwards."
-
-"All right." Peggy was making a prolonged departure, kicking at the turf
-as she stood at the gate. "I'll come around this afternoon, anyway, and
-we'll go and get some tutti-frutti ice-cream."
-
-"All right, and if you hear anything more about who those boys were, you
-can tell me then."
-
-"All right, and I'll bring around that letter I was telling you about,
-from Chester Reynolds."
-
-"All right. I guess my dinner's ready. I heard the bell when we first
-got in sight of the house."
-
-At this point Grandfather appeared at the door and seeing Elizabeth
-still looking in the direction of her departing friend, he approached
-firmly and grasped her by the ear, and led her, protesting, into the
-house.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- HUCKLEBERRIES AND NEW FRIENDS
-
-
-Grandfather came out of the north door and shaded his eyes with his
-hand. He gazed searchingly at Elizabeth's favourite tree by the gate
-under which she and Peggy were sitting with their embroidery.
-
-"Well, well, I'm disappointed," he murmured to himself. "I thought if I
-see anything of those two girls I'd ask them to go huckleberrying, but I
-s'pose they've gone off down to the shore, or somewhere."
-
-"Oh, do ask us to go huckleberrying," Elizabeth cried.
-
-"I thought they'd be right out here, sitting under that tree, like
-enough, doing some chore o' fancy work. It does beat all where they find
-to hide themselves."
-
-"Oh, what fun!" Peggy cried. "He took me huckleberrying last year, and I
-got four quarts in about two hours."
-
-"Well, well, I am disappointed. I might's well make up my mind to go
-alone."
-
-"He will, too, if we don't hurry," Elizabeth said, stuffing her crochet
-work into the pocket of her blue linen dress. "Run and get into the
-Ford."
-
-Grandfather, equipped with as many shining pails as a tinware peddler,
-approached the car and stared at it gravely, though Peggy and Elizabeth
-were already in possession of the back seat.
-
-"Too bad I couldn't find those girls," he said. "Mother's put a great
-heap of sweaters and aprons under the seat, so's if I should be lucky
-enough to pick them up on the way. Well, Lizzie"--this to the
-machine--"how cranky are you to-day? Crank by name and crank by nature,"
-he made half a dozen ineffectual attempts at starting, and then
-succeeded suddenly, jumped into the car, and they were off with a snort
-and a flourish.
-
-"You darling Granddaddy," Elizabeth said in his ear, "we're crazy to go
-huckleberrying, and Peggy says you know all the spots where they grow
-thickest."
-
-"Well, well, how did you get here? I dusted my car out carefully just
-before I started. It don't seem as if I could overlook a couple o' girls
-o' that size."
-
-"You didn't have your glasses on, Granddaddy."
-
-They took the road to the north, winding white into the hazy distance.
-
-"The road is like a white ribbon," Elizabeth said, "and those little
-scrubby pines, sitting low all along the way, are like--well, I don't
-know what they are like, but I like _them_. I don't complain if the
-trees on the Cape are not majestic, as they are in other summer resorts.
-You see a lot more sky when the trees are low."
-
-"You stand up for Cape Cod," her grandfather said. "It's a pretty good
-place. You know the story of the old farmer who was driving back from
-his wife's funeral. 'I lived with that woman forty year,' he said, 'and
-toward the last, I really got to like her.'"
-
-"Is that the way you feel about Cape Cod?" Peggy asked, mischievously.
-"I thought it was the way you felt about Lizzie."
-
-"Lizzie's got her good qualities, like most o' the rest of us. She ain't
-got much natural pride about the way she looks, and she hates to admit
-that a man is stronger than she is, but when he once gets the best of
-the argument she goes along peaceable. There's a lot o' human nature to
-Lizzie."
-
-"I'm so excited about these huckleberries I can't wait to get there.
-Don't you love to see those clumps and clusters of dusky blue berries
-just waiting to be jingled into the pail? The woods smell so sweet, too,
-with the wild honeysuckle and wild roses."
-
-"And wild bog cranberry and wild turnip and wild beech plums,"
-Grandfather added. "Well, here we are."
-
-They had switched from the macadam to a road deep with sand through
-which the light car had been ploughing for the last several minutes.
-There was a cleared space before them and a path leading into the woods
-beyond.
-
-"Foller your nose," Grandfather said, "and you'll find berries enough to
-make huckleberry dumplings for a regiment."
-
-Elizabeth and Peggy slipped into the big gingham aprons that Grandmother
-had provided, and each slung a pail over an arm.
-
-"I'll bet I can get more than you do," Peggy said.
-
-"If you do, it's because your fingers are longer." Elizabeth looked
-ruefully at her small, chubby hands.
-
-"Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp," Peggy said. "I can
-quote poetry as well as your friend, Jean, but don't ask me what that's
-out of, because I don't know. My fingers are longer. I don't know
-whether that makes any difference or not, but I'll give you a handicap."
-
-"I scorn your handicaps. One, two, three, go. May the best girl win."
-Elizabeth shot down the path, and the sound of the fruit beginning to
-spatter into her pail was heard almost immediately.
-
-"I never saw so many blue or huckleberries in my life. I've got the
-loveliest, thickest patch--come over here, Elizabeth," Peggy shouted
-from her retreat.
-
-"I've got all the blue or huckleberries in the world right here,"
-Elizabeth mimicked.
-
-"I'll pick a couple o' minutes, and then I'll lie in the bushes and rest
-a while," Grandfather said, vanishing with a six-quart cranberry
-measure.
-
-Later when the girls came into the clearing again with their laden pails
-they found him stretched at full length and apparently fast asleep, but
-beside him was his heaping measure of berries.
-
-"Granddaddy Swift," Peggy cried, "when did you pick all those?"
-
-"Those?" he said, yawning. "Oh, a couple of hours back."
-
-"I bet you've been working your head off every minute. We've got three
-quarts apiece. Elizabeth beat me after all, and then turned around and
-helped me get mine."
-
-"I nearly killed myself doing it. I never want to _eat_ another
-huckleberry, but I am thirsty for water or something. Don't I hear a
-spring?"
-
-"There might be one through the trees there. I don't know nothing about
-it." Grandfather pointed, however, in a definite direction.
-
-Peggy parted the branches, and slipped into a thread of a path which led
-them directly to a pool of crystal clear water fed by a tiny stream that
-was bubbling and gushing out of the earth. Protruding from the spring
-were three bottles of ginger ale that had been so placed that the cool
-water splashed upon them as it fell. On a rock close by were spread two
-paper napkins with a pile of bread-and-butter sandwiches on one and a
-stack of sugar-molasses cookies on the other. Between the two, holding
-them down, was a box of chocolates from New York's most popular candy
-manufacturers.
-
-"I don't know nothing about it," Grandfather said, when they dragged him
-to the feast, "I've been fast asleep back there for upwards of two
-hours."
-
-"You're a story-teller," Peggy said, "and for a punishment you've got to
-tell us a real story as soon as you've had your party."
-
-"Nothing ever tasted so good to me in my life," Elizabeth said, as they
-were brushing off the crumbs.
-
-"That's what she says after every meal she eats," her grandfather
-chuckled.
-
-"But it's always true. Now here's your pipe and here's your baccy, and
-while you're filling it, you've got to be thinking of a story to tell
-us."
-
-"I can't tell stories," he protested. "I'd sing a song if I knew any.
-There was a song my grandfather used to sing to us when we were
-children, but I can't remember it. The chorus went like this," he made a
-great pretence of getting the pitch, and then, rocking himself gently,
-sang in a solemn, sing-song voice:
-
- "Injun pudding and pumpkin pie
- The gray cat scratched out the black cat's eye."
-
-I never knew the rights of it, or what the trouble was. Some kind of a
-disagreement they had."
-
-"But where did the injun pudding and pumpkin pie come in?" Peggy asked.
-"And what is injun pudding?"
-
-"Don't show your ign'rance, as Moses says," Elizabeth put in. "It's
-Indian pudding, and you make it out of Indian meal and molasses, and it
-cooks all day and makes whey, and eaten with ice-cream it's perfectly
-heavenly. Grandma is going to show me how to make it. I made a cake, you
-know."
-
-"I heard about that cake," said Peggy, hastily.
-
-"Who's Grandma?" Grandfather inquired, innocently. "I thought we only
-had grandmothers around our place."
-
-"Grandma likes it better for me to call her that," Elizabeth answered,
-blushing.
-
-"You needn't think you are getting out of telling us that story," Peggy
-cried, "tell us about the time you went courting Grandmummy."
-
-"I don't remember nothing about it."
-
-"Tell us about the time you took Eliza Perkins to the Harvest Dance,"
-Elizabeth said, daringly.
-
-"Well, apparently you know something about it already. Women do beat the
-Dutch, gossiping along about things that happened near fifty years ago
-as if 'twere yesterday."
-
-"You needn't blame Grandma. I worm all her secrets out of her."
-
-"I'll warrant you do. I calculated for her to remember that Harvest
-Dance as long as she lived. Did she tell you how she was dressed?"
-
-"Was it a fancy dress party?"
-
-"Certain it was, and I went as King of the Harvest. I had a velvet suit
-with corn tassels all down the seams, and a velvet tam o'shanter with a
-big tassel on that. Your gram'ma she was going to be Queen o' the
-Harvest, till we had a little tiff, and she refused to have anything to
-do with me."
-
-"She didn't tell us that."
-
-"I calculated she hadn't. Well, she went as an apple, root and branch,
-all decked out in apple blossoms, with a staff, with artificial apples
-growing on it, and looking like an apple blossom herself, with her
-pretty pink cheeks and all the lacy fixings in the world trailing after
-her. I took Eliza Perkins, who was the best-natured and biggest-hearted
-girl I ever set eyes on, and the homeliest. Lord have mercy, wasn't she
-homely! I knew 'twould never do to take a pretty girl, so I picked her
-out to make your grandma jealous with, and I told her so. She was
-willing. 'I'll make Laury Ann just about jealous enough,' she said.
-''Twouldn't do to have her too jealous.' And she certain played her part
-well. Your grandma asked me to come around to a candy pull to her house,
-before the evening was over."
-
-"She didn't tell me any of this, the wretched woman!" Peggy cried. "Did
-you go to the candy pull?"
-
-"Oh, I went sure enough."
-
-"Did you have a nice time?" Elizabeth asked.
-
-"I didn't have the kind of time I expected," Grandfather twinkled.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"There wasn't any candy, and there wasn't any pull."
-
-"What was there?"
-
-"Your grandma was there."
-
-"Oh, what did happen? Granddaddy, don't you see me shaking with
-excitement and suspense?" Peggy demanded.
-
-"Well, Mother and me, we kind of come to an understanding. I guess it's
-about time I hitched up Lizzie and we started along. She's been a
-whining and a whinnying back there for some time now. Besides, your
-grandma calculates to make huckleberry dumplings for supper. She gave me
-special directions not to ask anybody in to eat 'em. She allowed she was
-only going to have enough for the immediate family."
-
-"That means I'm coming!" Peggy cried. "I _am_ the immediate family."
-
-"I know what dress Grandma had on that night-- her pink muslin with
-dolman undersleeves, the one that Ruth tried on the other day,"
-Elizabeth said, "and you kissed her in."
-
-"Well, force o' habit is strong. Get your berries together and hop back
-into the car, or I'll have to start without you." Grandfather led the
-way through the branches into the clearing where they had left the
-machine.
-
-"I half expected to see Lizzie grazing around without her harness on,"
-Peggy said. "Grandfather is so convincing."
-
-"You take good care o' that sister of yours." Grandfather was using most
-of his breath in the effort to crank Lizzie. "Don't let any o' these fat
-boys that is hanging around her try to run away with her. She's too
-precious."
-
-"He must have seen Piggy," Peggy said in an undertone to Elizabeth.
-
-"There was a fat boy hanging around your grandma once." He jumped into
-his seat with the agility of a boy himself, a thin boy, "Giddap, giddap,
-Lizzie."
-
-"I know," Elizabeth leaned over the seat to say into his ear, "Pork
-Joe."
-
-"You're a remarkable good guesser after you've been told. Well, Peggy,
-as I was saying, don't let any young Pork Joe get that pretty sister of
-yours."
-
-"Did she say anything more to you about that letter from Jean?"
-Elizabeth asked, snuggling down into the seat beside Peggy again.
-
-"Not a word," Peggy said. "Piggy Chambers is around all the time since
-he came down, and so I can't get much action. By the way, they want us
-to go to Provincetown with them to-morrow. Can you go? You'd better.
-They need chaperoning."
-
-"I think I can. I'll have to ask, of course."
-
-"Provincetown is way down on the tip toe of the Cape, you know. We live
-in the elbow."
-
-"Whoa, Lizzie." Grandfather threw in his clutch and stopped with a
-flourish just behind two figures who, laden with pails full of berries,
-and apparently oblivious of the oncoming machine, were plodding ahead in
-the dust. "Want a ride, boys?"
-
-Two caps were whipped off with an amazing suddenness, exposing one
-blazing head of bright red hair and one inimitable grin.
-
-"Yes, thank you, sir," two voices spoke as one.
-
-"One will have to ride behind and one with me," Grandfather said.
-"Elizabeth, these boys are Jim Robbins' grandsons, and if they are
-anything like old Jim, they are good young fellows to know. They'll tell
-you their own names, I guess."
-
-The red-headed boy on the front seat turned and smiled a trifle
-mischievously.
-
-"I'm Tom Robbins, and this is my cousin, Will Dean, Miss Elizabeth Swift
-and Miss Peggy Farraday."
-
-"How do you do?" Peggy said, gravely.
-
-"How do you do?" Elizabeth echoed, demurely.
-
-"Captain Swift is pretty good about picking up passengers on the road,
-isn't he?" asked the boy with the grin.
-
-"When you see two boys limping along in front of you everywhere you go,
-something's got to be done about it," Grandfather said good humouredly,
-"anybody might almost think you boys follered me on purpose. Yesterday
-and day before and day before that, I come across them hoofing it along
-the road," he explained, "going the same direction I was, and scurse
-able to take another step."
-
-"We didn't ask you for a ride _to-day_," the red-headed boy blushed. "We
-didn't even know you were on the road till we looked up and saw you
-about a minute before you caught up to us."
-
-"What's those girls giggling about?" Grandfather inquired. "I can't have
-a minute's serious conversation with anybody without this
-giggle-giggle-giggle business going on."
-
-"I guess I know what you are smiling about," the Dean boy lowered his
-voice, "but honest, don't misjudge us just on account of that
-post-office business. We kind of wanted a chance to square it, you know.
-Your grandfather thinks we're all right."
-
-"It's been pretty dry weather for the gardens, hasn't it?" Tom Robbins
-was saying to Grandfather. "Have your vegetables suffered much?"
-
-"Just about all they're capable of."
-
-"Do you see much prospect of a rainy spell?"
-
-"As fur as I'm concerned, I don't know as it will ever rain again."
-
-"That's too bad."
-
-"Ankle getting better?"
-
-"What ankle?"
-
-"The one you sprained the day before yesterday."
-
-"Oh, yes, sir, thank you."
-
-"Which ankle was it, now?"
-
-"The left--I mean, the right."
-
-"I suspected as much," said Grandfather, gravely. "Well, they are pretty
-nice, clever little girls, ain't they?"
-
-"Yes, indeed."
-
-"Ever play checkers?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"Your cousin play checkers?"
-
-"Yes, he does."
-
-"Well, it might be good for lame ankles for you to come around and have
-a game o' checkers with an old man once in a while. Always ask for me in
-particular because when anybody comes around to the house, especially
-when I've got a young girl visiting me, I like to be the one that has
-the privilege of saying whether I'm to home or not."
-
-"Thank you, Captain Swift. We--we will be glad to come."
-
-"Our girls don't go to the post office at night, but Saturday night
-around mail time they'll probably be dishing out Indian pudding and
-ice-cream to anybody that might happen along."
-
-"I know two fellows that might happen in," Tom Robbins said.
-
-"I think those boys are really quite nice," Peggy said, as they sat
-under their favourite tree after supper.
-
-"I think they are," Elizabeth said, "but it was rather mortifying the
-way they followed us in the first place. They ought to have known
-better."
-
-"But it only needed a hint from us to make them realize."
-
-"I think boys need those hints. It's the fault of girls if they aren't
-kept right up to the standard."
-
-"Some of the girls on the Cape are not very particular. They are just
-out after a good time and don't care how they get it."
-
-"I guess that's mostly just thoughtlessness. Anyhow, these boys haven't
-been a bit--well--you know--familiar since that first minute."
-
-"No, they haven't one bit. I think Will is quite good fun. Did you
-notice how he wouldn't sit on the seat with us for fear of crowding us,
-but just got right down on the floor and stuck his feet out? I think
-that's the way they really are, and the other was just showing off."
-
-"I think so, too," Elizabeth said. "Anyway, I'm awfully glad we told
-Grandmother about it. She knew who they were right away, and everything.
-I wouldn't have known whether I ever ought to speak to them again or
-not."
-
-"It isn't every grandmother that you could tell a thing like that to,"
-Peggy reflected. "I didn't tell my mother. She just wouldn't have
-thought it was much account. She trusts me to know the right thing, and
-that's fine of her when I do know it, but when I don't, it's
-embarrassing."
-
-"The thing about Grandmother," Elizabeth said, "is that she remembers
-back so well. She knows what it's like to be a girl, and she thinks all
-the things that girls think are important. Lots of grown people don't.
-She imagines right into things, but she doesn't poke around them. She
-doesn't say much, either, but when you tell her a thing she listens to
-it."
-
-"I wish any of my relations did that. Father just says, 'All right,
-Peggy, I'll take it all on trust--where's the morning paper?' whatever I
-say to him, and Mother says, 'Put in that little wisp of hair, darling,'
-or 'Look at your nails,' no matter what I say to her. Sister doesn't
-listen to anything anybody says any more."
-
-"Not even to Mr. Chambers?"
-
-"Him less than anybody, but she spends all her time with him."
-
-"Peggy, don't you think she's got a heart?"
-
-"I don't know what she's got. She kept me awake last night by snivelling
-for about an hour, and when I got so sorry for her that I couldn't help
-it, I went in and tried to put my arms around her, and she just turned
-me out as if I'd been an interloper. I don't know what to make of her
-lately. If you're looking for a nasty grown-up sister, I'd dispose of
-her cheap."
-
-"I'm glad she's not happy," Elizabeth said, soberly.
-
-"Well, I'm not. I'm just sore at her about last night, but I'll get over
-that. You remember that in 'Little Women' about not letting the sun go
-down upon your wrath. Well, I scarcely ever do."
-
-"I try not to," Elizabeth said. "It isn't getting angry so much that
-afflicts me. It's a lot of horrid, sensitive ideas that I have. I want
-to be loved the best, and have things just the way I think is about
-right--and if I don't, I brood over it."
-
-"Well, I'm a more active nature," Peggy said. "Haven't we had fun
-to-day?"
-
-"Weren't the huckleberries fun--from bush to kettle, as it were? Weren't
-those boys cute, to get acquainted with Grandfather?"
-
-"Wasn't it funny we happened to pick them up, when they'd been
-huckleberrying, too?"
-
-"And oh! Wasn't Grandfather a darling all day--so funny--telling stories
-and making little surprises, and so nice with the boys and everything.
-Oh, Peggy, don't you--love my grandfather?"
-
-"I certainly do," said Peggy, solemnly.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- PROVINCETOWN AND A WALK IN THE WOODS
-
-
-Elizabeth enjoyed her ride to Provincetown much more than she expected
-to.
-
-The objectionable Mr. Piggy Chambers shared with Ruth the soft cushions
-of the back seat of the big touring car while the two girls occupied the
-folding seats forward, which were, as Peggy said, as luxurious as most
-stationary seats in machines of an ordinary make. The chauffeur was in a
-smart buff livery that matched the upholstery, and on either side of
-Peggy and Elizabeth were sliding panels that revealed at the touching of
-a button a vanity box and a smoking kit respectively. Peggy had found a
-green leather driving coat with buff facings for herself tucked away
-under the chauffeur's seat, and Mr. Chambers had produced a brown and
-blue coat of soft scotch wool for Elizabeth. Ruth was wearing a white
-wool cape of her own, and steadily refused any of the additional
-luxuries that the owner of the big car offered to produce.
-
-"I feel like an absolute traitor to Buddy to be taking a minute's
-comfort," Elizabeth thought, trying to keep firmly in mind the fact that
-Mr. Piggy Chambers had claimed industrial exemption from the service
-through which her brother had lost his health, and perhaps the girl he
-loved, "but the car does roll smoothly, and the country is beautiful,
-and I'm lucky to have a chance to see it, though my motives in coming
-were quite unmixed."
-
-"You see, the Cape has everything," Peggy said with the air of a
-showman, "salt-water ponds, and fresh-water ponds, and hills and woods
-and sand-dunes. If you want a walk through the pines to a leafy glade,
-walk this way, ladies and gentlemen. If you want rocks and breakwaters
-and sand-dunes and inlets, look out of the car on the other side. Every
-town has at least two or three of the oldest windmills on Cape Cod, and
-dancing pavilions and moving-picture palaces stare at us from every
-side, without in the least interfering with the general panorama."
-
-"Don't you think you have talked enough, Peggy?" Ruth suggested.
-
-"No, I honestly don't, but perhaps Mr. Chambers does."
-
-"This is Miss Ruth's party," Mr. Chambers smiled diplomatically. "This
-country makes me think of English country, in one way," he added,
-smoothly. "It is, of course, altogether different, but in England,
-especially in the north, you get a varied landscape in a limited area,
-as you do here. This is the only place in the states where you find just
-that."
-
-"The Cape is only eight miles across at its widest point," Ruth said,
-"and of course the whole scenic effect is miniature in proportion. We'll
-begin to see the sea on both sides of us presently."
-
-"What amuses me is the way the townships are cut up; a township of
-fifteen hundred people is cut into almost what you might call house
-lots. North, South, East, West Harwich, Harwich Port, Harwich Centre,
-and it doesn't take ten minutes to run through any one of these little
-villages, and get into the next."
-
-"They are all very attractive," Elizabeth said, defensively, but not
-very loudly.
-
-"I'd like to show you England," Mr. Chambers continued, in a lowered
-voice. "I think you'd like it over there, say in a year or two, after
-the children begin to get back their rosy cheeks again, and the gardens
-are flourishing a bit more. The war has left it all a bit ragged."
-
-"It hasn't left _you_ ragged," Elizabeth thought. "It's only left you
-fatter and complacenter and richer. I wish Buddy had a million."
-
-"You look like a snow maiden in those white clothes," Piggy Chambers was
-saying to Ruth.
-
-"'Sweetheart, sweetheart, sweetheart,'" Elizabeth repeated to herself.
-"'I have never called you this and I have no right to call you so now.'"
-That was what her Buddy had written to Ruth Farraday, and Ruth Farraday,
-not knowing, was leaning back in Piggy Chambers' great French car, and
-letting him tell her that she looked like a snow maiden.
-
-"My brother says that southern France is much more beautiful--_was_ much
-more beautiful than England," she said aloud. "He--he helped to break
-the Hindenburg Line, you know."
-
-"Did he?" said Mr. Piggy Chambers, civilly.
-
-"My--my father would have gone, I think, but he wasn't able to get away
-from his business."
-
-"If he was in the steel business, he would have been industrially
-exempted, anyway."
-
-"He--he wouldn't have wanted to be industrially exempted," was on the
-tip of Elizabeth's tongue, but she remembered that she was talking to
-her host of the day. "It won't get me very far to be ill-bred and
-impolite all of a sudden," she thought, sensibly. "Mr. Piggy Chambers
-might just as well think that the members of our family are well brought
-up." Provincetown reminded Mr. Chambers a little of a Dutch fishing
-village, which he described at great length.
-
-"Anybody would think he had just discovered Abroad," Peggy scolded in an
-undertone. "Ruth likes all that travelogue stuff, because she was so
-crazy to get there and couldn't. Now we are going to get out and walk, I
-am thankful to say, but if he tries to lose us, don't let him, that's
-all!"
-
-Mr. Chambers did try to lose them. He tried bribing them with ice-cream
-and they took the ice-cream, but consumed it in time to join the two
-before they had strolled more than three blocks. He suggested that the
-chauffeur take the two girls in the car to examine the Truro lights a
-mile or two back from the course over which they had just come, while he
-and Miss Ruth strolled along the shore.
-
-"I'd rather stay here with Ruthie," Peggy insisted, flatly, and
-Elizabeth could not determine whether Ruth was pleased or displeased,
-for she made no display of either emotion.
-
-"If she wanted us to go, I think perhaps she would say so, but I don't
-know. Grown-up girls don't seem to think they can say what they mean,
-the way children do," she thought.
-
-Presently they were all walking along the beach, and Elizabeth found
-herself walking with Ruth, though she could not tell exactly how it had
-come about. No one seemed to have planned to pair off in that way. It
-just happened, though both Peggy and Mr. Chambers seemed to be very much
-dissatisfied with the arrangement.
-
-"Buddy would love a day like this," Elizabeth said. "He's shut up in
-that old hospital, you know, and he can't get out till he gets better,
-and he can't get better till he gets out. I want to get him down to the
-Cape, where I can take care of him."
-
-"You must be very worried about him," Ruth said. "I didn't even know
-that he wasn't discharged or anything about him, until Peggy found out
-all these things through you."
-
-"He's been too sick to write much."
-
-"He writes to you, doesn't he?" Ruth said, so very carelessly that
-Elizabeth's heart sank.
-
-"Yes, he does. He says that I'm the only girl that answers his letters
-whether he writes to them or not."
-
-"Does he expect to have girls write to him that he doesn't take the
-trouble to inform of his whereabouts?"
-
-"I think he would be very pleased if they did."
-
-"Why should they?"
-
-"Why--why shouldn't they?" Elizabeth stammered.
-
-"He's probably devoted to dozens of girls," Ruth said, lightly, "all
-waiting for a personal word from him. He's probably quite a Lothario,
-only little sisters aren't supposed to know that."
-
-"I don't exactly remember what a Lothario is," Elizabeth said, "but if
-you mean that he's a flirt and I don't know it, you're just awfully
-mistaken. I know things about Buddy that nobody else knows, that he
-doesn't even know that I know. I know what he's like, too, inside."
-
-"You think he's very nice inside, don't you?"
-
-"Yes," said Elizabeth, a little hostilely.
-
-"Well, I'll tell you a secret," said Ruth Farraday, still very lightly
-and gayly. "I do, too."
-
-"Then why--why do you go to Provincetown and things with Mr. Piggy
-Chambers?"
-
-"Mr--Mr. _who_? Really, that's too bad of Peggy. I'll have to speak to
-her." Ruth Farraday seemed to have a sudden little coating of ice all
-over her. "Would you mind telling Peggy that I want to speak to her
-alone a minute?"
-
-Elizabeth obeyed meekly and so miserably that Mr. Chambers, at whose
-side she lingered, since there was nothing to do but take Peggy's place
-with him, asked her what was wrong.
-
-"I'm not feeling very well," Elizabeth said, "the sun is so bright."
-
-"I find her rather bright myself," Mr. Piggy Chambers murmured. "Would
-you like to do me a great favour?"
-
-"Yes, yes, indeed," Elizabeth said, untruthfully.
-
-"Will you take Miss Peggy and go back to the drug store where you had
-your ice-cream, and buy a five-pound box of the very best chocolates
-they have? If they haven't a five-pound box, get five one-pound boxes.
-Just use your own judgment about it."
-
-"I will," said Elizabeth, "of course, Peggy might not want to go.
-She--I--we don't care very much about chocolates."
-
-"But Ruth does," said Mr. Chambers, decisively. "I should very much
-appreciate it, and we'll come along and pick you up presently. You might
-like some more ice-cream." He slipped a five-dollar bill into her hand.
-
-"He asked me if I would do him a great favour," Elizabeth explained to
-the protesting Peggy, as they turned toward the quaint street on which
-the little shops were set, "and I couldn't say no, could I? I couldn't
-say, 'Thank you for your lovely ride, but I don't feel obliging.'"
-
-"I just wish he'd asked me. I would have said 'No!' right out. Sister
-has been giving me fits because you told her that I called him Piggy."
-
-Elizabeth's eyes filled.
-
-"I'm not blaming you. I know you didn't spill the beans on purpose. I
-just wanted to know how it happened."
-
-"I just called him that. That's all," Elizabeth said, miserably.
-
-"Well, don't you care, darling," Peggy advised. "Ruth was only upset
-about something else, and wanted to take it out on me. It will serve her
-right if Mr. Hoggy Chambers proposes while we're gone. I promised her I
-wouldn't call him Piggy any more."
-
-"I think he means to."
-
-"Well, if he does, I wonder what he'll say. Love me and the world is
-mine. I guess that's about what he will say. The world is my oyster and
-I'll let you keep it in your stew, if you'll be good."
-
-"Mr. Piggy Chambers," said Elizabeth, "Oh!"
-
-"If she says 'yes' to that freak, I'll--I'll disown her."
-
-"Oh, let's not think of it."
-
-"There isn't much else I can think of," Elizabeth said. "Oh, but look!
-Sixty-four, sixty-five. Those are black Portuguese, and they count." Two
-swarthy fishermen in bright blouses were passing them on the narrow
-street.
-
-"You've caught up with me," Peggy said. "I was four ahead of you for a
-long time."
-
-"We'll probably get them all just in time to shake hands with Tommy
-Robbins and Billy Dean."
-
-"I won't," said Peggy.
-
-"You might have to," Elizabeth argued. "Supposing we were going away and
-they came to say good-bye, and held out their hands to shake hands. We'd
-have to shake them."
-
-"I'd say I had a sore finger."
-
-"We couldn't both say we had sore fingers. Besides, they could see we
-hadn't."
-
-"We might both have lame wrists, if we had been doing the same thing,
-rowing or playing tennis."
-
-"It would look rather suspicious."
-
-"Wouldn't it be better to look a little suspicious than to tie yourself
-up for life that way, or run the chance of it? I know who you want to
-shake hands with. That Reynolds boy."
-
-"I don't want to shake hands with anybody," Peggy said. "We may like Tom
-and Bill a good deal better before the summer is over, though."
-
-"They really are quite nice," Elizabeth reflected.
-
-"Mr. Chambers is trying to get us to ride home in the front seat, with
-the chauffeur. He says the front seat is the most comfortable in the
-car, and was designed for three. I told him I'd think it over."
-
-"I don't see what difference it makes now. He's talking to her alone,
-anyway."
-
-"I think it's a terrible responsibility. They are both old enough to be
-married, and they ought to be old enough to know just what they want to
-do, instead of keeping a couple of kids--I mean children--worried to
-death all the time."
-
-"I think Mr. Chambers knows what he wants to do."
-
-"Yes, but he ought to know better than to keep bothering a girl that
-doesn't."
-
-Elizabeth and Peggy managed to eat a plate of ice-cream apiece in spite
-of their dejection, but Elizabeth steadfastly refused to break Mr.
-Chambers' five-dollar bill, even to pay for the five pounds of candy she
-purchased for him.
-
-"He can pay me the way he would a grown-up person," she said. "I prefer
-to buy our own ice-cream, and do his errands on a strictly business
-basis."
-
-"My goodness," Peggy said, "I feel as if we had suffered enough, without
-having to buy our own refreshments."
-
-They rode with the chauffeur only a part of the way home, because when
-they had travelled twenty miles of the forty between the tip and the
-elbow of the crooked right arm of Massachusetts a tire gave way and they
-all stepped out of the car and took a walk in the woods while they were
-waiting for repairs to be made.
-
-Mr. Chambers and Ruth slipped into a thread of a path going in the
-opposite direction from that taken by the two girls, but evidently made
-a detour and turned again toward them, for the moment in silence. When
-they heard the sound of voices just beyond Peggy put her finger to her
-lips.
-
-"I am the kind of man who always gets what he wants," Mr. Chambers was
-saying. "You won't give me the chance to tell you what I want, but you
-know pretty well what it is, and I think you know that I am going to get
-it."
-
-"No," said Ruth Farraday.
-
-"You know that I want you to marry me?"
-
-"Yes, I know that."
-
-"You know that I love you?"
-
-"I--I don't know much about love."
-
-"I can teach you,"
-
-"Nobody can teach me anything that I can't find out for myself. If I
-don't know what this--this feeling people call Love is, from the inside,
-nobody can come and throw it over me, like a cloak."
-
-"Oughtn't we to stuff our fingers in our ears?" Elizabeth pantomimed.
-
-"No," Peggy shook her head, fiercely.
-
-"Wrapping it around you like a cloak is just what I should like to do. I
-should like to keep you warm and comfortable for the rest of your life."
-
-"And happy?"
-
-"I know I could make you happy."
-
-"Warmth comes from within, doesn't it? You wouldn't want an icicle of a
-woman."
-
-"I am not afraid that you would be an icicle."
-
-Peggy was showing strong signs of disgust, but Elizabeth was listening
-with parted lips and shining eyes. She had forgotten that she was
-eavesdropping, forgotten everything except that Buddy's girl did not
-want to give up her chance of learning something that Buddy could teach
-her. She expected the next words when they came.
-
-"I would be an icicle--to you."
-
-The suitor did not seem to realize the significance of this statement.
-
-"All I want is a chance to melt the icicle," he said, complacently.
-
-"Goop!" said Peggy in a loud whisper. Then she sneezed, but fortunately
-the speakers had passed far enough beyond to confuse the sound with the
-general blend of forest sounds, the whirring of wings in the underbrush,
-or the rustling in the trees overhead.
-
-"I guess he thought I was a startled quail," Peggy said, "though I
-wouldn't have cared much if he had found me. I never heard such
-silliness, did you?"
-
-"I didn't think it was silliness," Elizabeth said. "It was quite a lot
-the way people talk in books, you know."
-
-"It wasn't really mushy," Peggy agreed, "only sort of peculiar. Well, I
-guess I am not going to have a new brother-in-law right away. Still, I
-notice she's keeping a string tied to him, just the same."
-
-When they got back into the car Ruth suggested that the girls take the
-folding seats in the tonneau again, and Mr. Chambers quietly acquiesced
-in this arrangement. As they took their places Peggy gave her friend the
-benefit of a long, significant wink, and then subsided into the silence
-that encompassed them all during the remainder of the long drive home.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- LITTLE EVA
-
-
-I come to tell you that my mother's sick," Moses said. "She's hollering
-something awful. She said to tell Miss Laury Ann, but I can't find her
-nowhere."
-
-"She's out with Grandfather," Elizabeth said, "and I don't know when
-she'll be back."
-
-"Maybe Marmer'll be dead by that time. She's kind of turned green
-already."
-
-"She can't be going to die."
-
-"I arsked her was she going to die, and she said she guessed she was. I
-dunno nothing about it."
-
-"I'll go home with you," Elizabeth resolved suddenly. "I'll get Judidy,
-and we'll go and see what we can do."
-
-"Marmer didn't tell me to get no girls," Moses said, doubtfully, "she
-told me to get Miss Laury Ann."
-
-"I'll be better than nobody, Moses."
-
-"Well, if you do come over to my house, I ain't agoing to wear no
-bloomer suit."
-
-"Oh, I shan't expect you to," Elizabeth said, hastily.
-
-Judidy was nowhere to be found, so leaving word with Zeckal, the
-good-natured hired man, to send either Judidy or her grandmother to the
-rescue as soon as possible, Elizabeth followed Moses to the tumbledown
-little red house that was his home. On an old horsehair sofa in the
-middle of the kitchen, which was the first room they entered, a young
-woman with her blonde hair straggling into blue eyes swimming with pain
-was lying in a huddled heap. In the middle of the floor was a wash-tub
-full of dirty water and half-submerged, grimy garments.
-
-"I was trying to git some washing done when the pain struck me," a weak
-voice said. "I ain't in no condition to receive visitors."
-
-"I didn't come to visit," Elizabeth said, gently. "I came to help."
-
-A spasm of pain racked the sick woman. Elizabeth was down on her knees
-beside her in an instant.
-
-"You're all corseted up!" she said. "I'm going to rip these things off,"
-for under the trailing, ragged garments that overlaid Mrs. Steppe she
-was wearing a corset like a board. Elizabeth tore at the strings until
-she released her.
-
-"You shouldn't lace like that," she said, in horror.
-
-"I don't lace," the sick woman breathed, "my waist is
-only--eighteen--inches--around. It's naturally--small. I guess if I
-could only get a little hot water to drink I would feel better."
-
-Elizabeth found a one-wick kerosene stove so begrimed and choked with
-soot that she could scarcely light the sputtering wick, but thanks to
-her recent investigations in her grandmother's kitchen, she was able to
-heat a little water over it.
-
-"A month ago I didn't even know there was such a thing as a one-wick
-kerosene stove," she thought. She caught sight of what at first glance
-looked like a small gray animal on the floor under the table. "It's
-nothing but a piece of moldy bread, the kind that poor Madget was afraid
-would crawl out on her. Oh, dear!"
-
-"Where are the little girls?" she asked, as the sufferer sat up and
-drank the steaming water in the cracked blue cup that was the only china
-receptacle of any kind that Elizabeth could find.
-
-"I wasn't able to get them any breakfast, so they went out to see if
-they could pick some blue berries."
-
-"Madget is so little she ought to have milk in the morning." Elizabeth
-could not refrain from making this superfluous suggestion.
-
-"Milk sours so." The spasm of pain that attacked her was of longer
-duration this time. Elizabeth began rubbing the afflicted area, and
-calling to Moses, who presently appeared, and gazed at his mother
-speculatively as she winced and writhed in agony.
-
-"Go and get a doctor, Moses. Any doctor you know about."
-
-"I don't believe in doctors," Mrs. Steppe breathed. "I--I believe in
-spirit healing. Get a medium."
-
-"You get a doctor, Moses," Elizabeth said. "Tell him that I--Captain
-John Swift's granddaughter--will settle the bill."
-
-"Oh, all right," Moses said.
-
-"I don't know much about mediums," she explained to the sick woman, "but
-I know that a doctor would be able to help you right away."
-
-"I--I don't believe in medical healing," the woman moaned, "but if you
-want to spend your money that way--the last time--I had a sick spell,
-Mis' Abithy Hawes, she's a fine medium, she--come here and went into a
-trance--and had me cured in half an--hour. No doctor--could do--do like
-that. Her control is--Little Eva."
-
-"Don't try to talk," Elizabeth said, mystified.
-
-The next half hour was one that she remembered all her life. The spasms
-of pain increased. Elizabeth's experience of acute illness was so
-limited that she earnestly believed she had a dying woman on her hands.
-Madget and Mabel came in whimpering and hungry, and Madget cried
-steadily and consistently from the moment when she caught her first
-glimpse of her mother's tortured face. Mrs. Steppe continued to call for
-Mis' Abithy Hawes, and Elizabeth finally thought of sending Mabel to
-look for that lady. Mabel returned from this quest with amazing
-promptitude.
-
-"She had her hands in the flour dough," Mabel explained, "and she can't
-come. She sent word that she couldn't have no trances till she got her
-work done up, and then she'd see. She give me a cookie."
-
-"Did you explain to her how sick your mother was?"
-
-"Yes, she said she couldn't have no trances now. She said Little Eva was
-cranky to-day."
-
-By the time Moses appeared, with the word that the doctor would follow
-him shortly, Elizabeth was at the limit of her endurance and her
-ingenuity. She had been heating water in a leaky lard pail, and
-stripping off her own white petticoat to make hot compresses to relieve
-the increasing pain of her patient, quieting the ubiquitous Madget for a
-few seconds at a time only to provoke the din again as soon as she set
-her down from her lap; and trying in the intervals to reduce the
-slovenly room to something like order.
-
-"Is she dead yet?" Moses inquired, solemnly.
-
-Elizabeth shook her head.
-
-"Moses, dear," she said, "you mustn't talk like that. It's unfeeling."
-
-"All right," he said with unexpected docility, "I won't. I just wanted
-to make some plans, that's all. I thought I might come to live with you,
-if Marmer died."
-
-Elizabeth put her arms around the forlorn little figure.
-
-"She isn't going to die," she said, "at least, I don't think she is."
-
-"Well, you can't tell," said Moses, skeptically.
-
-The doctor, who proved to be a portly being with a red beard and the
-kindest eyes Elizabeth had ever seen, as she told Peggy afterward,
-explained that the seizure was nothing more serious than neuralgia
-complicated with a slight gastric attack.
-
-"Lack of nourishment, lack of exercise, lack of any sort of proper care
-for mind or body," he said.
-
-"What is neuralgia?" Elizabeth asked.
-
-"Starved nerves in revolt is one way of putting it."
-
-"I thought she had appendicitis or pleurisy or something."
-
-"She has nothing that a week's care won't bring her out of. If she isn't
-looked out for at least for that length of time the trouble is likely to
-increase. There isn't anybody to take care of her, is there?"
-
-"Well, there is nobody but me," said Elizabeth.
-
-The doctor looked at her under quizzical eyebrows with an expression
-that reminded her of her grandfather.
-
-"Give her this medicine regularly," he said, as if he found nothing
-remarkable in her statement, "and see that she has three nourishing
-meals a day and keep her quiet."
-
-"It's easier to keep her quiet when you are here," Elizabeth said,
-indicating the awestruck Madget, Moses, and Mabel, who stood in a
-respectful row, at a respectful distance from the great man.
-
-"I understand these children are always quiet when they're asleep or
-when the doctor comes."
-
-"Well," Elizabeth said, "the better they feel that they know you the
-more noise they make. They treat me like an old friend now."
-
-"I used to live in New York myself," the doctor observed, "and I miss it
-a good deal more than most people suspect. I know all about you, you
-see. I know pretty well all the news of the comings and goings in town."
-
-"You're a New Yorker, and yet you stay down here all the year round,"
-Elizabeth said. "I don't see how you can, if you really liked New York."
-
-"I liked New York," he said, "but you can't be a country doctor on
-Broadway. I'd rather take care of these people than those."
-
-"Oh, why?"
-
-"They need it more," he said, simply. "In a big city you don't get the
-same chance to find out what people do need. It isn't always sick bodies
-a doctor is called in to look out for, you know. A doctor down here has
-to be a kind of a lawyer and a justice of the peace and a plumber, into
-the bargain. In New York he doesn't get that kind of an opportunity."
-
-"That seems a funny kind of thing to call an opportunity, I think."
-
-"It is one, though," the doctor said. "Where is these children's
-father?"
-
-"He's on a coal barge. He only gets home once in a while."
-
-"He must make pretty good money."
-
-"He does, only she--" Elizabeth, who had walked to the door with him,
-and was standing just outside it as they talked, indicated the woman in
-the room beyond--"spends it on candy and novels and things, and then he
-gets discouraged, and doesn't send it to her, or drinks."
-
-"Well, call me again if you need me. No, I won't send you the bill.
-There isn't any bill. I'm paid already."
-
-"I hope he didn't mean that it paid him just to see me here doing good,"
-Elizabeth thought, when she realized that that was what he did mean. "I
-don't want him thinking I'm always looking after the poor when this is
-the first time I ever did it."
-
-The children crowded around her when the doctor left.
-
-"Your mother is going to be well in a week," she told Moses. "I'm going
-to wash your face, Mabel--and Madget, if you don't stop crying, do you
-know what I'm going to do to you?"
-
-"Spank me!" wailed Madget.
-
-"No, I'm not. I'm going to kiss you, but I guess it would be more to the
-purpose to feed you. What does your mother make oatmeal in when she
-makes it?"
-
-"She don't make none," Mabel said. "Can you make oatmeal?"
-
-"I could follow the directions on the package, I guess. I can make
-cake."
-
-"I want some cake," cried Madget, promptly.
-
-Elizabeth was trying to get some water "boiling, foaming, scalding hot,"
-according to directions, when Judidy appeared at the door, her moon face
-beaming over various pails and packages.
-
-"Land o' Liberty!" she said. "You up here a-tending the sick, and me out
-skylarking with my feller. I brought some milk and sandwiches for the
-children. I guess she ain't sick much, is she?"
-
-"I'm dretful sick, Judidy," a voice from the couch said, weakly; "I had
-the doctor."
-
-"I thought you was a spiritualist, and didn't believe in no medicine."
-
-"I don't believe that no doctor could doctor me as well as Little Eva
-could, but Mis' Hawes she couldn't come. I was too sick to depend on a
-contrary control, so we called the doctor, and he left me some kinder
-dark stuff to take, and some light-coloured pills that's kind o'
-quieting."
-
-"_Do_ tell," said Judidy, politely. "Now you drink to where I've got my
-finger," she instructed Madget, as she held out the milk bottle, which
-the children were trying to reach, "then Mabel, then----"
-
-"Pour a little out in this cup, and I'll feed Madget myself," Elizabeth
-said. "I guess the other children had better drink out of the bottle."
-
-Judidy looked at Elizabeth admiringly as she lifted the little girl on
-her lap.
-
-"My, ain't you a pretty picture," she said, heartily. "You was just as
-stuck up, when you first came, with your ideas about having a demi-tassy
-after you had et, and laffing at the pump in the kitchen, and never
-eating anything between meals, and to see you now, a-taking up with the
-town's poor as if they was own relations."
-
-"Don't you call us town's poor," Mrs. Steppe said, sitting up suddenly,
-and then falling back with a groan. "I ain't never been called such a
-name, Judidy Eldredge."
-
-"You just lay still," Judidy said, "and don't you worry. I'll stay now,
-Elizabeth, and you can go home and get ready for your dinner. It's a
-lucky thing I had it all arranged to have a day off on account of my
-feller being home. Miss Laury Ann she told me to send you as soon as I
-got here."
-
-"But I don't want you to have to lose a day with your--feller,"
-Elizabeth said, trying not to be guilty of the rudeness of correcting
-Judidy's pronunciation. "I'll come back as soon as Grandma will let me."
-
-Madget began to whimper as she set her down, but Moses assured her that
-if his marmer died, he would "come over there right away and tell her
-about it."
-
-"I don't know whatever makes him so pleased to think of my dying," his
-mother said, plaintively, "he has never known anybody that died or
-anything, if he is always burying birds with regular funeral preaching."
-
-"He doesn't want you to die," Elizabeth said, "he just gets ideas in his
-mind."
-
-"Well, they aren't very cheerful ideas for a sick woman to hear."
-
-"No, they aren't," Elizabeth agreed.
-
-"If I can get Mis' Hawes over here, Little Eva will tell me if I'm going
-to die. I'd like to lick Moses once, anyway, whether I'm going to die or
-not."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"I don't think anybody could 'a' done any better," her grandmother said,
-when she told her the story. "Hot compresses is the thing that always
-relieves pain, and what the whole situation needed was somebody to take
-charge and send for the doctor. You was a pretty brave, practical girl,
-I should say. The Swifts always had good contrivance, and come out
-strong when there was anything real to be done."
-
-"I don't think that I managed so very well. The children kept crying and
-I couldn't stop them, and Mrs. Steppe kept asking for a medium that I
-couldn't get for her. What does she mean by Little Eva being Mrs. Hawes'
-control?"
-
-To her surprise her grandmother began to laugh, and laughed until the
-tears ran down her cheeks.
-
-"I suppose it _is_ funny," Elizabeth said, "but I never thought of it
-that way. I suppose it's funny about Moses keeping on asking if his
-mother was going to die, but it didn't seem funny at the time, it just
-seemed queer and--and awfully hard to manage. I--I----" to her chagrin,
-her lip began to tremble. "What--what is a control, anyway?" she wailed.
-
-"It ain't nothing that you got to bother with just at present," her
-grandmother said, "you come here." She sank into one of the numerous
-valanced rockers conveniently placed about the house, and held out her
-arms. "You come here--to Grandma," she said.
-
-"You'll think I'm an awful baby," Elizabeth sobbed on the comfortable
-bosom, snuggling a little closer in the protecting embrace. "It isn't so
-much what I've done that I mind, but what I've got to do. It isn't very
-brave of me, but I dread taking care of that awful woman for a whole
-week. She--she isn't very grateful, or anything. She'd rather have a
-medium. But--but the children--they love me."
-
-"Elizabeth," her grandmother said, "I ain't a-going to let you go there
-for any week."
-
-"But it's my duty, Grandmother. You aren't going to stop me doing my
-duty, are you? You can't spare Judidy, and there isn't anybody else.
-There aren't any real servants or charity organization societies here. I
-don't see what there is to do but just what Doctor Hartly does, go
-around and be anything that the people need you for."
-
-"You can't be all things to all men, Elizabeth," her grandmother said,
-sagely. "If you can be like that Holland boy I've heard tell of, that
-put his hand through a hole in the wall and kept the water from
-destroying a whole town, that's one thing, but the kind of a hole that
-the water'll roll through forever, the minute you take your arm out, is
-another. The Steppe family is going to be in need of any person's full
-strength as long as Mis' Steppe continues to breathe, and we can't wish
-anybody's breath to stop, in spite of Moses. The best you can do for any
-set o' people in that condition is just what you went and done to-day.
-Look out for 'em when they get way down, give 'em what extry strength
-and vittles you got at all times, but don't try to lift 'em up unless
-you can lift 'em all the way out. Mis' Steppe will always sag back from
-her own weight."
-
-"Oh, dear," Elizabeth sighed. "Don't you think she could be reformed?"
-
-"She might, and then again she mightn't. I should say she couldn't be.
-She's always trying to get something for nothing, that woman is. This
-business of getting a medium to get her control to fix up things she's
-too lazy to fix for herself that's Mis' Steppe all over."
-
-"But what is a control?"
-
-"A control is a spirit guide that takes possession of a medium when she
-goes into a trance. Somebody that has lived and died, usually somebody
-kind o' tricky, that has a hard time getting into communication with
-whoever 'tis they want to talk to."
-
-"But that's just pure faking, isn't it?"
-
-"I don't know whether 'tis or not. I don't understand it. My idea is,
-never to make too light of a thing that I don't understand."
-
-"You don't think there is a Little Eva, do you, Grandma?"
-
-"No, I don't, but Mis' Hawes does."
-
-"I shouldn't think there was anything to do but laugh at Little Eva."
-
-"So wouldn't anybody, first off, but spiritualism is some people's
-religion. It ain't mine, but in general it ain't a good idea to laugh at
-anybody's religion, not even the cannibals'."
-
-"What shall we do about the Steppes, then?"
-
-"I'm going to get Judidy's sister to go over there and stay what she
-can. What she can't, you and me and Judidy'll make up between us. We'll
-have a kind of general care of 'em till they get out o' this particular
-patch o' woods. Then they'll have to go on their own gait again."
-
-"It does seem sort of awful, not to really do anything."
-
-"Yes, it does, but the thing to do is to keep people like that in the
-back of your mind, and when any chance comes that might benefit 'em, not
-to be too lazy to pass it along. I'm kind of arguing with your
-grandfather about taking Moses to come and live with us. I ain't pushing
-the matter, but kind o' working along easy. I've got an idea of getting
-Mis' Steppe interested in a different class o' books. Any woman that'll
-get the notion out of a book that she can wear a eighteen-inch corset
-around her waist under her rags and stick to it can get some other more
-practical notion through her head in time. Anyhow, that's one thing to
-work on. I ain't very hopeful, but I thought of it. I keep at the
-Steppes, and little by little I hope to get something accomplished. I
-see that the children is fed up about once a day anyway, but I don't
-stick my wrist through the hole o' their shiftlessness, I just bail out
-a little water as often as I can."
-
-"That _is_ the way, isn't it?" said Elizabeth. "I just thought I'd have
-to go there and practically live for weeks. It--it seemed like a
-bottomless pit."
-
-"There ain't really no such thing as a bottomless pit," Grandmother
-said, sagely; "there are only pits that we can't plumb the bottom of."
-
- * * * * *
-
-She told the story of Elizabeth's activities to Grandfather that night
-and this time she did not laugh, even in recapitulating the difficulties
-the little girl had encountered in relation to Mrs. Steppe's religious
-convictions and her constant demand for Little Eva. On the contrary, she
-wiped her eyes quite openly.
-
-"She was calculating to go there," she said, "and take entire charge of
-that miserable Steppe family without any help from anybody, nurse that
-sick woman and feed those children for a week and longer if it was
-required of her. She would have done it, too, if I hadn't put a stop to
-it. I wish you could have seen that pretty, anxious little face, and
-those great eyes of hers brim full o' tears but game as a fightin' cock.
-I do wish you could have seen her, Father."
-
-"I wish I could of," said Grandfather, gravely.
-
-"Just one thought come into my mind as I set there talking to her, and
-it come so strong I almost up and said it aloud before I caught myself.
-I was thinking o' that first night she come, and the dejected way you
-sat in that chair there, after she had gone up to bed, and I said to
-myself, holding her there in my lap all exhausted and quivering, after a
-whole forenoon spent doing battle with the slothfulness of the Steppe
-family, 'Father Swift,' I said to myself, 'what do you think o' John's
-girl now?' I said."
-
-"Didn't you hear what I spoke up and answered? Well, you couldn't 'a'
-been listening very hard. When you said that, I had my answer ready to
-the dot. 'I think a whole lot better of her,' that's what I said, 'and I
-have been doing so for some time back'."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- BUDDY WANTS TO KNOW
-
-
-Elizabeth had been to tea with the Farradays. The big, closed-in porch,
-which was practically their summer living room, gay with chintzes and
-strewn with all the appurtenances of luxurious modern existence, always
-gave her a little feeling of homesickness for the life to which she was
-used in town. The trim maid, quietly manipulating the tea wagon laden
-with the delicacies of the usual teatime meal, took on an almost
-pathetic glamour to the little exile.
-
-Mr. Chambers was in possession of the wicker chaise-longue. Ruth had
-poured tea with deft and dainty fingers, though she was unusually
-silent, even for her. Mrs. Farraday, who was as unlike Elizabeth's
-mother as it was possible for her to be, had yet, in a gown of blue
-linen, with rose-coloured net cuffs and neck piece, managed to suggest
-her vividly.
-
-Peggy had behaved abominably. In intervals of passing cakes she had
-managed to get out of the line of vision and stand grimacing and
-contorting her face at Elizabeth. Usage demanded that Elizabeth return
-these impudent salutations in kind, and twice Peggy nearly made her do
-so.
-
-"I should have been mortified," she thought, "if Mr. Piggy Chambers had
-caught me making faces, especially since I would naturally make that
-kind of faces about him, if it happened so. I guess Ruth would never
-speak to me again."
-
-"I can't help it," Peggy whispered, "these tea fights on the veranda,
-with Piggy--I mean Hoggy--Chambers and Mother knitting as if she had
-just eaten the canary, and Ruthie saying nothing and sawing wood, and
-the other self-sufficient member of our little circle sitting there and
-owning the universe--they just make me wild. I feel as if I would like
-to get an Indian tomahawk and scalp 'em all."
-
-"I--I like tea on your veranda, though," Elizabeth couldn't help
-admitting. "Grandmother would think afternoon tea was ridiculous, and I
-am used to it in my own home. I'm used to having my own mother around,
-too."
-
-"If your own mother were aiding and abetting the slaughter of your
-innocent sister," Peggy said, "you might not feel so excruciatingly fond
-of her. I didn't make that remark all up. Father said it first. Our
-family is just completely mixed up over the whole affair. There's one
-ray of light. Ruthie isn't mushy about any of it. Only she makes me
-nervous."
-
-"I don't see how you can bear it at all," Elizabeth said. "I can't,
-hardly."
-
-"Can hardly, Miss Swift," Peggy mocked. "You are more sensitive to
-things than I am, I guess. I throw 'em off after I've howled for a
-while. My idea would be to fill Piggy's bed with flour and hair-brushes,
-or to stick a hair-pin in his tires. You'd just give him mental
-treatment and take it awfully to heart."
-
-"I guess that's why we get on so well together. Opposites attract
-opposites."
-
-"If I were a man I think I should want to marry you, Elizabeth, but if I
-were a girl, I don't think I should want to be just like you."
-
-"That's not very flattering, because you are a girl already, and you
-couldn't be a man if you wanted to."
-
-"I mean for myself I would like to be like you. You take things harder
-than I do. I can always go out and punch something."
-
-"There never seems to be anything I can punch," said poor Elizabeth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Peggy had walked with her as far as her own gate, and then she had gone
-in to get her belated morning mail. She had been so sure that there was
-no one to write to her until she had answered the letters with which her
-portfolio was stuffed that she had neglected to go to the post office as
-usual. She found, however, a long letter from her brother and one from
-her mother. Buddy wrote:
-
- DEAR LITTLE SISTER:
-
- I am going to take you into my confidence in an important matter
- because, well, there is nobody else that I can ask any help of.
- You needn't get peeved at this way of putting it, because it
- stands to reason that if you weren't a pretty reliable little
- sport I wouldn't trust you. I don't have to. I only do.--Hope to
- die, and cross your heart?--Thank you.
-
- Well, the thing is, I want to know something about Ruth
- Farraday. For reasons of my own I haven't been writing to her.
- Now, I might like to write to her once or twice, a friendly
- little note, you understand. A fellow gets so doggone lonesome.
- They won't let me go until they're satisfied I'm fixed up. How
- you are going to fix up a fellow who has got some of the things
- I've got the matter with me, I don't know. They think it's shell
- shock, among other things. Well, among other things, it isn't
- shell shock, it's----Oh, well, it isn't shell shock. It's darned
- old discouragement, and homesickness for the things that never
- were on land or sea. That's poetry, my darling sister. I have
- some of that in my system, too.
-
- Well, I've been here alone so long that I want to know
- everything--_everything_ about the people I care about. Ruth
- Farraday is one that I do care something about. She was mighty
- nice to me before I went to be a soldier. I think she would have
- been nicer if I had worked it around to get a commission instead
- of just plain enlisting, but this is only just conjecture. She
- is a beautiful girl, and her heart is in the right place
- wherever it is, but Sister, that's what I want to know. You're
- fooling around with the Farradays so much, you ought to get some
- line on this. I don't want to be idiot enough to start the poor,
- sick old friend stuff, _if_ she's got her mind all off me or
- anybody that looks like me, and on somebody that doesn't. Does
- she wear a ring, and is she reported to be free or _cinched_, or
- _what_?
-
- I can't stand not knowing any longer. That's the point. I may
- have been a darn fool in the way I've warned you against talking
- to her about me. I've just had all these notions one after
- another, kind of feverishly. I'm going to write to her if you
- advise me to. Don't go making up anything. Tell me the truth.
- I've got to know it, Kid. I'm just all in--that's all.
-
- BUDDY.
-
-She opened her Mothers letter with eyes so full of tears she could
-scarcely distinguish its import.
-
- ELIZABETH DEAR.
-
- It is getting harder and harder to be away from you, especially
- since there is no immediate hope of Buddy's release. The poor
- boy doesn't get better. It is difficult to understand all the
- intricacies of the doctor's diagnosis. New conditions of warfare
- and of life breed new conditions of disease, physical and
- mental, he says, as well as new kinds of wounds and injuries, to
- be patiently handled by the new medicine and surgery. To a
- mother's eye, Buddy seems to be suffering from an old-fashioned
- set of causes and effects. But I don't know. All I know is that
- Buddy is not getting better, and that he has to be handled more
- carefully than ever. Elizabeth, dear, let me warn you again to
- be careful what you write him. He looks forward to your letters
- with the greatest interest, and yet when they come, to be
- perfectly frank, they often seem to fret him or to make him
- irritable. Perhaps you had best not mention your friends the
- Farradays. He used to know Ruth Farraday quite well, and
- sometimes the mention of these boys and girls that he used to
- have so many gay times with seems to make him morose. At other
- times he likes to look back at things he used to do. He is only
- a little boy, after all. Twenty-three doesn't seem much more to
- me than fourteen does, in spite of that stern look he has that
- all the men who have done any real fighting seem to come back
- with.
-
- My darling, take care of your health. Don't go out in all
- weathers without being suitably attired for cold or wet, as the
- case may be. Your letters are a great comfort to me. You are
- good to help Grandmother so much. She appreciates it, and so does
-
- MOTHER.
-
- P. S. I wish I might have tasted that cake you made.
-
-"Oh, Mother," Elizabeth cried. "Oh, you can't help me the least little
-bit in this, can you? What is the best thing for me to do for my Buddy?"
-
-She tried to talk with her grandmother, very carefully, for fear of
-betraying Buddy's confidence, but for once her grandmother did not help
-her.
-
-"It isn't a very good idea for little girls to think too much about such
-things," she said. "Love is a mystery. One heart kinder gets clinging to
-another heart, and nobody knows how it all come about, or how to stop
-it. When your time comes it is about like your time coming to die or be
-born, and you can only pray that it ain't going to be too hard, with
-anybody concerned in it."
-
-"But, Grandmother, if you loved anybody and you were a man, and--and
-didn't tell her so because you were poor or anything, and she was all
-mixed up with somebody else, and----"
-
-"Well, I ain't going to be called on to be a man just at present,"
-Grandmother said, "and I guess that's just as well, for anybody that's
-got to make blueberry cake and biscuits for supper. Your grandfather is
-going to Hyannis to get a watermelon, perhaps you'd like to go with him
-for the ride."
-
-"I would, only I've got to write a letter to Buddy. He--he wants me to
-write him right away about something."
-
-"Well, give him Grandma's love and tell him to come down to the old
-place and get well."
-
-"I'm going to write Buddy just the way I would want to be written to if
-I was in love with Ruth Farraday," Elizabeth decided, "only I am going
-to remember that he is sick. Supposing I was sick and supposing I was in
-trouble about something that was making me sicker, how would I want to
-be written to? Oh, dear Lord," she said, closing her eyes, suddenly,
-"help me to write that kind of a letter and to get it right."
-
-She climbed the stairs slowly and opened the desk in her little room.
-The sisters Faith, Hope, and Charity smiled benignly down at her, as she
-began to write:
-
- DEAR BUDDY:
-
- Cross my heart and hope to die. I am quite a lot more grown up
- than I was when you knew me, and I understand the sacredness of
- confidences as I didn't at that time. You don't need to worry
- about trusting me. I love Ruth Farraday very much, and I should
- think anybody might.
-
- Well, she is not a happy girl. There is a man called Mr. Piggy
- Chambers--that is what Peggy calls him, anyway--who is in love
- with her and asked her to marry him. I heard him that day that I
- went to Provincetown with him in his car. I did not tell you
- that I went to Provincetown with him, because I do not like him
- anyway, and I did not want you to think I would go motoring with
- a man like that. The fact was that I went to chaperone him and
- her. Well, she told him that he could not teach her love because
- she would be an icicle to him, and she said she did not know
- much about love anyway, but he insisted, to no purpose. I ought
- to have stuffed my ears, and so had Peggy, but some way we
- didn't.
-
- The only drawback is that he is around the place all the time,
- and does not seem to be discouraged in any way. Peggy is furious
- at him. Whenever I see him on their porch eating, in that wicker
- chaise-longue they have, I cannot tell you how I despise him, in
- spite of his being really very nice, if you like that kind. He
- doesn't seem to have any neck, to speak of, and his collars look
- as if they would choke him. His eyes are small, though bright
- and animated looking.
-
- Ruth Farraday comes here a great deal, and she asks for you
- sometimes, too. She loves Grandmother more than anybody does
- outside of the family. Their eyes look lovingly at each other
- even when they are not speaking, you know, like cousins or
- something. She is very kind to me, and never neglects a chance
- to do nice things for me. I told you how Granddaddy kissed her.
- She is sweet. She is just sweet. If I loved her, Buddy--(you
- told me not to talk this way to you once, but I am going to)--I
- would tell her I did, in some way. She is awfully little, for a
- girl as old as she is, and people protect her. Peggy protects
- her in a great many ways, and I know she is not happy.
-
- I guess there is one thing that I ought to repeat. Yesterday she
- said, "How is your brother?" and I said, "He is about the same,"
- and she said, "I've just discovered how ill he has been. I wish
- I had known it before," and I said, "Well, he might get
- discharged soon," because I didn't know what else to say. She
- said, "I should have written him, if I had thought he cared."
- Well, what could I say? I didn't say anything, because you have
- warned me so against blabbing. Then she said, "I can't write him
- now very well. I can't."
-
- Well, so this is about all I know. I wish it were something
- helpful, but it seems like nothing at all. I am only trying to
- write as I would be written by. (See the Golden Rule.) If I have
- not made you sicker, and you love me into the bargain, please
- tell me so. When you are fourteen, responsibility frightens you
- a good deal. At fifteen or sixteen, you throw it off better. If
- you tell me anything to say to Ruth Farraday, I will say it. She
- is certainly sweet, and I certainly love her, and she is
- certainly not a happy girl.
-
- Your sister
- ELIZABETH.
-
- P. S. That day we went to Provincetown, when I was walking alone
- with her, she said you were probably devoted to dozens of girls,
- and I said positively that you weren't. She said she would tell
- me a secret, and that was, that she thought you were very nice.
- It doesn't sound much to write it, but I think she meant it, in
- spite of laughing at it when she said it. She is certainly
- sweet. I would write to her, if it was me.
-
-She made a special trip to the post office to mail this letter, and as
-she dropped it into the slot, she had a moment of dizziness, as if the
-floor of the post office had suddenly shaken itself under her feet. Even
-the blueberry cake did not tempt her to eat very heartily at supper.
-
-"Elizabeth is growing up too fast," her grandmother complained,
-"watermelon and blueberry cake don't interest her."
-
-"I been trying to interest her with the account of the young red-head
-that rode with me to Hyannis when she wouldn't go along. He's a pretty
-likely young chap, mad about electricity, he says, and going to study to
-be an electrical engineer, but Elizabeth is too old for such light talk.
-Can't we think o' something solid that'll kind o' get her attention?"
-
-"She don't feel very well to-night, I guess. Leave her alone, Father."
-
-"I don't feel sick," said Elizabeth, "but I feel about ninety years old.
-I'll just go and sit in Granddaddy's lap after supper and braid his
-beard, so there won't be any hard feeling." She liked nowadays to make
-her grandfather the kind of answer that would please him.
-
-She crept away to bed as early as she could, and lay with throbbing
-temples against the cool white pillows in Great-grandmother's
-guest-chamber bed, wondering if she had written wisely to her sick
-brother and praying that she might have helped, not hindered, his
-recovery.
-
-It was two days later that Peggy came to her with a troubled face.
-
-"We've been having ructions over at our house," she said, "and I'm
-frightened. Mother and Ruth have had an awful row. I don't know how it's
-coming out. Mother is trying to egg Ruthie on to take Piggy for her
-lawful wedded. Anyhow, she claims Ruth ought to take him or leave him,
-with an accent on the _take_. Mother doesn't believe much in this soft
-stuff, you know. She wants everybody comfortable, without any rowing
-over expenses. She likes people to settle down and have large families,
-and large limousines, and large dinner parties, and so on. Her cry is
-that the country is going to the dogs, and our young men are all lame,
-halt, and blind from the late war, so why not pick a soft spot and let
-yourself down in it? She would. She wants Ruth to."
-
-"Oh, Peggy, would you?"
-
-"I don't know what I should do," Peggy said. "I like the people I like
-awfully. I'd rather be with them than be bothered. I don't see much use
-in being married, anyway."
-
-"Sometimes," Elizabeth said, "I've thought it might be rather nice to be
-_just_ married."
-
-"Well, Ruth, she's a puzzle to me. Something's eating her--'scuse my
-elegance--I don't know whether it's wanting to be married, or not
-wanting to be. She told Mother that she'd rather be the wife of a poor
-man that she was keen on, than to have a million. Mother said that Piggy
-Chambers had four million. Ruth said that made about two, or one and one
-half, since the purchasing power of a dollar was so reduced. I didn't
-know Ruthie had it in her to talk back that way. Mother said that the
-purchasing power of a dollar was reduced for our family as well as
-anybody's, did she ever think of that? And that girls were an expensive
-luxury nowadays. Whereupon Ruthie said that she hadn't thought of that,
-but she would, if that was the way Mother looked at it. Mother said it
-wasn't, but that was the way somebody a little more practical than
-Ruthie might have looked at it for themselves. Then she said that Ruth
-had been playing with Piggy, or nobody would have had any reason to
-think of the matter at all. It was all pretty raw, you know. I wouldn't
-tell any other soul on earth, but someway you are different."
-
-"A lot of people tell me things," Elizabeth said, "and I love Ruth."
-
-"Your family is different," Peggy sighed. "If Ruthie and I lived all
-alone, we'd be different. I wish you'd come on over to the house with
-me, Elizabeth. I'm honestly almost afraid to go home. The atmosphere is
-so thick, you couldn't cut it with a knife unless it had just been
-sharpened."
-
-"All right, I will," said Elizabeth. "I was coming over there anyway.
-Grandma thought it would cheer me up. I've been sort of mopey, myself."
-
-"Well, it's about as cheerful in the cottage as if it was a nice, cozy
-morgue, but perhaps we can amuse ourselves with croquet and raspberry
-shrub. Truth compels me to state that Cook has just completed a
-mocha-frosted cake with an icing about six feet high. Do we get any of
-that? The answer is, probably not, but while there is life there is
-hope."
-
-"Do you know that you have an awfully funny mind, Peggy? Amusing, I
-mean, and brilliant."
-
-"That's a pretty embarrassing way for you to talk to an old friend,"
-Peggy said, but she blushed in spite of her light laugh.
-
-"Hello! Daddy's come," she cried, as they approached the Farraday porch.
-"That makes it even more exciting, doesn't it?"
-
-Mr. and Mrs. Farraday were engaged in earnest conversation as the two
-girls opened the screen door and stepped into the dainty space within.
-
-"Hello, Daddy, dearest," Peggy cried, flying to kiss him, "this is a
-darling, unexpected pleasure."
-
-Mr. Farraday had a nice smile. He looked very much like his younger
-daughter.
-
-"Ruth phoned me to come down," he said. "How's my son?"
-
-"She's feeling a lot better, dear, since she knows you're in the house,"
-Peggy flashed back. "I'm the only son he's got, you know."
-
-"Your father and I were talking, dear," Mrs. Farraday's smooth tones
-intervened.
-
-"Elizabeth and I only looked in to see Cook, _in re_ a large cake she's
-been making."
-
-Mrs. Farraday looked up. "Here comes Ruth and Mr. Chambers, so you may
-as well stay here. I've told Cook to serve that cake with our tea
-to-day."
-
-"You have your good points, Mother," Peggy said, saucily.
-
-Ruth threw up her small head as she came out of the house. She was very
-pale, Elizabeth noticed, and Mr. Chambers was very red. He was smiling,
-but Ruth's face was entirely grave.
-
-"I am glad you are here, Father," she said, "for I have an announcement
-to make to you."
-
-"Shall I go?" Elizabeth asked.
-
-"No, dear, I want you to stay. It's not a secret. It is merely that Mr.
-Chambers has asked me to marry him, and I have said that I would."
-
-"Oh, Lord!" Peggy cried.
-
-"Don't you want me for a brother-in-law, Miss Peggy?" Mr. Chambers
-asked. "You don't sound very much pleased at our news."
-
-"I don't want any brother-in-law very much," Peggy said, "but I do want
-my sister to do what she wants to, and--and to be happy," she finished,
-lamely.
-
-"I don't know what to say," Mr. Farraday said. "I feel just about the
-way Peggy does. If--if you're both sure, you have my blessing."
-
-"What nonsense!" Mrs. Farraday cried. "Of course they are both sure, and
-of course they have our blessing."
-
-"How about you, little Miss Elizabeth?" Piggy Chambers smiled at her and
-held out his hand.
-
-"I--I congratulate you," Elizabeth said.
-
-"And me?" asked Ruth.
-
-"And you," Elizabeth said, not quite able to keep her voice steady, "if
-you want to be congratulated by me."
-
-"Kiss me, dear." Mrs. Farraday slipped an arm around her daughter's
-shoulders.
-
-"No," said Ruth, sharply, "no."
-
-"I don't see why anybody should want to kiss anybody," Peggy said. "It's
-too exciting, anyway."
-
-"It's rather usual," Mr. Farraday murmured, "or it used to be, before
-this modern generation."
-
-"A telegram for Miss Ruth," the maid came in and crossed the porch to
-present it.
-
-Ruth looked a little dully at the yellow envelope on the silver tray.
-
-"Who can be telegraphing now?" she said.
-
-"Shall I open it, Sister?" Peggy put out her hand protectingly.
-
-"No."
-
-Ruth tore the crackling paper slowly, her mouth set in pinched, tense
-lines which changed suddenly and quivered for an instant piteously. Then
-she regained her composure.
-
-"It's just a telegram from your brother," she said to Elizabeth, "a few
-lines to inquire about me and wish me good luck. It's funny it should
-have come _now_--isn't it?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- CRABBING
-
-
-Elizabeth's first impulse the next morning was to write to Jean. It was
-Jean who always helped her to think out her problems, and this was the
-greatest problem that she had ever been called to face. She could not
-entirely confide in her friend, still she was comforted by the mere act
-of opening her birthday writing-case, and filling the fountain pen with
-which she was going to write.
-
-She wondered if the Christian Graces, when they looked down on her Aunt
-Helen, had ever found her in such a state of real trouble and dismay.
-
-"Hope can't do me much good," she thought, "and there is nobody to have
-any Charity for but Mr. Piggy Chambers. It's Faith I need for my guide,
-and she is the saddest looking sister of the lot."
-
- DEAR JEAN:
-
- All I can say is, I wish you were here, and I don't see how I am
- going to stop saying that and write anything else. Letters are
- such cold and far-away things. I hope you do know how I love
- you, and how the thought of you comforts me. I told you about
- Faith, Hope, and Charity. Well, there they stand grinning above
- me, and they don't offer much consolation.
-
- I am in trouble, Jean. I can tell you this much. Ruth Farraday
- is going to marry Mr. Chambers, and she was Buddy's girl. I
- can't tell you the ins and outs of it, because they are other
- people's different secrets, but I am afraid that this will kill
- Buddy, and I don't see one single thing to do about it. I feel
- like a criminal and a German spy, to tell you even this much,
- but I feel as if I should burst with grief--really burst. You
- know that feeling of suffocating you get after you have eaten a
- lot too much. I have that same feeling emotionally. I know this
- is a funny way to say it, but it's the only way I can express
- it. I wish we could be together, and I could hear you reading
- poetry or something soothing, and you could help me think how to
- break it to Buddy. It will have to be told him. After I write
- you, I am going to write him. So you see how much I value
- writing to you.
-
- I will answer your questions some other time, when my mind is
- more free. Though I can only doubt if that time will ever come.
- I wish you could see Ruth Farraday. There is something about her
- that makes me think of the girl in the "First Violin," though
- she isn't in the least like her. I don't know what it is. I
- guess it is the sadness that hangs about that book. There is a
- sadness hanging about her, and about me, too,
- Jeanie-that-I-love.
-
- I am glad your friend Neil Seymour is at the Point. I liked him
- very much. If he still wants to send me "Prometheus Bound," he
- may, Mother says. I guess she thinks anything that will keep me
- contented is a good idea. I think "Prometheus Bound" would help
- me, if it is anything like what I think it is.
-
- When I write you, I feel a little as if I were right in the room
- with you. What I am doing now is to hang onto the door, not to
- have to shut it, and go into another room, where my sick Buddy
- is. Life is a strange thing. Good-bye--good-bye--good-bye. I
- love you--hard.
-
- That old-fashioned girl,
- ELSPETH.
-
- MY DEAR BROTHER:
-
-
- I have got to use my own judgment about writing to you. I am to
- blame for writing you the way I did, but I did not know any
- better at that time. I only told you the truth. Now I have more
- truth to tell you. Buddy, will you brace up as if you were in
- the trenches again? You are a soldier, you know, and you've got
- to fight another battle.
-
- Mother said I was not to tell you anything that might trouble
- you, but I have got to trouble you the worst of all. Buddy, Ruth
- Farraday is engaged to marry that goop, and her family have
- egged her on till she did not know which way to turn, and has
- turned this way. She told me and her family, and her face looked
- like death. I am not making this up. Peggy says so, and she
- knows. She loves Ruthie with all her heart, and she would not
- make anything up. She is not that kind. I am more that kind, but
- this is really and truly so. Ruth is not a happy girl, and we
- both know it. She has lost her lovely pink cheeks, and is a
- white apple blossom now. A pear blossom is more like it, only
- not pretty enough for her.
-
- Well, Buddy, I have never had any real, grown-up trouble, but
- the kind of fourteen-year-old trouble I have had has seemed
- pretty hard sometimes. Grandmother says that you've always got
- to live, whether you can or not. I know you don't want my
- condolences, but I love you so that I can't help being sick over
- this. It's hard work for me to eat and sleep. I hope you can
- swear a little, because that will help you.
-
- SISTER.
-
-"I don't feel very much like going to Swan Pond crabbing," she thought,
-as she sealed her two letters, and set them before her on the desk, "but
-I suppose people mustn't give up to things. Even if my heart is
-breaking, the Robbins boy and his cousin and Peggy ought not to have
-their plans spoiled."
-
-She made her way through the chain of little rooms between her den and
-her sleeping chamber, unfastening, as she went, the blue linen gown,
-buttoned all the way down the back, that, with its pink twin, was her
-regular morning uniform. In her bed room she slipped into a blouse cut
-like a boy's, and dark blue woollen bloomers with wool stockings to
-match. With this she put on, very carefully, a blue tam o' shanter. She
-saw in the glass that her face was drawn, and her eyes had dark shadows
-beneath them.
-
-"If Tom Robbins notices how I look and asks me any questions, I shall
-only tell him that I am in deep trouble," she thought. "I won't say
-anything like that to Bill. He would only grin and be embarrassed, but I
-think Tom Robbins would understand more about grief."
-
-She was a little ashamed of having thought so much of her own trouble
-when she saw Peggy's stricken face.
-
-"Don't ask me what has happened," Peggy whispered, as they clambered
-into the car and Grandfather started for the cross-roads where they were
-to pick up the two boys. "I don't know what hasn't happened. Ruth has
-shut herself into her room, after some sort of a tragic heart-to-heart
-talk with Father, and Mother and Father are scarcely speaking, and the
-cook is mad, and ruined the breakfast muffins and gave us bad eggs, or
-baddish eggs, for breakfast, and Sister won't see me. Piggy sent her a
-huge box of flowers this morning. I've got to stop calling him Piggy and
-call him Albert, I suppose. Wouldn't you know his name would be Albert?
-Isn't he the most Albertish person? Elizabeth, I never hated anybody so
-much in all my life. He never did me any harm, but I would be pleased
-and proud to--to choke him to death."
-
-"So would I," sighed Elizabeth.
-
-"Wasn't it funny, her getting that telegram from your brother just when
-she did? Sometimes I think she was keen on your brother, and sort of
-peeved because he didn't ever write to her when he got back. You don't
-suppose she'd get herself engaged to Piggy just out of pride, do you?"
-
-"Oh, I don't know," Elizabeth cried.
-
-"Anyhow, she took that telegram to bed with her, and it was all mussed
-up under her pillow. I know, because I made the beds this morning. Our
-treasure of a second maid went to mass, and stayed out to breakfast."
-
-"What's all that whispering about?" Grandfather inquired, looking over
-his shoulder. "I've a great mind to just reach over and tech the whip to
-you," he made a movement toward an invisible whip socket. "I guess I
-won't. It makes Lizzie nervous to have me flourishing a whip around. I
-suppose you are trying to get all giggled and whispered up before you
-have to stop it and talk to the boys."
-
-"We aren't giggling much this morning," Elizabeth said. "There they are
-on the corner, waving to us."
-
-"Did you ever see such red hair?" Peggy said. "I like red-headed
-children and boys. I don't think I like red-headed girls so much. I
-think Mabel is awfully cunning with her red curls."
-
-"Mabel? Oh, she has real auburn hair," Elizabeth said, "and it's
-beautiful. How do you do?" she returned Tom Robbins' greeting with more
-than a touch of her customary shyness as he scrambled for a place on the
-floor of the car at her feet.
-
-"It's my turn," he insisted, as his friend Bill tried to argue the
-matter. "You ride with Captain Swift, and mind the rakes."
-
-"You've got real nets!" Peggy cried. "How scrumptious! We just take
-rakes, you know."
-
-"I don't know as the Swan Pond crabs will consent to do anything but be
-raked in," Grandfather said. "I heard of a boy once that caught a crab
-in one of those store nets, but it was a bad one."
-
-"You wait and see," Tom said. "Our object is to catch crabs, and we are
-going to catch them."
-
-"So am I," said Grandfather.
-
-They left the machine in a clearing by the roadside, and, laden with
-nets and bait, made their way through a path among the underbrush, until
-they stood on the shore of Swan Lake. A blue sky, with here and there a
-winging cloud, met the low horizon, skirted with the dense green of
-low-set pine and oak trees. The gray-green water lapped the shore
-alluringly.
-
-There was a general scramble to remove encumbering shoes and stockings.
-
-"If anybody says, 'Come on in, the water's fine,' they'll owe me a
-pineapple college ice," Peggy declared, "or, if you prefer it in New
-York-ese, a pineapple sundae--though why they should think over there
-that by spelling Sunday with an e, they can make it a soda-fountain
-dish, I don't know."
-
-"Don't you go jeering at the manners and customs of my native town,"
-Elizabeth cried.
-
-"Did your ancestors own most of New York?" Grandfather asked,
-innocently. "I thought most of Manhattan Island belonged to the Dutch."
-
-"I don't know what my ancestors owned," Elizabeth said.
-
-"They owned this, for instance," her grandfather waved a nonchalant hand
-at the beautiful country about him, "forty or fifty acres around these
-parts. My Great-grandfather Swift, he got kinder tired of having so much
-property, and he sold a chunk to the town for a cemetery, and one thing
-and another."
-
-"Where did he live?" Elizabeth asked.
-
-"Up the road apiece, in a great house that was burnt down long before my
-time. He was quite a likely old fellow, though, from all I can hear of
-him. He had a lot of stories told about him. He started a bank, and all
-his money was carted up to it in ox teams, because they didn't have
-anything but silver money in those days."
-
-"Quite an influential old party, wasn't he?" Peggy said. "Doesn't it
-make you feel creepy, Elizabeth, to descend from the very oldest
-settlers, the way you do? I don't know anything about my ancestors."
-
-"I never did before," Elizabeth said.
-
-"The time is going to come when Elizabeth will be proud of what she
-comes from," her grandfather said. "Well, if anybody really wants to go
-crabbing with me, I'd advise them to----"
-
-"Come in while the water's fine," the boys chanted together.
-
-"I owe you a pineapple college ice," Bill grinned at Peggy.
-
-"I owe you a pineapple sundae," Tom told Elizabeth.
-
-"I wasn't betting," Elizabeth said.
-
-"But I was," Tom's grin was almost as broad as his cousin's. "You can
-have a maple marshmallow sundae if you prefer it. I do."
-
-"Well, it's hard to choose," Elizabeth temporized.
-
-"You can have both," Tom decided. "I'll show you how to use the crab
-catcher. You float the bait on this line, and when the crab comes to the
-surface, you----"
-
-But Grandfather, scorning artificial allurements, caught the first crab.
-The crab was scurrying away over the pebbles and shells at the bottom of
-the transparent water when Grandfather's inexorable implement caught him
-in mid-career, and he was imprisoned in the covered basket they had
-brought for the purpose.
-
-"I didn't know that you could catch them so near the shore," Elizabeth
-said, looking down at her bare toes in some dismay, "do they hurt when
-they bite you?"
-
-"The game is not to let them bite you," Peggy said. "Hooray! One for
-me--us, I mean."
-
-"Three," said Grandfather, landing another.
-
-"I've got the father and mother of all crabs here," Bill Dean said, as
-he dragged at the handle of his net. "Look at old Grandfather Crab."
-
-"He isn't very pretty," Elizabeth said, "but I prefer him to a raw
-lobster. I never saw a green lobster till the other day."
-
-"She was just making Judidy throw it out when I caught her at it,"
-Grandfather laughed, "she said it was sick, and would give us all
-ptomaine poisoning, and the lobster was so mad when he heard it that he
-tried to claw poor Judidy's hand off."
-
-"It _is_ strange that they turn bright red after being bright green,"
-Elizabeth said. "I think I prefer crabs."
-
-"Come with me, and we'll get some," Tom said, taking possession of her.
-
-"I guess we can rest now," he said a little later, "we got more than any
-of them."
-
-"Did we?"
-
-"Well, we got as many, anyhow. I'm hot, aren't you?"
-
-Elizabeth mopped her forehead and smiled by way of answer.
-
-"Look here," Tom said, "there is something I want to ask you, Miss
-Swift. If you don't like it you just have to say so, and I will
-understand and not ask you again. I was just wondering if I couldn't
-call you Elizabeth. Bill he's going to ask Peggy, I mean Miss Farraday,
-the same thing."
-
-"I didn't know you had been calling me anything," Elizabeth said.
-
-"Well, I haven't. I think last names are rather stiff, you know, and I
-didn't like to use your first name without permission."
-
-"I'd just as soon have you call me by my first name," Elizabeth said,
-"if--if only----"
-
-"You've got something in your mind about me that you aren't saying. If
-you think it's--well--fresh--of me, to ask you that question about first
-names, you can say so."
-
-"I don't think that's fresh of you," Elizabeth said, "but I--well, I
-don't feel like talking in any way but a very straightforward and
-truthful way to-day. The thing I don't like, really, is the way you
-tried to get acquainted with us. Every time I think of that, I feel as
-if--well, I wish it hadn't happened, that's all."
-
-"So do I," said Tom Robbins, soberly, "but I'll tell you something. I
-have never done anything like that before. We just made up our minds
-that we would, that's all. You know the way you make up your mind to try
-something that you've seen other people do."
-
-"But I don't see why you tried it on us," said Elizabeth.
-
-"I don't see why we did, either, except that we wanted to know you the
-most of any girls."
-
-"I don't like to have a boy make me feel that he thinks I am a girl he
-can scrape acquaintance with," Elizabeth said. "It hurts my feelings."
-
-"I wouldn't hurt your feelings for anything, and you ought to know now
-that I am not the kind of boy that does things like that, except for a
-lark. Don't you?"
-
-"Don't I what?"
-
-"Know that?"
-
-"Yes, I guess I do."
-
-"Well, then?"
-
-"All right, you can call me Elizabeth."
-
-"Peggy and I have caught more than you have," Bill shouted, as he came
-up with crawling crabs in his net.
-
-"I guess it worked all right," Tom whispered to Elizabeth, "with them."
-
-"Bill asked if he could call me Peggy," that young lady whispered to
-Elizabeth, on the way home. "I was so surprised I nearly fell over. I
-thought he always had. I've always called him Bill."
-
-"I think boys sort of make up their minds to do a certain kind of thing,
-and then they do it," said Elizabeth, "without thinking whether it is
-really appropriate or not."
-
-"I guess you are right," Peggy said, "and now that we've had this
-pleasant afternoon, we'll just have to take up the burden of our gloomy
-thoughts again."
-
-"I know it," said Elizabeth, forlornly.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- ELIZABETH IS RUDE
-
-
-Elizabeth and Moses took the shore road, and finally struck off across
-the fields and through the woods to make a short cut for the bathing
-beach. Moses was going to initiate the new bathing suit Elizabeth had
-bought him, and Elizabeth to sit on the beach and knit on a sweater she
-was making for Madget.
-
-It was a rehabilitated Moses that alternately darted and jogged along by
-her side. He was wearing one of the half-dozen shirts that Grandmother
-had cut and made by the famous Butterick pattern from which the girls
-had fashioned the garment he wore on his appearance at the bean supper.
-His trousers were the veritable "pants" of his dreams, and the rudiments
-of suspenders, with which he would not part, were tucked in under his
-belt. His face was comparatively clean, and he had allowed Elizabeth to
-brush his heavy, upstanding hair until it looked almost personable.
-
-"What are those things around your neck?" Elizabeth cried, catching
-sight of an extraordinary decoration only partially concealed by his
-shirt collar.
-
-"Shark's teeth. I wear 'em for luck. I cut 'em out myself."
-
-"Cut them out of what?"
-
-"Sharks. What'd you think I got 'em from? Cats or something?"
-
-"Moses, you've got to learn to be a little more respectful to me. I
-don't like the way you speak to me."
-
-"All right," he agreed, amiably.
-
-"Where did you get those teeth from?"
-
-"I told you I got 'em from sharks. I go down to the shore when the boats
-come in from their weir. You know, the men bring in a lot of fish every
-day. Well, yesterday they brought in four sharks and they let me cut out
-these teeth. I could of got more if my knife had been sharper, or I'd
-had more time. Every night they give me a fish, too."
-
-"That doesn't sound a bit probable, about the sharks. Still, I never
-caught you telling a lie, Moses. What do you do with the fish they give
-you?"
-
-"I take 'em home and I cook 'em. Mis' Laury Ann, she showed me how, one
-time. Mabel, I'm learning her to cook, and Madget she wants I should
-learn her, but I don't think I shall."
-
-"Oh, dear, I'm afraid I've rather neglected you lately," Elizabeth said.
-"I haven't been to see your mother for a long time."
-
-"Well, Mis' Laury Ann she comes, and Judidy. Mother says neglecting is
-all you can expect from girls."
-
-"She's a whole lot better, isn't she?" Elizabeth asked, hastily.
-
-"Sure. Mis' Abithy Hawes she come around and got Little Eva to going it,
-and Little Eva she said that Mother had water on her lungs."
-
-"Mercy!"
-
-"But Mother she got to reading a book that said housework was a good
-cure for sickness. About sweeping bein' good for the spine, and washing
-bein' good for the stomick, and housecleaning a good thing for the
-figger. So she thought she'd try that, too."
-
-"Where did she get the book?"
-
-"It was one that Mis' Laury Ann lent her."
-
-"I guess Grandmother is working along the way she said she was going
-to," Elizabeth thought. "Does your mother really do housework?" she
-asked, aloud.
-
-"Most every day," Moses said, proudly, "she bought me these pants, too."
-
-"Does she do any cooking?"
-
-"She don't like to cook, and she ain't never learned. I kin learn her
-when I've learned myself some more."
-
-"It does seem as if there were _some_ improvement in your family's
-condition, doesn't it, Moses?"
-
-"Judidy, she told Ma she was the town's poor, and Ma says she ain't.
-That kind of stuck in Ma's crop, and Madget cried and said she wouldn't
-go to the poor house. Now Ma says she is going to buy tea and coffee
-enough to git a premium set o' dishes. I don't know whether she will or
-not. If she don't I'm going to earn them. Captain Swift is going to let
-me sell some corn and string beans out of his garden."
-
-The path emerged on the beach, and Moses disappeared abruptly in the
-direction of his favourite clump of pines, scorning a bath-house. He
-reappeared almost immediately, clad in a single garment of blue jersey
-that glistened with newness.
-
-"You watch me pretending to be a whale," he said, "first I'll dive. Then
-I'll come up spouting a whole mouthful of water."
-
-"He's a good little swimmer," Elizabeth thought, as she watched his
-antics. "I guess he'll turn out all right. How wonderful Grandmother is,
-always keeping her eye on them. It's so much easier to do a thing like
-that as hard as you can sometimes, and then drop it, than it is to keep
-pegging along at it all the time."
-
-She was knitting so busily that she did not see Ruth Farraday
-approaching along the beach, and it was not until a long shadow fell
-across her work that she realized Ruth was near. Ruth in a pink voile
-frock, with a frilly, rose-coloured parasol, smiled down at her--a smile
-of the lips only.
-
-"Shall I sit down beside you?" she asked, in her low, clear voice.
-"Peggy couldn't come down to the beach to-day. I was too lazy to go in
-swimming, but I thought I'd like a smell of the sea, all the same."
-
-"I--I'm very glad to see you," Elizabeth said.
-
-"I'm glad to see you. I haven't seen you since that other day at tea."
-
-"No," said Elizabeth, gravely.
-
-"I haven't been feeling very well since then. It was--nice of your
-brother to wire me, wasn't it?"
-
-"I told Buddy that I thought you would be pleased to hear from him. It
-was my fault. I shouldn't have told him, if I had known."
-
-"If you had known what?" asked Ruth Farraday, lightly.
-
-"That you were going to marry somebody else."
-
-"Somebody else?" she laughed.
-
-"Somebody that wasn't Buddy," Elizabeth said, bravely.
-
-"There never was any question of my marrying your brother. We were very
-good friends before he went abroad. Then he seemed to let it--our
-friendship, die a natural death."
-
-"I told you about his being sick," Elizabeth said, "and I told you that
-there weren't any other girls."
-
-"There not being any other girls doesn't--didn't necessarily mean----"
-
-"Oh, yes, it does, with Buddy."
-
-"That's putting it rather ambiguously."
-
-"I don't know how it's putting it," Elizabeth cried, "but I do know that
-there wasn't any other girl."
-
-"He didn't tell you so, did he?"
-
-"He--he----" Elizabeth stammered.
-
-"You--you said that you told him to communicate with me?" Ruth was
-having almost as much difficulty in speaking as Elizabeth.
-
-"He wrote and asked my advice, and I told him I would, if I were he, and
-that was why he did it, and then I had to write him that you were
-engaged."
-
-"Oh, you've written him that already?"
-
-"I had to," Elizabeth said, miserably. "I had just told him that you
-weren't engaged to anybody else, and that you inquired about him, and
-that you--you might want to hear from him. He's very sick, and he wrote
-and asked me what to do."
-
-"When did he write that?"
-
-"Just the other day."
-
-"And you wrote just the other day?"
-
-"There was time for him to get my letter before he telegraphed to you."
-
-"And then you wrote again to say that I was engaged?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, I'm still engaged," Ruth Farraday said, lightly. "When you write
-to him, won't you tell him that I thank him for remembering me so--so
-pleasantly, but that I'm a good deal occupied just at present."
-
-"No, I won't," said Elizabeth.
-
-"Indeed?"
-
-"He's too sick, and it would bother him too much."
-
-"Oh, very well," said Ruth Farraday.
-
-"I didn't mean to be rude," Elizabeth said.
-
-"You were, rather. I'd like to send your brother a message, you see, and
-I--I can't write to him. I've tried, and I can't. I don't want him to
-think I am altogether unappreciative. What message shall I send him,
-Elizabeth?"
-
-"Send him your love, if you really mean it, and then not any message."
-
-"I will. I do send him my love. I'm sorry he's sick. Wouldn't it be wise
-to say that?"
-
-"I think so."
-
-"Send him my love and tell him--oh, tell him he was a day too late."
-
-"I will," said Elizabeth.
-
-With one long, indrawn breath, Ruth Farraday turned and walked back
-along the beach.
-
-"She's shivering as if she were cold," Elizabeth thought, as she watched
-the diminishing figure.
-
-It was high tide, and the deep blue waves were foam-crested. The wide
-sky was streaked with clouds, and a bright sun lay hot upon the sands.
-Elizabeth looked first at Moses' bobbing head, and then at the bobbing,
-rose-coloured parasol dwindling in the distance.
-
-"Life is a curious thing," she said to herself, slowly, "it keeps
-changing so, getting better or worse all the time. Here's Moses and the
-Steppes, who were so perfectly hopeless and helpless, and there is an
-improvement in them. They are my friends and my responsibility--if I
-don't live up to it very well. Then here is Ruth Farraday, that I truly
-love, and everything about her is getting worse every minute, and it's
-all mixed up with me, somehow. I don't do much good, or anything, but
-it's mixed up with me all the same."
-
-She knitted to the end of her row and pulled out her needle. She gave
-another long look at sea and sky.
-
-"Everything is a part of everything," she said, a little confusedly.
-"Poor Buddy, dear."
-
-She wrote him a long letter that night, and told him what Ruth had said,
-and then she tried not to think about him at all for the next few days.
-She was afraid for what she had done. She had had no word from him in
-answer to her letter announcing Ruth's engagement, and only the briefest
-line from her mother, who was evidently gravely anxious about her son's
-condition. She knew that Buddy was worse, and she knew that the letter
-she had written him had made him worse; how much worse, Elizabeth could
-not bear to think.
-
-It was five days after her meeting with Ruth upon the beach that the
-evening mail brought her two letters, one in her mother's handwriting
-and one in Buddy's. Judidy brought them in and put them in her lap.
-
-"We are going to lose Judidy next winter," her grandmother said when
-that young woman had blushed, giggled, and withdrawn to the back porch,
-from which the sound of a drawling, masculine voice was heard at
-intervals, interspersed with Judidy's high-pitched protestations. "She's
-going to be married, she tells me."
-
-"Is she?" said Elizabeth, trying to subdue the dizziness she felt at the
-sight of Buddy's familiar scrawl.
-
-"Your grandfather and I thought we'd give them a wedding. Judidy's folks
-won't. They are nice enough people, but peculiar--odd. They believe in
-saving trouble and expense on everything."
-
-"Oh, Grandmother," Elizabeth said, trembling, "will you hold my hand
-while I read these letters? I--I am so worried about Buddy."
-
-"Certain." Grandmother drew out the little footstool that matched the
-particular valanced rocker she was sitting in. "You come here."
-
-Elizabeth leaned her head against her grandmother's knee, with the
-feeling of faintness still upon her. Her grandmother stroked her hair
-gently.
-
-"I can't read them out loud, Grandma. They are private in a way.
-It's--it's the private things in them that frighten me."
-
-"There ain't nothing in this world to be afraid of. There ain't," said
-Grandmother. "Fear once killed a cat, you know."
-
-"Don't you ever get afraid, Grandma?"
-
-"Certain I get afraid, but when I do, I just think that there ain't
-nothing in this world to be afraid of so much as of being afraid, and
-that kind of stops me."
-
-"I can't help being afraid of what's in this particular letter."
-
-[Illustration: "'I can't help being afraid of what's in this particular
-letter'"]
-
-"What are you afraid it's going to do to you?"
-
-"I--I don't know."
-
-"Well, you just open it up and read it, and after you've opened it up,
-you'll just find you're sitting here the way you were before, with your
-grandma's arms around you."
-
-Elizabeth pulled the kindly hand down to meet her lips.
-
-"Well," she said, "I'm going to read it now."
-
- DEAR LITTLE SISTER:
-
- I can't tell you how much I thank you for your two letters. They
- cured me. I've been seeing ghosts, but "being gone, I am a man
- again." I'm going to get my discharge if I have to bust the
- whole darned hospital, and I'm coming down to Cape Cod. While
- there, I shall tell you what I think of several things,
- including the opinion I have of a man who sits in a cloud of
- vapour all day in a United States Base Hospital, and lets things
- go some other man's way.
-
- You tell Miss Ruth Farraday that it's never too late. No, don't
- tell her anything, but whenever you see the man in the case,
- stick out your sweet little tongue at him. I'm sick--sure I'm
- sick, but I'm a well man, just the same. You wait and see. I
- broke the news to Mother and she doesn't believe it. She thinks
- that I'm probably delirious. Father sees that something
- significant has happened, but doesn't believe that I can bust
- out so easy. You wait, dear.
-
- Keep your eye on Ruth and report to me.
-
- I love and admire you, and you are my own darling sister, for
- whom and which I devoutly thank whatever gods there be. I am the
- Captain of my Soul.
-
- YOUR BUDDY.
-
-Elizabeth buried her face in the ample folds of her grandmother's white
-apron.
-
-"He's better. He's going to get well," she sobbed. "Oh, dear, I was
-afraid I had killed him, but I didn't. I did him good."
-
-"He needed something to rouse him," Grandmother said, "your mother says
-the doctor has been saying that for some time. I don't know how you've
-done it, but I guess you've turned the trick."
-
-"He says he's going to get out and come down here right away."
-
-"I thought 'twas about time."
-
-"He's so sweet and dear and handsome, and he was so brave, and oh, I
-love him so!"
-
-"That don't seem to me to be anything to sob over."
-
-"I--I can't help it."
-
-"I always cried more tears of joy than I ever cried of sorrow. It runs
-in the family."
-
-"I guess I can read Mother's letter aloud. It's longer than Buddy's."
-
- ELIZABETH DEAR:
-
- The strangest thing has happened to your brother. He has
- suddenly taken a new lease of life. Night before last I left him
- just as dull and discouraged and apathetic as ever, and this
- morning when I went to see him, at about ten o'clock, he was
- another boy. The nurse said he had been that way ever since he
- got a letter from you in the morning mail. I suppose that was
- merely a coincidence. I don't mean to say that I found him in
- any seraphic mood. He was literally fighting mad at the hospital
- authorities, and his whole mind seemed concentrated on getting
- out. At first I thought his fever had risen, but the doctor
- assures me that the subtle cloud that has been resting over his
- mind has lifted. He says he has never known a case where the
- patient provided his own stimulus before, that usually it has
- come from the outside in the form of some kind of shock,
- pleasant or unpleasant.
-
- It hasn't been entirely a nervous case, you understand. He would
- probably have less trouble in getting away, if it had been just
- a matter of mind, but his mind has kept his body sick. It's been
- a vicious circle. He has believed, it now develops, that the
- physical matter was incurable. His old job was gone, you know,
- and that seemed to depress him. Your father was perfectly
- willing to keep him at home indefinitely, and we kept telling
- him so, but in his poor, tortured mind he had construed our
- doing so into an admission that we never expected him to get
- well.
-
- At any rate, the worst is over now. I believe we'll have our boy
- restored in mind and body very soon. I don't dare to hope we'll
- all get down to Cape Cod as soon as he thinks we shall but I am
- inclined to think that he is too lively a character for the
- United States Government to hold very much longer.
-
- You have been my brave, darling daughter, and I love you more
- than I can tell you. I am sending your shoes by this post.
-
- MOTHER.
-
-"I hope he'll get here while it's still cucumber season," Grandmother
-said. "My, how that boy used to eat herrings and cucumbers! I cooked a
-whole half dozen once, and I vow he et the whole lot, and I don't know
-how many cucumbers. He was a dretful one to eat. He used to like to
-climb up in the pear tree in pear season, and pick the topmost pear on
-the tree and eat his way down."
-
-"Do you mind if I cry a little more, Grandma? I can stop, but I don't
-want to," Elizabeth sniffled.
-
-"It will be good for the fern to have a little dampness in the air. You
-cry, and I'll knit a spell."
-
-"You tease just about as much as Grandfather does, don't--don't you?
-Only you're so--so sly about it, nobody realizes it."
-
-"Ain't that our ring on the telephone?"
-
-"I don't know. I just sit here and let it ring all the time. I forget to
-count whether it's fifteen or fourteen."
-
-"Land, fourteen will wake me up out of a sound sleep when I'm to bed
-upstairs. And I don't never hear fifteen no more'n if it hadn't
-sounded."
-
-"It _is_ fourteen," Elizabeth said, as the imperious instrument sounded
-one long and four short signals distinctly. "I'll answer."
-
-"Elizabeth, where have you been all day?" Peggy's voice inquired. "I
-particularly want to see you about something, but Mother insists it's
-too late for me to come over."
-
-"I went swimming with Moses," Elizabeth said, "and finished Madget's
-sweater, and made a chocolate cake. What is it that you've got to tell
-me?"
-
-"I can't tell you very well over the phone."
-
-"Is it pleasant or unpleasant?"
-
-"Unpleasant," Peggy whispered, with her mouth close to the receiver.
-
-"Tell me."
-
-"I can't."
-
-"Hint it. Is it about Ruthie?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And it's unpleasant?"
-
-"Well, there is something pleasant about it. The festivities will be
-pleasant."
-
-"Oh, Peggy, tell me. I've just about got to know."
-
-"Well, listen close. It's going to be hurried up."
-
-"What is?"
-
-"The--well--you know. Somebody's receiver is down. They are listening
-in. Don't you hear that clock ticking?"
-
-"Oh, don't mind that. Tell me."
-
-"They've hung up, I think. Guess what I mean. The festivities are going
-to be hurried up. We want you to take part in them. It's going to be in
-two weeks. Now do you know? It begins with w."
-
-"You mean Ruth is going to be----"
-
-"Yes, but don't breathe it. We want you at it--you know--the w. You and
-me, dressed alike in blue dimity. There won't be many people."
-
-"Oh, Peggy, I couldn't."
-
-"Yes, you can. The way I look at it is that we might as well be
-philosophical about it and have a good time, even if our hearts do hang
-down to our boots. Don't you say so? Mother is calling me and I've got
-to go. Don't breathe a word. I'll tell you all about it to-morrow. I'll
-be over. Good-bye."
-
-"Oh, good-bye!" said Elizabeth.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- PICKING CHICKENS
-
-
-Do you want to come out and set with me in the woodshed while I pick a
-couple o' chicken?" Grandfather asked one morning at the breakfast
-table.
-
-"Ye--es," said his granddaughter.
-
-"I don't mind picking a chicken, but I do like encouragement while I'm
-a-doing of it. All the pesky little pin feathers stick twice as tight
-when I'm alone with 'em."
-
-"When do you begin?" Elizabeth faltered.
-
-"Soon's I can get to it. First I catch my chickens. After you have heard
-them squawking for a while, you get your knitting and come out to the
-shed."
-
-"When he cuts off their heads, I just about pass into Kingdom Come,"
-said Judidy. "I hate to hear them squawking as much as I hate to hear a
-pig stuck."
-
-"Oh, do you cut off their heads?" Elizabeth asked, faintly.
-
-"Well, I wring their necks first."
-
-"Don't take Jehoshaphat, will you, Captain Swift? I've fed him about
-every day this year, and he eats out o' my hand just as cute's the next
-one."
-
-"Don't take Speckletop, will you, Grandfather?" Elizabeth moaned.
-
-"She's a setting hen. I don't calculate to eat no chicken pie made out
-o' setting hens."
-
-"It's dretful hard to eat your own hens," Grandmother said. "You raise
-'em from chickens, and you get to know every one from every t'other one,
-and then some fine morning Father he puts their heads on the chopping
-block, and that's the last of them, but they do stick, going down, when
-I try to eat them."
-
-"You don't have to worry, Mother. I know this is a pretty middling
-tender-hearted family, so I bought this pair o' roosters over to
-Battletown."
-
-"Where's Battletown?" Elizabeth asked.
-
-"That's the old-fashioned name for the region over yonder. This here was
-called Crocker Neck. You remind me and I'll tell you some poetry about
-it."
-
-"I hate to eat anybody else's hens," Grandmother said, "you don't know
-how they been raised."
-
-"They say old Uncle Jonathan Swift won't take his vittles hot nor cold,"
-Grandfather chuckled. "Either way they hurt his teeth, he says."
-
-"If you feel too squeamish about seeing those chickens picked, you just
-tell Grandfather, Elizabeth," her grandmother said after he had left the
-table. "I used to feel pretty delicate about such things myself, till I
-decided I'd got to get hardened."
-
-"How did you get hardened?"
-
-"Well, I took a spell to think about it. I can stand most anything if I
-can get my ideas fixed up about it."
-
-"Oh, so can I," Elizabeth cried. "I guess I inherited it."
-
-"I couldn't stand the sight o' blood, or hearing about killing a pig or
-a chicken, much less seeing the carcasses around. Well, I come to the
-conclusion that every time a chicken was killed somebody'd have to pick
-it, and I could pick a chicken if anybody else could. I figured out that
-if it wasn't me, it would have to be somebody else, probably just as
-squeamish. So I went ahead and caught a chicken and wrung its neck. I
-couldn't of chopped off its head if I suffered, but after Father helped
-me out that far, I cleaned it and picked it just like a storekeeper."
-
-"I suppose that's the way you do get character, just by doing things
-that you can't do--all the time."
-
-"Well, Providence sees that you have plenty of things to do that can't
-be done. I kinder hate to see young folks forcing themselves into it."
-
-"I guess I'll go and see that chicken picked all the same, Grandmother,"
-Elizabeth said.
-
-She did not even put her fingers in her ears to shut out the sounds of
-attack and slaughter in the chicken yard when she went out to the
-woodshed and took her place determinedly on the step, companionably near
-the three-legged stool that her grandfather had drawn up to the door.
-
-"What was the poetry you said you were going to say to me?" she began,
-"that poetry about Crocker Neck?"
-
-"It's just what the girls used to say to the boys when they went
-a-courting:
-
- "Hasty pudding in the pot,
- Pumpkin in the lantern,
- If you hadn't come from Crocker Neck,
- You wouldn't be so handsome."
-
-"It doesn't rhyme very well, does it?" Elizabeth said.
-
-"It used to kinder tickle the young folks. We used to have one that we
-said to the girls:
-
- "The Cape Cod girls they have no combs.
- They comb their hair with the codfish bones.
-
-I don't know as that rhymes any better, but young folks get up things
-that don't have much rhyme or reason."
-
-The air was full of the scent of wet feathers. Elizabeth looked up in
-time to see him lift a dripping fowl from the pail of hot water at his
-side, and then hastily looked away again.
-
-"Grandfather, what did you do when you were a young man?" she said.
-
-"I went to sea."
-
-"How old were you when you first went?"
-
-"'Long about nine or ten. I started in by going cook."
-
-"Cook?" Elizabeth cried. "Cook? How--how did that happen?"
-
-"All the boys went cook summers. We used to go to district school in the
-winter and then go to sea in the summer. I cooked for seventeen men my
-first trip, and I hadn't nothing to cook in but a baking kettle,
-neither."
-
-"What kind of boat did you go in?"
-
-Grandfather industriously plucked at the carcass in his hand.
-
-"A fishing vessel. She was called the _Good Intent_. I used to make
-seven loaves of bread at a time, and we had to eat it every scrap up
-before we could touch the new. It didn't make much difference, though,
-because we carried four bushels of meal, part Indian and part rye, and
-it all soured before we was out long, but we et it just the same. We
-used to stay out two or three weeks at a time, and bring in seven or
-eight thousand fish."
-
-"I can't believe that you used to be a cook. It doesn't seem possible."
-
-"I didn't used to be a cook," said Grandfather, quietly, "I used to go
-cook on my grandfather's vessel. Have you heard from that friend of
-yours lately whose brother-in-law is a count?"
-
-"No. Yes, that is. She writes me quite regularly." Elizabeth blushed
-crimson. "She's an awfully nice girl, with no nonsense about her at
-all."
-
-"'Taint so much her that I'm interested in as her brother-in-law,"
-Grandfather said, solemnly, "he must have been a pretty smart man, to
-earn that title of count by his own efforts."
-
-"I--I don't think he did," Elizabeth said, before she caught the twinkle
-in her grandfather's eye.
-
-"Your grandmother's father he was a sailmaker, you know," he continued,
-soberly. "He used to have a sail loft where he sat and sewed on sails.
-He used to pay your grandmother by the dozen for threading for him."
-
-"I didn't know," said Elizabeth. She looked up from her knitting for an
-instant, and saw the strange, prickly surface of the denuded fowl. "I
-didn't realize that the reason they called it goose flesh when they got
-chilled was because your flesh looked like a goose's flesh--I mean a--a
-geese's," she added, hastily.
-
-"Yes, and sometimes the reason they call a young girl a little goose is
-that all of a sudden she begins to act like one. Pesky things, these
-little pin feathers!"
-
-"I--I can help you do that," Elizabeth said.
-
-"Well, put that towel over your lap and don't get any blood on you. Sure
-it won't make you sick?"
-
-"I'm just about sure that it will," said Elizabeth, "but--but what do I
-care? Did it make you sick when you first went to sea, Grandfather?"
-
-"Sick as a dog," said her grandfather, heartily, "and the smell of that
-souring meal, and mouldy corn beef, and dead fish--well, I----"
-
-"Oh, you poor, poor granddaddy," Elizabeth cried, "you poor little boy,
-why did they make you go?"
-
-"That was my father's idea of bringing me up. I ain't so sure it wasn't
-a pretty good one."
-
-"Did you get paid for it?"
-
-"Six dollars a month and found. I had the promise of a new hat in the
-fall, but I never saw it. Times has changed considerable since I was a
-boy."
-
-"I should think they had," said Elizabeth, fervently.
-
-"You see, Grandfather he owned a fleet of fishing vessels, he owned a
-dozen himself, and he was part owner with your grandmother's father in
-as many more."
-
-"But I thought you said Grandmother's father was a--was just a
-sailmaker?"
-
-"So he was, but he was a shipowner, too. He had to have an interest in a
-good many vessels in order to get the business of making sails for
-them."
-
-"Did he make them all by himself?"
-
-Grandfather smiled.
-
-"Well, not exactly. His will was good, but he couldn't manage to fit out
-more than a few hundred boats single-handed."
-
-"You laugh at me every word you say, Grandfather."
-
-"About every other word, I should call it. He went to sea a good part of
-his life, but he had learned his trade at sailmaking. Boys learned a
-trade those days, if they was real enterprising. My father he learned
-the cooper's trade when he was a boy."
-
-"How big were these boats?"
-
-"They carried from ten to twenty-five men. Grandfather he built a
-sailing vessel down here at the mouth of Herring River that went all
-around the world nearabout. 'Twas his boast that he built it from timber
-cut on his own land. I was on board of her just off New Bedford when the
-steamer _Morning Star_ struck her amidships. She sunk in less'n fifteen
-minutes."
-
-"But you--were saved?"
-
-"I woke up when she struck, and I come up from below just as I was, in
-my underclothes. I saw a dark shape coming alongside, and that was all I
-knew. I jumped for her. They said I was the first one over the side.
-'Twas the old coastwise steamer that saved us, nosing along in the dark.
-She was good enough for me to land on."
-
-"All these things don't seem possible, Grandfather. I can't believe
-them. You must have been a brave little boy."
-
-"I don't know. I don't think boys is born brave, but they get the fear
-o' God put into them one way or another, the same as little girls."
-
-"But all these things are like--story books."
-
-"Like enough. Story books is imitated from real life, as near as I can
-make out."
-
-"I didn't think any things like these could happen to anybody I knew. I
-mean, things so exciting."
-
-"You never thought to sink so low as to be picking pin feathers out of
-the same fowl with a feller that had been cook on a fishing schooner."
-
-This time Elizabeth met his twinkling gaze. She rose from her task long
-enough to deposit an emphatic kiss on the top of a shiny, bald pate.
-
-"Who called me a goose?" she said.
-
-"In the circles you're accustomed to, I suppose they don't call such
-names?"
-
-"This is the circle in which I move," Elizabeth said, "this circle of
-you and Grandmother and Judidy. Now I know where I inherited my cooking
-ability from--you, sir."
-
-"Well, there was times when the crew could get their teeth into my pie
-crust," grandfather admitted.
-
-Elizabeth slipped up to her room that afternoon, after her noonday
-dinner, and wrote to Jean:
-
- JEANIE DEAR:
-
- I have learned so much since I came to Cape Cod, that I don't
- see how there is going to be much more in the world to learn. I
- suppose there will be, but I don't think it can possibly be so
- important. I was an untried child when I came here, and now look
- at me. You can't, but I wish you could. I have grown a little
- taller and, I think, a lot sadder looking. Also, I am healthier.
- I feel a lot like Alice in Wonderland, mentally, however--I have
- to keep running and running, to stay in the same place, and then
- I don't.
-
- I have some things in my mind that I can hardly bear, and some
- that I can hardly wait for, and some that I can hardly believe.
- You know what they are all about. The first is Buddy's girl and
- her approaching wedding. I am to stand up with them. I couldn't
- refuse; how could I, Jean? It's just a terrible, terrible thing.
- Buddy doesn't know it, because he is coming out of the hospital
- and down here just as soon as he can, and I am afraid it would
- retard his recovery if I wrote him. So I am not telling him till
- he gets here. Do you wonder, Jean, that I feel like a so much
- older girl than I did when I first came down here? Sometimes I
- think that my hair ought to be quite gray, with all my
- responsibility. I lit a light once, in the middle of the night,
- and got up to see if I hadn't really got gray hair, I felt so
- gray. I keep having to decide what to tell Buddy and what not. I
- can't ask Mother, because Buddy would never forgive me if I did,
- and what he would do to me would turn me gray for a fact, I
- guess. I've hinted it all out to you to keep from bursting, but
- Jeanie, it isn't the same thing as talking to you. It's only
- like saying my prayers or writing a diary. Besides, I haven't
- told you details. Only the general facts.
-
- The things I can hardly wait for are my parents and Buddy
- coming--my own brother, that has come out of the jaws of death
- in two senses, since I have seen him. Once from the Trenches and
- once from the U. S. Base Hospital. Having a brother is the
- strangest, sweetest thing. I'd rather have one than a sister,
- though I do think Ruth Farraday is beautiful, and Peggy's lot
- is, next to mine, the most fortunate in that respect. I ought
- not to crow like this to an only child, though.
-
- The things I can hardly believe are the things I've been hearing
- about my ancestors. In a way, you know, I think it is more
- interesting to be an American than even to be a count. I've
- lived along all my life with the idea that I was a New Yorker,
- or rather a New Jerseyite with one foot on Broadway or Fifth
- Avenue, and I thought the cook was the cook and the butcher the
- butcher, and that was all there was to it. I had a grandfather
- and grandmother that I had idealized in my imagination, all
- dressed up in city clothes and manners. I didn't stop to think
- what I came from, except that Mother was an Endicott, and that
- all her relations lived abroad most of the time.
-
- You know the rude shock I got when I came down here. The corner
- grocer is my distant uncle. The hired girl is a kind of cousin.
- The butcher that goes out selling things in a cart, meat all raw
- and pig pork that he has killed himself, is the family's friend.
- It seemed just plain awful to me at first. I didn't know what
- any of it _meant_. But now I'm getting to. I talked with
- grandfather, who quite rightly understands my horrid scruples
- and teases me to pieces about them, and I talked with Peggy,
- whose father tells her a lot of things. (Those girls get their
- niceness from their father.)
-
- He says this early settlers' blood is a wonderful thing. It was
- mostly the younger sons of aristocrat families that settled
- here, and a great many of them married their cooks or serving
- maids. (Perhaps that's why cooking is such a general talent.)
- They had to hew a living out of a very sterile soil, and to
- learn all the virtues of thrift and prudence from actual
- practise. They didn't have any houses or money or matches or
- anything. They just had to make them, and learn not to be
- aristocrats, instead of learning to be. They had to _make_ New
- England. Well, my grandparents and my great-great-great-greats
- did an awful lot about this. There wouldn't be any Cape Cod, if
- it hadn't been for these Industries that they were engaged in,
- and it's the most romantic thing, the way even young children
- lived this seagoing, hardy life in the school of hard knocks. My
- grandfather was a cook at a very early age, and was lost at sea,
- only he jumped into a coastwise steamer instead of being
- drowned.
-
- It's all wonderful, about grandmother's being courted at a
- Harvest Ball, and her grandmother running to get fire in a
- swing-pail, and funny little old songs they sing. Do you know
- what I feel as if I had done? I feel my roots pushing right down
- into the ground, and I love the ground, and it loves my roots.
-
- Also, I love you, my own Jeanie, and more so all the time as I
- grow better. Some time I am going to show you all this Cape.
- Well, now I must take up my cross and my scare again. I almost
- forgot it when I was writing.
-
- Your
- ELIZABETH.
-
-When she had finished and stamped this letter, Elizabeth took it in her
-hand and went slowly down the stairs. It was nearly time for the
-auto-bus from the morning train, the rumble of which could be heard
-distinctly on the street beyond that on which the old house stood.
-Elizabeth always waited for this before she went to the post office. She
-had heard the whistle of the train some time since.
-
-Her grandmother stood at the door.
-
-"The barge has turned in on our street, and it's stopping here," she
-said, "I guess we're going to have company. I'm dretful glad Father
-killed those roosters this morning. There's plenty cooked."
-
-"Who do you suppose it is?" Elizabeth said.
-
-"Some o' Father's folks. They're always turning up when least expected."
-
-Elizabeth watched the high-set, curtained vehicle, a hybrid motor truck
-and picnic carryall that had been converted to its present use by the
-exigencies of "depot" traffic. A boy in overalls had descended from the
-driver's seat, and was lifting out a small motor trunk by its handle,
-and a big, pig-skin suitcase.
-
-"Why, that's like Mother's trunk," Elizabeth said, "and that suitcase is
-like her suitcase."
-
-A tall, blonde woman in a blue tailored suit and a blue veil jumped
-lightly out of the unwieldy conveyance, her hand touching that of the
-boy in overalls.
-
-"Shall I lift these here baggages into the house for you?" he said.
-
-"Yes, thank you. Thirty-five cents, isn't it? Oh, don't bother to make
-change. That's all right."
-
-"For the Land o' Liberty!" Grandmother exclaimed. "For the land sakes!"
-
-"Why, it _is_ Mother!" cried Elizabeth.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- MOTHER
-
-
-Madget was sitting on the floor, and singing to herself:
-
- "I am a little love, and I'm sitting on the floor.
- They put me here to sit and sing,
- Eating cookies as I sing,
- On Grandma Swiftie's lovely floor.
- A little girl I used to be
- Is sitting on the floor."
-
-"Don't you think you have sung almost enough, Madget?" Mrs. Swift said.
-"What's the matter, Elizabeth? Don't _you_ think she has?"
-
-"Oh, I don't know. I was just listening to the sound of your voice,
-Mother. It's so good to hear it again--saying anything."
-
-"No, I don't," said Madget, pausing between selections only long enough
-to reply literally to the question addressed to her:
-
- "A little girl with yellow teeth
- Was sitting on the kitchen floor.
- She sat and sang most all day long,
- And et some cookies all day long,
- On Grandma Swiftie's lovely floor."
-
-"She certainly has a keen sense of rhythm," Mrs. Swift laughed. "You've
-grown up so, Elizabeth, I hardly know my child."
-
-"I'm not really a child any longer, Mother, dear."
-
-"I don't suppose you would care to walk down to the block and get a
-quart of ice-cream so soon after breakfast, would you, dear?"
-
-"Oh, yes, Mother, I can always eat ice-cream." Elizabeth swept the
-gingham frock she was making for Madget out of her lap and rose hastily.
-
-"I don't think I've quite lost my little girl," Mrs. Swift smiled.
-
-"For that, Mummy, darling, I won't go. You are just playing tricks on
-me, the way you always do, and I fall right into the trap the way I
-always do, and oh, it's so good to have it happening again!"
-
-"You may go for ice-cream if you like, but a maturer Elizabeth might
-prefer to wait until it was a little nearer dinner time. When you sat
-down, you were going to whip all the seams in that dress before you
-moved again."
-
-"I want some ice-cream!" wailed Madget.
-
-"You shall have some bye and bye, dear. Don't you know that nice little
-girls don't shriek like that?" Elizabeth said.
-
-"Dear me," Mrs. Swift laughed, "I think I'll have to make a kindergarten
-teacher out of you. You have the professionally maternal manner."
-
-"But I have grown older, Mother, and soberer."
-
-"You've taken hold of life better. To tell you the truth, I was worried
-about you this spring, you seemed to be getting your sense of values so
-wrong. You were running around with nice, wholesome children enough, but
-your ideas of life seemed to be growing very artificial. That was one
-reason I sent you down here by yourself. I was pretty sure that you
-would learn some of the essential lessons."
-
-"I guess you would have been disappointed if I hadn't, Mother. I might
-not have. At first I just thought it was all horrid and--common."
-
-"And what, dear?"
-
-Elizabeth hung her head.
-
-"Don't you know that nice little girls don't use that word?"
-
-"There isn't any other that says it."
-
-"That is one of the words which reflect on the user. It's one mostly
-used by people who have just come to realize that there is a difference
-in manners."
-
-"It's awful to be a snob, isn't it, Mother?"
-
-"It's unfortunate."
-
-"I've just discovered that I was one. Mother, what do you suppose made
-me so snobbish about the Cape when I first came down? You're not a snob,
-and Father isn't, nor Jeanie."
-
-"I am afraid it was the disadvantage of your bringing up, my dear. We
-had some pretty hard knocks when you were growing up. Your father's
-advancement came late. We always lived nicely and had the same standards
-as other people, but we had a greater struggle to maintain them. Our
-lean years gave you a little sense of inferiority, my dear, that's all."
-
-"Oh, Mother, how much you know and how wise you are! There is something
-I wish I could tell you about, Mother, dear, but I can't."
-
-"You mean about Buddy and Ruth Farraday?"
-
-"I didn't know you knew," Elizabeth gasped.
-
-"I didn't until the night I came away, and then Buddy told me. It was
-very brave and dear of him."
-
-"Oh, Mother, what shall we do?" Elizabeth wailed. "Ruthie is going to be
-married next week. Maybe before Buddy gets here."
-
-"Grandmother told me so last night. I don't think there is anything to
-do, excepting to let matters take their course."
-
-"But couldn't you go and see Ruth, and tell her?"
-
-"Tell her what? That my boy loves her and that she should have loved
-him?"
-
-"Well, she should. She almost does, I think. She's just marrying because
-her dreadful mother----"
-
-"Elizabeth!"
-
-"She _is_ a dreadful mother."
-
-"So are we all sometimes, but it takes our contemporaries to judge us."
-
-"But you are so nice, and she isn't, Mother, dear."
-
-"Elizabeth, if you are in the confidence of the Farraday family in any
-way that I am not, you must not share that confidence with me."
-
-"But it's Buddy's future we are talking about, and if I know things that
-will help us to work it out, I think I ought to be allowed to tell
-them."
-
-"I think I can manage to get a perspective on Buddy's future without
-gossiping about the Farradays."
-
-"Well, why can't you go and tell Ruthie about Buddy? Tell her he--he
-loves her, right out?"
-
-"Why didn't you do that, dear?"
-
-"I--I was scared to; besides, it would have been sneaky to Buddy,
-and----"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"But now she'll be married if somebody doesn't do something."
-
-"I am afraid there is nothing to be done but sit still and let her _be_
-married."
-
-"But how can you, Mother?"
-
-"I don't know how I can, to tell the truth. That's about the hardest
-thing any mother does, to sit still and let things happen that involve
-her children, but as your father says, a man's first duty is to mind his
-own business, and if at first you don't succeed, try, try again."
-
-"Oh, dear!" said Elizabeth.
-
-"Oh, dear!" echoed Madget.
-
-"Aren't you happy, Madget?"
-
-"I want some ice-cream and some doughnuts and some cookies and some
-boiled ham, and I want to come and sit on your lap."
-
-"You may have some ice-cream pretty soon and you may come and sit on my
-lap now. Will that do?"
-
-"I know who I love," Madget said, pushing aside the folds of gingham and
-climbing into the coveted place, "but I won't tell."
-
-"Do you want to see the beautiful present that my mother brought me,
-Madget?"
-
-"I want a beautiful present," said Madget.
-
-"I am going to give you a present," Elizabeth said, "but not now,
-because you asked for it. It isn't nice to ask for things. You must just
-wait until people give them to you."
-
-"All right," Madget said, unexpectedly.
-
-"That's the way those children are," Elizabeth explained, seriously,
-"Moses especially. You tell them what isn't nice, and then they agree
-with you, and there isn't any argument. It just leaves you feeling
-flat."
-
-"Madget is only waiting seraphically for her present to come without
-asking," Mrs. Swift said.
-
-"See what I have!" Elizabeth took a gayly-coloured rubber cape and
-bathing cap to match from the back of the chair on which she was
-sitting, and spread them out for the child's inspection. "I carry them
-around everywhere I go, Mother."
-
-"Rainbows," said Madget, ecstatically.
-
-"It is all the rainbow colours," Elizabeth said, "isn't it lovely,
-Mother, dear?"
-
-"I'm so glad you like it. I had a bad time making up my mind what to
-get."
-
-"These capes look so grand when you come out of the water, and it's
-cold, too, running up to the bath-house. You really need something. Look
-here."
-
-Madget had insinuated her bobbing curls into the depths of the cap, and
-then, standing, was swathing herself in the folds of the bright cape.
-
-"She looks like one of the Stewart babies. I don't know why, but I
-suppose it's that dressed-up look they have. Her hair is clean, because
-I washed it myself. What are you laughing at, Mother?"
-
-"It seems so extraordinary to have you in charge of a family of
-children."
-
-"Well, somebody had to take an interest in them. It's Grandmother that
-takes the real care of them, though. I only help as I can."
-
-Mrs. Swift smiled a smile of deep satisfaction into her embroidery.
-
-"I am very pleased with you, dear," she said.
-
-"Mother," Elizabeth's gaze became fixed out of the window, "a boy comes
-to call on me sometimes. I don't think you would disapprove, because
-Grandfather invited him--but there he comes now."
-
-"He looks like a nice boy."
-
-"He is. He's quite sensible, when you get to know him."
-
-"Well, go to the door, Elizabeth. He looks as if he might run away if he
-wasn't admitted instantly."
-
-"I guess he has heard you're here."
-
-"How do you do?" Tom Robbins said to the widening crack that gave him
-his glimpse of Elizabeth, "I can't wait till you get the door open."
-
-"How do you do?" said Elizabeth.
-
-"Is Captain Swift at home? I don't want to see him, but I have to ask
-for him because he told me to."
-
-"No, but my mother is," Elizabeth said.
-
-"Well, I want to see _her_."
-
-"Here she is, then. Mother," Elizabeth led the way into the living room,
-"this is Mr. Robbins."
-
-"I'm glad to meet Mr. Robbins. I think that his other name is Tom, or if
-it isn't it ought to be, for he's the image of the Tom Robbins I knew."
-
-"Father remembers you," Tom cried. "He used to see you when you were
-first married."
-
-"Take some chairs," Elizabeth said.
-
-"That's our joke," Tom explained, "the first time I came here Captain
-Swift was so full of fun, and everything----"
-
-"That, well, I got rattled," Elizabeth explained, "so I said, 'take some
-chairs,' and we always say it now."
-
-"Taking chairs just about describes me when I go into a place. I move
-around a good deal," Tom said.
-
-"If I could have my present," Madget interrupted from the sofa, "I
-_would_ be good."
-
-"At dinner time I am going to give it to you."
-
-"All right," Madget said, "I'll go ask Grandma Swift to have my dinner."
-
-"Isn't she cunning?" Tom looked after her as she trotted off. "Oh,
-Elizabeth, I'm going to give Moses my old bicycle. It isn't doing any
-one any good now. I'm making him a rack to go in front, that he can
-carry milk bottles on."
-
-"Grandfather will give him a job carrying milk then," Elizabeth said.
-"Won't that be fine?"
-
-"It seems to me that you children are quite practical philanthropists. I
-think you are doing wonders for the Steppes."
-
-"It's all Elizabeth," Tom said, "she's the one that got us all thinking
-of it. What I came in this morning for is this, Mrs. Swift. Our family
-is going to give a big, old-fashioned clambake on the beach the first
-pleasant day after Monday, and we wanted--that is, I did--we thought
-perhaps Peggy and Elizabeth might like to come. It'll be great fun. Bill
-and I are going to help dig the clams. Of course it's just a family
-affair, and I don't know whether Father knows you are in town, Mrs.
-Swift, but I am sure if you would like to come, too, we should all be so
-very glad. We thought of Elizabeth and Peggy first, you see." Tom was
-very confused.
-
-"That's very kind of you, Tom, but I shouldn't be able to go. I am
-expecting my husband and my sick son almost any day now, and my object
-in coming ahead of them is to get everything in running order for them,
-but I am sure Elizabeth would be delighted to go, and I should be very
-glad for her to."
-
-"Oh, thank you. Mrs. Farraday said that Peggy could come if Elizabeth
-could. I think it will be pretty good sport. It will be a regular,
-old-fashioned clambake, you know, with the clams banked in bricks and
-sand, and all the things wrapped in seaweed and steamed in--in their own
-steam. We have one every year, and some of our family comes from a long
-way to be there."
-
-"I think it will be beautiful," Elizabeth said. "I am so glad Mummy will
-let me go."
-
-"I wish I had my twenty-seven white horses," she sighed, as she watched
-Tom's retreating figure. "He's nice mannered, isn't he? He always whips
-off his hat at the gate, just like that. He'd count for one red-head so
-nicely. I got my ninety-nine Negroes, but the white horses are very hard
-to get. I've only got four and a half, and I'm not sure it wasn't the
-same white horse all the time."
-
-"Four and a half white horses?" Mrs. Swift looked up inquiringly.
-
-"A white goat. That's what I mean by half. We saw him one way down in
-Chatham. I don't really mean to count him unless we get desperate. I
-don't suppose it's quite fair."
-
-"We have to make a good many compromises in this day and age, but it
-doesn't seem to me that a goat would make an efficient substitute for a
-horse. Why stop there? Why not a pig or a bear?"
-
-"Well, I didn't really mean to count him. Peggy and I get discouraged,
-and then we try to think of encouraging things."
-
-"I haven't seen Peggy yet."
-
-"She's coming soon, but she has to help Ruth make that dreadful
-trousseau. I'm going upstairs and get Madget's doll, and then I'm going
-to telephone and see where she is."
-
-Solemnly seated on the floor in the guest chamber, Elizabeth found
-Madget contemplating the Little Red Riding Hood doll that Mrs. Swift had
-brought for her. It stood upright on the bureau and returned her gaze
-complacently.
-
-"Is that my present?" Madget said. "I want it."
-
-"You shouldn't have come upstairs without being sent, Madget."
-
-"I was sent. You sent me for a thimble."
-
-"But that was yesterday."
-
-"Here it is," Madget said, producing it with a wide smile.
-
-"Yes, that's your present," Elizabeth said in despair. "Take it."
-
-Madget took it.
-
-"My baby dolly!" she cried.
-
-As Elizabeth started downstairs again, she heard Peggy's voice.
-
-"You don't need to telephone," Peggy cried, from the sitting room, "I
-came and I brought the bride along with me, what there is left of her."
-
-"I didn't know it was going to be quite so much trouble to be married,"
-Ruth Farraday was saying, "perhaps if I had, I wouldn't have attempted
-it."
-
-"Well, this is the last marriage I can ever have in my family," Peggy
-said, "unless I ever take the fatal step myself, which I won't. You're
-just the same, aren't you, Elizabeth? You can only have one outside of
-your own."
-
-"I don't think Buddy will ever marry," Elizabeth said, looking at Ruth
-Farraday.
-
-"My son is coming to-morrow or the next day," Mrs. Swift said, hastily,
-"we hope that Cape Cod is really going to make him well again."
-
-"He'll be here in time for the wedding," Peggy said, "if he is invited."
-
-"We were planning to have only the family," Ruth said, "but not having
-two sisters to add the proper touch of picturesqueness, I asked
-Elizabeth to stand with Peggy."
-
-"She never opened her mouth," said the incorrigible Peggy, indicating
-herself, "excepting to put her foot into it."
-
-"Hush, Peggy," said Ruth, whitening a little, "Mrs. Swift understands.
-Peggy regards this wedding as a sort of cross between a picnic and a
-visit to the dentist's."
-
-"I certainly do," said Peggy, "only you don't have to have so many
-clothes on those occasions. I don't see why you can't just be married in
-what you've got. Well, anyway, that clambake is going to be a ray of
-light through the gloom. That's something we can enjoy without any
-mixture of our emotions."
-
-"I shall have to come some day without Peggy," Ruth said, rising, "this
-time we were just going by to the post office and she dragged me in."
-
-"She gets a letter every mail," Peggy explained, "and sometimes two a
-mail. If you think I've said awful things, Mrs. Swift, I'm sorry,
-but--but----"
-
-"I assure you they are nothing to the things she could say," Ruth
-laughed. "I'm glad she has Elizabeth's restraining influence. I suppose
-the two are so different that that's the reason they get on so well."
-
-"Elizabeth's a perfect lady," Peggy said.
-
-Mrs. Swift stood at the window and watched the two girls go down the
-path, Ruth's pink linen and close-fitting white sweater outlining her
-extreme slenderness and her little feet set with a delicate deliberation
-as she moved.
-
-"She _is_ an apple-blossom girl," she said, thoughtfully, "poor Buddy!"
-
-"Oh, Mother, Mother, Mother," Elizabeth wailed, flinging her arms around
-her, "isn't it perfectly terrible? I am so glad you are here. I don't
-believe I could have borne it another minute without you."
-
-"Well, now, I guess you're satisfied," Grandfather said, coming in on
-this tableau. "I guess you've got about all you need to make you happy,
-ain't you?"
-
-Elizabeth threw a forlorn glance at her mother.
-
-"I need other things to make me happy," she said, "but I'm perfectly
-satisfied with this darling person, all the same."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- ELIZABETH IS SCARED
-
-
-"Well, Baby."
-
-"Well, Daddy."
-
-Elizabeth and her father were the first ones down to breakfast on the
-morning after his arrival with Buddy--the first of the visiting family,
-at least. Grandfather had been outside and at work since dawn, and
-Grandmother and Judidy had been in the kitchen almost as long, employed
-in magnificent preparations for feasting the returned sons of the house.
-
-"What is all this radiance for this morning, Elizabeth? Me or Buddy or
-the new roadster?"
-
-"You _and_ Buddy _and_ the new roadster, Father, darling. The roadster
-was the completest surprise, but I am more intimately fond of you and
-Buddy. I just can't believe you are here. I gave myself a good hard
-pinch every time I woke up in the night, to try to make myself believe
-it. The last time, I got up and sneaked to your door and listened to
-hear if you were breathing."
-
-"Well, was I?"
-
-"You were doing more than that, Daddy."
-
-"Where did you sleep when they turned you out of your room for John?"
-
-"I'll show you bye and bye, Daddy. I've got a room of my own, and all I
-had to do was to put a tiny, weeny little bed in it. I thought that was
-going to crowd it dreadfully. Instead, it is very becoming to it. Faith,
-Hope, and Charity guard my slumbers, only I couldn't slumber, I was so
-excited."
-
-"Faith, Hope, and Charity?" her father looked inquiring.
-
-"They are my guardian angels, borrowed from Aunt Helen by permission of
-Grandmother. Would you like to go out and see the pigs, Daddy?"
-
-"I'd like to but I don't think we've time before breakfast."
-
-"Well, their names are Faith, Hope, and Charity, also--this new litter,
-I mean. Grandfather let me name them. They are excruciatingly cunning,
-Daddy. Faith and Hope keep themselves a little messily, but Charity is
-as clean as a kitten. She knows her name, too, and comes when you call
-her by it."
-
-"Her?"
-
-"Well, him or her. All their names are nice and non-committal. They can
-be boys or girls, whichever they like."
-
-"I should think they were committed to a great deal, in either event."
-
-"Well, children," Grandmother appeared behind a platter heaped high with
-crisp, hot doughnuts, "have you got a good appetite for your breakfast?"
-
-"It seems so funny to think of your being Grandmas child," Elizabeth
-said.
-
-"But I am."
-
-"Well, it's hard to believe it."
-
-Grandfather, who had followed on his wife's heels, took his place at the
-head of the table, and shook out his napkin.
-
-"I've heard tell of a feller that went driving down Chatham way one
-day," he said, "and he come to an old house in the woods, and there he
-found a little old man sitting on the doorstep that was so old and
-palsied and shaky, he could hardly make out to speak at all. Well, this
-feller he wanted to find out how the old man happened to be left alone
-at his great age, with no care nor companionship nor nothing, so he
-asked him; he says 'Do you live all alone here?' he says. The little old
-man he was so deaf he couldn't hardly hear nothing, but this feller he
-asked him again, and he put his hand up to his ears and just made out to
-catch the question. 'No,' he says in his high-pitched, quavering voice,
-'No, I don't live here all alone, I live here with my father.'--'Your
-father?' this feller says, all taken aback, 'Your father? Have you got a
-father? Where is he?' The little old man he hardly made out to get this
-question at all, but after a long time, when it had been repeated to him
-over and over again, he managed to understand it. 'Where's Father?' he
-says. 'You ask me where my father is? Well, where should he be, 'cepting
-upstairs, putting Grandfather to bed.'"
-
-Mr. Swift laughed immoderately.
-
-"I suppose it does look a little like that to Elizabeth," he said.
-"She's used to thinking of me as being about as old as that kind of
-relative gets to be."
-
-"Grandfather's whole life is spent in teasing me," Elizabeth said, "it's
-bread and butter and pie and cake to him."
-
-"By the way, Father, where is your pie this morning? I didn't know that
-you ever started the day without it, but I don't see it on the table."
-
-"Now, I am going to tell something on Father," Grandmother said, slyly.
-"He ain't had a piece o' pie for his breakfast since Elizabeth come, and
-he wouldn't let me put none on the table, either."
-
-"I was afraid she'd get to making it the way she makes cake, and I'd
-have to eat it whether or no." Grandfather mopped his brow with a great
-show of vigour.
-
-"It warn't that," Grandmother smiled. "He was just sprucing up for his
-city granddaughter a little. He went down street and got two new
-neckties and a white cotton vest before she'd been here a week. He had
-to kind of jerk Elizabeth down a peg and jerk himself up several to meet
-her."
-
-"Why, Granddaddy _Swift_," Elizabeth said, "have you been going without
-your breakfast pie on my account?"
-
-"Who said breakfast pie?" a gaunt figure in khaki appeared in the
-doorway, and Elizabeth, with one admonishing finger still uplifted,
-turned from her grandfather and with one leap hurled herself upon it.
-"I'm going to get out of these clothes to-morrow," Buddy continued,
-calmly, holding his sister off with one hand, "but I have forgotten how
-to get into regular trousers before breakfast. Emerson, the well-known
-sage of Concord, used to eat pie for his breakfast--pumpkin pie, and it
-goes very well with coffee."
-
-"Grandfather won't let me have so much as a snitch of coffee," Elizabeth
-pouted, still clinging to him.
-
-"Not even a demi-tassy," Grandfather put in, slyly.
-
-"And a good thing, too," Buddy said. "Granddad, your ideas of bringing
-up Elizabeth are a good deal like my own--a firm, strong hand applied
-wherever necessary."
-
-"And last but not least--Mother," said Elizabeth, pausing in the midst
-of a grimace at her brother. "I never knew you to be the last one at the
-breakfast table in my life before, Mother."
-
-"I'm glad," Mrs. Swift said, as she took her place between her children,
-"and oh, John and I have our napkin rings! I was going to bear it with
-resignation if we didn't, but I am so glad to see them again. We had
-them on our honeymoon, you know."
-
-"Elizabeth had one for a while, but she didn't seem to admire it, not
-what you might call beyond reason," Grandfather said.
-
-"Oh, dear!" said Elizabeth, "the instances keep piling up of the way he
-has seen right through me from the first minute of my coming, but now
-I'm beginning to see through him," she added, triumphantly.
-
-"When anybody makes up their mind they are beginning to see through
-Father, there is generally breakers ahead for them," Grandmother said,
-thoughtfully.
-
-"It's from Father that I get whatever business acumen I have," John
-Swift said; "let the other fellow think he is getting away with
-everything, and then when he has given himself entirely away, never let
-up on him."
-
-"Yes, that's my principle," Grandfather said, complacently.
-
-"I'm going into Father's office, did you know it?" Buddy said. "Until
-day before yesterday I might just as well have thought of getting a job
-with J. P. Morgan, and then suddenly this opening came, and my old boss
-recommended me for it."
-
-"We lost a good man suddenly," John Swift explained, "and yesterday
-morning old Howard came in to me and asked me what I knew of a youngster
-named John Smith that used to be with the Urner Company. I was pretty
-sure he had got the name wrong, so I told him I'd call up the Urner
-office and find out if he was the one I thought he was. In the
-afternoon, just before I left, Howard asked me if I found out anything
-about the boy, and if I knew anything to his advantage or disadvantage.
-'I do,' I said, 'both. He's my son.' 'We'll take him in,' Howard said,
-'I guess you know how to handle him by this time.'"
-
-"You see," Buddy explained, "I began to get busy on the hospital wire
-just as soon as I realized I was cured, and my old boss is a white man,
-if ever there was one."
-
-"Not going to Russia just at present?" his father asked.
-
-"Not going to Russia," Buddy said, steadily.
-
-After breakfast Elizabeth had her first minute alone with her brother.
-They were in the living room, in Grandmother's and Grandfather's chairs
-respectively, with the big fern branching between them.
-
-"Well, Sister?" Buddy said.
-
-"Well, Buddy!"
-
-"What do you know about Ruth, now?"
-
-"About Ruth?"
-
-"Yes, Sister, darling, you heard me the first time."
-
-"You mean how--how is she?"
-
-"I mean, tell me everything you know that you haven't told me before."
-
-"Haven't you talked with Mother about her since you came?"
-
-"Not a word."
-
-"Hasn't she told you----"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-"Well, then, I've got to."
-
-"You certainly have--and quick," said Buddy. "What is it? Fire away."
-
-"Ruth--Ruth is going to--to get married next week--Thursday."
-
-"Oh!" Buddy's jaw shut on the monosyllable.
-
-"It was hurried up all of a sudden. I saw her and talked with her on the
-beach once, and she said to tell you that your telegram was a day too
-late."
-
-"Thanks," said Buddy, briefly.
-
-"She sent her love, and said you were a day too late."
-
-"We'll see about that. Is this Chambers fellow around?"
-
-"No, he is in Boston, but he comes down to see her all the time."
-
-"We'll see about that, too. What's her telephone number?"
-
-"Thirty-two, ring eleven. You have to ring in, you know--that handle on
-the box, and ask Central."
-
-"Oh, I know," said Buddy, "telephone is nice and convenient, isn't it?
-Anybody on the farm can hear from this location," he picked up the
-instrument from the desk in the corner.
-
-"Shall I go?" Elizabeth asked.
-
-"No, dear."
-
-"I want to speak to Miss Ruth Farraday--Mr. Swift." He put his hand over
-the mouthpiece, the fingers trembled slightly, but his voice was cool,
-"I guess that was your friend Peggy. Sounded like a flapper's voice.
-She's gone to call her. Oh, hello, Ruth," he said into the instrument,
-"this is John. Yes, I managed to squirm out. Fine, thank you. A little
-under weight, that's all. I want to see you. Now, this morning, may I
-come over there? I wouldn't take up much time. Yes it _is_ important.
-Oh, all right, that will be better yet. I am perfectly able to make it,
-but I'd rather have you here if you'll come. All right. In about half an
-hour. All right. Good-bye."
-
-"She's coming here," he explained to Elizabeth, "she was starting out to
-do some errands. She didn't want me there, at any rate. Perhaps Chambers
-is expected."
-
-"The walls of that house are as thin as paper," Elizabeth said, "and I'm
-glad you don't have to go there. Her mother might be around."
-
-"It's awfully decent of her to come here."
-
-"She _is_ awfully decent."
-
-"She's scared."
-
-"Who wouldn't be?" Elizabeth said. "My gracious!"
-
-"I suppose I ought to try to get into some kind of decent clothes."
-
-"No," said Elizabeth, "stay in those."
-
-"But I've been mustered out. I ought to be in 'cits'."
-
-"She'd like you better in those," Elizabeth said, positively.
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"I don't know how I know, but I know," Elizabeth said. "I'm a girl, and
-I know."
-
-"I guess you are," Buddy said. "I never thought of it before, but you're
-a girl and you've got a line on girls. Do I look pretty punk to you?
-Cadaverous and all that?"
-
-"You are the handsomest thing," Elizabeth cried, "that I ever saw,
-Buddy. You used to be good looking, but now you've got a kind
-of--look--a soulful look--that----"
-
-"That'll do. I was only interested in my physical aspect."
-
-"Well, that's perfect," Elizabeth said.
-
-"Is my face clean?"
-
-"Let me see. Yes, it is, perfectly."
-
-"Then I won't go upstairs at all. You just sit around and help me kill
-time till she comes."
-
-"Oh, Buddy, can I kiss you just once?"
-
-"You cannot," said Buddy. "I've changed a good deal in a great many
-ways, but I haven't got to the point where I like to be kissed after
-breakfast yet."
-
-"You used to write pretty affectionately from those old trenches."
-
-"There was an ocean between us then, and it was perfectly safe."
-
-"I think men are the funniest things," Elizabeth said. "It isn't that
-they don't want to be loved----"
-
-"No, it isn't," said Buddy. "So tell Mother to keep the coast clear,
-will you, and then come back. No, don't come back. I'll watch for Ruth
-and let her in. No, you watch for Ruth and let her in. You bring her in
-here, and then get out unless I tell you to stick around. See?"
-
-"You can't tell me that before her."
-
-"I can tell anybody anything before her."
-
-"All right," Elizabeth said, "but--but I'm scared, Buddy."
-
-"You--you go to the deuce," her brother said, and only then did
-Elizabeth realize the strain under which he was labouring.
-
-It was with a face nearly as white as Buddy's own that she opened the
-door to Ruth a few minutes later.
-
-"Buddy's in there," she said, weakly, to Ruth's inquiry.
-
-"Come and show me," Ruth said.
-
-"Right this way," Elizabeth said, superfluously. "Buddy, here's Ruth."
-
-"All right," said Buddy, unfolding his long legs from the rocking chair,
-and advancing so slowly that Elizabeth knew he was trembling with
-weakness, "you may go now, Elizabeth."
-
-"Please," said Ruth Farraday in her low voice, "let her stay."
-
-"All right," said Buddy, "you may stay, Elizabeth."
-
-"I'd rather go," said Elizabeth, miserably. But neither of the two paid
-any more attention to her.
-
-Ruth put out her hand, and then when Buddy would have taken it, withdrew
-it.
-
-"I am going to be married," she said, "next week. Did Elizabeth tell
-you?"
-
-"Yes," said Buddy. "It's me you should be marrying. You know that, don't
-you?"
-
-"No," said Ruth Farraday. "Yes, I do know it, I think. But it's too late
-now."
-
-"It's not too late."
-
-"You don't seem to understand that I am going to be married--married
-next week."
-
-"I heard you the first time," said Buddy, grimly.
-
-"Well?"
-
-"You are my girl," said Buddy, "and you know it."
-
-"Supposing I do," said Ruth Farraday, "what then?"
-
-"Then this marriage is a lie. It can't happen."
-
-"It has--happened, as far as I am concerned. I have given my word."
-
-"Ruth, you can't mean that."
-
-"But I do."
-
-"It means a lifetime of misery for three people."
-
-"But it's all done, now. That's all there is to say."
-
-"You mean, you haven't the courage to break away?"
-
-"I mean more than that. This has happened, that's all, I've given my
-word. I've let things get where they are. If you wanted to marry me, you
-should have told me when I was free. I waited for you, for just a word
-or a line from you."
-
-"I was sick."
-
-"I wasn't waiting for you to get well, and write me you were well. I
-wanted to know that you thought of me when you were sick."
-
-"Oh, Ruth, I didn't think of anything else."
-
-"I waited as long as I could, that was all."
-
-"Ruth----" Buddy said, "Ruth----" He took a long step toward her, "Get
-out of this room, Elizabeth," he said, steadily, "you are willing for
-her to go, dear, aren't you?" he said, as Ruth put out a restraining
-hand.
-
-"Oh, I don't know. Oh, I don't know."
-
-"I'd better go," said Elizabeth, and Buddy nodded to her as she slipped
-out. Before the door had closed on her, he had walked across the floor
-and taken Ruth Farraday in his arms.
-
-It was nearly half an hour later that Elizabeth, watching from the room
-above, saw Buddy walk with Ruth to the gate, open it for her, and stand
-with his head bared as she walked down the street. She ran down the
-stairs breathlessly to meet him as he came in.
-
-"Is it all right?" she asked. "Oh, Buddy, is it all right?"
-
-"It's all right, little sister," Buddy said, "it's all right anyway, the
-way she wants it. She won't break it off. She thinks it wouldn't be
-honourable."
-
-"But she must break it off, Buddy. It'll kill you if she doesn't."
-
-"No, it won't. She must do what she wants to do."
-
-"But she doesn't know what she wants," Elizabeth cried.
-
-"She knows what's right for her."
-
-"I don't believe she does at all."
-
-"You don't know."
-
-"I do know this," Elizabeth cried, "you can't stand it, Buddy, it will
-kill you. It will kill you."
-
-"All right, then," said Buddy, "let it. But I don't think it's going to.
-She wouldn't want it to, you see."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- ELIZABETH SHAKES HANDS
-
-
-"Well," Peggy said, surveying the picnic tables set up in the pine grove
-beyond their customary bathing beach, "this is certainly some party. I
-never saw so many pumpkin pies in conclave assembled in all my life."
-
-"Pumpkin pies are just the background," Elizabeth said, "all these
-regular New England dishes don't count; they always have them. Brown
-bread and biscuits and cake and watermelon. They always have them. The
-stuff they are baking is the real party."
-
-"This being your first clambake, you are just repeating what you've been
-told. I know. It was nice of the boys to send for us, so we could be
-sure and be here early, but where are they?"
-
-"Mrs. Something-or-other Robbins, that tall woman with the earrings,
-told me the boys had been sent to Harwich for some more provisions, but
-they will be back right away."
-
-"Rather a good-looking crowd of people, aren't they? And what a lot of
-work they've done. These tables were put up last night, and every family
-contributed some of this milder grub--I mean these foods on the tables,
-if I must be polite. The men dug the clams and furnished all the other
-things. I asked Tom how they managed. Look, there are Mabel and Madget
-down on the beach, right in the heart of the bake. I'll bet Tom told
-them they could hang around."
-
-"Do you know what, Peggy?"
-
-"What particular what?"
-
-"Mabel is my last red-head."
-
-"Well, she's my next to the last, come to think of it. It was lucky we
-went to the cattle show, and got all those white horses at once."
-
-"I am not going to shake hands with anybody to-day. It's hard to
-remember, though. Just now I shook hands with Tom's father and his
-uncle."
-
-"Those old men don't count, anyway."
-
-"Are you sure? Tom's uncle is quite a young widower, Mother says."
-
-"Well, you don't have to worry, because you didn't have Mabel when you
-shook hands. Now is the time to look out."
-
-"You are safe until you see another red-head."
-
-"Let's go down on the beach and see what the mound builders have
-accomplished," Peggy said, "that large woman in the yellow skirt is
-going to come over here and entertain us if we don't."
-
-"I think we will go down on the beach," Elizabeth said to the large
-woman, as they turned to walk in her direction, "of course we would like
-to help if we could, but Mrs. Robbins said there wasn't anything left to
-do."
-
-"We have everything done, I think," said the woman, whose name they did
-not know. "The boys are going to bring back some vines to trail over the
-table, and some paper napkins to twist up in the glasses. We do
-everything the same way every year, to keep up the tradition."
-
-"I think it's awfully nice," said Peggy, "and we appreciate being
-included."
-
-"We always have a table of young people. The boys are always privileged
-to invite their--friends. Dear me, I must count noses."
-
-"There she bustles off, counting noses," Peggy said. "I don't like her
-so much, but I guess she's a good-hearted one. Now's our chance to break
-away."
-
-They scrambled down the steep embankment to the beach.
-
-"That's the only time I ever didn't slide down, sitting," Peggy said. "I
-don't believe in being civilized unless you have to. I only ate a
-cross-section of burnt toast this morning, and drank some feeble cocoa.
-I'll be too hungry to eat pretty soon. We now approach the most
-celebrated of all the relics of the mound builders, a perfectly intact
-mound about six feet long and broad in proportion. This mound is a
-perfect specimen of the mound builders art. It is made of bricks and
-sand. A huge fire was first built on the base of this erection, in the
-ashes of which are baking, at the present moment, luscious ears of corn
-dressed in their original wrappers, huge sweet, or garden potatoes,
-clams by the galore, as our cook says, and, I strongly suspect, lobsters
-and bluefish, to complete the assortment. Dost like the picture, Love?"
-
-"What's all that seaweed sticking out?"
-
-"The things are steamed in seaweed, darling. That's what gives them
-their galumptious flavour."
-
-Mabel and Madget drew near as they saw their friends approaching.
-
-"Is it a grave?" Madget asked in an awed whisper, as she indicated the
-erection respectfully.
-
-"It's a giant's grave," Peggy said. "Fee, foo, fi, fum. Can't you smell
-the blood of an English giant?"
-
-"No, I can't," said Mabel, "them's just clams, and we'm going to have
-some. Moses has gone to ride with Tom and he told me to stay here and
-watch, to see if the clams didn't burn. They ain't burnt yet."
-
-"How's your mother?" Elizabeth asked, hastily, as she saw the rising
-laughter in Peggy's eyes.
-
-"She's better, and she's got a purple velvet dress," Mabel said, "she
-got breakfast to-day, too."
-
-"What did she get for breakfast?"
-
-"Fried fish and potatoes, and elderberry wine."
-
-"I shall choke," Peggy cried, "anything anybody says to-day strikes me
-so funny."
-
-"You can laugh at me," Mabel said, unexpectedly, "I don't care. I ain't
-funny."
-
-Peggy sank on the sand and gave way to merriment. Mabel regarded her
-kindly, and Elizabeth took advantage of the occasion to tie four
-shoe-strings in double bows, and comb two curly heads with the side comb
-of which she relieved the helpless Peggy.
-
-"This week has been such an awful strain," Peggy said, wiping her eyes,
-"that whenever I get a reaction, I'm off. Oh, there come the boys, now."
-
-"Awfully sorry," Tom said, hurrying down the beach. He gave a hand to
-Peggy, which she shook heartily, and then extended it to Elizabeth, who
-was a little farther away.
-
-Elizabeth gave a little shriek, and put her own hands behind her back.
-
-"I've got a kind of a sore finger," she said.
-
-"I'll remember and not scrunch it," Tom said, "if I get the chance, that
-is."
-
-"It's going to be sore all the week, isn't it, Elizabeth?" asked the
-irrepressible Peggy. "I'm all right, because I'm--oh!--oh!" she
-shrieked, glancing at Tom's blazing hair.
-
-"What's all this mystery?" Bill said, joining the group.
-
-"Peggy is just slightly indisposed, as usual," Tom said. "She has one of
-her light attacks of mental derangement."
-
-"I'm a psycho--psycho--whatever--it--is case," Peggy said. "I'll be all
-right when I have had most of what's under there."
-
-"It's a giant's grave full of clams and oysters and ice-cream and potato
-salud and pumpkin pie," Madget elucidated in a sing-song voice, "and I
-am going to have some of all of it."
-
-"Doesn't leave much room for the giant, does it, Madget?" Tom said, "but
-you are right about having some of all of it. We have a nice New York
-guy coming pretty soon. I asked him specially for you, Elizabeth. I know
-you have a warm spot in your heart for anybody that lives around Grant's
-Tomb."
-
-"Is he your cousin?" Elizabeth said.
-
-"No, he's just a fellow I see around the town sometimes. We hit it off
-pretty well, and he doesn't know many people."
-
-"What's his name?"
-
-"Stoddard, Robert Stoddard."
-
-"Where does he live?"
-
-"New York City, New York State, Manhattan Island."
-
-"I mean, what part of New York?"
-
-"Oh, I don't know that. New York's all New York to me."
-
-"I'm going to live in New York next year," Elizabeth said.
-
-"I thought you always had."
-
-"No, we lived in New Jersey, but now we're going to take an apartment in
-town. It's just been decided, and I am so excited about it, I can hardly
-breathe."
-
-"What about school?" Peggy asked.
-
-"I am going to study with Jean this winter. She has always had private
-teachers, you know."
-
-"That will be fine for you," Peggy said, "but don't let's think about
-next winter. When do we eat, Bill?"
-
-"In about half an hour, or less."
-
-"Come on up to the grove," Tom said. "I told Bob I'd meet him by the
-road and kind of work him in among the crowd. We sure have a raft of
-relations when they are all got together."
-
-"Shall we bring Madget and Mabel?"
-
-"Sure. Moses is up there now, right in the heart of the picnic. He was
-trying to catch watermelon juice between the cracks of the table, where
-they were cutting it, the last I saw of him."
-
-"I want some watermelon," said Madget, leading the procession.
-
-"Did you see what I did?" Peggy whispered to Elizabeth as they followed
-the others. "I shook hands with Tom. I never thought. I just did, that's
-all."
-
-"But you didn't have your last red-head."
-
-"He made the last red-head, don't you see?"
-
-"I never thought of that. Do you think he counts that way?"
-
-"I don't know whether he does or not. I don't want to count him, but I
-want to play fair. Only I shouldn't think, as a general proposition,
-that shaking hands with your last red-head mattered one way or the
-other. I didn't even consciously remember that he was my last red-head."
-
-"Well, then, I don't think he's the one. If you had really counted him
-first as a red-head and then shaken hands with him, you'd have to call
-him the first boy you shook hands with, but he really isn't, as it
-stands. Now that you've counted him, if you shook hands with him again,
-why----"
-
-"Well, you bet I won't. I'll put my hands behind me the way you did."
-
-"I thought just in time."
-
-Tom dropped behind his friends.
-
-"Bill wants you to walk with him," he said to Peggy.
-
-"Sure I do, but Tom said it first," Bill grinned, "he wants to walk with
-you, Elizabeth."
-
-"I'll beat you climbing up the bank," Peggy cried, making for the sheer
-wall of soil and roots ahead of them.
-
-"You won't beat me," Elizabeth said, "I'll go round by the road, thank
-you."
-
-"Some people have a great amount of superfluous energy," Tom said, "Bill
-and Peggy are pretty well matched for that."
-
-"Peggy is only a tomboy at times," Elizabeth said, "she really has quite
-an old mind, when you get to know her as well as I do."
-
-"I'd rather get to know you as well as she does."
-
-"Well, she sees me every day, almost."
-
-"I wish it hadn't been almost halfway through the summer before you and
-I met. I've got to go home Monday," Tom said, mournfully.
-
-"I didn't know that. I thought you were going to stay through September,
-like the rest of us."
-
-"Well, it's all decided for Monday."
-
-"That's too bad. It will break up our summer crowd, sort of."
-
-"Is that all you care?"
-
-"I--I'm sorry," said Elizabeth.
-
-"Well, I suppose I ought to be thankful for small favours. I haven't
-hardly seen you, except around at your grandfather's, and with Peggy and
-everything."
-
-"I think we've had a good time," Elizabeth said.
-
-Tom kicked out at a giant horseshoe that obstructed his path.
-
-"Darn the good time," he said.
-
-"Well," said Elizabeth, hastily, "we'd better catch up with the
-children. I don't know what they'll be into."
-
-"They'll be all right," Tom muttered.
-
-"Isn't that your friend waiting up there by the path?"
-
-"Oh, I suppose so."
-
-"Tom," Elizabeth said, "don't be cross. I haven't done anything, have
-I?"
-
-"No, and you won't do anything. That's the trouble. Even say a kind
-word. Come ahead, I suppose I've got to collect that guy and drag him
-round among the animals."
-
-"That isn't a very nice way to speak of your relations."
-
-"Elizabeth, there's Bill and Peggy talking to Bob--he'll keep a minute.
-Aren't you sorry that I'm going away Monday?"
-
-"Of course I am."
-
-"How sorry?"
-
-"Quite a lot."
-
-"Will you write?"
-
-"If Mother'll let me."
-
-"Does she usually let you?"
-
-"Well, she never has."
-
-"You told me yourself that Peggy wrote to a boy. Bill's going to get her
-to write to him."
-
-"I said I would if my mother will let me."
-
-"The question is--will she?"
-
-"If she does, I will. Aren't you satisfied?"
-
-"No, you are just saying that to please me!"
-
-"Don't you want to be pleased?"
-
-"Not like that."
-
-"I don't know what you want me to say."
-
-"Would you say it if you did?"
-
-"How do I know?"
-
-"Girls are the hardest things to get anything out of--Elizabeth"--little
-beads of dampness stood out on Tom's forehead--"Elizabeth, will you, I
-mean, do you, I mean, would you care----"
-
-"Hurry up there," Peggy called.
-
-"Everybody's supposed to take their places," Bill cried, "come ahead,
-you two."
-
-"They want us," Elizabeth said, relieved that the tête-à-tête was
-over.
-
-"We're all introduced," Peggy said, "but Elizabeth."
-
-"Miss Swift, I want you to meet my friend Mr. Stoddard," Tom said, doing
-the honours.
-
-The tall boy standing between Peggy and Bill put out his hand, and
-Elizabeth slipped hers into it.
-
-"I am very glad to meet you, Mr. Stoddard," she said.
-
-The warning cry from Peggy came too late.
-
-"Now, you've done it!" she said.
-
-"What has she done?" the tall boy asked. His eyes were brown and amused,
-and he had to look down several inches even to reach the level of the
-lanky Peggy.
-
-"Nothing, really. She had a--sore finger, and I was afraid----"
-
-"I've heard about that sore finger before," Bill said, "there's some
-kind of a mystery about it."
-
-"We're just full of the dickens to-day," Peggy explained, hastily, "this
-sparkly air has gone to my head--our heads, I guess. Elizabeth always
-behaves better than I do, but she's as far gone as she ever is to-day.
-We've just been giggling at nothing all the morning."
-
-"If you can call Mabel and Madget nothing," Elizabeth supplemented.
-
-"Let's go eat, let's go eat, let's go eat," Bill chanted. "I am so
-starved, I am weak. Tom and I didn't eat any breakfast this morning."
-
-"I guess that's what's the matter with him," Elizabeth smiled at him.
-
-"All right," Tom said in an undertone. "I'll come out of it--for you."
-
-"It was me that you went into it for," Elizabeth whispered, saucily.
-
-The Steppe children in a comparatively decorous row were much more
-nearly a social success than on their first public appearance. They ate
-steadily and conscientiously, and their table manners compared not
-unfavourably with those of the other children of the party. Most of
-these ate with their parents. Two boys of thirteen, twins, and two girls
-a little younger than Peggy and Elizabeth were at the low table, at the
-end of the two long rows of family tables that Tom had designed for his
-guests.
-
-"Bet you I can eat more clams than you can," Bill challenged Peggy.
-
-"I hope you can," said Peggy, "my idea is to go easy on the clams, eat
-two sweet potatoes, one lobster, a soupçon of bluefish, all the corn I
-can hold, because that's the best of all, with that grand, sea-weedy
-taste it's got, and this lovely, gooey, trickly butter. Then I shall
-really fill up on cake and pie. I'm not going to eat any bread, because
-that takes room."
-
-"You are going to eat watermelon?" Bill asked, anxiously.
-
-"I'm going to take one of those boatshaped pieces and get in," Peggy
-said.
-
-"The beauty of this party," Bob Stoddard said, "is that you can treat
-everything like that. You can snuggle right down into all the edibles."
-
-"I'm snuggling into my clams," Elizabeth said. "Isn't it funny that the
-clams you get in New York are so distinct from these clams? They are
-just like different animals."
-
-"They _are_ different animals," Bob said. "You like New York, don't
-you?"
-
-"Love it."
-
-"Well, here's to it, then," he lifted his clam shell gayly, and
-Elizabeth gravely lifted one of her own. They drained the liquor
-ceremoniously.
-
-"I hope I shall see you in the winter," Bob Stoddard said.
-
-"You'll see me," Tom interposed quickly, "I'm coming on to visit you in
-my Christmas vacation."
-
-"You said that last year."
-
-"Well, this year I'm coming."
-
-"I'm in a comatose condition," Peggy complained at dusk, as they
-lingered under their favourite tree to talk over the events of the day.
-"I hope nobody will ever mention any kind or variety of food to me
-again. If Tom hadn't brought all that candy, I should feel better, and I
-think those ice-cream cones we had on the way were nasty."
-
-"They tasted nice and cooling at the time," Elizabeth said. "I wouldn't
-want another one right now."
-
-"And your family are all in the house there, eating," Peggy said. "Can't
-you hear the merry clatter of their knives and forks?"
-
-"Don't mention it, Peggy. Do you realize what happened to me?"
-
-"You shook hands with that boy, you mean. I tried to warn you, but it
-was all over before I could even cough."
-
-"I know it, and I had been fortifying myself all summer long against
-doing anything like that."
-
-"Well, you won't have to remain in suspense like me."
-
-"Maybe it's Tom for you, after all."
-
-"No, I know it isn't. That's a nice boy, though. It would be funny if
-you really did grow up and marry him."
-
-"I'd rather marry somebody that I knew a little better."
-
-"Well, if you do marry him, you will know him better, that's one
-comfort. How's your brother?"
-
-"He's pretty good. He--he----Oh, he's the best we could hope for him to
-be."
-
-"He's awfully handsome. Do you know what's happened over at my house? My
-sister is getting ready to marry a man she isn't even on speaking terms
-with. They had some kind of a ruction last night about the war or
-something. He drove down, meaning to stay two or three days, and they
-had this row, and he just turned around and went back. Meantime, we
-merrily make trousseau and wedding chest."
-
-"I wish that he'd never come," said Elizabeth.
-
-"Oh, but he will. He'll be back to-morrow morning, with the bells on,
-and the flags flying, and a footman on the step of his car to show how
-classy he is. Just you wait."
-
-"Oh, dear," said Elizabeth, with a glance toward the open window of the
-dining room where her brother was sitting, "oh, dear, Peggy!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- RUTH
-
-
-The small reception room in the Farraday cottage had been converted into
-a temporary sewing room, and here Elizabeth and Peggy were sewing on
-their own blue dimity frocks, fitted to them by the Boston seamstress,
-who had been working in the house, and finished except for the
-hemstitching to be done on sleeves and collar. Peggy sewed neatly but
-erratically, exploding into violent protestations when her thread
-knotted or her scissors fell. Elizabeth found the steady rhythm of
-hemming rather soothing to her, especially to-day, when her heart was so
-heavy for her brother.
-
-"Piggy's--I mean, Mr. Chambers' parents have sent the flat silver,"
-Peggy announced, "and to my taste it's very hideous. It's the kind with
-a beading all around it. If you are going to have elaborate silver,
-why--have it. Have Cupids and little birds building nests, but if you
-are going to have it simple, why, then it's a crime, I think, to have a
-_little_ trimming on it."
-
-"You've got very good natural taste, Peggy--my mother says so."
-
-"I know it. So's Ruth. I bet she hates this. Just think, Elizabeth, if
-you marry a man it's not only for keeps, but it's for every day, all the
-time, whether he likes the things you loathe or not."
-
-"Have you shaken hands with anybody yet, Peggy?"
-
-"No, I haven't. Have you seen your future husband again?"
-
-"I passed him on the street yesterday. I like a boy that really takes
-his hat off, instead of fumbling at it."
-
-"Tom certainly takes his hat off--like a streak."
-
-"Too much like a streak. Besides, he always wears a cap."
-
-"I like caps," said Peggy.
-
-"I don't. I like hats. Bob Stoddard had a hat even at the picnic."
-
-"Look here, Elizabeth," Peggy said, seriously, "I hope you really won't
-get interested in that Stoddard boy. It would be kind of uncanny, and I
-should feel too awfully responsible."
-
-"You didn't do anything about it."
-
-"I got you into this counting business. I don't really think there is
-anything in it, but if there was, I should feel guilty all the rest of
-my life. I don't want to have your marital unhappiness to consider, the
-way I expect to consider Ruth's."
-
-"Mr. Chambers came back, didn't he?"
-
-"I told you he would. They are on the porch now, having a pow-wow.
-Mother was so rejoiced over the prodigal's return that it was pitiful."
-
-"Peggy, don't you wish that Ruth had just happened to fancy my Buddy,
-and to have married him instead?"
-
-"Goodness, yes. Anybody. That doesn't sound very flattering. You know I
-would have adored it, but that's too great a piece of luck even to
-contemplate. I'd rather she'd marry--Bill Dean than Piggy Chambers.
-
- "I do not like you, Doctor Fell (Chambers)
- The reason why I cannot tell,
- But this alone I know full well,
- I do not like you, Doctor Fell (Chambers)."
-
-"It would be nice to have lots of money," Elizabeth said, "and to have
-chauffeurs, and butlers, and tall, elegant footmen in green livery, and
-estates and things."
-
-"Oh, yes, it would, if you didn't have to take any incumbrances with
-them. If you had to be handcuffed to a fat man, in addition, that would
-be something else again."
-
-"Life is very bewildering. Don't you think so, Peggy?"
-
-"It doesn't bewilder me. It disgusts me sometimes. All these mixups
-could be avoided, if people only wouldn't be short-sighted."
-
-"Some trouble seems to come from other sources."
-
-"Yes, but most all the things that people suffer from could be avoided
-if they weren't so silly. I notice that all the time."
-
-"Well, so do I."
-
-"Hark," said Peggy, "they're at it again. If they row like that before
-they are married, what will happen to them in their honeymoon stages?"
-
-"He's going," Elizabeth said; "she's letting him out of the front door."
-
-"Good riddance to perfectly good rubbish," said Peggy, "till dinner
-time."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"No," Ruth's clear voice rose, distinctly, "no, no. I mean what I say."
-
-"So do I mean what I say. I'll see you at dinner."
-
-"If you like."
-
-"Oh, I like!"
-
-"At seven then."
-
-"At seven."
-
-The door closed after him, and Ruth, looking wearier and paler than
-Elizabeth had ever seen her, opened the door that led from the reception
-room to the hallway, and came in.
-
-"Take some seats," said Peggy, hospitably.
-
-Ruth sank into a big wicker armchair without speaking.
-
-"Lovely weather we're having for this time of year," Peggy continued,
-conversationally. "Ruth, dear, I love you."
-
-"I'm glad of that," Ruth said.
-
-"So do I!" said Elizabeth, timidly.
-
-"I'm glad of that, too," said Ruth Farraday, with her charming, wistful
-smile. "Well, children, you don't need to go on with those dresses. You
-won't have occasion to wear them."
-
-"What?" said Peggy.
-
-"I've just told Mr. Chambers that I won't marry him."
-
-"Does he know it?"
-
-"Well, not exactly, Peggy--that's his trouble--but he will know it.
-I'm--I'm through."
-
-"I don't believe it," Peggy said.
-
-"I do, and that's the principal thing," Ruth said. "I never realized how
-he felt about certain things before. I hadn't given much thought to his
-attitude about the war and all that. I knew he had been a sort of
-pacifist, and that he had German friends and business connections. I
-like men to be broad-minded. I don't mind a man that sticks to honest
-conclusions, if they're sincere, but when I find they are coloured by
-physical or moral cowardice, why, then I--I'm through. Albert Chambers
-is a coward, and he's a selfish coward. We've had it all out and I
-know."
-
-"Hooray," said Peggy, "I could have told you that any time this summer."
-
-"And I'm through with marriage or any idea of marriage, so there we
-are."
-
-"I don't envy you the sweet task of breaking it to Mother."
-
-"Haven't you got any feeling, Peggy? Don't you care how hard the things
-are I've been going through?"
-
-"Don't I?" said Peggy. She flung the folds of muslin wide, and made an
-impetuous dive for her sister. "Oh, Ruthie, Ruthie, Ruthie," she cried,
-"I'm so glad, I'm trying not to believe it, for fear it isn't so."
-
-Ruth clung to her wordlessly.
-
-"I love you, I love you," Peggy whispered.
-
-"I tried to do the right thing," Ruth said. "It's been hard to know what
-was right."
-
-"_You're_ all right," said Peggy, feebly. "Excuse these tears all down
-your back, Ruthie."
-
-"I've got to be at home for lunch," Elizabeth said. "I--I--they're
-expecting me."
-
-"Don't mind us," Peggy said, "this is only a small family reunion."
-
-"I think I'd really better go."
-
-"I'll write a note to your brother, Elizabeth, when it's settled. Mr.
-Chambers doesn't even understand it yet, you know."
-
-"I wouldn't have told Buddy unless you had told me to," Elizabeth said.
-
-Ruth smiled.
-
-"I might have known you wouldn't," she said, "your own kind of people
-have your own sense of decency, and the others never have."
-
-"I'm so glad I seem to you like your own kind of people." Elizabeth took
-Ruth Farraday's out-stretched hand gratefully.
-
-"Well, you do, dear, and you always have. On your own account, I mean."
-she added, quickly.
-
-"That's what I meant, too," said Elizabeth, shyly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was hard to sit through the mid-day meal with the secret that would
-change Buddy's world for him locked in her breast, still Elizabeth
-managed it somehow. He looked very pale and worn, but the three men kept
-up a lively discussion of the impending Presidential campaign and other
-political matters. She noticed the respect that both her father and
-Buddy paid to Grandfather's opinions on all these subjects.
-
-Elizabeth wondered how it could be that Buddy could laugh his hearty
-laugh, before he knew the thing that she could have told him or how,
-when the conversation turned to the question of bait for a day's fishing
-on the banks that the three men contemplated, he could discuss worms and
-fishing tackle so eagerly.
-
-"Speaking of fish," Buddy said, "it seems to me that these are
-extraordinarily good herrings we are eating. I don't suppose there is
-any difference in herrings, but----"
-
-"Well, you don't suppose right, then," Grandfather said, "there is as
-much difference in the herrings that come from Herring River and those
-you get over to the westward as there is between some folks. The meat's
-whiter and sweeter in the Herring River herrings. I used to think it was
-a great thing to go after them in the spring. It don't make no
-difference where a herring has been putting in his time in the other
-seasons, come spring he makes for the river bed where he was born. I've
-seen them so thick on their way up Herring River that they couldn't swim
-straight, but had to kind of flop over one side to make way for t'other.
-I used to get five cents a hundred for 'em, and kitch 'em as fast as I
-could haul 'em out."
-
-"That isn't true, is it?" asked Elizabeth. "Do herrings go back to the
-place where they were born?"
-
-"Yes, and sometimes they swim a great many hundreds of miles to get
-there. They seek the Southern waters in the cold weather, you know, but
-they always come back once a year to the stream in which they were
-born," Elizabeth's father explained to her.
-
-"The place where their great-grandfathers were spawned. It's natural,"
-Grandfather said.
-
-"I guess it is natural," Elizabeth said, soberly.
-
-"You bet it is," said Buddy.
-
-They took a drive in the new roadster that afternoon, and Buddy seemed
-so happy and so free during the entire course of the day that Elizabeth
-was entirely unprepared to find him, as she found him some time after
-supper, flung across the bottom of the big four-poster bed in the guest
-room, with his head buried in his hands.
-
-"Buddy," she said, "Buddy, dear."
-
-"Oh, I'm all right, Sis. Run along."
-
-"I thought perhaps you wanted to walk with me to the post office."
-
-"I do, but it isn't time yet."
-
-"It's nearly time."
-
-"When it's time, we'll go."
-
-"Buddy, I wouldn't feel too bad. Things mightn't be so dreadful as you
-think."
-
-"They might, and then again they mightn't."
-
-"I wouldn't give up."
-
-"I've given up everything I can give up."
-
-"You seem--pretty much all right."
-
-"Live or die, sink or swim, survive or perish. Them's my slogans. I'll
-come through all right. I _am_ all right. Got to be."
-
-"Oh, Buddy," Elizabeth said, "you _will_ be all right."
-
-"It's a funny thing, little sister, that you don't irritate me more. It
-seems to me that you used to be quite an irritating child, and now I
-scarcely mind you, no matter how Paul Pryish or Polly Anna-ish you get."
-
-"I could irritate you more if I wanted to."
-
-"I'm perfectly willing to take that for granted."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Just as they reached the post office they met the Chambers' car piled
-with a full luggage equipment. Albert Chambers sat in lonely state
-within, looking neither to right nor left.
-
-"He didn't go back to dinner, after all," Elizabeth thought, "or at any
-rate, he didn't stay."
-
-Buddy made no comment on this encounter, but he walked composedly
-through the crowd overflowing the little building, his head held high,
-and all the colour drained from his white face. He even insisted on
-stopping at the drug store and regaling Elizabeth with her favourite
-marshmallow and maple nut sundae, though he refused all refreshment for
-himself.
-
-"One thing that the life over there taught you was that you've got to
-get through every day somehow," he said, thoughtfully. "I wish ice-cream
-soda didn't drip so much. There's a row of pink rings and chocolate
-rings all along this counter. I don't like them."
-
-"He thinks everything is perfectly horrid," Elizabeth said to herself,
-"and yet he doesn't give in. Oh, I think he's perfectly splendid!"
-
-They made a detour and came out by the Flatiron field, where the station
-road divided itself into two separate byways in the crux of which was a
-letter box. Ruth Farraday was in the act of mailing a letter there. It
-dropped inside as Elizabeth and Buddy approached.
-
-"I was just mailing you a letter," Ruth said.
-
-"Can't I get it out?" Buddy asked.
-
-"No," Ruth said, "turn and walk with me home, and I'll tell you.
-Elizabeth knows already. I've broken my engagement. No, don't say
-anything. I--I just want to tell you, that's all."
-
-"There is so much I _might_ say!" Buddy said.
-
-"The reason I broke it has nothing to do with anything else--except that
-I broke it," she explained, incoherently. "It doesn't mean anything but
-that. I shall never marry now, I'm going into reconstruction work
-abroad."
-
-"Not--not right away," Buddy said.
-
-"As soon as I can make my plans--but there is one thing I want you to
-believe. I've written it in the letter, but I don't know whether I've
-managed to make it as clear as I meant to. I've broken my engagement
-only because Mr. Chambers and I were not suited to each other."
-
-"I--know that," Buddy said.
-
-"So this might just as well be good-bye between us."
-
-"If you wish it so?"
-
-"Do you doubt I wish it?"
-
-"No," Buddy said, "I know how you feel."
-
-"Then--then good-bye."
-
-"Right here?" said Buddy. "I thought we were going to walk home with
-you."
-
-"I'm nearly home," Ruth said. "Say it now, please."
-
-"Good-bye," said Buddy. He stood looking at her for a moment, levelly
-into her eyes. Then he turned away, wheeling as if he were under orders
-to march.
-
-"Tell me what you know, Elizabeth," he said, as they walked on, and
-Elizabeth told him of what had happened at the Farradays that morning.
-
-"But I thought things were going to be all fixed," she concluded,
-miserably, "and now they seem to be in a worse tangle than ever. I don't
-see what she's sending you away for."
-
-"That's all right," said Buddy. "I see."
-
-"But she said it was good-bye between you."
-
-"That's all right. It's an ethical question with her. She split up with
-him because she couldn't stand him, not because she wanted me. It's like
-a gentleman's agreement, you see. You enter into a mutual arrangement
-under the supposition that the other fellow is as decent as yourself.
-When you find he isn't, that releases you, unless the contract is
-actually signed. If he'd been all right, she would have stuck. She wants
-me to understand that."
-
-"But you do understand it, and I don't see why she has to be so cool."
-
-"I want her to be cool," said Buddy. "What do you think I wanted? To go
-in and spend the evening?"
-
-"Well, that would be better than this."
-
-"No, it wouldn't," said Buddy.
-
-"I don't understand you," Elizabeth said. "Perhaps you are not feeling
-very well, Buddy. You looked awfully pale there in the post office."
-
-"I'm not pale now, am I?"
-
-"No-o, but you look so kind of queer, and you act queer, too, Buddy. I
-understood why you respected her feelings when she wouldn't break her
-engagement, but now that she has, I don't see why you go right on
-respecting them. I--I thought you wanted to marry her yourself."
-
-"Marry her? Why, I'm going to," said Buddy. "That's the point."
-
-"When--when?" said Elizabeth.
-
-"Just as soon as I can get three weeks' salary in my jeans."
-
-"But she said she was going away, and--and everything."
-
-"Oh, I'll attend to all that!" said Buddy, happily. "Don't you worry,
-Sister."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- GOOD-BYE
-
-
-Elizabeth was making a round of farewell calls. Her summer on Cape Cod
-was over. Her trunk had already been packed and sent by express to New
-York, with all the other family baggage excepting the light motor trunk
-and bags that they were to carry in the car.
-
-Moses and Madget and Mabel surrounded her when she arrived at the
-Steppes.
-
-"You look like a lady in them clothes," Moses said, "I didn't know you."
-
-"She's got gloves on," Mabel said, "and a pink hat."
-
-"Loverly gloves," said Madget, dreamily. "I want a pink hat."
-
-"I want flowers on _my_ hat," said Mabel, critically.
-
-"How nice your house looks," Elizabeth said. "The kitchen floor is
-clean, and everything put away."
-
-"Mis' Laury Ann, she's learning me how to do housework, and I learn
-Mabel pretty good. Marmer she bought some dishes. See 'em there. Mabel
-and me, we like to keep 'em shined up."
-
-On the two shelves over the pump an array of formidably coloured, coarse
-crockery had made its appearance. Large pink roses heavily smeared with
-gilt were the prevailing decoration. Three pink coffee cups, with a
-gilded moustache protector in each, occupied a place of honour.
-
-"Me and Marmer and Mabel has these," Moses informed her proudly.
-"Madget, she drinks out of a mug. It's only a plain white mug, so we
-don't put it where it will show. Ma, she says she had just as soon we
-would eat out o' them dishes if we'll clean 'em up after."
-
-"Who does the cooking?"
-
-"I told you I done the cooking once," Moses said, "how many times have
-you got to be said it over to?"
-
-"Moses!"
-
-"Well," said Moses, argumentatively, "if you was old enough to boss me,
-it would be different, but you ain't."
-
-"I'm bigger than you are, Moses, and you are not big enough to boss me."
-
-"No," said Moses, "but I'm big enough to fight you to see who's got the
-most strength. Only girls can't fight."
-
-"Only morally," said Elizabeth.
-
-"Huh?" said Moses, staring blankly.
-
-"Well, never mind. You take care of your mother and sister and be a
-nice, clean boy, and--and learn your lessons at school."
-
-"Then what'll I get?"
-
-"You'll get to be comfortable and happy by your own efforts."
-
-"Well, I ain't going to do what anybody tells me--much."
-
-"Tell yourself, Moses. Tell yourself to be good, and then mind yourself.
-I do."
-
-"But you'm a girl," Moses said.
-
-"It doesn't make any difference who you are, Moses. If you don't try to
-learn that lesson about minding yourself, you won't get on very well."
-
-"Who says so?"
-
-"Miss Laury Ann says so, for one."
-
-"Did she tell you to mind yourself?"
-
-"She--she showed me how to do it."
-
-"Does she mind herself?"
-
-"Always, that's what makes her--so nice and kind. You see, Moses, you
-are the man of the family, and the man of the family has to be
-responsible for it and have a good control of it. So you've got to have
-a good control of yourself." The word was unfortunate.
-
-"Ma's got a control," Moses said. "Little Eva."
-
-"I didn't mean that kind of control, Moses. I meant--well, you just
-think what I meant. I want you to promise me that you will watch
-yourself and tell yourself what's right and wrong, just as if you were
-telling it to somebody else."
-
-"Well, I'll see about it," said Moses, "but if I do it, _they_ got to,"
-he pointed to his sisters.
-
-"Try it a while for yourself, and then if it works, teach it to them,"
-said Elizabeth with sudden inspiration.
-
-"Well, I'll teach it to them, anyway," Moses decided.
-
-"Here comes Marmer," Mabel cried.
-
-"I just slipped over to Mis' Hawes'," Mrs. Steppe explained,
-apologetically. "I had a matter I wanted to consult her about. My spine
-kinder give way last night, and I thought when she was going into a
-trance, she might see if Little Eva had anything to say about it. It
-ain't important enough for her to go into one special for."
-
-Elizabeth stared at the vision in purple velvet--a tight-fitting basque
-of obsolete make gripped the eighteen-inch waist inexorably, and the
-skirt, cut to the prevailing eight inches above the floor, exposed high
-white canvas shoes with knotted laces, shoes that had apparently never
-been cleaned in the course of their long and useful existence. Mrs.
-Steppe had not prefaced this elaborate toilet by arranging her hair, and
-the light strands stood out from her face, straggling and unkempt as
-usual.
-
-"I'm glad to see you," Elizabeth said, a little confusedly. "I just came
-in to say good-bye. I'm going away to-night, you know."
-
-"What train be you taking?"
-
-"I'm not taking any train. We're motoring."
-
-"Well," said Mrs. Steppe. "I'm glad you got an automobile to go in. I'm
-one of those that likes to see my friends get on in the world."
-
-"So--so do I," said Elizabeth. "What a pretty colour that dress is."
-
-"I like to wear silks and velvets," Mrs. Steppe said, with the slightest
-emphasis on the _I_. "Some people don't care nothing about it."
-
-"I love silks and velvets myself, and that's a lovely quality."
-
-"When I put my money in anything, I like to put it in something good."
-
-"Yes, indeed. I think that's my brother tooting his horn for me, so I'll
-have to say good-bye."
-
-"It's quite a little car, ain't it?" Mrs. Steppe surveyed the new
-roadster from the vantage point of the window. "For my taste, I like
-these limousines, but anything that will go is better than nothing."
-
-"Yes, indeed," said Elizabeth, "good-bye."
-
-"Good-bye," said Mrs. Steppe, "take care of yourself. I hope you'll find
-me in better health next summer than you have this."
-
-"Good-bye, Mabel. Good-bye, Madget."
-
-"Good-bye," said Mabel, "come again."
-
-"Kiss me again, Madget," said Elizabeth, "aren't you a little sorry I am
-going? Oh, be good children, won't you?"
-
-"Bring me a present some time," said Mabel.
-
-"I will."
-
-"Well, if you say you will, you will--I know that," said Mabel.
-
-"Leggo," said their mother, "leggo. That little automobile out there is
-waiting for her. Tell Moses to get off that front seat and come back
-into the house. I don't know where the boy's manners is. I ain't never
-seen any sign of them."
-
-"Oh, dear!" said Elizabeth, as she drove away with Buddy, "it doesn't
-seem as if anybody with so little intelligence could be so selfish as
-that Mis' Steppe is. It saddens me every time I go there. I know I've
-had a funny call, but it doesn't seem funny to me. It never does."
-
-"Now, you want to be dropped at Peggy's, don't you?"
-
-"Yes, please."
-
-"Give Peggy my love and tell her to keep us informed about her sister."
-
-"I guess you've kept informed about her ever since she left."
-
-"A little additional information at times won't do any harm. I don't
-want her to spring anything on me--like getting out of the country."
-
-"She's getting ready to go abroad."
-
-"She thinks she's getting ready to go abroad. I just want about ten days
-before the day she thinks she's going."
-
-"She's getting her passport."
-
-"I want her to," said Buddy, affectionately, "I want her to have
-everything go the way she thinks she wants it to go, and then at the end
-I want to step right in and smash it."
-
-"Just like that?" said Elizabeth.
-
-"Just like that," said Buddy, happily.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"I don't believe I'm going to be able to bear this," said Peggy. "I
-thought it was going to be all right to say good-bye. Everybody has to
-at this time of the year, but--but that doesn't make it any easier. I
-don't want to part with you at all. I couldn't sleep last night,
-thinking of it."
-
-"Neither could I," said Elizabeth.
-
-"It's a whole year till next summer."
-
-"I know it."
-
-"I figured it out. It will be at least two hundred and seventy-two days
-before we are down here together again."
-
-"Will it? We might visit each other in the winter."
-
-"We might, but will we? You know my parents and I know yours. They
-always have other plans for their offspring in the vacations."
-
-"How is your mother?" Elizabeth asked.
-
-"She's pretty good. I did Mother an injustice. She's a better loser than
-I thought she'd be. She's been awfully decent to Ruth. Elizabeth, do you
-know what I found out about Ruth?"
-
-"Oh, what?"
-
-"I found out why she broke her engagement. I would have broken mine. She
-found out that he falsified his income tax report. He bragged about it
-to her. He thought it was smart. She wouldn't stand for it, that's all.
-If he hadn't given himself away, she'd be Mrs. Millionaire-slacker-Piggy
-Chambers, and half over to Europe by this time."
-
-"I don't like to think of it."
-
-"Well, then, think of me," said Peggy. "You don't care as much as I
-care. You are going back to your Jean and you like her best. There, I
-said I would bite my tongue out before I said that to you, and now I've
-gone and said it."
-
-"Let's not care what we say," Elizabeth said. "I do love Jean.
-Grandmother always says it doesn't make any difference how many children
-a woman has, she always has a different place in her heart for every
-one. I guess that's the way it is with friends. None of them can occupy
-the same place."
-
-"I only have one in my place," said Peggy, "you are my most intimate
-friend and I am not yours. Well, I guess I'll have to get reconciled to
-it."
-
-"I have two most intimate friends," said Elizabeth, "don't cry, Peggy."
-
-"Well, you're crying yourself, that's something. It's--it's a great
-deal."
-
-"Good-bye," said Elizabeth, "there's Buddy's horn again."
-
-"Good-bye," said Peggy. "Oh, I won't say good-bye. I--I guess I'll come
-over there and see you off."
-
-"She won't," Elizabeth thought, "she's just saying that to postpone the
-evil hour. All right, Peggy, dear," she said aloud, "good-bye
-till--good-bye!" and she flung her arms around Peggy's neck in a
-suffocating embrace.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the old valanced rocking chairs before the living-room windows
-Grandfather and Grandmother Swift sat alone in the gathering darkness.
-
-"House seems kinder lonesome to-night, don't it, Mother? Hard lines to
-lose the whole family all to once. They ought to gone off one by one,
-so's we wouldn't notice it so much."
-
-"Times come and seasons change," said Grandmother. "We have to expect to
-let 'em go. We are lucky to have them coming, even if we do have to let
-them go again."
-
-"Young John--Buddy she calls him--is as likely a young feller as I ever
-see."
-
-"And as handsome."
-
-"John--he's made a fine job of his business and a fine job of his life,
-as far as I can see. He keeps remarkable young for a man of his way of
-living, too. Don't dissipate none. I expect that's the secret of it. He
-picked himself up a pretty likely wife, too--good looking and sweet
-natured and no nonsense about her. _She_ looks like her, too."
-
-"She's going to be about her mother's size, I should say, when she gets
-her growth. She ain't quite so fair, but she's got the same eyes, and
-the same long, light-coloured lashes."
-
-"But her mouth's all Swift," said Grandfather. "You know that tintype we
-got of John. Why, cut her hair off, and put her in a boy's shirt and
-necktie and she'd be the image of him."
-
-"When they stood up there together by the door just before they started,
-and he put his arm around your shoulder, the likeness stood out plain
-then."
-
-"Where's Judidy to-night? Gone out with her feller?"
-
-"No, not to-night. The poor critter felt so bad when she see that car
-pulling out of the yard that she burst out into a fit of crying, and put
-her apron over her head and run off. She hasn't been heard from since."
-
-"Judidy was fond of _her_, and she had cause to be. I guess she give her
-almost a complete wedding outfit out of her own fixings that she brought
-down."
-
-"It was pretty cunning of her to give away the silk things she set such
-a store by. She washed 'em all out herself and run new ribbons in them,
-and then went and laid them out on Judidy's bed, with her eyes full of
-tears because she was parting with them. She found out that Judidy had
-set her heart on silk underwear for her wedding outfit, and she thought
-it all out that she had ought to give them to her. 'I have about
-everything I want, Grandma,' she said, 'and I've had a summer's wear out
-of them.' She don't exaggerate nothing much, that she does."
-
-"She's been pretty plucky, the way she took right hold helping you in
-the kitchen. She's helped me, too. When we was getting in the hay, and
-Zeckal was busy all the time she mixed up the hog's vittles and fed the
-hens, and carted big pails of water around. Faith, Hope, and Charity,
-they've been squealing considerable to-night, I notice. I guess they
-kinder feel the absence of a friend."
-
-"You remember the first night she come, Father? You was kind o'
-disappointed in her."
-
-"So was you, but you didn't let on nothing."
-
-"You said that you kinder hoped that John's girl was going to be a
-little more like folks."
-
-Grandfather chuckled.
-
-"Did I?" he said. "Well, she turned out to be a good deal more like
-folks than most people ever gets to be."
-
-Grandmother wiped her eyes.
-
-"There," she said, "I'm most always able to be philosophical about
-everything, but to tell the truth, I don't know how I am going to be
-able to get along without that child."
-
-"Well--" Grandfather took off his spectacles and wiped them carefully
-before he transferred his attention to the process of mopping his
-forehead--"well, I don't know how I'm going to get along without her,
-either," he said.
-
-
- THE END
-
- [Illustration: THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
- GARDEN CITY, N. Y.]
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber Notes:
-
-Passages in italics were indicated by _underscores_.
-
-Small caps were replaced with ALL CAPS.
-
-Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of the
-speakers. Those words were retained as-is.
-
-The illustrations have been moved so that they do not break up
-paragraphs and so that they are next to the text they illustrate.
-
-Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
-unless otherwise noted.
-
-In the caption of the illustration on page 46, a period was added at the
-end of the last sentence.
-
-On page 6, "look a might" was replaced with "look a mite".
-
-On page 40, "strangers smile" was replaced with "stranger's smile".
-
-On page 60, "Peggy s!" was replaced with "Peggy's".
-
-On page 181, "Promethueus Bound" was replaced with "Prometheus Bound".
-
-On page 185, a single quotation mark was replaced with a double
-quotation mark.
-
-On page 207, a quotation mark was added before "Do you want to come".
-
-On page 279, "overt he pump" was replaced with "over the pump".
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Elizabeth, Her Folks, by Barbara Kay
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Elizabeth, Her Folks, by Barbara Kay
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Elizabeth, Her Folks
-
-Author: Barbara Kay
-
-Illustrator: The Donaldsons
-
-Release Date: December 22, 2016 [EBook #53788]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ELIZABETH, HER FOLKS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Ernest Schaal, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img class="border" src="images/cover.jpg" width="438" height="700" alt="Cover" title="Cover" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 600px;">
-<a name="Frontispiece" id="Frontispiece"></a>
-<img class="border" src="images/illus002.jpg" width="600" height="390" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">&quot;&#39;Nothing ever tasted so good to me in my life&#39;&quot;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img class="border" src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="471" height="700" alt="ELIZABETH, HER BOOKS
-
-ELIZABETH
-HER FOLKS
-
-BY
-BARBARA KAY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-ILLUSTRATED
-BY
-THE DONALDSONS
-
-GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
-DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY
-1920"
-title="ELIZABETH, HER BOOKS
-
-ELIZABETH
-HER FOLKS
-
-BY
-BARBARA KAY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-ILLUSTRATED
-BY
-THE DONALDSONS
-
-GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
-DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY
-1920"/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY<br />
-DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY</p>
-
-<p class="center">ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION<br />
-INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>CHAPTER <span class="ralign">PAGE</span></p>
-
-<p>I. <span class="smcap">John&#39;s Girl</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page3">3</a></span></p>
-
-<p>II. <span class="smcap">The Steppe Children</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page16">16</a></span></p>
-
-<p>III. <span class="smcap">The Little Room&mdash;and Peggy</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page28">28</a></span></p>
-
-<p>IV. <span class="smcap">The Birthday</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page44">44</a></span></p>
-
-<p>V. <span class="smcap">Ninety-nine Negroes</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page58">58</a></span></p>
-
-<p>VI. <span class="smcap">The Bean Supper</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page71">71</a></span></p>
-
-<p>VII. <span class="smcap">The Locked Closet</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page87">87</a></span></p>
-
-<p>VIII. <span class="smcap">Letters and the Post Office</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page102">102</a></span></p>
-
-<p>IX. <span class="smcap">Huckleberries and New Friends</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page117">117</a></span></p>
-
-<p>X. <span class="smcap">Provincetown and a Walk in the Woods</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page134">134</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XI. <span class="smcap">Little Eva</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page147">147</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XII. <span class="smcap">Buddy Wants to Know</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page164">164</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XIII. <span class="smcap">Crabbing</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page180">180</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XIV. <span class="smcap">Elizabeth Is Rude</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page192">192</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XV. <span class="smcap">Picking Chickens</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page207">207</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pagevi" id="pagevi"></a>[pg&nbsp;vi]</span></p>
-
-<p>XVI. <span class="smcap">Mother</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page220">220</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XVII. <span class="smcap">Elizabeth Is Scared</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page234">234</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XVIII. <span class="smcap">Elizabeth Shakes Hands</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page249">249</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XIX. <span class="smcap">Ruth</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page265">265</a></span></p>
-
-<p>XX. <span class="smcap">Good-bye</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page278">278</a></span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>&quot;&#39;Nothing ever tasted so good to me in my
-life&#39;&quot; <span class="ralign"><a href="#Frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></span></p>
-
-<p class="right">FACING PAGE</p>
-
-<p>&quot;&#39;Do open it. I can hardly wait to see what
-you think of it.&#39;&quot; <span class="ralign"><a href="#illus059">50</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&quot;&#39;Oh! let&#39;s try them on&#39;&quot; <span class="ralign"><a href="#illus109">98</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&quot;&#39;I can&#39;t help being afraid of what&#39;s in this
-particular letter&#39;&quot; <span class="ralign"><a href="#illus215">202</a></span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<h1>ELIZABETH, HER FOLKS</h1>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3"></a>[pg&nbsp;3]</span></p>
-
-<p class="h2">ELIZABETH, HER FOLKS</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">John&#39;s Girl</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">A little girl in a short-sleeved, blue ruffled
-nightgown flung herself across the foot of
-Grandmother Swift&#39;s great guest-chamber
-bed, and sobbed as if her heart would break.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Downstairs, each in an old-fashioned, valanced
-rocking chair before one of the living-room windows,
-Grandfather and Grandmother Swift were discussing
-the newcomer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think she seems real glad to be here,&quot; Grandmother
-was saying. &quot;She looks a little pale and
-peaked, but we&#39;ll soon have her fed up and as brown
-as a berry.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I never see any brown berries. All the berries I
-ever had anything to do with was red or blue, but
-there must be berries that is brown, if you say so,
-Mother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandmother&#39;s amber needles flew.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She seemed real pleased at the things I had
-cooked up for her,&quot; she said, &quot;especially the chocolate
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page4" id="page4"></a>[pg&nbsp;4]</span>
-cake. She didn&#39;t more than sample the lemon
-pie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought she seemed a little high-toned about
-her vittles. She kinder turned up her nose at your
-ginger tea, Mother. She was used to having her
-dinner at night, she said, and drunk nothing but a
-demi-tassy after it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You hadn&#39;t ought to have begun your teasing
-before she was fairly in the house, Father&mdash;it made
-her feel strange. She hasn&#39;t been here for four years,
-and four years, when a child is just getting into her
-teens, is a long while.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;An inch in a man&#39;s nose is considerable.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandmother surveyed him severely over the top
-of her bi-focal glasses.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Speaking of noses,&quot; she said, &quot;you be careful
-how you try pulling Elizabeth&#39;s nose or chuck her
-under the chin, or any such actions. Growing girls
-is particular about such things.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And I&#39;m particular who I chuck under the
-chin. I&#39;m afraid you are going to ruin your eyes
-with those glasses, Mother, you have to strain so
-hard to look over the top when you want to see
-anything at a distance, and work so hard trying
-to look under &#39;em when you want to see anything
-nigh to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He chuckled at Grandmother&#39;s sudden effort to
-concentrate her keen brown eyes within the space
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>[pg&nbsp;5]</span>
-of the glass half-moon through which she was supposed
-to focus her knitting.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I just wanted to bind off the sleeve before the
-light faded,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When Congress repeals this here light-saving
-scheme, it&#39;ll hurt your feelings two ways, won&#39;t it,
-Mother? You won&#39;t have the satisfaction of expressing
-your mind at the Administration for setting
-the clock back, and you won&#39;t have a extry hour of
-light to strain your eyes in.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The old lady&mdash;she was seventy-five, but in a strong
-light when she was not quite becomingly dressed,
-which was not often, she looked sixty&mdash;drew her
-rocking chair closer to the small window, and knitted
-in silence. All the windows in that remarkable old
-house were small, and divided into little, square panes.
-Grandfather drew <i>his</i> rocking chair closer to <i>his</i>
-window, and made a great pretence of reading, but
-he did not turn or rattle his paper.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You trying to prove that your eyes is just as
-good as mine? Well, I don&#39;t know as I blame you,
-Father, but your glasses is out in the barn on the
-feed box. If you could read a line without &#39;em, I&#39;d
-know the contents of the whole paper by this time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandfather Swift grinned, and unbuttoned a
-lower button on the immaculate linen waistcoat he
-had put on in his granddaughter&#39;s honour&mdash;he wore
-no coat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a>[pg&nbsp;6]</span>
-&quot;Got back at me that time, didn&#39;t you, Mother?
-I always feel uneasy after I get the better of you till
-you&#39;ve worked the laugh round to me again. Well,
-I thought we&#39;d be setting up till all hours of the
-night, entertaining John&#39;s girl, and hearing all the
-news of the family. I wonder if she always goes to
-bed before sundown. She didn&#39;t look a might
-sleepy to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She travelled all the way from New York&mdash;of
-course she was sleepy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Her father brought her all the way from New
-York to Boston, and she rested there a couple of
-days before he put her on the Cape train. All she
-had to do was to sit among her bags and boxes till
-she got here. Three shiny black bags, she had, and
-as proud of &#39;em as if she had made &#39;em herself&mdash;and
-a wardrobe trunk. I thought myself that all trunks
-was wardrobe trunks until she told me different.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You can&#39;t hardly judge the child till she gets
-settled down a little.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandfather Swift let his paper fall to the floor.
-Then he picked it up and folded it carefully, and
-made a place for it on the stand between the two
-windows under the wide fronds of Grandmother&#39;s
-pet fern, which was supposed never to be displaced
-for such a purpose.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I did hope John&#39;s girl was going to be a little more
-like folks,&quot; he admitted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id="page7"></a>[pg&nbsp;7]</span>
-The dimity curtains in the guest chamber puffed
-in the light night breeze. An insect with the voice
-of a bird set up a cheerful chirping just under her
-window, but Elizabeth Swift, in a little, huddled
-heap on the four-poster bed that had belonged to
-her great-grandmother, with her head smothered
-in the best goose-feather pillows to shut out the
-sound she was making, was still sobbing as if she
-could never stop again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They don&#39;t even speak the English language,&quot;
-she was saying to herself. &quot;They are just countrified
-and ordinary, and I&#39;ve got to have them for my
-grandparents just as if they were like other people,
-and eat great hunks of corn beef and drink ginger
-tea, and never see my parents, or my dear, dear
-brother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The goose-feather pillow got wetter and wetter
-until Elizabeth, still very miserable but quieter now,
-began to be concerned about the damage she was
-doing, and finally dragged herself up on the edge
-of the bed to examine it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I mustn&#39;t do damage to property, no matter
-how anguished I am,&quot; she thought. &quot;People&#39;s things
-aren&#39;t to blame, if they do say &#39;hadn&#39;t oughter,&#39; and
-&#39;ain&#39;t,&#39; but I don&#39;t see how my own mother and my
-own Father John could have sent me here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She groped for the second pillow, and the tears
-started afresh, but presently she began to try to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>[pg&nbsp;8]</span>
-stop them. The soft wind that was pushing the
-dimity curtains into the room brought with it a
-heavy breath of honeysuckle and roses. Her mind
-began to stray away from her immediate trouble.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Honeysuckle toilet water might be the very best
-toilet water that any one could have. I wonder if
-you couldn&#39;t make some with honeysuckle blossoms
-and wood alcohol. There&#39;s a bird going to bed in
-that tree. Maybe it&#39;s an oriole.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She had never seen an oriole except in pictures,
-but that was one of the things she had wanted to
-come to Cape Cod for, when she had thought she
-was coming with her mother and her big soldier
-brother to a cottage on the beach, before they had
-realized how sick he was going to be when he got
-home from France. The bird chirped drowsily once
-more, and the insect in the grass drew its string over
-its bow again. She almost went to the window to
-look, but she had cried so long that she wasn&#39;t quite
-willing to think of pleasant things yet. Her head
-ached and her nose was sore, and the second pillow
-was almost as wet as the first. She hung them both
-over the foot-board to dry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose it is a little funny to cry quarts into
-old family goose-feather pillows. I might have cried
-so long I would have had to use a whole feather-bed,
-too. I wonder if Grandmother would scold me just
-as if I were a child. I told her I was going to have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>[pg&nbsp;9]</span>
-my fourteenth birthday here. I told my horrid
-grandfather, when he pinched me, that I wasn&#39;t
-in the habit of being teased. What would Jean
-Forsyth say if she could see me now? I guess I&#39;ll
-get up and put some talcum powder on my nose.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a knock on the door as she began to
-move around the room. She scrambled back into
-bed meaning to pretend to be asleep, but her grandmother
-opened the door and came in just as if she
-had spoken.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you asleep, Elizabeth?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, Grandma.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought you might like a glass o&#39; milk to kinder
-stay your stomach between now and breakfast.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you, Grandma.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Would you like a cookie to go with it? I made
-up a whole jar full o&#39; sugar-molasses cookies so&#39;s
-you could go and help yourself to them whenever
-you was a mind to. I&#39;ll set the milk right here on
-the stand, and then I&#39;ll go fetch the cookie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you for the milk, Grandmother, but I don&#39;t
-care for the cookie. I never eat between meals.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your grandfather and I had a little spell o&#39; argument
-about that cookie. He claimed you wouldn&#39;t
-be used to eating sugar-molasses cookies, but I
-thought you might of inherited your father&#39;s taste
-for them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have inherited a great many of Father&#39;s tastes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id="page10"></a>[pg&nbsp;10]</span>
-&quot;Your brother Johnny, he used to like &#39;em, too, when
-he was a little feller. He was a real good little boy,
-Johnny was. He spent every summer of his life with
-me and Grandpa till he began to go to that college.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We don&#39;t called him Johnny. We called him
-Junior when he was growing up, and I called him
-Buddy, but now we call him John&mdash;or John Junior
-when we wish to distinguish him from Father.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, your grandfather and I always called him
-Johnny. It seemed to suit him. I hope he&#39;ll get well
-enough to get down to Gran&#39;ma&#39;s before the summer
-is over. Gran&#39;ma could help him to get well.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is quite sick now, and unable to see any one
-at all. He is very devoted to me, but he is in such
-a weakened condition that even I wasn&#39;t allowed to
-see him. He won the D. S. C.&mdash;the Distinguished
-Service Cross, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know so much about this new-fangled
-soldiering. I lost two brothers in the Civil War&mdash;your
-great uncles they would have been. Only eighteen
-and twenty, but grown men they seemed to be
-in them days. Your father favoured my brother
-William more&#39;n he did anybody on his father&#39;s side
-o&#39; the house. Johnny, he looked like Sam when he
-was a little feller. Well, I&#39;m real glad Johnny got
-home safe.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Of course, we can&#39;t be sure that he is safe yet,
-but the recent reports have been very encouraging.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>[pg&nbsp;11]</span>
-&quot;Your father&#39;s proud of his boy, I guess. It was
-a great thing for him to have a grown boy to go.
-The next best thing to going himself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think he cared about going himself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did he ever say anything about not caring to
-go?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think I ever heard him express himself on
-the subject; but the work he was doing here, of course,
-was very important. Anybody who was connected
-with steel production in any way felt that they were
-being a great deal more useful on this side of the
-ocean.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Whatever your father was doing on this side of
-the ocean, I guess his soul and his spirit was all the
-way across it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think you are mistaken, Grandmother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandmother Swift looked at her granddaughter
-over the rim of her bi-focal glasses, and smiled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s one o&#39; the easiest things in this world to be
-mistaken, Elizabeth,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth put out her hand for her glass of milk,
-and began to drink it with a sudden meekness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You go and set yourself in the chair by the bed,
-and finish your milk, and I&#39;ll lay back your bed for
-you. There&#39;s a golden robin has a nest in that tree,
-and I guess there&#39;ll be a family there pretty soon.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You mean an oriole, don&#39;t you, Grandmother?
-Oh, I&#39;m crazy to see one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>[pg&nbsp;12]</span>
-&quot;Some folks calls it that. Golden robin means
-more to me. I like to have things called by their prettiest
-names.&quot; She was busying herself about the bed.
-&quot;I&#39;m going to turn these pillows over on their dry
-side,&quot; she said, as if Great-grandmother&#39;s goose-feather
-pillows had always one tear-dampened surface.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh!&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But her grandmother wasn&#39;t looking at her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Speaking o&#39; names,&quot; she was saying, &quot;I&#39;ll tell
-you a conundrum that my grandmother used to
-tell me, a real appropriate conundrum, seeing that
-it&#39;s about a namesake o&#39; yours. See how long it
-takes you to guess it.</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;Elizabeth, Elspeth, Betsy and Bess,</span>
-<span class="i0">All went together to seek a bird&#39;s nest,</span>
-<span class="i0">They found a bird&#39;s nest with four eggs in it,</span>
-<span class="i0">They each took one and left three in it.&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But how could they?&quot; Elizabeth cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, they did, and now&#39;s a good chance to show
-how smart you are, so&#39;s Gran&#39;ma needn&#39;t make any
-mistake about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Something in the eyes over the bi-focal glasses
-made Elizabeth squirm a trifle.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The girls at home,&quot; she said, rapidly, &quot;often call
-me Betsy. Oh, I know now. That&#39;s the answer.
-It was all one girl&mdash;Elizabeth, Elspeth, Betsy, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13"></a>[pg&nbsp;13]</span>
-Bess&mdash;all nicknames for Elizabeth. I never heard
-of any one called Elspeth, but I&#39;m called all the others
-myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your great-grandmother was always called Elspeth.
-She always called you that when you was a
-baby.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did she? I didn&#39;t know that I ever saw Great-grandmother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She saw you. She loved you better than any
-grandchild she lived to see, because you was named
-after her, I suppose. She used to say that conundrum
-was wrote about her, because she was four or five
-different characters all in one. Elizabeth when she
-was feeling high and mighty, Elspeth when she was
-good, Betsy when she had trouble keeping herself in,
-and Bess when she put on her airs and graces. Bessie
-was a real stylish name in her day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, I have different names for myself&mdash;Beth
-you know, and Betty, they are contractions of Elizabeth,
-too, but I never knew any one else who thought
-of themselves in different characters.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your great-grandmother was quite a remarkable
-woman. She was your grandfather&#39;s mother, but
-she seemed like my own. You look considerable
-like her, Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve always thought I resembled my own mother
-more than any one. She was an Endicott, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your great-grandmother was a Jones. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>[pg&nbsp;14]</span>
-Joneses had the name o&#39; being one of the likeliest
-families in Crocker Neck.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did they?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And she had the reputation of having the prettiest
-manners and the kindest ways of any girl from
-here to Chatham. Your father takes after her in
-that. It was the first trouble that ever come to
-him when his gran&#39;ma died, and he took it hard.
-He went out behind the henhouse and lay there a
-whole night; just the way he used to when he had
-trouble as a boy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But he was a grown man then, and I was born.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He wasn&#39;t so much of a grown man that he didn&#39;t
-lay and blubber all night. He ain&#39;t so much of a
-grown man now that he wouldn&#39;t do the same thing
-if he was in the same kind of trouble.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&mdash;he didn&#39;t when we thought we had lost
-Buddy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandmother&#39;s eyes looked kindly over the tops
-of her ridiculous glasses, but all that she said was,</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You come and hop into bed now. You&#39;ll get cold
-setting by that open window.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess I know how my own father felt and acted
-last winter,&quot; Elizabeth said, but not aloud, as she
-slipped between the creamy linen sheets, and her
-grandmother tucked her under the blue-and-white
-comfortable. She closed her eyes for the good-night
-kiss that she expected to submit to, but it did not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>[pg&nbsp;15]</span>
-come. Instead, her grandmother made her way to
-the door and stood holding it open, as she looked back
-to say:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your grandfather and I are real glad to have you
-with us, Elizabeth. It&#39;s always a day of rejoicing
-to us when we have our own flesh and blood under
-our roof. No matter what you start out in life thinking,
-the conclusion you kinder come to, when all&#39;s
-said and done, is that blood is thicker than water.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her tone was exactly as gentle as before, but alone
-in the darkening room Elizabeth felt a slow wave of
-crimson mount to her forehead, and spread hot over
-her face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandmother doesn&#39;t think I am very nice,&quot; she
-said.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>[pg&nbsp;16]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">The Steppe Children</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dear Buddy:&quot; Elizabeth was writing, &quot;dear,
-dear, dear, <i>dear</i> Buddy: Mother says I may
-write you real letters, now, all about everything,
-because you are in a condition to bear it. So
-I am starting in bright and early this morning to go
-into details about my existence here, and my rejoicings
-at your convalesence. (I spelled that right, I
-know. I am naturally a good speller, but I have such
-a poor example set by my brother the Harvard
-gradjuate, that I fall into bad ways at the slightest
-provocation.)</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;First let me testify that I love you best&mdash;best&mdash;best
-in the world next to and including Father John
-and Mother Darby. You know that already, but
-if you are like me, the things you like to be told best
-are the things you know already. You know also
-already how I feel about your being sick. Please
-get better and come down here quick. I want you
-here, oh! so very, very much. Father and Mother
-thought I had better get the benifit of country air,
-but they don&#39;t know that I can&#39;t get much benifit
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>[pg&nbsp;17]</span>
-from country air while you are breathing cloriform
-and bandige lint all the time. I am not as comfortable
-in my mind as I should be in stuffy New York,
-in the hotel with Mother and Father. I know you
-will suspect my motives in yearning for hotel life,
-but it is really you and Mother and Father I want
-more even than life at the Holland House. Of
-course, I can&#39;t help feeling that if the house in Jersey
-is going to be closed and the family moved into town,
-though even in the dead of summer, that I ought to
-be moved with it, instead of being shoved off down
-here.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Buddy, I know you used to like it here, but I am
-miserable. I know you would think it was awful
-of me if you knew how I felt inside all the time, but
-I am not half-civilized or savage enough to like the
-primative way things are down here. I think girls
-are more sensitive and refined than boys and care
-what they eat more, and how things sound that are
-said to them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose that sounds horrid. Grandmother
-thinks I am horrid, though she is very tactful, I
-will say;&mdash;but Grandfather teases me from morning
-till night, and has no respect for my years. I
-don&#39;t see why he thinks I am such a child. He was
-engaged to Grandmother when she was sixteen, and
-that is only two years and forty-one days older than
-I am. But oh! Buddy, I wish my other grandparents
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18"></a>[pg&nbsp;18]</span>
-had lived. I think I am all Endicott, really,
-because I feel like a stranger in a strange land.
-Children and little girls keep coming to call on me.
-The girls of my own age that I used to play with keep
-their distance, and I am not sorry. It&#39;s hard enough
-to be polite as it is. Life is one eternal round of corn
-beef and cabbage and fried fish hash. I hope you
-get plenty of steaks and chops and delicacies. Grandmother
-won&#39;t let me go in bathing unless I have someone
-to go with, and I haven&#39;t any one to go with.
-The motors whizz by all day, but Grandfather&#39;s
-Ford is in the repair shop, and so I don&#39;t get anywhere.
-Tennis? All the boys own the courts
-around here, and won&#39;t let the girls on them for fear
-they will mess them up for the tournaments. I
-don&#39;t know any girls to play with, so that doesn&#39;t
-affect me, but you can see what a good time I am
-having.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, &#39;a sorrow&#39;s crown of sorrow is remembering
-happier things.&#39; We used to have good times together,
-Buddy, befo&#39; de war.</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;Your affectionate, but very blighted sister,</span><br />
-<span class="i0">&quot;<span class="smcap">Elizabeth&mdash;Eliza&mdash;Elspeth&mdash;Bess&mdash;Bessie&mdash;Lizzie&mdash;Betsy&mdash;Beth, etc.</span>&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">As she folded the closely written sheets of lilac-tinted
-notepaper and crowded them into their envelope,
-her grandmother&#39;s voice summoned her to
-the head of the stairs.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>[pg&nbsp;19]</span>
-&quot;The step-children are here,&quot; was what she
-seemed to be saying; &quot;shall I send them up or are
-you ready to come down?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I beg your pardon, Grandmother?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The step-children are here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you wish, Grandmother. It sounds just as
-if you said the step-children.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I did say the step-children. I&#39;m going to send them
-up for you to amuse them. Go right on upstairs,
-children. She ain&#39;t a bear. She won&#39;t bite you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;&quot; pant&mdash;pant&mdash;&quot;see a bear yesterday, a dancing
-bear. Didn&#39;t I see a bear, Mose?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hush, babe,&quot; another breathy voice answered.
-&quot;You don&#39;t want to talk so much when you go
-a-visiting.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A mysterious single file of chubby children, considerably
-more ragged than dirty, made a cautious
-way up the steep stairs, panting as they came.
-Elizabeth led the way into the big chamber where
-she had been writing, and the three followed her
-solemnly. Her first instinct was to give them each
-a friendly pat, as if they were so many little dogs
-who had been running hard.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good morning, children,&quot; she said. She was
-fond of children, and these were adorable specimens,
-despite their superfluous fringes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good morning, teacher,&quot; they answered, with
-unexpected promptitude.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>[pg&nbsp;20]</span>
-&quot;Well, I&#39;m not exactly a teacher, you know. I&#39;m
-just Miss&mdash;I mean&mdash;Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We know who you be,&quot; the eldest, a boy, volunteered.
-&quot;You&#39;m Miss Laury Ann&#39;s granddaughty,
-that&#39;s who you be. We come to see you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That was very kind of you,&quot; Elizabeth smiled,
-&quot;but I don&#39;t know who you are.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We&#39;m the step-children.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are just about like steps,&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;but
-that seems a funny name to call you just the same.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;Tis our <i>name</i>,&quot; the second child, a girl with long
-red curls, met Elizabeth&#39;s eyes and subsided instantly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;S-T-E-P-P-E,&quot; the boy spelled out. &quot;&#39;Tain&#39;t
-a joke. It&#39;s our name. It&#39;s Parper&#39;s name and
-Marmer&#39;s name.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Steppe-father and Steppe-mother,&quot; Elizabeth
-said to herself, &quot;and the Steppe children.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have other names?&quot; she said aloud.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m Moses.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m Mabel.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m Madget.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Her real name is Margery, but she calls herself
-Madget, and so we call her that. Madget means a
-dwarft, and she&#39;s little for her age. I&#39;m nine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m seven.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m four,&quot; said Madget.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">All this had so much the effect of a recitation that
-Elizabeth asked them if they spoke pieces.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>[pg&nbsp;21]</span>
-&quot;I speak &#39;Shavings,&#39;&quot; Moses said. &quot;I&mdash;I mean
-Excelsior.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I speak &#39;Baby&#39;s Evening Prayer.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I speak, &#39;Little drops o&#39; water&mdash;little grains o&#39;
-sand&mdash;make a mighty ocean&mdash;an&#39; a pleasant land,&#39;&quot;
-Madget contributed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She didn&#39;t ask you to speak it,&quot; Moses said,
-witheringly, &quot;she only asked did you speak it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you went and spoke it,&quot; Mabel added,
-accusingly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The wail that Madget set up at being accused of
-this breach of polite usage sent Elizabeth&#39;s arms
-straight around her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You must remember she&#39;s only a baby,&quot; she
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s what we tell her,&quot; Mabel said, &quot;but we
-can&#39;t make her pay no attention to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You must pay attention to it, and take care of
-her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh! we take care of her, all right,&quot; Moses agreed,
-darkly. &quot;We gotter.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Doesn&#39;t your mother take care of her sometimes?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, ma&#39;am.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is she sick&mdash;or something?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, ma&#39;am. She&#39;s sick o&#39; living, she says.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What does she do all the time?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothin&#39;.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Does she have to stay in bed?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22"></a>[pg&nbsp;22]</span>
-&quot;Yes, ma&#39;am, when she ain&#39;t up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What does the doctor say is the matter with her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She don&#39;t have no doctor. She reads novels.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All the time?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, ma&#39;am.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who does the cooking?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We don&#39;t have no cooking.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What do you eat?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bread and molasses, and doughnuts out the
-cart.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you ever have any meat or chicken or fish
-hash or anything?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When my a&#39;nt comes we do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then your mother isn&#39;t really sick?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She feels as if she was, and she says that&#39;s just as
-bad.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m going to be a hired girl when I grow up, and
-go out to work where I can make pies and cakes,&quot;
-Mabel said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m going to be a cook on a vessel,&quot; Moses said,
-&quot;and get learned how to make vittles.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m going to be a bake-cart,&quot; Madget said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Listen to her. Don&#39;t you know you can&#39;t be a
-bakery cart?&quot; Moses jeered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You gotter be the one that drives it,&quot; Mabel
-contributed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wanter <i>be</i> a bake-cart and curry the food
-around all the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>[pg&nbsp;23]</span>
-&quot;All right, you may.&quot; Elizabeth spoke just in
-time to avert another tearful crisis. &quot;What would
-you like to do to amuse yourselves, children? Would
-you like to have me tell you a story?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, ma&#39;am,&quot; Moses said, promptly. He indicated
-the row of shiny travelling bags by the
-mahogany what-not. Elizabeth had long since unpacked
-them, but they were such proud possessions
-that she could not bear to put them out of sight.
-&quot;I want to see what&#39;s in <i>that</i>,&quot; he said, selecting
-the hat-box.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want to see what&#39;s in that,&quot; Mabel said, choosing
-the suitcase in her turn.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget fell upon the overnight bag.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wanner see that,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth&#39;s laugh rang out gayly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are acting just like the story of the three
-bears,&quot; she said. &quot;There isn&#39;t anything inside of
-the bags now, but I&#39;ll show them to you, just the
-same. This is my hat-box, see, and these silver
-letters on the outside are my initials, E. S.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is, too, something inside,&quot; Mabel cried,
-as the brightly flowered lining was disclosed. &quot;Trimming.
-Now open mine. There&#39;s trimming in all
-of them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And a pocket, too,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now me,&quot; said Madget.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There isn&#39;t any trimming in this,&quot; Elizabeth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>[pg&nbsp;24]</span>
-said, hastily, &quot;but there are lots of pockets, and see,
-in this pocket there is a little cake of lovely smelling
-soap, and I&#39;m going to give it to you. You can wash
-your face and hands with it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She ain&#39;t a very good one to give soap to,&quot; Moses
-said. &quot;Water makes her nervous.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll give you all a piece of soap if you&#39;ll promise
-to use it every day&mdash;the big bear and the middle-sized
-bear, and the baby bear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I ain&#39;t going to be no bear,&quot; Moses said, &quot;I was a
-bear in a canatartar. Zibe Hunt&mdash;he had me on a
-string, and he sang a song.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What kind of a song?&quot;</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;I am an animal trainer,</span>
-<span class="i2">This is my polar bear.</span>
-<span class="i0">He comes from the far-distant mountains,</span>
-<span class="i2">Out of his icy lair.&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">Mabel obliged, &quot;And then he done some tricks,&quot; she
-added, &quot;and Zibe hit him; and Parper licked him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why should your father lick him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For what he done to Zibe after the canatartar.
-He don&#39;t like to play bears now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I see a dancing bear,&quot; Madget said. &quot;Didn&#39;t I,
-Mose?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You better stop talking about bears,&quot; Moses
-hinted, darkly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>[pg&nbsp;25]</span>
-&quot;If you&#39;ll bring the children downstairs, Elizabeth,&quot;
-Grandmother called from the foot of the staircase,
-&quot;they can have some milk and cookies.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget made directly for the staircase, and as
-promptly fell all the way into Grandmother&#39;s arms,
-from which position she scowled and freed herself.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She always falls downstairs,&quot; Mabel said, tolerantly.
-&quot;It don&#39;t hurt her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It does her good,&quot; Moses explained.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Milk,&quot; said Madget, &quot;and cookies.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The little thing is really hungry,&quot; Grandmother
-said. &quot;How long ago did she have her breakfast,
-Mose?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We don&#39;t have no breakfast to our house. She
-wouldn&#39;t eat her bread because she said she was
-skeered of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Scared of it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, some of it had gray fur on it, and she was
-afraid it was going to crawl out on her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandmother,&quot; Elizabeth cried, &quot;why are these
-children neglected like this? Are they so poor or
-what?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They ain&#39;t no poorer than a great many other
-folks. Their mother won&#39;t do anything for them&mdash;that&#39;s
-all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But why?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She don&#39;t like work. Mercy me! They&#39;ve
-et a dozen cookies already. You fill up their glasses,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>[pg&nbsp;26]</span>
-Elizabeth. I stirred half a cup o&#39; cream into the
-pitcher so&#39;s to be sure they was nourished.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why isn&#39;t something done about them? The
-Charity Organization Society, or somebody, ought
-to take up the case.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The only organization society we got is the fire
-department. These children don&#39;t need putting
-out, they need taking in more, I should say. If one
-person in the world lays down and refuses to do what
-the Lord requires of him he puts a powerful lot o&#39;
-machinery out o&#39; gear. Mis&#39; Steppe&mdash;she just refuses
-to do her part in the Lord&#39;s scheme.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is she old and ugly?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s young and pretty if she&#39;d fix herself up
-some. She come from real good folks, too, but when
-she see how hard it was to live and take care o&#39; her
-children like other folks, she just decided to lay down,
-and down she lay. Most all of us feels inclined to
-shirk our responsibilities at one time or another, but
-most of us thinks better of it after a spell. She
-thought worse of it, Mis&#39; Steppe did. Too bad you
-don&#39;t like sugar-molasses cookies, Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I do,&quot; Elizabeth blushed. &quot;I was only just
-waiting for the children to get all they wanted.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They&#39;ll never do that, but they got all they can
-hold. You open the screen door, Elizabeth&mdash;&mdash;Scat,
-out you go,&quot; she said, shooing at the Steppe
-family as if they were so many chickens, and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>[pg&nbsp;27]</span>
-children scattered instantly, chickenwise, onto the
-lawn, and down the path to the gate. &quot;Too much
-of anything is good for nothing,&quot; she concluded,
-tranquilly.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Buddy, my darling, I have broken into my letter
-again to say that I am a pig&mdash;the piggiest kind of pig,
-and this letter to you is a piggy letter. I will send
-it because I wrote it, and because I haven&#39;t got any
-time to write another, better one. I only wish to
-add that in certain ways I am as bad as &#39;Mis&#39;
-Steppe,&#39; that&#39;s a good pun you see, whether you
-know who I&#39;m talking about or not. I&#39;m going to
-be a better sister to you, and a better daughter to
-Father John and Mother Darby. I&#39;ve found out
-that one poor mother can do so much damage in
-the world that I don&#39;t want to be a poor&mdash;anything.
-Get well, and write me a letter, Buddy.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Sister
-Bet.</span>&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>[pg&nbsp;28]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">The Little Room&mdash;and Peggy</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">The golden robins woke first, and demanded
-their breakfast in weak, insistent voices.
-Then the blue counterpane slid to the floor
-and two ruffled blue dimity sleeves were flung out at
-right angles. The clear bell of the schoolhouse
-clock struck six times.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dear me, I must hustle,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She flew to the wash-stand and poured the creamy,
-gilt-edged bowl of the best room set full of well water,
-in which she laved and splashed. An aroma of bacon
-and coffee and the inimitable savour of raised biscuits
-helped to accelerate her progress. She sang
-as she dressed, but she thought of nothing at all but
-her breakfast.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her grandfather, in his shirt sleeves and sand-coloured
-waistcoat, was already at the table when she
-took her place there, and unfolded her red-fringed,
-damask napkin from the napkin ring that was her
-father&#39;s, and marked with his name. It was on a
-standard, and supported by twin boys, wreathed and
-carrying trumpets. Elizabeth always tried to hide
-it behind some dish as she ate.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>[pg&nbsp;29]</span>
-&quot;Good morning, Miss Betsy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good morning, Grandfather.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The hired girl, who was sixteen and the daughter of
-a neighbour, wiped her immaculate pink hands on a
-more immaculate and pinker apron, and took her
-seat opposite Elizabeth. She was an enormously
-fat blonde, who never spoke without blushing.
-Grandmother was bustling about with plates of biscuit
-and coffee cups.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The reason we don&#39;t have more help around the
-place is that Mother wears herself all out waitin&#39; on
-them,&quot; Grandfather observed. &quot;Judidy, ain&#39;t you
-got no control over Mis&#39; Swift? Can&#39;t you make her
-set down to the table when breakfast is ready?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, sir,&quot; Judidy blushed. &quot;She told me to set
-down, so I set.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, whenever she tells me to set down&mdash;I set,
-but I thought maybe you had more independence
-of spirit.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth, here&mdash;she don&#39;t pay much attention
-to what anybody says. She sets all the time, so&#39;s
-to be on the safe side. Well, I guess we&#39;re in for a
-spell o&#39; bad weather. I see old Samuel Swift out
-bright and early this morning, and when Samuel
-comes out of his hiding that means rain sure enough.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth shuddered. Samuel Swift was an unbelievably
-unkempt individual who lived in a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>[pg&nbsp;30]</span>
-hermit&#39;s shack in the woods, and was locally known
-as a &quot;weather breeder.&quot; Whenever he harnessed
-his ancient mare to his antiquated buggy and
-emerged into the light of day the wind changed,
-according to neighbourhood tradition, and the fog
-and rain swept in. She quoted:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;There was an old man with a beard,</span>
-<span class="i0">Who said, &#39;it is just as I feared,</span>
-<span class="i2">Three rats and a hen,</span>
-<span class="i2">An owl and a wren</span>
-<span class="i0">Have all made their nests in my beard!&#39;&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s poetry,&quot; her grandfather explained with
-a wink at Judidy. &quot;Fall to,&quot; he said as he served
-the last plateful of golden eggs and crisp bacon.
-&quot;Here&#39;s Mother with her last chore done, and
-we ain&#39;t more than half through our breakfast.
-If that coffee&#39;s for Elizabeth, Mother, you can give
-it to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought Elizabeth could have a little&mdash;very
-weak.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not at my table,&quot; Grandfather said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth poured a glass of milk and drank it in
-silence, but her grandfather gave her one sharp look
-from under his bushy brows.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I see old Samuel&#39;s crawled out,&quot; he said, turning
-to Grandmother. &quot;I guess we&#39;ll have some wet
-weather, now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s a disgusting creature,&quot; Elizabeth said, looking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>[pg&nbsp;31]</span>
-resentfully at the jug of milk&mdash;and taking a
-second glass of it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s a kind of relation of yours. His mother
-was my father&#39;s cousin. I think he&#39;d be better off
-at the poor farm, but he&#39;s so dirty, the selectmen
-kinder hate the job o&#39; trying to get him there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A relation?&quot; Elizabeth cried. &quot;Oh!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t know much about your Cape Cod relations,
-do you, Elizabeth?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess I&#39;m a kind o&#39; relation, too,&quot; Judidy
-simpered. &quot;Everybody&#39;s relation on Cape Cod, I
-guess.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth would be proud to have you for a
-relation, Judidy,&quot; Grandfather said, gravely. This
-time Elizabeth saw the sharp glance that appraised
-her, and she turned quickly toward Judidy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Anybody would be proud to have a&mdash;a cousin
-with such a lovely complexion,&quot; something urged her
-to say.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t!&quot; Judidy protested. &quot;I&#39;m all tanned up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have a friend in New York, Jean Forsyth,&quot;
-Elizabeth said, presently, &quot;whose sister married a
-count.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And when you get back to New York, you can
-tell her all about your cousin Samuel,&quot; her grandfather
-twinkled. &quot;My, what good times you can have,
-comparing notes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Father!&quot; said Grandmother Swift, warningly.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32"></a>[pg&nbsp;32]</span>
-&quot;You run along upstairs, Elizabeth, and I&#39;ll come up
-there as soon&#39;s I take one more swaller o&#39; coffee. I
-got something I want to say when there ain&#39;t no men-folks
-about.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Upstairs again, Elizabeth took the photograph
-of a deep-eyed girl in a silver frame out of the drawer
-in her wardrobe trunk and gazed at it with gathering
-woe.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, dear, Jeanie,&quot; she said, &quot;the only thing
-that would make me any less miserable in these
-surroundings would be to sit down and write
-you just exactly how things are, and that I can
-never do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You come with me,&quot; her grandmother called
-suddenly from the threshold. &quot;I got an idea.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She led the way past the landing and tiny hall into
-which the steep stairway debouched, into the regions
-in the rear of the three bedrooms that Elizabeth was
-familiar with. There seemed to be a chain of small,
-stuffy rooms dimly stored with old furniture and
-boxes, and not all on the same level, and beyond
-them a low room, with a slanting roof, half chamber,
-half hallway.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I never knew you had all these rooms,&quot; Elizabeth
-said. &quot;Why, the old house is enormous,
-isn&#39;t it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The front o&#39; the house is new; it hasn&#39;t been
-built more&#39;n fifty years at the outset, but these
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id="page33"></a>[pg&nbsp;33]</span>
-back chambers belong to the old house&mdash;the one
-your great-grandfather built to go to housekeeping
-in.&quot; She flung open a door that led into a little room
-still beyond.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, what a darling, what a sweetheart of a room!&quot;
-Elizabeth cried. &quot;Whose was it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was your Aunt Helen&#39;s room. She had it
-papered in this robin&#39;s egg blue paper, and she got
-a lot o&#39; old, painted furniture, and fixed it up real
-cunning. I thought maybe you might like to do
-the same thing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was only one portion of the room in which
-Elizabeth could stand upright. The roof sloped
-gradually until it met the partition about shoulder
-high, where two tiny, square windows, of many
-panes, were set; but the main part of the chamber,
-in spite of its low ceiling, was big enough to hold all
-the essentials of comfortable furnishing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You could hunt around through the house and
-the attic chamber until you found the things you
-wanted to put in it, and furnish it just according to
-your taste, and nobody would ever set foot inside of
-it unless you happened to want them to. I know
-girls. That&#39;s what they want.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess you do know girls, Grandma,&quot; Elizabeth
-said. &quot;I guess Aunt Helen must have had a good
-time growing up if you let her do things like this.
-I don&#39;t remember her much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page34" id="page34"></a>[pg&nbsp;34]</span>
-&quot;Well, that ain&#39;t so remarkable. She&#39;s lived in
-China since before you was born. I ain&#39;t never let
-anybody use this room, but now I kinder think her
-lease has expired. She&#39;s got daughters as big as
-you, and sons that&#39;s grown men now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll be just as good to her room!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess you can&#39;t help it. There&#39;s a good spirit
-in it. You rummage around in these different rooms
-here, and then you go up in the barn chamber and
-look till you find the things that suits you. There&#39;s
-a powerful lot of what some folks calls antiques
-around this place. Dealers and what-not is always
-coming around and begging to look through my
-pantry and my attic, wanting to buy all Grandmother&#39;s
-pretty dishes, and a good many that warn&#39;t
-so pretty, but I tell &#39;em all that when I&#39;m ready to
-part with &#39;em I&#39;ll let &#39;em know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The Washington Vase china that you use all the
-time is really valuable, isn&#39;t it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, so those collectors say. It&#39;s valuable to
-me, because I was brought up on it. Money value
-ain&#39;t everything. The value of a dollar is one thing&mdash;the
-joy it brings to you is another. You just rummage
-around and find the things that you like,
-and we&#39;ll get Grampa or Zeckal to move &#39;em up
-for you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How did you ever think of such a thing, Grandmother?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page35" id="page35"></a>[pg&nbsp;35]</span>
-&quot;Well, your grandpa thought he hadn&#39;t seen you
-looking around the house much, and s&#39;long&#39;s it&#39;s
-full o&#39; the kind o&#39; things that most city folks goes so
-wild about, I kinder figured you might like something
-to get your interest started. Helen, she was never
-very much interested in anything she didn&#39;t have to
-do with. You favour her in some ways.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose I haven&#39;t seemed very much interested
-in the house and things, I&#39;ve&mdash;had other things on
-my mind.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ve been worried about your brother, and a
-little homesick.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t think I showed it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t always have to show your feelings to
-Grandma. You better start in the barn chamber,
-and then work on through the house. When you
-get all the furniture you want, you can come to me
-and get the key to that closet some day.&quot; She indicated
-a door that might have been a panel set in
-the wall, except for the keyhole, where a knob might
-have been. &quot;There&#39;s a closet there, that runs clear
-under the eaves. I guess you might find some fol-de-rols
-you would like.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It might be fun to start in the closet,&quot; Elizabeth
-suggested.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It might,&quot; her grandmother agreed, &quot;but better
-save that till the last.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will,&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36"></a>[pg&nbsp;36]</span>
-The barn chamber, reached by a rickety stairway
-leading from the region of the stalls, from which a
-white mare poked a friendly nose as she went by,
-proved to be a storehouse of the most heterogeneous
-assemblage of objects Elizabeth had ever imagined.
-The overflow of fifty years of housecleaning and readjustment
-had been brought together under those
-dusty rafters.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Poor things,&quot; Elizabeth thought, looking about
-at the old settees and rocking chairs, broken backed
-and legless. &quot;A horse in that condition is put out
-of its misery. I don&#39;t suppose they could blindfold
-and shoot an old sofa, but they might cremate it,
-or something.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She came upon the wreck of a little old rocking
-chair, a child&#39;s chair, with a back beautifully decorated
-with grape clusters and leaves, and two limp,
-broken arms stuck out helplessly. These she tied
-up with strips of faded blue cambric that were
-lying about, and set the little chair gallantly rocking.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There were innumerable cracked china jugs, big
-bowls, and strange wooden utensils and cabinets;
-beds that had been taken apart, forlorn, carved old
-posters minus springs or mattresses that were merely
-being used as pens to keep forlorn chairs and tables
-herded together. These things were all draped
-with dust and spiders&#39; webs; and in a corner, from a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>[pg&nbsp;37]</span>
-pile of ancient straw, Elizabeth heard a faint, continuous
-rustling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mice!&quot; she said, &quot;but they can&#39;t frighten me
-unless they get a good deal nearer. Still, I guess
-I&#39;ll look carefully around and choose my nearest exit.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her first discovery for her house furnishing was a
-flag-bottomed chair with rockers about two inches
-long. It was perfectly preserved. It wasn&#39;t a
-child&#39;s chair, though it was very little of its age, she
-told herself. The next was a spinning wheel, which
-was the first one she had ever seen outside of a picture
-book.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m going to get Grandmother to teach me to
-spin on it,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a writing desk, a rosewood box with inlaid
-corner pieces, and a short-legged, square stand
-to set it on; and then more rustling in the straw sent
-Elizabeth suddenly downstairs again, though not
-until she had segregated her chosen furniture.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Zeckal, whoever he may be, can come and get
-it,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She went back to the little blue room under the
-eaves, and began a diagram of arrangement. Standing
-against the wall was a long, panelled picture in
-a black frame, that had made its appearance there
-in her absence. Elizabeth lifted it to the light and
-disclosed three barefooted ladies in flowing garments
-of gauze, who were standing on a light turf from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>[pg&nbsp;38]</span>
-which lilies of the valley were springing. One
-of these ladies was reclining on the breast of another,
-and the third was standing erect and aloof, with
-shining eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;The Christian Graces,&#39;&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;For
-goodness&#39; sake!&quot; and beneath, the curious inscription,
-simulating letters cut into stone, was engraved
-in a neat, Spencerian hand, &quot;Faith, Hope, and
-Charity.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For goodness&#39; sake!&quot; said Elizabeth, again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She turned the picture around, and found on the
-board at its back another inscription, written in a
-round, childish hand, &quot;Helen Swift, aged eleven,
-hung in my room to help me to remember.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess I&#39;ll hang it in my room, to help me to
-remember,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She was a little self-conscious about going down
-to dinner. She knew that her grandfather had found
-a good many things to chuckle at in her breakfast-table
-conversation. She always knew afterward
-just what things she had said that Grandfather would
-consider most typical of what he referred to as her
-&quot;city manner.&quot; This time she realized that her
-allusion to Jean Forsyth&#39;s brother-in-law would
-be the subject of many sly, humorous thrusts for a
-long time to come. However, when she reached
-the table again, her grandfather had not yet come in,
-but he appeared almost instantly, with a tall,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>[pg&nbsp;39]</span>
-freckled girl hanging on his arm&mdash;a girl with a turned-up
-nose and a bronzed pigtail the size of her doubled
-fist hanging down her back.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, Granddaddy Swift,&quot; she was saying, earnestly,
-&quot;don&#39;t you see that I can&#39;t come and meet a
-brand-new city granddaughter, and sit down to a
-respectable person&#39;s dinner table, attired in a bloomer
-suit? Don&#39;t you know it isn&#39;t done in the circles
-in which we move? Make him let go of my ear,
-Grandmummy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth rose shyly, and then she sat down again,
-but the stranger eluded Grandfather&#39;s masterful grip,
-and slipped around to her side, with a hand out-stretched
-in greeting.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Isn&#39;t he dreadful?&quot; she said, indicating her tormentor
-affectionately. &quot;When I heard you were
-here, I was going back to the cottage, to put on my
-best bib and tucker and make a proper call upon
-you, but Granddaddy wouldn&#39;t hear of it. He insisted
-on dragging me hither by the hair. So here
-I am&mdash;Peggy Farraday, at your service, and am
-very glad to meet you, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m glad to meet you,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;I
-haven&#39;t seen any girls for a long time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The woods down here are full of them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I guess I haven&#39;t been into the woods very
-much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth ain&#39;t a tomboy, like you, into everybody
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page40" id="page40"></a>[pg&nbsp;40]</span>
-else&#39;s business, all day long. She stays at home
-with me and Gra&#39;ma, and minds her p&#39;s and q&#39;s.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, we&#39;ll change all that. Attractive as you
-and Grandmummy are, you can&#39;t expect to monopolize
-her forever. Now it&#39;s my turn.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth saw that both her grandfather and grandmother
-were beaming at this tall girl&#39;s impulsive
-chattering. She felt her own stiffness relaxing under
-the sunny influence of the stranger&#39;s smile.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I adopted Grandmummy and Granddaddy three
-years ago, when I came over to this ducky old house,
-on my very first day on the Cape, to beg a pint of
-milk and a pail of water for my hungry, unkempt
-family. I saw that they were just the grandparents
-I was looking for, and so I took them on, and I&#39;ve
-been the plague of their existence every summer
-since. Haven&#39;t I, Granddaddy? Isn&#39;t he a lamb?
-You know, my one ambition is to squeeze him to
-pieces, but he&#39;s so woolly and scratchy and cantankerous,
-that it&#39;s almost impossible to get your arms
-around him, isn&#39;t it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, it is,&quot; Elizabeth said, crimsoning, with a
-quick glance at her grandfather.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To her surprise, he took no notice of her discomfiture.
-Both he and Grandmother seemed unaware
-of the delicate ground upon which Miss Peggy
-Farraday had set her enthusiastic little heels.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m fifteen,&quot; that young lady continued, with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41"></a>[pg&nbsp;41]</span>
-very little pause either between her mouthfuls of
-food or of conversation&mdash;&quot;You&#39;re fourteen, aren&#39;t
-you? I had more fun the year I was fourteen than
-I ever had before, or ever expect to have again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll be fourteen next Thursday,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I took on an entirely new character the day I
-was fourteen. I became very sedate and dignified,
-and changed my name from Peg to Peggy. Do
-you expect to do that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think perhaps I shall,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;I guess
-my character does need improving.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She expected some retort from her grandfather at
-this, but he only held out his hand for her plate, and
-heaped it high with roast lamb and tender green
-peas from the kitchen garden.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I envy you the scrumptious things you have to
-eat all the time over here. We bring our fat cook
-down with us. She cooks all right in town in the
-winter, but she always sulks on Cape Cod, and we
-have a dreadful time getting anything. We&#39;re not
-lucky enough to have Judidy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t!&quot; that flattered young lady protested.
-&quot;Land, think of anybody feeling lucky to have
-me! I <i>kin</i> cook, though, whenever Mis&#39; Swift is
-willing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mother, she don&#39;t let our help do much work.
-She&#39;s afraid they&#39;d get the habit, and kinder get in
-her way whenever she wanted to make a day of it.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id="page42"></a>[pg&nbsp;42]</span>
-When she&#39;s cooking, Judidy she generally sets down
-and reads the newspaper.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m so fat,&quot; Judidy explained, &quot;that I kinder
-make hard work getting around.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To Elizabeth&#39;s surprise, Peggy Farraday went off
-into peals and spasms of laughter at this.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are such loves,&quot; she explained. &quot;They
-are such darlings! I adore the way they do things.
-Grandmummy&mdash;I call her that, because she was
-jealous of Granddaddy for a name&mdash;is a lot like the
-Peterkins in her domestic arrangements.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I ought to be like Elizabeth Eliza. That&#39;s my
-name.&quot; Elizabeth was glad that she had read the
-&quot;Peterkin Papers&quot; with Buddy the summer before.
-She had never met any other girl who was familiar
-with them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll tell you later what character in fiction I think
-you&#39;re like. It takes me a while to make up my mind
-about things like that. I seem to jump at conclusions
-a good deal quicker than I do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Can you always tell whether you like people or
-not, at first meeting?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I can. Can&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy looked up quickly, and then her eyes dropped
-to her plate and she began eating rapidly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s shy, too,&quot; Elizabeth thought.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you&#39;ll come upstairs after dinner,&quot; she said,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id="page43"></a>[pg&nbsp;43]</span>
-aloud, &quot;I&#39;ve got something I want to show you.
-You&#39;ve come just in time to give me your advice
-about something pretty exciting.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As she was leaving the dining room something
-made her turn and look back at her grandmother,
-who was smiling broadly to herself, like the Cheshire
-cat in &quot;Alice in Wonderland.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The something I was going to show you was <i>her</i>
-surprise to me,&quot; Elizabeth whispered to Peggy.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page44" id="page44"></a>[pg&nbsp;44]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">The Birthday</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth sat in her little blue room, and
-shivered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was the afternoon of her birthday, and
-although she hadn&#39;t mentioned the fact to any one,
-she had dressed herself to do honour to the occasion.
-Every undergarment, chemise, camisole, and petticoat,
-was of a soft, flesh-tinted silk. Her dress was
-of the finest white muslin trimmed only with infinitesimal
-tucks and Valenciennes beading, and she
-was wearing a blue ribbon sash with a big butterfly
-bow at the back.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My pride ought to keep me warm,&quot; she thought,
-&quot;what a pity it doesn&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Before she bought her silken lingerie she had
-deliberated a long time between that magnificence
-and a light blue wool sweater and had finally succumbed
-to the lure of the lacy garments which had
-taken every penny of her month&#39;s allowance and all
-that she was allowed to borrow on her next.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She looked around her room with a glow of satisfaction,
-having only that morning put the finishing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page45" id="page45"></a>[pg&nbsp;45]</span>
-touches on it. She had draped the windows with
-an old-fashioned print, a blue groundwork with
-tiny pink roses wandering over it, that her grandmother
-had produced from an ancient chest stored
-with remnants of the popular fabrics of an older
-generation. The furniture she had chosen was
-mostly painted black, or a very dark stain. She
-had found another flag-bottomed chair, a twin to
-the first, and a wonderful old settee on rockers, which
-had a deep seat with an adjustable rack running
-along the outside of it, as if to prevent its being used
-except for the one person who chose to sit in the space
-that was clear at the end. This she had piled with
-cushions made from little square pillows that her
-grandmother kept for &quot;children who came a-visiting.&quot;
-Her desk and her spinning wheel were in opposite
-comers, and a miniature organ, the keyboard of
-which comprised two octaves exactly, occupied
-a position under the eaves between the two farther
-windows.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The morning mail had brought her a writing-case
-from her mother, a check for five dollars from her
-father, and a letter, her first, from her Buddy. She
-had taken a high resolution not to shed one tear on
-her birthday, and the mild faces of Faith and Charity
-smiled down on her as if to strengthen her will.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hope looks a little teary, herself,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a sound of altercation on the stairway
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page46" id="page46"></a>[pg&nbsp;46]</span>
-that led directly out of the passage from the dining
-room of her new suite.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You <i>shall</i> come upstairs, Grandmummy, and
-give it to her yourself. She doesn&#39;t want your present
-by way of me. She wants it handed out, with
-your own personal and private blessing. Besides,
-I&#39;ve got a present for her myself. I can&#39;t give her
-two presents.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy Farraday, with her hands sternly set on
-Grandmother Swift&#39;s shoulders, marched her firmly
-into Elizabeth&#39;s chamber.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here&#39;s Grandmummy with a beautiful present
-for your birthday. She was going to send it upstairs
-by me, but I declined the honour.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Young folks like to open packages by themselves,
-without anybody standing around counting the Ohs
-and Ahs, and waiting to be thanked for something
-that may not exactly suit. If Elizabeth likes what
-I&#39;ve made her, I guess she can make out to tell me
-so.&quot; Grandmother, entirely unruffled by the recent
-coercion to which she had been submitted, put down
-a bulky tissue-wrapped package and departed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Isn&#39;t she funny?&quot; Peggy said. &quot;But do open
-it. I can hardly wait to see what you think of it.
-It&#39;s copied from one of mine, the only sweater I&#39;ve
-ever really loved. And it&#39;s in your colour, and everything.&quot;</p>
-
-<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 481px;">
-<a name="illus059" id="illus059"></a>
-<img class="border" src="images/illus059.jpg" width="481" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">&quot;&#39;Do open it. I can hardly wait to see what you think of it.&#39;&quot;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth, scarcely crediting her senses, shook
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id="page47"></a>[pg&nbsp;47]</span>
-out from the folds of tissue the lovely, fleecy garment
-of her dreams, a wool sweater in her own colour
-of &quot;Heaven&#39;s blue.&quot; She gave it one comprehensive
-glance, then she slipped after her grandmother,
-caught up with her halfway down the stairs, and
-kissed her on the nape of an astonished neck.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;re not a grandmother, you&#39;re an angel,&quot;
-she said, and flew back, in a panic, to Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here&#39;s my present,&quot; that young lady informed
-her. &quot;It&#39;s something very practical, but I made it
-myself. I thought you might like it. I always
-give away the kind of thing I adore, don&#39;t you?
-That&#39;s doing the very best you can to show love&mdash;and
-one person&#39;s sure to be suited.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s a laundry bag,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;and I
-haven&#39;t got one. You dear.&quot; She put out her hand
-toward Peggy, and missed her. Then they both put
-out their hands together, and kissed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The beauty of this creation is that you don&#39;t
-have to fish down into it,&quot; Peggy explained. &quot;It
-buttons all the way across the bottom, and can
-be dumped that way. I made the buttonholes
-myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And it&#39;s my colour, too. Have you made this
-since you were here last week?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I made it the first week I came down, to be
-sure to have it ready.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Before you even saw me. How did you know
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page48" id="page48"></a>[pg&nbsp;48]</span>
-you&#39;d like me well enough to give it to me when it
-was done?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was willing to take my chances. When I heard
-about your brother being sick, and your disappointment
-about the cottage, I thought you might be
-feeling kind of low when you first got here. So I
-prepared for it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How kind you are! How kind everybody is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, don&#39;t get the weeps. See here, do you
-know what this bar on this settee was put on for?
-It&#39;s a kind of a cradle arrangement. Mother makes
-up baby&#39;s bed on the lower end, puts up the bar,
-sits herself up at the head, and rocks and knits.
-Grandmother told me. She was rocked there herself
-when she was a baby. She remembers having
-scarlet fever on it. Aren&#39;t these old things fascinating?
-You&#39;re an awfully lucky girl to have grandparents
-like this. Mine live in a Back Bay apartment,
-and are just like everybody else, only a lot
-more so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;re a lot nicer than I am,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I don&#39;t have such nice clothes. I thought
-you might like this clo&#39;, though.&quot; Peggy stood up
-to be admired. &quot;It&#39;s my best bib and tucker. See,
-this is the bib,&quot; she indicated the square of cobwebby
-lace and lawn under her bronze chin, &quot;and this is
-the tucker.&quot; She turned around, to show its counterpart
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49"></a>[pg&nbsp;49]</span>
-in the back. &quot;That&#39;s really what I bought it
-for, I couldn&#39;t decide between this pink linen and
-a gray dotted swiss until I realized that this was a
-bib and tucker. Which of course settled it at once.
-By the way, I know something very funny.&quot; Peggy
-barely took a breath between sentences. &quot;I wonder
-if you know it, too. My sister Ruth knows your
-brother John quite well. They wrote to each other
-all the time that he was abroad. I just found out
-that he was your brother by the merest accident.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t mean that Ruth Farraday is your sister!
-Why, Buddy&#39;s known her for years.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Can&#39;t he have known my sister for years?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I suppose so, but it doesn&#39;t seem possible.
-I thought he met that girl in Boston.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I live in Boston. If you&#39;ve got a sample of your
-brother&#39;s handwriting, I can prove to you that my
-Ruth is the girl. I&#39;ve taken in his letters for years.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth produced the precious morning missive
-by the simple process of diving into the neck of her
-blouse. Peggy bent over the letter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s the same,&quot; she said. &quot;Oh, is he going to
-be an awful lot better soon? Ruthie has been dreadfully
-worried, I know, though she hasn&#39;t said much
-about it. She&#39;s the still member of the family, you
-see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What does she look like?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, she&#39;s darlingly pretty, with great blue eyes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>[pg&nbsp;50]</span>
-and long golden lashes, and lovely colour that comes
-and goes, and she dresses sort of quaintly. She looks
-well in fringes and sashes and droopy things. I
-have to wear boys&#39; clothes, almost, to set off my
-peculiar style of beauty, but you mustn&#39;t judge
-Ruthie by me. She&#39;s really a star.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think I&#39;d like you best.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you wouldn&#39;t if you could see Ruth. You&#39;d
-just call for the incense and get busy worshipping.
-Everybody does.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Has she many suitors?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Flocks and herds of them, but she doesn&#39;t care.
-She&#39;s kind of booky and dreamy. I don&#39;t mean she
-doesn&#39;t play a stunning game of tennis, and drive a
-car, and all that. She was motor corps for a while,
-and just crazy to get over, but Dad wouldn&#39;t hear of
-it. She&#39;ll be on the Cape bye and bye, and you can
-judge for yourself&mdash;I&#39;m going to stay to supper, did
-you know it? Your grandmother sent over and invited
-me yesterday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t know she even remembered my birthday,
-and now&mdash;only think!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She said to me that you were as blue as indigo,
-and putting up a good old struggle not to be, and she
-wanted you to have something pleasant to remember.
-That festive sound from below stairs is Judidy taking
-her turn at the handle of the ice-cream freezer. Do
-you know what they make the ice-cream of here?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51"></a>[pg&nbsp;51]</span>
-Just pure Jersey cream and fruit juice. I never
-tasted anything like it in my life.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Didn&#39;t I hear something outside the door? It
-sounded just as if somebody had crept up and then
-crept away again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t hear anything.&quot; Peggy threw open the
-door like a flash. &quot;It <i>was</i> someone. More birthday
-surprises.&quot; She held up the package that an unseen
-hand had deposited on the threshold. &quot;Open it
-quick, Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, it&#39;s the Kipling &#39;Birthday Book,&#39;&quot; Elizabeth
-said, &quot;that red-leather edition that I&#39;ve been crazy
-for. Who do you suppose could have got it for me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who is there left to give you a present?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nobody.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandpa hasn&#39;t been heard from.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandpa?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s capable of anything. You don&#39;t half
-appreciate him, Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know I don&#39;t, Peggy, but I think I&#39;m beginning
-to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the supper table they cornered him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; he admitted to Peggy, &quot;I didn&#39;t know as
-you was upstairs, and I calculated to have Elizabeth
-blame it on you, but seeing as I&#39;m caught, I&#39;ll own up
-to what I can&#39;t hide. I asked that girl in the apothecary
-shop in Hyannis what was the best kind of a
-birthday present, and she said a birthday book. I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id="page52"></a>[pg&nbsp;52]</span>
-thought that was likely, so I asked to see one. She
-fetched out a Longfeller book and a Emerson book,
-and then I see this one standing all alone in a corner,
-and I took to it right away. Kipling, he writes about
-things I know something about. So I took him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you are going to put your name in the book
-the first thing&mdash;before any one,&quot; Elizabeth declared:
-&quot;What&#39;s your birthday?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What day is to-day?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The thirtieth of June.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t mean that you were born on my birthday?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I always kind o&#39; calculated you were born on
-mine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When Judidy, attired in a purple and yellow silk
-gown over which she wore a black silk apron embroidered
-in blue forget-me-nots, rose to change the
-plates, with an expression of the most intense self-consciousness,
-Grandmother rose also, and the two
-exchanged signals.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If I understood dumb show a little better,&quot;
-Grandfather said, slyly, &quot;I might be inclined to think
-that Mother had something hid out in the kitchen,
-and Judidy had an errand in the pantry, but o&#39; course
-I probably got it all mixed up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; Grandmother smiled, &quot;seeing as the same
-thing has come o&#39; the pantry every June thirtieth for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>[pg&nbsp;53]</span>
-forty-five years, it ain&#39;t anyways likely that you
-know anything about it.&quot; She bustled off to the
-kitchen, to reappear with a mound of ice-cream in
-which the strawberries were embedded, like so many
-perfect emeries.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I like ice-cream better than anything in the
-world,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I like it better than fathers and mothers and
-sisters and intimate friends, but not better than
-grandparents, especially not grandparents when one
-of them is celebrating its birthday,&quot; Peggy declared,
-&quot;Now, I&#39;m getting silly. Will somebody stop me,
-please? Oh, look! Look at Judidy!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">That flushed and excited young woman was approaching
-the table with the air of a standard bearer.
-In her arms she carried a big tray lined with white
-paper lace, and on it was set a marvellous erection of
-cake&mdash;a big round of chocolate confection lettered in
-pink, and further adorned by blazing pink candles.
-She placed it in front of Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Time was when I had a cake to myself on my
-birthday,&quot; Grandfather grumbled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The time ain&#39;t so fur off.&quot; Grandmother appeared,
-with a round loaf of fruit cake on which one
-candle burned brightly. &quot;You can take the candle
-right off if you want to. I only put it on for a joke.
-The cake is just what I always bake for you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth can eat all the candle grease.&quot; Grandfather
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page54" id="page54"></a>[pg&nbsp;54]</span>
-made an effort to frown, in which he succeeded
-only indifferently.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I made it myself,&quot; Judidy cried, as Elizabeth
-counted her candles, &quot;fourteen, and one to grow on.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And did you make all the letters&mdash;&#39;Elizabeth
-With Love?&#39;&mdash;I think that&#39;s the nicest thing any
-birthday cake ever said on it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was going to put on &#39;Elizabeth-aged-fourteen,&#39;
-and then I thought that the candles would tell how
-old you were,&quot; the blushing Judidy hovered over her
-masterpiece, &quot;and then I thought it was better to put
-on a kind of a message. I couldn&#39;t write a very long
-one, but I guess that says just as much as a whole
-sheet of paper.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How did you make the letters so clear?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;With a cornycopia. You colour your white
-frosting with strawberry juice, and then you make
-this here cornycopia out of letter paper, and then you
-sort of dribble it along and write with it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It looks lovely,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;Thank you.
-Thank you, Judidy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t let your ice-cream melt,&quot; Peggy warned.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You haven&#39;t let yours melt,&quot; Grandmother said,
-putting out her hand for the empty dish Peggy was
-waving.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I never had all the ice-cream I wanted,&quot; Peggy
-acknowledged, sadly. &quot;I never shall have, I know I
-shan&#39;t, because I can&#39;t hold it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>[pg&nbsp;55]</span>
-When Elizabeth made her wish, and blew out her
-candles, tears of pure delight stood in Judidy&#39;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve give you luck,&quot; she said. &quot;Oh, I hope it was
-a good wish!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was the best wish anybody could wish,&quot;
-Elizabeth smiled. &quot;I shall never forget this birthday,
-and this cake, Judidy, nor any of the dear things that
-have been done for me.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">That night, as her grandmother tucked her into bed,
-she caught one of the kindly hands and clung to it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That was the most beautiful sweater in all the
-world,&quot; she said. &quot;Do you think I could go down and
-kiss Grandfather good-night, too?&quot; she asked, shyly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess it could be managed. I&#39;ll go downstairs
-with you, and see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And presently Grandfather, with his glasses sitting
-low on his nose, and his nose in the morning paper,
-was attacked from behind and kissed breathlessly;
-but when Elizabeth tried to escape, she found herself
-caught by a blue dimity sleeve, and drawn into an
-energetic embrace.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, you don&#39;t,&quot; he said, placing her on his
-knee. &quot;You&#39;re going to set here a while, and talk to
-Grandpa.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the eminence of his knee proved such an embarrassing
-vantage ground that he soon let her go.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-night,&quot; she said, slipping her hand into
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page56" id="page56"></a>[pg&nbsp;56]</span>
-his. &quot;Good-night, Granddaddy, dear,&quot; and she kissed
-him again, a real kiss this time, as if he were her
-father, or Buddy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, well,&quot; he said, &quot;well, well!&quot; and sat holding
-her by the shoulders so long that he almost seemed to
-have forgotten she was there. Then he picked her up
-in his arms and carried her up the stairs again, tucking
-her into bed with a hand as accustomed as
-Grandma&#39;s.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Fourteen years old and letting her grandfather
-put her to bed the way he did when she was a baby.
-Ain&#39;t you ashamed?&quot; he asked, playfully, in a tone
-she had never heard him use before.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I&#39;m proud,&quot; Elizabeth said, and she meant it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Under her pillow was her brother&#39;s letter, and she
-lit a flickering bedside lamp to read it by before she
-went finally to sleep. It was a short letter, slanting
-down the paper, as he was not yet able to sit up in
-his bed long enough to write properly. He said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent"><span class="smcap">Dear Sister-on-her-birthday</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I&#39;d be willing to eat a German helmet to be able to spend this
-day with you. But the U. S. base hospital&mdash;base is the word&mdash;has
-got me for the present. I send you my respects, and fourteen
-and one half kisses to grow on.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For the love of Michael, don&#39;t get priggish in your old age.
-Some of your letters have made me wonder if there was nobody
-home where my sister lived, but lately they&#39;ve seemed more the
-real thing. Get acquainted with your grandfather and grandmother.
-Grandfather once told me that he had come to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>[pg&nbsp;57]</span>
-conclusion there was only one person in the world he had to keep
-an eye on, and that was himself. Good talk, Sis.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Which endeth the lesson.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Buddy.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">As she tucked the letter back in its envelope,
-she realized that the sheet which had been wrapped
-around it to prevent its scrawly surface from showing
-through the transparent envelope was not blank as
-she had at first supposed; she spread it out before her,
-thinking to find a postscript to her own letter, but it
-was not that. It was evidently a sheet of a letter
-begun and discarded. Elizabeth had read it before
-she realized that it was not meant for her eyes to see.
-&quot;Sweetheart&mdash;Sweetheart&mdash;Sweetheart&mdash;&quot; it ran, &quot;I
-have never called you this, and I have no right to call
-you so now, or any other name. At least, not for
-many years to come. I&#39;m done for. I love you, and I
-can&#39;t try for you. That&#39;s something the war has done
-for a lot&mdash;more&mdash;&mdash;&quot; Here it broke off, abruptly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Buddy, Buddy,&quot; Elizabeth cried, &quot;I didn&#39;t
-mean to snoop. How perfectly, perfectly terrible!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was two in the morning before she slept. She
-lay wide eyed in the darkness, thinking of her brother
-and Peggy Farraday&#39;s sister. It couldn&#39;t be anybody
-else&mdash;she knew that much about Buddy. For
-the first time in her life she was feeling the weight of
-a trouble that did not make her want to cry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess that&#39;s what it means to be fourteen and
-grown up,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58"></a>[pg&nbsp;58]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Ninety-Nine Negroes</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy and Elizabeth were lying on the beach
-in their bathing suits. Peggy had hollowed
-out a careful seat in the sand, and built arm
-rests and a slanting support for the head, which she
-was trying to recline on and enjoy. Elizabeth, who
-had made no such elaborate preparations for relaxation,
-was really comfortable. She was wearing a
-black mohair suit with a patent leather belt and silk
-stockings, and a blue rubber cap put on with great
-care, so that tendrils of soft brown hair framed her
-face. Peggy wore a rubber diving cap that made her
-look as if she had been scalped, but her blue jersey
-suit was trimmed with blue and green stripes and
-slashed up the side and laced fetchingly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you get your birthday wish, or did you wish
-for a handsome husband in the sweet bye and bye?&quot;
-Peggy asked, lazily. &quot;I always wish for things that
-will happen right away, because I can&#39;t stand the
-strain of not knowing whether I&#39;m going to get them
-or not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t wish to get anything. I wished to be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>[pg&nbsp;59]</span>
-something. I can&#39;t tell yet whether I&#39;m going to
-succeed in being it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I know&mdash;occasions like that always make
-you feel noble, but I hate to waste a wish on wanting
-to be a better girl. You can&#39;t tell your wish, and if
-you don&#39;t, there&#39;s nobody that can judge whether
-you&#39;ve got it or not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Can&#39;t we judge for ourselves?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose we can, but it&#39;s kind of embarrassing
-to award yourself prizes for virtue.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know it, but in a kind of general way you have
-to keep tabs on your own piggishness, because you&#39;re
-the only one that can.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you say pig or fig?&quot; Peggy had all of &quot;Alice
-in Wonderland&quot; on the tip of her tongue.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I said pig, but I guess prig was what I meant,
-really. You&#39;re not a prig&mdash;but I am.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, speaking of wishes,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;do you
-know the very latest way of telling who you&#39;ll marry?
-You count ninety-nine niggers, twenty-seven white
-horses, and three red-heads, and then the next man
-you shake hands with, you&#39;ll marry. Let&#39;s begin
-and do it. I&#39;ve been meaning to for a long time,
-but I wanted to wait until I had somebody to
-do it with. Those things are not so much fun alone.
-Kindly remove that inquisitive sand flea from my
-back. Oh! Ouch! Lots of people claim they don&#39;t
-bite.&quot;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>[pg&nbsp;60]</span>
-Elizabeth took the offender between thumb and
-forefinger.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s a funny looking beastie,&quot; she said. &quot;He&#39;s
-got a kind of solemn, long face.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think he looks interrupted,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;I guess
-he liked my flavour. Shall we start counting to-day?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There aren&#39;t many Negroes on the Cape, unless
-you count Portuguese.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There are two kinds of Portuguese&mdash;black
-Portuguese and white Portuguese. We&#39;ll have to
-count the black ones. My mother once went to the
-Azores&mdash;that&#39;s inhabited by Portuguese, you know&mdash;she
-says that the high-class women all wear a kind of
-nun&#39;s costume, with a huge black head-dress made
-exactly like a pea-pod, and they are all quite light-skinned
-in spite of their black hair and eyes. Well,
-let&#39;s go in swimming.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth swam her hundred strokes, and then
-stood breast high, watching Peggy&#39;s fearless performance
-as that young person displayed all the
-latest spectacular swimming feats, diving and wallowing
-and spouting like a young whale. The raft,
-which was usually rocking in at least seven feet of
-water, had at first filled Elizabeth with terror, but
-Peggy&#39;s adventurous spirit was beginning to animate
-her, and she followed courageously when Peggy
-cried, &quot;Now, the raft,&quot; and climbed up its slippery
-sides with very little hesitation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>[pg&nbsp;61]</span>
-&quot;You&#39;re an amphibious animal,&quot; Elizabeth said.
-&quot;I don&#39;t just know what kind, but I do know what
-your mind is like&mdash;the way it flies around, up one
-thing and down another. It&#39;s exactly like a squirrel.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know whether that&#39;s a compliment or
-not. Look who&#39;s here, Elizabeth. A little fish, see.
-A perfectly good fish. I wonder how he got here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is he dead?&quot; Elizabeth asked, shrinking a little.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s either dead or sleeping. I think he&#39;s alive.
-He hasn&#39;t any eyes, that&#39;s his trouble. Let&#39;s put
-him back in the water&mdash;but let&#39;s wish on him first.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wait a minute,&quot; Elizabeth cried. &quot;I know a
-perfectly lovely poem out of the Kipling book. I&#39;ll
-try it on the poor little thing.</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;Little blind fish, thou art marvelous wise.</span>
-<span class="i0">Little blind fish, who put out thine eyes?</span>
-<span class="i0">Open thy eyes, while I whisper my wish;</span>
-<span class="i0">Bring me a lover, thou little blind fish.&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He couldn&#39;t very well open his eyes, on account
-of never having any, but I guess he got the general
-idea. Back you go into the water, you little blind
-fish.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You wish, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I did&mdash;one of my next week wishes. You know
-how they tell your fortune with cards. &#39;What you
-expect, What you don&#39;t expect, What&#39;s sure to come
-true. Next week.&#39; My wishes are all on that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page62" id="page62"></a>[pg&nbsp;62]</span>
-principle. There goes fishie, swimming away for
-dear life.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bring me a lover, thou little blind fish.&quot; The
-raft was rocking gently under a fleece-lined sky, and
-the water was blue-green and full of little thrills and
-ripples. Peggy took off her cap, and let her black
-hair stream on the breeze.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have you ever thought much about lovers?&quot;
-Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy blushed. &quot;Have you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not about my own. That is, I mean not about
-anybody I ever knew or saw, but have you ever
-thought about anybody else having a lover? Any
-relation of yours?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;About Ruthie, yes, but I don&#39;t believe she would
-ever really care about that. Except in a very friendly
-way. All the engaged people I ever knew were so
-mushy! I can&#39;t imagine Ruth being mushy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I never think about the engaged people I know.
-That isn&#39;t what I call being engaged&mdash;the way people
-<i>are</i> engaged. I always think of the way people in
-books get engaged, and that makes it easier to
-imagine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, it does. That would be the only way Ruth
-would ever do it. But I don&#39;t think she would.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you think she would be the kind of girl to get
-engaged by letter?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I don&#39;t know. I don&#39;t like to think about
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page63" id="page63"></a>[pg&nbsp;63]</span>
-her getting engaged. She&#39;s too useful around the
-house. You wouldn&#39;t like to think of your brother
-being engaged, would you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I might, if he were very unhappy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, don&#39;t you worry about your brother being
-unhappy. The thing about being grown up is that
-you can do just about what you please. If a man
-wants to get married, he can do it, when he&#39;s as old
-as that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There might be things to prevent him&mdash;health
-and things.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Say, I wouldn&#39;t worry about my brother and any
-girl if I were you. He isn&#39;t the marrying kind. I
-heard Sister tell Mother that. Mother was quizzing
-her, I guess; you know how mothers are about this
-suitor proposition. Well, Ruth said that John Swift
-was the one man she knew that was perfectly satisfied
-to be a friend, and a good friend to a girl, and that he
-had told her so. She said she had a perfectly tranquil,
-lovely friendship with him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, dear!&quot; Elizabeth thought.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Buddy has got a very beautiful nature,&quot; she
-said aloud. &quot;I think a girl of his own age would
-like him very much, and he would make a good
-friend to her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ruth would make the best little friend in the
-world. I think friendship is much more beautiful
-than love. I don&#39;t think I should altogether like it,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64"></a>[pg&nbsp;64]</span>
-if my sister and your brother were the other kind,
-and wanted to behave, well, you know&mdash;that way.
-Would you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know,&quot; said Elizabeth, faintly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the way home she was very silent, while Peggy
-chattered, but at her own gate she looked at her
-friend speculatively.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you know, Peggy,&quot; she said, &quot;that there are
-ways in which I feel a whole lot older than you are?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are there?&quot; said Peggy, uncertainly. &quot;Look,
-Elizabeth, there&#39;s the third Negro. I&#39;ll bet we&#39;ll
-really get our fate settled before the summer is over.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">That afternoon Elizabeth took her knitting&mdash;she
-was making a scarf for Buddy, who had demanded
-one to bind himself round, soldier fashion, during
-the period of his anticipated convalescence on Cape
-Cod&mdash;and sat in Grandfather&#39;s chair by the living-room
-window. Her grandmother was darning stockings
-on the other side of the branching fern. Elizabeth&#39;s
-knitting would have progressed more rapidly
-if she had not been keeping a sharp eye on the street,
-in order that no Negroes should escape her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you ever do any stunts to see who you would
-marry?&quot; she asked her grandmother.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My sister and I used to hang horseshoes over the
-door, and the first one that passed under them was
-supposed to be the one we was going to marry.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did somebody pass under?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>[pg&nbsp;65]</span>
-&quot;We did it a good many times. I remember one
-time we did it, and the first one that passed under
-was to be my husband, and the second was to be
-Alviry&#39;s. The first one turned out to be young
-Pork Joe, who was one o&#39; the unlikeliest boys that
-ever put his waistcoat on hind-side before; he never
-would dress himself proper. I was pretty well
-discouraged at the idea of young Pork Joe for a
-husband, but Alviry she made me hang around watching
-for her beau to turn up, and lo and behold the
-very next person to set foot over that threshold was
-your grandfather. I thought I felt bad enough
-before, but when I saw John Swift&#39;s shoulders thrusting
-themselves through that door frame, I just
-bolted off upstairs and had a good cry. Alviry she
-wasn&#39;t pleased, either. She had her eye on Martin
-Nickerson at the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Maybe it was the second one you were to marry,
-and the first didn&#39;t count. Who was young Pork
-Joe?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Old Pork Joe&#39;s son. He used to keep pigs to
-sell, and so they finally got calling him that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The way they call the plumber Pump Peter. I
-think Cape Cod is the funniest place.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It ain&#39;t so different from other places.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In other places you don&#39;t associate so much
-with&mdash;the baker and the butcher.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Maybe they ain&#39;t so well worth associating with.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66"></a>[pg&nbsp;66]</span>
-&quot;My friend Jeanie Forsyth is a direct descendant
-from the <i>Mayflower</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, so&#39;re you. Don&#39;t you know it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have we really got <i>Mayflower</i> blood?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Those old pewter spoons on the dining-room
-mantle, that you was examining the other day, was
-made from a mold that Peregrine White brought over
-on the <i>Mayflower</i>. My mother was a White, you
-know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t know. I guess I don&#39;t know much about
-anything, Grandmother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Live and learn. Babies ain&#39;t born with any
-great amount of contrivance, nor yet much of an
-idea of what&#39;s what.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve learned a lot since I&#39;ve been down here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You ain&#39;t so sure as you was about the way things
-was meant to be. At first, we&#39;re pretty sure that
-things was meant to be just one way, and that way
-the one we&#39;ve picked out. After living along a while,
-we get to realize that the other feller has his way, too.
-Then we have to kinder arrange our ideas again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Buddy thinks I&#39;m a snob.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, what do you think?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I think Buddy&#39;s right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, he ain&#39;t going to be right very long if you
-<i>think</i> so. When I was growing up, I used to have a
-stylish city friend that I spent a good deal of time
-with. She was the daughter of the biggest man we
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>[pg&nbsp;67]</span>
-had had from these parts, and she used to spend her
-summers at home, in the big white house on Main
-Street&mdash;the one with the pillars and the cedar hedge,
-just opposite the post office. She used to get her
-dresses from Paris, and let me make copies of them,
-too, and she was courted by a member of the governor&#39;s
-staff. I don&#39;t know as she ever had a brother-in-law
-that was a count&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Grandmother!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, let Grandma have her joke&mdash;as long as she
-can keep Grandpa quiet. Well, when we was little
-girls, she used to love to go to my grandma&#39;s with me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not Grandmother Elspeth&#39;s?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, my grandmother; Grandmother White. Well,
-Mary&#39;s folks mostly lived away from here, and most
-of the ways and doings of home folks was a novelty
-to her. She liked to get Grandma telling about
-old times on Cape Cod. You see, when Grandmother
-was a little girl, her mother was bedridden,
-and the whole family was taken care of by her and a
-neighbour&#39;s daughter, a little girl called Hopey D.&mdash;I
-never knew what the rest of her name was. As fast
-as the babies come along, they was put in the old
-settee cradle, and she and Hopey used to have to
-change places sitting and rocking there all the time
-they wasn&#39;t doing housework. That&#39;s the same
-settee you got in your room upstairs. Grandma
-used to tell how the fire would go out in the old fireplace,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>[pg&nbsp;68]</span>
-on account of she and Hopey not keeping it
-going right. Those were the days before matches, you
-know; and she used to have to run through the woods
-to the nearest neighbour, who lived a mile away, to
-borrow fire and bring it home in a swinging pail.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh,&quot; Elizabeth cried. &quot;Oh, that doesn&#39;t seem
-possible. I thought that the days before matches
-were way back in Columbus&#39;s time, or something.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. I&#39;ve got a piece o&#39; flint and a tinder box
-upstairs somewhere that came from Grandma&#39;s.
-Supposing you had to strike a spark from a piece o&#39;
-flint before you could get the kettle to boiling.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Supposing I had a bedridden mother, like poor
-Grandma White. Oh, I hope that Hopey D. was a
-nice little girl, and that she and great&mdash;no, great-great-grandmother
-had good times together.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When Grandma used to tell all those old stories
-to my stylish friend, do you know how I felt? I felt
-mortified at having a grandma that wasn&#39;t more high
-toned, and I used to try to get Mary not to go there,
-so&#39;s we wouldn&#39;t have no more talk about running
-after a pail of fire, and rocking babies on the old settee
-and such.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth bent her head over her knitting, and
-the colour mounted slowly to her forehead, but she
-did not speak.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So you see, girl nature is pretty much girl nature,
-wherever you find it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id="page69"></a>[pg&nbsp;69]</span>
-&quot;I was going to write a letter to-night, Grandmother,&quot;
-Elizabeth said, after a period of silence,
-&quot;and it wasn&#39;t going to be a very nice kind of a letter,
-because it&mdash;it was going to misrepresent things some.
-Now, I am going to write entirely differently, because
-things you&#39;ve been saying have set me to thinking.
-I&#39;d be willing to show you the letter, if you thought
-you ought to see it,&quot; she added, anxiously, but her
-grandmother only smiled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I ain&#39;t never very particular about reading other
-folks&#39; letters,&quot; she said. &quot;I have trouble enough
-reading those I write myself, and those that is sent
-to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; Elizabeth said, in a very small voice,
-&quot;I guess it&#39;s going to be hard enough to write it,
-anyway.&quot; This was the fateful epistle:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Jeanie</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I want to begin by correcting an impression I was snobby
-enough to give you when I first came down here. I wrote you
-about this place and my grandparents in an entirely false way.
-I did it because I was too proud to own up the truth. I was
-surprised and shocked when I got here, to find how things really
-were. I hadn&#39;t been here since I was a little girl, and then only
-for very brief visits. I imagined a kind of Farm de-luxe and a
-grandmother in real lace and mitts, and a kind of Lord Chesterfieldian
-grandfather, and all the comforts of a château. Instead,
-my dear Granddaddy and dearest Grandmother are just&mdash;natives.
-They murder the President&#39;s English, and they sit around in their
-shirt sleeves&mdash;the former, not the latter&mdash;and they, well, they
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70"></a>[pg&nbsp;70]</span>
-aren&#39;t like anything I&#39;ve ever known. So I got started pretending,
-in my letters to you, and kept right on. The &quot;car&quot; is an
-old, rattletrap Ford, and Granddaddy drives it in his suspenders
-when he wants to. The chauffeur I sort of gave you the impression
-we had is a regular, farm hired man. Our hired girl sits
-at the table with us, and she is nice, too. They are all nice, nice
-people&mdash;nicer than I am. My grandmother is beautiful looking.
-I wish you could see her. I didn&#39;t care for any one to see her,
-for a while. Now, I am getting anxious for everyone to.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Jeanie, can you understand me or not? I&#39;m just a prig, snob,
-liar, and I don&#39;t feel fit to live. I don&#39;t know what got into me.
-I always tell you everything, and now I deliberately did this
-awful thing, and I&#39;ve got something else that I can&#39;t tell you, but
-that is not my secret.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Can you love me any more? I ask this seriously, because I
-know you won&#39;t mind my humble origin half as much as the
-deception. I knew this all the time, and yet I could not seem to
-help the way I was behaving.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I am afraid to read your letter in answer to this, so don&#39;t write
-me one. Let me hear from you by return mail, but don&#39;t say
-anything, not much, about this anyway. If you love me, though,
-please begin your letter by saying so. I don&#39;t deserve you for my
-most intimate friend. I&#39;ve taken a new name. My great-grandmother&#39;s
-name, and I am going to live up to it. I took it
-so to be thoroughly part of my family, and to cultivate the old-fashioned
-virtues with. It&#39;s</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Elspeth</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">P. S.&mdash;Call me by it. Everything I told you about my birthday
-was so. They did all those beautiful things for me. I
-slightly camouflaged details, but it was all the way I said, except
-that Judidy <i>ate</i> with us. Aren&#39;t I a pig?</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Elspeth</span> again.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id="page71"></a>[pg&nbsp;71]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">The Bean Supper</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">The three Steppe children stood in the centre
-aisle of the local department store, in a state
-of unembarrassed good humour, while Peggy
-and Elizabeth drew apart in consultation. The
-saleswoman busied herself with folding up a series of
-small garments that had been discussed and rejected
-by the two young shoppers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Six dollars and thirty-three cents, and a stamp.&quot;
-Elizabeth counted the contents of her purse again,
-distractedly. &quot;Your three dollars and my three,
-and the thirty-three cents we both saved on ice-cream
-cones, and the stamp makes it thirty-five.
-I had no idea that children&#39;s clothes were so expensive.
-We can hardly buy shoes for them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, they can&#39;t go to that supper unless they
-have shoes. Look at their feet, Elizabeth&mdash;I mean
-Elspeth&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know it,&quot; Elizabeth said, colloquially.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want to go to bean supper,&quot; Madget wailed.
-&quot;I said I would go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hush up, Baby,&quot; Mabel warned her, &quot;you&#39;re in a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>[pg&nbsp;72]</span>
-apartment store. The lady will throw you right out
-the door if you don&#39;t be good and quiet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget turned large, disturbed eyes on the lady
-indicated, and discovered in her calm countenance
-nothing to rouse alarm.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want to go to bean supper!&quot; she wailed, even
-louder than before.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We have some laced canvas shoes with rubber
-bottoms that are a dollar and a dollar and a half,&quot;
-the clerk volunteered. &quot;You might get them for
-the little girls, and a pair of sneakers for the boy.
-We have them in black and brown,&quot; she added, with
-a hasty glance toward the grimy toes and scratched
-ankles protruding from his nondescript footwear.
-&quot;We have stockings and socks that are reasonable,
-too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, let&#39;s get their feet covered,&quot; Peggy said,
-&quot;and trust to luck for the rest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget and Mabel were accordingly fitted to
-brown shoes and socks and Moses to black sneakers
-and long, black ribbed stockings. Nothing that could
-be said to him, even the argument of the financial
-inconvenience of covering his long legs, would induce
-him to put on socks like those of his sisters. It was
-stockings or nothing with Moses, though he was perfectly
-willing to do without them entirely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;One dollar and eight cents. Could we buy this
-little boy any kind of trousers or bloomers for that,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>[pg&nbsp;73]</span>
-do you suppose? You wouldn&#39;t mind taking a
-stamp to make up the difference, would you?&quot; Peggy
-asked, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not in the least. We have some khaki bloomers
-that might fit him for seventy-five cents.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I ain&#39;t agoing to wear bloomers,&quot; Moses said,
-decisively. &quot;I want pants or nothing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing is what you&#39;ve got on now,&quot; Peggy said,
-severely, &quot;or very near nothing. You can&#39;t go to
-that bean supper in rags, you know. Don&#39;t you
-want to have some cake and ice-cream, and corned
-beef&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And potato salud,&quot; Mabel put in, helpfully, &quot;and
-beans&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And ice-cream and cake and potato salud,&quot;
-Madget droned, &quot;and coffee and ice-cream and
-cake&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You said that before,&quot; Moses said. &quot;Don&#39;t you
-ever get tired of hearing things over and over?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We can get a Butterick pattern and make him a
-shirt,&quot; Peggy suggested.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We can get Grandmother to give us some cambric
-and things to make the little girls dresses. See
-here, Moses, you&#39;ve just got to have a pair of those
-bloomers. All boys wear them. You can&#39;t go to
-the supper if you don&#39;t&mdash;&mdash; Do you mind measuring
-him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Moses stood up and was measured; and five dollars
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id="page74"></a>[pg&nbsp;74]</span>
-went into the cash drawer of the Hamlin Department
-Store, while the two girls, laden with their purchases,
-steered their young charges toward home.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandmother produced goods enough to make
-Moses a blouse of brown striped shirting and each
-of the little girls a print dress. She also found some
-old petticoats, yellowed with age, but daintily made,
-and some waists with which they could be worn,
-complete to the very last button.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So far, so good,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;but we&#39;ve got
-to hustle to get this family covered before five
-o&#39;clock to-morrow night. Moses&#39; shirt is going to
-be the worst. The dresses we can mostly make on
-the sewing machine. You play around here in the
-yard all day to-morrow, children, so we can try on
-the things whenever we need you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They started with their dressmaking bright and
-early the next morning.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Moses&#39; shirt went very well, for after it was cut
-and basted, Grandmother offered to do all the necessary
-finishing, but Madget&#39;s dress kept both the girls
-busy almost all the rest of the day. It was a very
-effective garment, despite the fact that the seams
-were not finished. The hem was done beautifully
-by hand, the little sleeves were lace trimmed, and
-the pink chambray of which the dress was made hung
-in graceful folds about the small figure. Madget&#39;s
-toilet was very successful, but as for Mabel, ill luck
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>[pg&nbsp;75]</span>
-seemed to blight her costume from the very start.
-One side of the dress was cut shorter than the other,
-both sleeves turned out to be for one arm, and there
-was no more material to cut another, and to add
-dismay to discomfiture, Elizabeth spilt a whole
-bottle of ink over the front breadth just as she was
-getting it ready for the machine.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know what we are going to do,&quot; Peggy
-cried. &quot;It&#39;s nearly four o&#39;clock. We&#39;ve just about
-got time to wash and dress them and get them
-started.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandmother appeared at this juncture with a
-little white, frilly garment in her hands.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here&#39;s an apron that would just about fit the
-oldest girl,&quot; she said. &quot;I know it ain&#39;t the style to
-wear aprons, and this would cover all her new dress
-up, but I found it, and I just thought I&#39;d show it to
-you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth looked at it speculatively.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She could wear that for a dress,&quot; she cried. &quot;We
-could just sew in lace at the armholes, and nobody
-would ever know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have I got to be washed?&quot; Moses demanded. &quot;I
-can wash myself, and I will, too. Kin I borry
-an old tablecloth or something?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here&#39;s a towel,&quot; Peggy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want an old tablecloth, <i>too</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You come downstairs and I&#39;ll give you one.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id="page76"></a>[pg&nbsp;76]</span>
-Children takes notions,&quot; Grandmother said. &quot;He
-probably has an idea of some kind. You come
-along with me, Moses.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Thus relieved of Moses, Peggy and Elizabeth
-each took a little girl and scrubbed and polished and
-combed till the result was miraculous. With the
-wonderful, red curls smoothed and a big yellow bow
-on top of them, Mabel looked like the distinctive
-child she was meant to be. The apron proved a
-great success.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She looks just as well as Madget, in spite of
-all our trouble,&quot; Elizabeth said a little dolefully.
-&quot;There&#39;s nothing to cry about in that, Madget.
-You want your sister to look as well as you do, don&#39;t
-you, dear?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I don&#39;t,&quot; Madget answered, concisely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s awfully cunning, if she is bad,&quot; Peggy
-said, standing off to view the effect of her finishing
-touches. &quot;She looks good enough to eat.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ice-cream and potato salud, and beans and coffee
-an&#39; ice-cream,&quot; Madget began, at the suggestion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I said <i>you</i> looked good enough to eat, Madget.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I <i>am</i> going to eat.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where do you suppose Moses is? It&#39;s time he
-was dressing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, he went downstairs with Grandma. There
-he comes now, I think.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Trailing up the front stairs into the guest chamber,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77"></a>[pg&nbsp;77]</span>
-which was the centre of activities, Moses appeared,
-swaddled in the folds of a red damask tablecloth,
-holding his clothes in his hand. His hair was dripping,
-but from the rest of his person there emanated
-an atmosphere, even an odour, of shining cleanliness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Want to know how I washed?&quot; he inquired,
-proudly. &quot;I went out by the back door, and I took
-off all my clothes, and then I rubbed myself all over
-with yaller soap, and then I turned the hose on till
-I come nice and clean. I don&#39;t like to take no baths
-in the house. You can&#39;t get the water to squizzling.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I guess it squizzled, all right,&quot; Peggy said.
-&quot;Now get yourself into these clothes quickly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was two thoroughly exhausted girls that finally
-marshalled their charges into the Town Hall, where
-the bean supper was to take place, but they felt that
-their efforts to improve the Steppe children were
-justified by the result. Moses in a brown shirt,
-bloomers and stockings to match them, with his
-not unshapely feet encased in black sneakers, and a
-red Windsor tie&mdash;he had demanded red&mdash;headed the
-little procession. Then Mabel, proudly pinned into
-her white apron, with a yellow sash about her middle,
-and the lace frills of her improvised sleeves draped
-elegantly about her elbows, and lastly the resplendent
-Madget&mdash;a complete product in pink chambray and
-ribbons to match.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Their colours all swear at each other,&quot; Elizabeth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page78" id="page78"></a>[pg&nbsp;78]</span>
-said, &quot;I never thought of that, did you, Peggy?
-We&#39;ll put Moses between. His tie doesn&#39;t go with
-pink or yellow, but there isn&#39;t very much of it, thank
-goodness!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where are the beans?&quot; Mabel asked, practically,
-as they seated her at one end of a long, deal table
-decorated with bunches of small American flags&mdash;the
-occasion was patriotic&mdash;clustered in cups and
-glasses, like stiff-stemmed flowers, and vases of
-dahlias and asters and rambler roses flanking
-them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t show your ign&#39;rance,&quot; Moses said, witheringly.
-&quot;It&#39;s a bean <i>supper</i>. You don&#39;t have no
-more beans than you do supper. See the chocolate
-cake, Madget, and the custid pie, and the potato
-salud?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What&#39;s that yellar stuff, with leaves growing
-out of it?&quot; Mabel inquired.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s potato salud. Ain&#39;t you never seen
-potato salud before? Where you been all your life?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To home,&quot; Mabel answered, literally.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget, elevated on a wooden box with Peggy&#39;s
-coat thrown over it, sat speechless between her
-brother and Elizabeth. The hall began to fill
-rapidly. A young girl mounted the platform and
-started a few uncertain notes on the wheezy organ.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s going to be the &#39;Star-Spangled Banner,&#39;
-Peggy groaned. &quot;We&#39;ve got to get these children
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page79" id="page79"></a>[pg&nbsp;79]</span>
-up again.&quot; But one of the bustling waitresses
-hurried to the side of the young organist, and arrested
-her in mid-career.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t play that,&quot; she was heard protesting.
-&quot;We want to feed this lot, and get them out in time
-to set the tables twice. We haven&#39;t got time for
-them to stand up through the anthem.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The young musician switched obediently to &quot;I
-am always blowing bubbles&mdash;blowing bubbles in the
-air,&quot; which Moses sang with her nonchalantly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Plates of cold ham and corned beef began to
-circulate up and down the table. The portly waitresses,
-family matrons in white duck and muslin,
-enveloped in huge white aprons with long strings
-tied imposingly behind, began to pass the beans, and
-to distribute thick mugs of golden-brown coffee.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget still gazed ahead, with unseeing eyes and
-quivering lips.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You eat your supper,&quot; Moses said, not unkindly,
-&quot;or brother&#39;ll land you one when he gets you home.
-Ain&#39;t you thankful for all that Miss Laury Ann and
-Elizabeth and Peggy Farraday has done for you?
-See me eat.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;See me,&quot; Mabel contributed, encouragingly, but
-Madget&#39;s miserable silence was unbroken.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let&#39;s not pay any attention to her,&quot; Peggy
-whispered. &quot;She&#39;s got stage fright. I don&#39;t believe
-she&#39;s ever been in a crowd before.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>[pg&nbsp;80]</span>
-&quot;And such a crowd,&quot; Elizabeth groaned. &quot;Where
-did they all come from?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, from all around. These suppers are awfully
-popular, because you are allowed to eat all you can
-for thirty-five cents. All these women that have to
-do their own cooking all the time are so glad to have a
-meal that somebody else gets ready. Lots of poor
-old hermits that live alone like to come and stuff
-themselves in a civilized manner once in a while.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Civilized!&quot; Elizabeth cried, looking down at the
-three-pronged fork with which she had been vainly
-trying to spear her beans. &quot;Sheets for tablecloths,
-and paper napkins, and these implements of torture.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Civilization, as my history teacher loves to remark,
-is all a matter of comparison. Don&#39;t eat with
-your knife, Moses, dear. Nice little boys don&#39;t eat
-with their knives.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Moses looked around inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I ain&#39;t got no spoon,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why don&#39;t you try a fork?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I ain&#39;t never et with a fork,&quot; he said. &quot;Forks is
-for women.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s about right,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;Look down the
-table, Elizabeth&mdash;Elspeth, I mean.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A long line of men and boys, with only an occasional
-woman sandwiched in between, faced them.
-They were all eating steadily and industriously with
-their knives. At intervals they would stretch a far-reaching
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page81" id="page81"></a>[pg&nbsp;81]</span>
-hand for more supplies, or nudge a neighbour,
-and indicate with a grunt a plate of food that
-was out of their reach. Peggy began to choke with
-suppressed merriment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Look, look, there comes old Samuel Swift,&quot; she
-said. &quot;Would you think they would let him in?
-Oh, isn&#39;t he an outrageous old creature? Who is he,
-anyway, Elspeth? Do you know? Where did he
-come from?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s a sort of&mdash;of relation of mine,&quot; Elizabeth
-said, bravely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Cousin Samuel,&quot; Peggy cried. &quot;Do you think
-we ought to invite him to come and sit beside us?
-Oh, dear, I wish you&#39;d pinch me. I&#39;m afraid I&#39;ll have
-hysterics if I don&#39;t stop seeing the funny side of
-everything.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m having&mdash;having trouble on my own account,&quot;
-giggled Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where&#39;s Madget?&quot; Peggy gasped.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget&#39;s empty seat confronted them accusingly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She got bashful, and went under the table,&quot;
-Mabel said. &quot;She has those bashful spells. I give
-her a piece of bread and butter.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget, secure from embarrassment in this seclusion,
-ate everything that her thoughtful brother
-and sister provided her with, impartially. Her pink
-chambray suffered from contact with the dusty floor
-and the butter and chocolate icing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id="page82"></a>[pg&nbsp;82]</span>
-&quot;What&#39;s the odds, so long as she&#39;s happy?&quot; Peggy
-cried. &quot;That&#39;s better than having her cry into her
-plate. See Moses. Isn&#39;t he wonderful? I don&#39;t suppose
-he ever really got enough to eat before in his life.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose he is wonderful,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;but I
-wish he&#39;d keep his bloomers up, or else not get up
-from the table when he passes food down to Madget.
-You&#39;d think he&#39;d feel them slipping, wouldn&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It would be all right if he had something on
-under them,&quot; Peggy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t think of that, did you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve busted in my back,&quot; Mabel informed them,
-cheerfully, &quot;I guess I&#39;ve et so much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wish we&#39;d sewed her in, instead of pinning her
-in,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;but never mind. I&#39;ll take my
-school pin. She&#39;s lost one of the blue enamel baby
-pins.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve got a pin down my back,&quot; Mabel said,
-wriggling. &quot;Shall I git it for you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, no, not here, dear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d just as soon.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, we wouldn&#39;t just as soon have you. After
-the ice-cream comes, we&#39;ll go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But when this condition had been fulfilled, Madget
-presented an unexpected obstacle to their departure.
-She had her ice-cream in her hiding place, and
-spilled a great deal of it down the front of her dress.
-By some unique manipulation of her spoon she had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>[pg&nbsp;83]</span>
-managed to smear her hair with it also. It was not
-because of these casualties that she refused to make a
-second public appearance, however. She merely
-preferred not to see the light of day again, having
-successfully sought sanctuary from an intimidating
-multitude. Finally, Elizabeth picked her up, and
-bore her kicking and screaming from the hall, Woodrow
-Wilson, under the protection of his flag, looking
-down at her with some criticism implied in his glance,
-and the unfriendly crowd of Madget&#39;s imagination
-seemed to be boring a hole in her back with its
-composite gaze.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was a relief to get Moses out without his
-trousers falling off,&quot; Peggy declared. &quot;Mabel&#39;s apron
-was entirely undone, and her hair came down.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Think how well their shoes and stockings looked,&quot;
-Elizabeth said, philosophically. &quot;I&#39;m glad we gave
-them a treat, but I think I should have lived ten
-years longer if the bean supper hadn&#39;t occurred.
-Madget&#39;s got an awfully shrill voice.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can hear her yet,&quot; Peggy laughed, &quot;&#39;I won&#39;t
-come out. I won&#39;t go home. I won&#39;t stay here. I
-won&#39;t be good.&#39; Honestly, Elspeth, it was screamingly
-funny if we wanted to look at it that way.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But we didn&#39;t do it to be funny,&quot; Elizabeth
-wailed. &quot;We did it to be kind. Did you ever stop to
-think, Peggy, how different things are in real life
-from the way they are in books? In a book it would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>[pg&nbsp;84]</span>
-have come out that the children&#39;s clothes were a great
-success, and the children had a lovely time, and the
-two young heroines were greatly admired for their
-philanthropy. Or if it had been a funny book, the
-children would have said funny things that you could
-have enjoyed. In real life, you just get tired and hot,
-and things seem flat and stupid.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They were walking home as they talked, with the
-three children solemnly herded in front of them. The
-arch of maple trees that shaded the main street of the
-town swayed softly in the breeze. The birds were
-still busy calling to each other.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know that life is so much different from
-books,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;It sometimes seems to me
-much more beautiful. You can&#39;t see the colour of
-the trees in a book. Walking down Main Street
-doesn&#39;t mean a thing if you read about it, but when
-you are doing it, you can smell the flowers and hear
-the birds sing and see the trees waving in the breeze.&quot;</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;I hear the wind among the trees</span>
-<span class="i0">Playing celestial symphonies.</span>
-<span class="i0">I see their branches downward bent,</span>
-<span class="i0">Like keys of some great instrument,&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Elizabeth quoted. &quot;They do look a little like a great
-harp, don&#39;t they?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can&#39;t say that they do,&quot; Peggy returned, candidly,
-&quot;but they sound like one. You know a lot of
-poetry, don&#39;t you, Elizabeth?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>[pg&nbsp;85]</span>
-&quot;I&#39;d like to know a lot of poetry. My friend Jean
-Forsyth knows almost all the poetry that was ever
-written. She is really literary, you know. I think
-she&#39;ll be a great poetess when she grows up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d like to meet her some time,&quot; Peggy said.
-&quot;Oh, listen to Moses.&quot; She beckoned Elizabeth
-nearer the children, who were engaged in animated
-discussion of the afternoon&#39;s festivities.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I could go back there and eat a whole pot o&#39; beans
-and a plate o&#39; corn beef, and a freezer of ice-cream,
-and a six-quart measure of coffee.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, why don&#39;t you go back then?&quot; the practical
-Mabel inquired, &quot;it was paid for you to eat all you
-wanted to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I did eat all I wanted to. I was only saying how
-much more I could eat <i>if</i> I wanted to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I <i>did</i> eat a freezer of ice-cream, didn&#39;t I, Mabel?&quot;
-Madget insisted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You didn&#39;t have no freezer of ice-cream to eat.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I did so. A big bear crawled under the table, and
-gave it to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mabel lifted a sisterly hand to chastise her for the
-sin of prevarication, but Elizabeth arrested the blow.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Madget knows she didn&#39;t see a big bear. She is
-only having her little joke.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A dancing bear, with a great big little monkey on
-its back,&quot; Madget offered in corroboration.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t like jokes,&quot; Mabel said. &quot;I ain&#39;t agoing to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>[pg&nbsp;86]</span>
-have her make &#39;em. I&#39;d rather talk about what I had
-to eat, and I can&#39;t if Moses and the baby won&#39;t give
-me any chance to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll tell you what you do,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;you
-run home and tell your marmer and your parper all
-about it. The one that gets there first can talk the
-most, you know. Now we&#39;ll go and tell Grandmummy,&quot;
-she added, as the children took to their
-heels.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wonder what she&#39;ll say,&quot; Elizabeth mused.
-&quot;She always says something that you don&#39;t quite
-expect, but that somehow settles things.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">What she did say, after listening to the complete
-recital of the affair with an almost suspiciously long
-face, was merely:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There&#39;s a great satisfaction in undertaking a
-thing and going straight through to the end, no
-matter how it comes out. What&#39;s worth doing is
-worth doing well, and I was real proud of the way
-you two girls stuck it out.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, that&#39;s something,&quot; Peggy said to Elizabeth,
-&quot;but deep down in the bottom of her soul, she&#39;s
-laughing at us, just the same.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s laughing at us&mdash;some,&quot; Elizabeth acknowledged.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>[pg&nbsp;87]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">The Locked Closet</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Sister Dear</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Your epistles of late show a great improvement. I don&#39;t
-refer to the spelling and rhetoric. You are not one of these fancy
-spellers, I am thankful to state, and you subject the English
-language to only an average amount of ill treatment. What I
-am referring to is your morale. Your morale has certainly looked
-up. Your letters from the farm leave nothing to be desired,
-though they create an atmosphere of yearning for the farm, and
-all the livestock inclusively. This is a flattering statement.
-Being weakened by long suffering, I don&#39;t mind admitting right
-out in writing that I&#39;d rather see my sister than even Old Dog
-Tray.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It&#39;s good of you to return this compliment. You did in your
-last letter, you know, but I&#39;m afraid, if you once got me down
-there, you would repent of your bargain. Even sisters have
-their limits, and, to tell you the secret that is preying on my
-damask cheek (See Bartlett&#39;s Familiar Quotations)&mdash;like the
-worm in the well-known bud&mdash;no girl but you cares a tinker&#39;s
-damn what becomes of me. No girl but you answers my letters.
-To be sure, you are the only girl I write to, but I don&#39;t think that
-ought to make a real difference, do you? You&#39;d write your
-Buddy&mdash;if he was your Buddy&mdash;no matter what stood in the
-way, wouldn&#39;t you? If he wasn&#39;t your Buddy, you wouldn&#39;t.
-<i>Voilà l&#39;obstacle.</i> That&#39;s Sarah Bernhardt for &quot;Aye, there&#39;s the
-rub,&quot; if anybody should ask you.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>[pg&nbsp;88]</span>
-All of which is complete nonsense. The general idea is that
-I am not getting well very fast, and I don&#39;t care very much if I
-am not. France was France, and I made it&mdash;Dieu merci! If
-I never make anything else, I hope I shan&#39;t do much hollering,
-but I, too, was young once, little sister. So whenever you feel it&#39;s
-a hardship to milk six cows before sunrise&mdash;as I suppose of course
-you are doing&mdash;give a thought to your bed-ridden</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Buddy.</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Buddy</span>, my own darling, dear, dear <span class="smcap">Buddy</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I love you best, best, best, which doesn&#39;t include the other
-generation, on account of its being so unflattering to our mutual
-mother and father, but is almost completely true, all the same.
-I hate to love anybody so much, because there is a hurt in loving
-all that. My hurt is in your not getting better, and not feeling
-more encouraged about it. Mother writes that your discouragement
-is worse than your sickness. Oh, dear, Buddy, don&#39;t be
-discouraged. Please, please, please don&#39;t. You <i>did</i> go over to
-France and fight. You did get a D. S. C. that all your family
-are so proud of, their hats will hardly fit any more. You are
-perfectly lovely yourself, and better looking than any one, and
-have perfectly fascinating manners. Isn&#39;t that something?
-Any girl would be crazy about you, and if there is any girl you
-want to be crazy about you, I&#39;ll bet you could get her without
-half trying. I know that if you only wanted to be a girl&#39;s friend,
-you would be a perfectly beautiful, tranquil friend to her, and she
-would like it better to have you be that than to have a lover of
-any kind. Also I believe that if ever you wanted to get engaged
-just by letter, you could do that, too.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy Farraday&#39;s sister Ruth is expected down here any time.
-I believe that she is the girl you used to correspond with before
-you went to France. Perhaps you have forgotten all about her
-by this time. Peggy and I took the Steppe children to a bean
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>[pg&nbsp;89]</span>
-supper. I will describe this at length anon. It made them
-quite sick. As I remarked before, I like you better than ice-cream
-or pink silk underclothing.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Elspeth</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Elspeth waited anxiously for the answer to this
-letter, for she had tried to be very tactful and helpful,
-and to handle strategically the secret that she had
-surprised, but Buddy&#39;s answer was a blow. He
-wrote:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sis</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I&#39;m duly appreciative of the soft stuff. I sure do appreciate
-your letters, and I know you like the way I look. (We might
-be mistaken for twins, save for the slight accident of a few years&#39;
-handicap.) But I&#39;d be willing to can that Everywoman stuff,
-if it&#39;s all the same to you. Don&#39;t go getting ideas in your head
-about the girls I&#39;m clubby with. My first letter was all a joke,
-and I gave you the credit for understanding a joke. That&#39;s all.
-Keep on the subject of the old farm, and this year&#39;s crop of brass
-tacks, and you will suit me fine.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I am no better, but a lot worse. Don&#39;t, however, mention me
-to any one but Grandpa and G-ma. If any one wants to know
-how I am, say that I am aces up, and anxious to get discharged
-and go to Russia. Yes, if I can get my old job back, I might
-get a chance at Russia, and that&#39;s what I want. To get as far
-out of this country as I can get. If this letter sounds grouchy&mdash;it&#39;s
-because I am grouchy, and not that I don&#39;t like my relations.
-I do, and here&#39;s a kiss to prove it.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Bud.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t see why a tactful letter like mine made
-him sore,&quot; Elizabeth thought, forlornly, and inelegantly.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id="page90"></a>[pg&nbsp;90]</span>
-But a communication from her mother,
-a day or two later, made her understand her brothers
-state of mind and body a little more clearly.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Elizabeth dear</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Be careful how and what you write to Junior&mdash;John, I mean.
-He is in a highly excitable condition, and little things worry him
-out of all proportion. Recently his great fear seems to be that
-you will gossip about his condition to friends of his that you may
-meet on the Cape. As far as I can find out, he has no friends
-there except his immediate family, but he says that you don&#39;t
-understand how a fellow hates to have his physical condition
-discussed, and he seems to be in terror lest you tell someone
-whom he doesn&#39;t care to have informed just what a state he is in.
-I am writing you this for two reasons: First, I don&#39;t want you
-to mind if John writes you irritably, and second, I promised him
-that I would ask you not to talk about him to any one at all.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Your father and I are as comfortable as we can be with this
-anxiety upon our minds, but New York is very uncomfortable
-just at present, and keeping cool is an occupation in itself. I
-miss my little girl. I didn&#39;t realize, Elizabeth, dear, how many
-things you do for me, how many steps you save me, and how
-many thoughtful little things you contribute to my comfort.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I know it is hard for you to be away from us, but I am so thankful
-for your brave and helpful spirit and the real character building
-that I feel you are accomplishing. Every letter I get I am
-prouder of, and so is your father. You could make it so much
-harder for us if you were not trying to get through the summer
-right.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Do be careful when you go into the water, and don&#39;t ever
-stay in too long. Take plenty of wraps to the beach to put on
-when you come out. Don&#39;t let Grandmother feed you too many
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>[pg&nbsp;91]</span>
-pies and cakes, but obey and trust her in every other way. She
-is a very wise woman. Mother knows in just what ways this
-summer is hard for you, and she loves you dearly&mdash;dearly.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Mother.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought I had got all over the habit of crying
-at Mothers letters, but it seems that I haven&#39;t,&quot;
-Elizabeth said. &quot;I know what Buddy&#39;s afraid of
-now. I shall just have to use my own judgment and
-try to make it the best old judgment I ever used in
-my life.&quot; She wrote again:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Buddy</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I am very snubbed, but I guess I shall survive. I will can
-the Everywoman stuff, but after all, I know more about it than
-you do, even at my very immature age, because some day I am
-going to grow up to be a woman, and in spite of your very great
-and boasted superiority&mdash;<i>you</i> aren&#39;t.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I won&#39;t talk about you to any one except to G-pa and G-ma,
-and not them if you don&#39;t want me to. But I shall say that I
-love you, and why. You&#39;re a dear darling, that&#39;s why, and if
-I was cross a little bit at your letter, I got right over it, on account
-of your being such a dear, <i>and</i> such a darling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I am glad you can sit up some. I ate a whole pint of ice-cream
-and a quarter of a chocolate cake to-day, and thought of our
-childhood days when you did the same thing. Peggy Farraday&#39;s
-sister came yesterday, and I think she is a peacherine. She inquired
-for you and I said you were getting better, and thanked
-her. Buddy, I won&#39;t say nothing to nobody that will make you
-out an invalid or not an invalid. When asked, I shall open my
-mouth wide, and say nothing, nothing, nothing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I do, I do, I do love you.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Elspeth.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>[pg&nbsp;92]</span>
-The answer to this was brief:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sis</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Consider yourself patted on the back, and congratulated for
-being the nicest girl. Enclosed find two dollars which will
-buy six or eight pints of vanilla girl-exterminator, and don&#39;t,
-after taking the dose, leave a letter telling how you met your fate.</p>
-
-<p class="right">Yours,
-The mean old Grouch, <span class="smcap">Bud</span>.</p>
-
-<p >P. S. Tell Peggy Farraday&#39;s sister anything you please.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">It was not long after this exchange of letters
-that Elizabeth asked her grandmother for the key
-of the locked closet.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought you had forgot all about it,&quot; her grandmother
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, but I was rash enough to promise Peggy
-that she could be with me when I opened it, and we&#39;ve
-been doing so many things out of doors together that
-we haven&#39;t had any other time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, here it is. You can play with anything
-you find, as long as you want to, but hang the clothes
-up again, come night.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will, Grandmother. I&#39;m so excited, and I&#39;ve
-got to go upstairs and twirl my thumbs until Peggy
-comes. Send her right up, won&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Waiting upstairs in her little blue room, Elizabeth
-began reading over her brother&#39;s letters, and pondering
-on his sudden change of mood.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>[pg&nbsp;93]</span>
-&quot;When he heard that Ruth Farraday was coming
-down here he was afraid I would say something to her.
-Before he knew that, he was willing to be just as
-mushy as I was. I suppose being in love is a pretty
-terrible feeling.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Elizabeth-Elspeth,&quot; sang Peggy from the
-bottom of the stairs, &quot;can I bring my sister Ruth
-up with me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Cert-certainly.&quot; Elizabeth flew to straighten
-the pillows on the cradle settee, and to pick up some
-stray threads from the braided rug in front of it. &quot;I
-shall be very glad to see her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth Farraday, in a rose-and-white striped satin
-sports skirt, with a fleecy, rose-coloured sweater
-and hat to match, made a very pretty picture against
-the background of Elizabeth&#39;s little room. &quot;Like
-a rose against the blue of the sky,&quot; Elizabeth thought.
-&quot;Her name ought to be Rose, anyway. How becoming
-she would be to Buddy&#39;s dark eyes and colouring.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This is the room, Ruth,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;you can
-look at it for two minutes, and then you&#39;ve got to
-stop looking at it, because we are gathered together
-to-day for quite another purpose, to wit, to penetrate
-the mysteries of Blue Beard&#39;s closet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s a lovely room,&quot; Ruth said, smiling. &quot;I
-wouldn&#39;t have intruded on this very special occasion,
-except that it began to rain as I was bidding Peggy
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>[pg&nbsp;94]</span>
-good-bye at the gate, and Peggy thought you would
-rather shelter me than have me run away through
-the flood.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, indeed,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;and it will be fun
-to have you see what&#39;s in the closet if you don&#39;t
-mind.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall adore it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I adore you,&quot; Elizabeth said to herself, &quot;already.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We&#39;d better hurry,&quot; Peggy cried. &quot;Ruth is getting
-ready to rave about the cradle settee and the
-flag-bottomed chairs. If we get started telling her the
-history of all the things in the room, we shan&#39;t get a
-look at Blue Beard&#39;s wives. Ruthie, dear, this is the
-key to the enchanted closet. Doesn&#39;t it look spooky?
-This house is a hundred and twenty-five years old,
-and see, all the doors have latches instead of knobs.
-Which leads us to this one particular door.&quot; Peggy
-linked an arm through that of her sister on one side
-and her friend on the other, &quot;And presto! Here we
-are. Now, Elizabeth-Elspeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;One, two, three!&quot; Elizabeth turned the big key
-in the ponderous lock, and the door swung wide.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Blue Beard&#39;s wives&#39; trousseaux!&quot; Peggy said.
-&quot;One hundred and one thousand two hundred and
-forty-three silk dresses of the Georgian period. I
-don&#39;t know when the Georgian period was, but I
-guess this is it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth stepped inside the closet.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>[pg&nbsp;95]</span>
-&quot;These things run from about eighteen fifty to
-the early nineties; mostly Victorian, if you must be
-educated, Peggy,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose I must, but look, look, look, at all these
-beauties.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On rows of little pegs driven into the low rafters
-of the irregular triangle that formed the closet were
-the carefully preserved relics of three generations
-of dainty feminine finery. Dresses of taffeta and
-dimity and poplin, in all the flower-like gradations
-of colour that our grandmothers remember their
-mothers and grandmothers looking most distinguished
-in. Not only gowns, but capes and dolmans
-and dressing sacques, and, packed away in a barricade
-of old-fashioned, flowered bandboxes, were
-the bonnets and hats, and even some of the gay
-little bags and muffs that complemented the costumes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I never saw anything so wonderful in my life,&quot;
-Ruth Farraday said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, let&#39;s try them on. Let&#39;s get Grandmummy
-to tell us about them. Let&#39;s dress Ruth up and take
-a snapshot of her. Let&#39;s&mdash;&mdash;&quot; Peggy&#39;s breath failed
-her.</p>
-
-<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 469px;">
-<a name="illus109" id="illus109"></a>
-<img class="border" src="images/illus109.jpg" width="469" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">&quot;&#39;Oh! let&#39;s try them on&#39;&quot;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here&#39;s Grandmother now,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandmother, making her placid way through the
-outer chamber, smiled, and held out her hand to
-Ruth Farraday.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96"></a>[pg&nbsp;96]</span>
-&quot;Peggy&#39;s sister,&quot; she said, &quot;well, well, it&#39;s good
-to have Peggy bring her sister along&mdash;to play in the
-garret.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This&mdash;this is Miss Farraday, Grandmother,&quot;
-Elizabeth said. &quot;She&mdash;she isn&#39;t&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth is trying to say that I am not a little
-girl, but I&#39;m not really so very far from it. I&#39;m not
-so grown up that I want to be sent out of the attic
-now I&#39;ve just seen all these lovely things. You
-don&#39;t mind if I stay?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d mind if you didn&#39;t stay. You are the kind
-o&#39; sight that sore eyes is aching for all the world over.&quot;
-The old woman and the girl smiled at each other as
-if they had been friends all their lives.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;First, tell me who this belonged to, Grandmummy,&quot; Peggy
-dragged at her sleeve imploringly,
-&quot;and then tell me who every single dress here belonged
-to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, they belonged to a number of people,
-all told. Some of my wedding things is there. That
-rose lavender silk in your hand, Peggy, was the dress
-I appeared out to meeting in the Sunday after I was
-married. The blue silk with the black velvet ribbon
-scallops around the basque was the dress my sister
-Alviry wore to my wedding. She had long, pink
-ribbon streamers on her hat, a chip hat trimmed
-with pink roses, and she was a picture, I can tell you.
-My appearing-out hat is here somewhere&mdash;like
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97"></a>[pg&nbsp;97]</span>
-Alviry&#39;s, only trimmed with little lavender plumes.
-I had a black silk trimmed with jet. That&#39;s it, that
-Elizabeth has her hand on. That&#39;s too old for me
-yet, but everybody had to have a black silk dress
-that was heavy enough to stand alone in those
-days.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What&#39;s this little love of a pink muslin with all
-these tiny, tiny ruffles on it, Grandmother dear?
-See these bell-shaped white undersleeves, and this
-figured pink sash, Peggy. Wouldn&#39;t your sister
-look a dream in it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That was the dress I wore when I give your grandfather
-my promise. I liked it better than any dress
-I ever had.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I should think you would have,&quot; Peggy put in,
-fervently.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I should have liked it best if your grandfather
-had never been born in the world. Leastways,
-that&#39;s what I&#39;ve always said. It was the first dress
-my mother ever let me have all the say about.
-Dresses had to be chose for their wearing qualities
-when I was a girl. If they wouldn&#39;t wash and turn,
-year out and year in, we warn&#39;t allowed to have &#39;em,
-but I had set my heart on a pink muslin with dolman
-undersleeves, and after I went and nursed Grandmother
-White through scarlet fever, and just barely
-lived after I caught it myself, Mother said I could
-have anything I wanted as a present to get well on.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>[pg&nbsp;98]</span>
-Land, I begun to improve from the day that dress
-was promised me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I should think you would have,&quot; Peggy said,
-again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was pretty brave of you to go into a house
-where they had scarlet fever, and nurse your grandmother
-through it,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;Weren&#39;t you
-deadly afraid?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t remember much about that part. My
-father sent me, and so I went, but I shall never forget
-the day when I first put on the dress. Your grandfather
-he was calling on my brother Jonas when I
-come down the stairs drawing my train after me.
-Jonas he started to stare at me, and then he began to
-say poetry. An old poem he used to say whenever
-he wanted to tease me:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;Here she goes, there she goes,</span>
-<span class="i0">All dressed up in her Sunday clothes,</span>
-<span class="i0">High-heeled boots and a cashmere shawl,</span>
-<span class="i0">Grecian bend and a waterfall.</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">I was so put out, I run upstairs and didn&#39;t come
-down again till he coaxed me down with the promise
-of a drive to Bass River by moonlight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But how about Grandfather? You said that
-was the very dress he proposed to you in.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So t&#39;was.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did he propose that evening?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" id="page99"></a>[pg&nbsp;99]</span>
-&quot;No, he didn&#39;t. I was so put out at Jonas that I
-wouldn&#39;t have a word to say to your grandpa for a
-whole week.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That was hard on Grandfather.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He went and got another girl and took her to the
-Harvest Dance. Eliza Perkins, and she wore a
-mahogany-coloured silk that made her look as
-sallow as a pumpkin. I was so sorry for him that
-I kinder made it up to him. I suppose girls will always
-be high and mighty with the boys they like
-best. I never took the trouble to plague any other
-of the young men, but your grandfather I used to make
-life a burden to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nowadays it&#39;s the young men that are high and
-mighty,&quot; Ruth Farraday said, &quot;they go into the
-service, and their uniforms turn their heads, and
-then they&mdash;forget.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess the young men to-day ain&#39;t so different
-from the men in my time, if you come right down to
-it. I guess liking is liking&mdash;just the same as it always
-was. Love will go where it&#39;s sent.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you believe it comes once to every man, as
-the saying goes?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know it. There&#39;s a lot of talk about loving
-this one and that one, but when you get right down
-to it, the second time is a pretty poor imitation of
-the first. There is natures that&#39;s different, of course,
-but true natures find their own and cling to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>[pg&nbsp;100]</span>
-&quot;Oh, I don&#39;t know that I like that for a philosophy,&quot;
-Ruth said, &quot;it&#39;s all right&mdash;if it isn&#39;t one-sided,
-but if only one feels it&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It ain&#39;t so often one-sided as you think&mdash;the
-real thing ain&#39;t. If it ain&#39;t real&mdash;why, that&#39;s another
-story.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But how is anybody going to tell if it is real?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There ain&#39;t really any way of not telling.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandmummy,&quot; Peggy begged, &quot;can we dress
-Ruth up in your pink muslin and take a snapshot
-of her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Certain, but you ought to curl her hair. I made
-a hundred and twenty curls when I wore that dress.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s where Elizabeth inherits her curly locks.
-Please dress up in Grandmother&#39;s muslin, Ruth.
-Don&#39;t you want her to, Grandmummy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It would do my heart good to see her pretty face
-shining out over my pink muslin.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you feel like that, then you shall,&quot; Ruth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have a kind o&#39; feeling that it will bring you
-luck,&quot; Grandmother said, when the soft hair had been
-loosened and curled about the face, and the pink
-muslin had been hooked and buttoned and tied till
-it undulated in delicate folds and curves all about the
-girl&#39;s slender body.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the lawn under the honeysuckle arbour, on the
-gate post, on the front steps of the old house, which
-followed the old-time habit of facing the south,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>[pg&nbsp;101]</span>
-though the street was due north, Peggy took picture
-after picture, and Ruth Farraday smiled up at the
-sun like an old-fashioned blush rose blooming in an
-old-time garden.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There comes Father,&quot; Grandmother said, &quot;let&#39;s
-see how much he&#39;ll notice.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandfather, approaching, took in the tableau
-under the honeysuckles. Elizabeth and Peggy
-watched breathlessly as he made straight for the
-little figure in Grandmothers pink muslin gown and
-stood staring down at it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know who you be,&quot; he said, slowly, &quot;nor
-where you got the dress you&#39;re wearing, but I know
-what you make me feel like.&quot; He swept his hat to
-his breast with a courtly, old-time bow, and bent over
-Ruth&#39;s little hand and saluted it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then he put out his other hand to his wife and
-drew her arm within his.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mother,&quot; he said, softly.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" id="page102"></a>[pg&nbsp;102]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Letters and the Post Office</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Jeanie Dear</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Your letter was lovely. I forget what you are like between
-times a little, and then I look at your picture or get a letter from
-you, and know. I can hardly believe you love me, after all you
-know about me, but I guess you do. I wish I could see you, but
-I am glad you are at the Point again this summer. I tried out
-Mother about my coming to visit you, without asking in so
-many words, but her idea is that she would like to have me stay
-put. My brother may get well enough to come down here at
-any time, and when he does I want to be chief nurse and bottle
-washer&mdash;medicine bottles.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I&#39;ve been doing quite a lot of things. I spend a great deal of
-time with Peggy Farraday. She is very nice. Nicer than I am,
-but not as nice as you, Jeanne of Arc. She is as nice as a Peggy
-Farraday can be. She has a sister Ruth, who is as sweet as
-peaches. She is about nineteen and a half, and blonde, with big
-blue eyes and long golden lashes, and one of those soft voices
-low in the throat, with a kind of thrill in it. You know&mdash;like
-contralto singing. You would love her. I am wild about her,
-and Buddy knows her. Don&#39;t mention that to any one. It&#39;s a
-secret. If you were here I think I could hint to you some things
-about it, but I can&#39;t on paper. Somebody might read a letter
-some time that you didn&#39;t expect. Buddy is very unhappy,
-and writes me one cross letter to every pleasant one. He is
-afraid I shall not be discreet, but discreet is my middle name, to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>[pg&nbsp;103]</span>
-use slang. Oh, I long to tell you what I mean. He won&#39;t write
-to her and she won&#39;t to him, and I am trying to make them. You
-can see how exciting it is.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Well, I must give you a brief résumé of what I have been doing,
-before I close. Monday we went in swimming, and afterwards,
-in the Farraday car, to Wianno, which is a very attractive summer
-colony farther up the Cape. We stopped at Hyannis and
-had ice-cream with a frozen pudding sauce. Tuesday, after
-swimming, Grandfather took us to Chatham in the noble Ford&mdash;me
-and Peggy&mdash;and we stopped at an attractive little tea room,
-where we had chocolate ice-cream. Wednesday we went swimming
-and then we walked to the adjoining town where we got
-some wonderful ice-cream sodas, three apiece. Peggy and I
-have each got over thirty Negroes. I told you how we were
-counting them in order to find out our fate. I am glad you
-have begun, too. I love you dearly.</p>
-
-<p class="right">Your own <span class="smcap">Elizabeth-Elspeth</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">(Peggy calls me that. She sends her love even though she doesn&#39;t
-know you.)</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth was in a letter-writing mood, and sealing
-Jean&#39;s letter with her favourite sky-blue sealing wax,
-stamped with her monogram signet ring, she opened
-her letter-case again. She began:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Daddy</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">We don&#39;t write very many letters to each other this summer.
-At least, I don&#39;t write many separate ones to you, but all the
-letters that go to Mother are meant for you, too. My special
-particular efforts go to Buddy. Poor Buddy! I hope you will
-soon be able to bring him to his own grandmother&#39;s hunting
-ground. He keeps writing me about going to Russia. I guess
-I should want to go to Russia if my health was as discouraging
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>[pg&nbsp;104]</span>
-as Buddy&#39;s. I worry about him, and, Daddy, dear, I worry about
-you. I have made the great discovery that a Daddy is a Daddy,
-and that it has to work pretty hard buying wardrobe trunks and
-Japanese kimonas and almond nut bars for its female offspring.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When I think of you sweltering in that hot city whether you
-want to or not, I get quite upset. You have to work every day,
-don&#39;t you, whether you feel like it or not? I never thought of
-that before till last evening, and it made me a little bit ill, it
-struck me with such force. I have just never happened to
-think of it in that light. I can tell you, Daddy, it made me love
-you harder than ever, and that&#39;s pretty hard. Well, all I can
-say is that I respect you more than anybody, and I hope you are
-never sorry you got married and got this family on your hands.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now for a few words to cheer you up. Monday we went in
-swimming, Peggy and I, and afterwards in the Farraday car to
-Wianno. I guess you know all about Wianno. We stopped
-at Hyannis and had some ice-cream with frozen pudding sauce.
-Tuesday we swam and Grandfather took us to Chatham in the
-Grand Old Ford, and we had chocolate ice-cream there. Wednesday
-we went in swimming and then walked to Harwich and
-got three ice-cream sodas. Also we counted quite a lot of Negroes.
-I wrote Mother that we had to get ninety-nine Negroes etc. for
-a stunt we are doing. Portuguese count, if they are dark enough.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I love you more than my old scratchy pen can tell. There
-goes the station barge, with the morning mail. So here goes I
-after it.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Your Baby</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">"You write an awful lot of letters, Elizabeth,&quot; said
-Peggy, as the two met at the post-office steps. &quot;You
-get a lot, too. I&#39;m not much good at correspondence.
-Did you ever write to a boy, Elizabeth?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>[pg&nbsp;105]</span>
-&quot;No, not really. Only thank-you letters and
-answering invitations and things like that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, don&#39;t you ever tell, Elizabeth, because I
-might get teased, but I&#39;m writing to a boy right now.
-That is, I am going to be when I&#39;ve answered his
-letter. It isn&#39;t a silly boy, though, it&#39;s a sensible
-boy&mdash;a boy that knows a lot of things I want to learn
-about. Chester Reynolds, you know, that I&#39;ve told
-you about winning the tennis cups. I got a letter
-from him last night. It isn&#39;t supposed to be very nice
-to show letters, but if you&#39;d like to see this one,
-I&#39;ll bring it around to-morrow, and then I&#39;ll bring my
-answer to it, and let you see what you think of that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; Elizabeth agreed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Isn&#39;t it a funny thing, he is the only boy that I
-ever thought I&#39;d like to correspond with, and now he
-has just sat himself down and written to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think that&#39;s very nice.&quot; Elizabeth said.
-&quot;There&#39;s a boy in New York that I felt that same
-way about. He sort of offered to send me a copy of
-&#39;Prometheus Bound,&#39; but I knew if he did that I
-should have to write and thank him, and I didn&#39;t
-know whether Mother would approve of my writing
-him like that when I was away from home, so I didn&#39;t
-say anything more about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is &#39;Prometheus Bound,&#39; anyway?&quot; Peggy
-inquired.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I think it is a kind of a blank verse poem or
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>[pg&nbsp;106]</span>
-book, something like Whittier&#39;s &#39;Snow Bound,&#39; but
-I&#39;m not sure. That was one reason that I wanted
-him to send it&mdash;so I could find out. He was quite a
-literary boy, one of Jeanie&#39;s friends. He&#39;s very good
-looking, though.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t like literary boys as a rule, though, do
-you?&quot; Peggy asked. &quot;They usually wear rubbers
-and horn rims, and have to mind their mothers.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not any friend of Jeanie&#39;s. Her friends are
-always all-around boys. They must have brains, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh!&quot; Peggy said, impressed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The crowd on the post-office steps was beginning
-to thicken. The big bags, bulging with mail, had
-been passed behind the glass façade of the mail-box
-section, and behind the closed wicket that indicated
-the distribution was taking place the silent postmaster
-and his assistant worked with grim, accustomed
-rapidity.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let&#39;s go and watch them put the things into the
-boxes,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;It&#39;s the most exciting thing
-to see the letters go in. Ours is 178. See, here it is,&quot;
-she cried, as Peggy followed her into the stuffy office.
-&quot;There&#39;s a card from Buddy already, and one for
-Grandfather from the Bass River Savings Bank, and
-one fat one that I can&#39;t see the face of that I hope is
-from Jean. She doesn&#39;t always wait to get answers,
-you know. She writes when the spirit moves and so
-do I. I&#39;ve just been writing her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>[pg&nbsp;107]</span>
-&quot;When you go back to New York, let&#39;s write to
-each&mdash;I mean one another&mdash;like that, only I&#39;m afraid
-you&#39;ll get the worst of the bargain. When the spirit
-moves me to write a letter, it mostly only moves me
-to say, &#39;Dear Elspeth,&#39; or whoever it is, &#39;Hello!
-Yours frantically fondly, Peggy.&#39; It&#39;s funny, when
-I like to talk so much, that I don&#39;t like to write more.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There&#39;s my thirty-first,&quot; Elizabeth whispered,
-as a solemn black chauffeur made his appearance in
-the post office.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My thirty-third,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;and outside is a
-white horse. What a pity we have got to get the
-white horses in sequence. They are so hard to find,
-especially when you are looking for them. But
-when we do get them all, I am going to keep my
-hands behind me all the time, until I find somebody
-I am willing to shake hands with!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It would be awful, after all this trouble, if we
-didn&#39;t shake hands with the right one, wouldn&#39;t it,
-Peggy? There goes a postcard right into my box.
-It&#39;s for Judidy. She has a young man. Did you
-know it? He&#39;s almost as fat as she is, and not nearly
-so good looking.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I hope she gets somebody very nice, and marries
-them, and has a whole backyard full of fat pink
-babies, though I don&#39;t know what Grandmummy
-would do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandfather says she&#39;d get the work done
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>[pg&nbsp;108]</span>
-quicker if she didn&#39;t have Judidy to look out for, and
-I think perhaps she would. Isn&#39;t it funny, when I
-first came, Judidy just seemed to me like a kind of
-queer person that I felt not quite right about eating
-at the table with, and now she&#39;s my friend.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The gate in the wicket flew up, and in an instant
-it was surrounded.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;See all the mail-hungry fiends,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;Oh,
-goody, Mother&#39;s got a letter from my cousin in
-Rome&mdash;and Ruth has a letter from that Chambers
-fellow.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What Chambers fellow?&quot; Elizabeth asked,
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Piggy Chambers I call him. He&#39;s got loads of
-money and he is very good looking, and he just
-pesters Ruthie to death.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What does she do?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She lets him. She likes it, rather.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, dear!&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t have to worry. She&#39;s my sister.
-Piggy Chambers isn&#39;t so bad. He&#39;s just kind of a
-bore, you know, and awfully fond of writing letters
-to Piggy Chambers, Esquire. Lots of grown-up
-fellows are like that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s your sister, but I love her, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Shouldn&#39;t think much of you if you didn&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They were on their way home by this time, and
-the post-office crowd had begun to melt away,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>[pg&nbsp;109]</span>
-streaming up and down the street, and into all the
-cross roads.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wish my grandmother would let me come
-after the mail at night,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;I have
-to wait till Judidy or Zeke are ready to come,
-or Grandfather will take me. As if I wasn&#39;t old
-enough to go out after six o&#39;clock alone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It isn&#39;t your being old enough, it&#39;s the general
-reputation of the post office being a place where the
-crowd goes in the evening to&mdash;start something. You
-know yourself that lots of things that go on there
-don&#39;t look very well. It&#39;s such a mixed crowd, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;As long as you behave yourself, I don&#39;t see what
-difference it makes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve thought a lot about going to the post office
-at night,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;and I&#39;ve argued a lot about
-it with Ruthie and Mother, and the conclusion that
-I&#39;ve come to is that it&#39;s just as well to keep away.
-All the girls that aren&#39;t nice hang around there.
-Some of the girls that are nice stay away. When I
-grow up, my niceness is going to be so much a matter
-of course that I won&#39;t have to look out for it so hard.
-Just now I am going to obey Grandmummy&#39;s rule
-to &#39;avoid the appearance of evil&#39;.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess you are just about right, Peggy,&quot; Elizabeth
-said after reflection. &quot;Sometimes you talk a
-lot like Jeanie. Would you like to hear some of her
-letter?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>[pg&nbsp;110]</span>
-&quot;I should say I would, but don&#39;t read it to me unless
-you really want to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I do,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;and the reason I do is
-that I think you are like Jean in some ways. You
-are both of you way beyond me in the way you look
-at things.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The way I look at things is better than the way
-I act sometimes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m inclined to be just the other way around.
-The way I look at things is worse than the way I act
-most generally.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m disobedient,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;and sloppy
-weather, and always late to places. I do as I&#39;m told
-about things like going to the post office at night,
-but not about trying to run the car or getting home
-on time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m just the other way,&quot; Elizabeth reflected.
-&quot;I wouldn&#39;t monkey with anything I was told not to
-touch, but I&#39;d make a big fuss, if only in my own
-mind, about obeying a grown-up rule that I didn&#39;t
-understand.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Either way gets you into trouble at times,&quot; Peggy
-said, sagely. &quot;Don&#39;t look round, but there are two
-boys trailing behind us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What kind of boys?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Two of the boys that were down at the Aviation
-Camp all last summer.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are they all right?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>[pg&nbsp;111]</span>
-&quot;Yes, but I don&#39;t know them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are speaking to us. Don&#39;t look round.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Oh, girls!</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose they&#39;ll get tired and go away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t look round.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Oh, girls!</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, look here,&quot; Peggy suddenly wheeled on the
-two followers. &quot;We haven&#39;t met you. We&#39;re not
-going to have you trailing around after us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The older of the two boys whipped off his hat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I beg your pardon,&quot; he said, colouring. &quot;We
-were only joking. We&mdash;we&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It puts us in an embarrassing position,&quot; Elizabeth
-contributed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, some of the girls, they&mdash;we&mdash;&mdash;&quot; the other
-boy also found explanation more difficult than he had
-anticipated.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There&#39;s a difference in girls,&quot; Peggy said, severely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We were only going to ask you the way to the
-beach.&quot; The first boy&#39;s hair was a blazing, splendid
-red. Elizabeth liked red-headed boys.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve seen you there almost every day this summer,&quot;
-Peggy challenged.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So&#39;ve I seen you.&quot; The second boy had a wide,
-ingratiating grin. &quot;We want to get acquainted,
-that&#39;s all,&quot; he admitted, &quot;so we were pursuing what
-seems to be the usual way down here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>[pg&nbsp;112]</span>
-&quot;That isn&#39;t the way to get acquainted with us,&quot;
-Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is the way, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t ask <i>us</i>.&quot; Peggy gathered Elizabeth&#39;s arm
-under hers, and hurried her along.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are sort of nice,&quot; she admitted, when they
-had put several yards between them and the objects
-of their encounter. &quot;If they are really nice, I suppose
-they will get introduced the way they ought to.
-If they aren&#39;t, well, we won&#39;t see them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s a sort of strain waiting to find out such
-things,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Read me Jean&#39;s letter, and that will take our
-minds off them,&quot; Peggy demanded, practically.
-&quot;One reason that I don&#39;t like to have much to do with
-boys is that when you get thinking about them it&#39;s
-hard to get your mind on other things. If they are
-silly, they aren&#39;t any fun.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;On the other hand,&quot; Elizabeth argued, &quot;if they
-aren&#39;t just a little bit&mdash;silly or&mdash;something&mdash;they
-aren&#39;t so much fun.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, they have to be interested in you some,&quot;
-Peggy admitted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now I&#39;ll read you Jean&#39;s letter. We&#39;ll sit down
-under this tree by the gate. See how pretty her
-handwriting is. Doesn&#39;t she make fascinating E&#39;s
-and R&#39;s?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think there is a lot of character in handwriting,&quot;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>[pg&nbsp;113]</span>
-Peggy said, bending her head over the letter. &quot;See
-this one from Piggy Chambers. He writes like a
-pig and he is one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;See this card from my brother Buddy. He writes
-like a perfect gentleman, and he is one, though I say
-it as shouldn&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I&#39;ve seen your brother&#39;s handwriting before,
-but not for a long time. Why don&#39;t you write him
-to write Ruthie? I&#39;d a whole lot rather she was hearing
-from him regularly than from Piggy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Has she a friendship with Mr.&mdash;Mr. Piggy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, she hasn&#39;t. He just wants her to marry
-him, and that&#39;s all there is about it. If your
-brother is her friend, it would be the part of a good
-friend to stick around just now, if only by correspondence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There are things about my brother that you
-don&#39;t understand, Peggy,&quot; Elizabeth said, solemnly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thirty-four,&quot; Peggy said, her gaze diverted to
-the street, &quot;count that one, Elizabeth. It may be
-that same chauffeur, but never mind. We don&#39;t
-know positively that it is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, now for Jean,&quot; Elizabeth said, after these
-formalities were finished.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Elspeth-Elizabeth dear</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I&#39;ve had your long letter, the one that told about the Steppe
-children (and how I laughed!), for a week, and your two postcards
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>[pg&nbsp;114]</span>
-I wrote you one serious letter in answer to a serious one
-from you, and now I&#39;ll just tell you about the way things are
-going here. It&#39;s just the same thing&mdash;sailing, teas, dances,
-bathing, and then begin all over and do it again. I like it all&mdash;especially
-the sailing&mdash;&quot;a wet sheet and a flowing sea,&quot; you know,
-is one of my ideals. Another ideal is getting realized, too. I&#39;m
-learning to drive the car. I bogged it yesterday, and a farmer
-with whiskers to his knees, and a long rope, like the funny papers,
-came and pulled us out. The chauffeur was with me. He ought
-to have prevented it, but he said I was too quick for him. Anyhow,
-won&#39;t it be wonderful when I learn? Then you and I can
-&quot;ride together, forever ride,&quot; as Browning says.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I went into New York on Thursday, and what do you think,
-I went to see your brother Buddy. I called up your mother
-from the station and she suggested it, so I did, as we had the car
-and were going out of New York from his end of the town, anyway.
-I felt two ways about doing so. One way was, that it
-was hard on you for me to see him first, and the other way was
-that if you couldn&#39;t see him, I could represent you. He is quite
-a sick-looking Buddy, but very, very sweet and dear. I hope
-you can get him down to the Cape and take care of him. They
-won&#39;t discharge him, will they, until they get good and ready to?
-He looks a lot like you and a lot like some of those Rembrandt
-portraits of himself. I suppose it&#39;s his beard that makes him
-look so sort of shady and shadowy. He said he didn&#39;t think he
-would ever be any better, but that if he did, he hoped he could
-go to Russia. He seemed to want me to think that this and everything
-else he said was a joke. I must interrupt myself now,
-and say au revoir, because the car is waiting, and Mother is being
-very polite in it. I can see her back getting politer every minute.</p>
-
-<p class="center">&#39;bye&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Jean</span>.</p>
-<p>P. S. I love you.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>[pg&nbsp;115]</span>
-&quot;I didn&#39;t know that your brother was as sick
-as all that,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;Why haven&#39;t you told
-me so?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He doesn&#39;t want anybody told. He doesn&#39;t want
-to appear like a confirmed invalid.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d like to tell Ruthie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I&#39;ll tell you what you do. You take Jeanie&#39;s
-letter and read it to her. That won&#39;t be either of us
-telling her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right, I will.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know what excuse you can give for having
-a strange girl&#39;s letter with you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I won&#39;t need any excuse. I&#39;ll just say to Ruth
-that I&#39;ve got a letter from a friend of yours about
-John Swift. She&#39;ll just grab the letter&mdash;that&#39;s all.
-I&#39;ll say you were willing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You come around and tell me what she says
-afterwards.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right.&quot; Peggy was making a prolonged departure,
-kicking at the turf as she stood at the gate.
-&quot;I&#39;ll come around this afternoon, anyway, and we&#39;ll
-go and get some tutti-frutti ice-cream.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right, and if you hear anything more about
-who those boys were, you can tell me then.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right, and I&#39;ll bring around that letter I was
-telling you about, from Chester Reynolds.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right. I guess my dinner&#39;s ready. I heard
-the bell when we first got in sight of the house.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>[pg&nbsp;116]</span>
-At this point Grandfather appeared at the door
-and seeing Elizabeth still looking in the direction of
-her departing friend, he approached firmly and
-grasped her by the ear, and led her, protesting, into
-the house.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page117" id="page117"></a>[pg&nbsp;117]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Huckleberries and New Friends</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandfather came out of the north door
-and shaded his eyes with his hand. He
-gazed searchingly at Elizabeth&#39;s favourite
-tree by the gate under which she and Peggy were
-sitting with their embroidery.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, well, I&#39;m disappointed,&quot; he murmured to
-himself. &quot;I thought if I see anything of those two
-girls I&#39;d ask them to go huckleberrying, but I s&#39;pose
-they&#39;ve gone off down to the shore, or somewhere.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, do ask us to go huckleberrying,&quot; Elizabeth
-cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought they&#39;d be right out here, sitting under
-that tree, like enough, doing some chore o&#39; fancy
-work. It does beat all where they find to hide themselves.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, what fun!&quot; Peggy cried. &quot;He took me
-huckleberrying last year, and I got four quarts in
-about two hours.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, well, I am disappointed. I might&#39;s well
-make up my mind to go alone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He will, too, if we don&#39;t hurry,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page118" id="page118"></a>[pg&nbsp;118]</span>
-stuffing her crochet work into the pocket of her blue
-linen dress. &quot;Run and get into the Ford.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandfather, equipped with as many shining
-pails as a tinware peddler, approached the car and
-stared at it gravely, though Peggy and Elizabeth
-were already in possession of the back seat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Too bad I couldn&#39;t find those girls,&quot; he said.
-&quot;Mother&#39;s put a great heap of sweaters and aprons
-under the seat, so&#39;s if I should be lucky enough to
-pick them up on the way. Well, Lizzie&quot;&mdash;this to
-the machine&mdash;&quot;how cranky are you to-day? Crank
-by name and crank by nature,&quot; he made half a dozen
-ineffectual attempts at starting, and then succeeded
-suddenly, jumped into the car, and they were off with
-a snort and a flourish.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You darling Granddaddy,&quot; Elizabeth said in his
-ear, &quot;we&#39;re crazy to go huckleberrying, and Peggy
-says you know all the spots where they grow thickest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, well, how did you get here? I dusted my
-car out carefully just before I started. It don&#39;t seem
-as if I could overlook a couple o&#39; girls o&#39; that size.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You didn&#39;t have your glasses on, Granddaddy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They took the road to the north, winding white
-into the hazy distance.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The road is like a white ribbon,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;and those little scrubby pines, sitting low all along
-the way, are like&mdash;well, I don&#39;t know what they are
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>[pg&nbsp;119]</span>
-like, but I like <i>them</i>. I don&#39;t complain if the trees on
-the Cape are not majestic, as they are in other
-summer resorts. You see a lot more sky when the
-trees are low.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You stand up for Cape Cod,&quot; her grandfather
-said. &quot;It&#39;s a pretty good place. You know the
-story of the old farmer who was driving back from
-his wife&#39;s funeral. &#39;I lived with that woman forty
-year,&#39; he said, &#39;and toward the last, I really got to
-like her.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is that the way you feel about Cape Cod?&quot;
-Peggy asked, mischievously. &quot;I thought it was the
-way you felt about Lizzie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lizzie&#39;s got her good qualities, like most o&#39; the
-rest of us. She ain&#39;t got much natural pride about
-the way she looks, and she hates to admit that a
-man is stronger than she is, but when he once gets
-the best of the argument she goes along peaceable.
-There&#39;s a lot o&#39; human nature to Lizzie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m so excited about these huckleberries I can&#39;t
-wait to get there. Don&#39;t you love to see those
-clumps and clusters of dusky blue berries just waiting
-to be jingled into the pail? The woods smell so
-sweet, too, with the wild honeysuckle and wild roses.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And wild bog cranberry and wild turnip and
-wild beech plums,&quot; Grandfather added. &quot;Well,
-here we are.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They had switched from the macadam to a road
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>[pg&nbsp;120]</span>
-deep with sand through which the light car had
-been ploughing for the last several minutes. There
-was a cleared space before them and a path leading
-into the woods beyond.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Foller your nose,&quot; Grandfather said, &quot;and you&#39;ll
-find berries enough to make huckleberry dumplings
-for a regiment.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth and Peggy slipped into the big gingham
-aprons that Grandmother had provided, and each
-slung a pail over an arm.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll bet I can get more than you do,&quot; Peggy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you do, it&#39;s because your fingers are longer.&quot;
-Elizabeth looked ruefully at her small, chubby
-hands.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, but a man&#39;s reach should exceed his grasp,&quot;
-Peggy said. &quot;I can quote poetry as well as your
-friend, Jean, but don&#39;t ask me what that&#39;s out of,
-because I don&#39;t know. My fingers are longer. I
-don&#39;t know whether that makes any difference or
-not, but I&#39;ll give you a handicap.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I scorn your handicaps. One, two, three, go.
-May the best girl win.&quot; Elizabeth shot down the
-path, and the sound of the fruit beginning to spatter
-into her pail was heard almost immediately.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I never saw so many blue or huckleberries in my
-life. I&#39;ve got the loveliest, thickest patch&mdash;come
-over here, Elizabeth,&quot; Peggy shouted from her retreat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id="page121"></a>[pg&nbsp;121]</span>
-&quot;I&#39;ve got all the blue or huckleberries in the world
-right here,&quot; Elizabeth mimicked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll pick a couple o&#39; minutes, and then I&#39;ll lie in
-the bushes and rest a while,&quot; Grandfather said,
-vanishing with a six-quart cranberry measure.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Later when the girls came into the clearing again
-with their laden pails they found him stretched at
-full length and apparently fast asleep, but beside him
-was his heaping measure of berries.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Granddaddy Swift,&quot; Peggy cried, &quot;when did you
-pick all those?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Those?&quot; he said, yawning. &quot;Oh, a couple of hours
-back.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I bet you&#39;ve been working your head off every
-minute. We&#39;ve got three quarts apiece. Elizabeth
-beat me after all, and then turned around and helped
-me get mine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I nearly killed myself doing it. I never want to
-<i>eat</i> another huckleberry, but I am thirsty for water or
-something. Don&#39;t I hear a spring?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There might be one through the trees there. I
-don&#39;t know nothing about it.&quot; Grandfather pointed,
-however, in a definite direction.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy parted the branches, and slipped into a
-thread of a path which led them directly to a pool of
-crystal clear water fed by a tiny stream that was
-bubbling and gushing out of the earth. Protruding
-from the spring were three bottles of ginger ale that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page122" id="page122"></a>[pg&nbsp;122]</span>
-had been so placed that the cool water splashed upon
-them as it fell. On a rock close by were spread two
-paper napkins with a pile of bread-and-butter sandwiches
-on one and a stack of sugar-molasses cookies
-on the other. Between the two, holding them down,
-was a box of chocolates from New York&#39;s most
-popular candy manufacturers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know nothing about it,&quot; Grandfather
-said, when they dragged him to the feast, &quot;I&#39;ve
-been fast asleep back there for upwards of two
-hours.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;re a story-teller,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;and for a
-punishment you&#39;ve got to tell us a real story as soon
-as you&#39;ve had your party.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing ever tasted so good to me in my life,&quot;
-Elizabeth said, as they were brushing off the crumbs.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s what she says after every meal she eats,&quot;
-her grandfather chuckled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But it&#39;s always true. Now here&#39;s your pipe and
-here&#39;s your baccy, and while you&#39;re filling it, you&#39;ve
-got to be thinking of a story to tell us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can&#39;t tell stories,&quot; he protested. &quot;I&#39;d sing a song
-if I knew any. There was a song my grandfather
-used to sing to us when we were children, but I can&#39;t
-remember it. The chorus went like this,&quot; he made
-a great pretence of getting the pitch, and then, rocking
-himself gently, sang in a solemn, sing-song
-voice:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page123" id="page123"></a>[pg&nbsp;123]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;Injun pudding and pumpkin pie</span>
-<span class="i0">The gray cat scratched out the black cat&#39;s eye.&quot;</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="indent">I never knew the rights of it, or what the trouble
-was. Some kind of a disagreement they had.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But where did the injun pudding and pumpkin pie
-come in?&quot; Peggy asked. &quot;And what is injun pudding?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t show your ign&#39;rance, as Moses says,&quot;
-Elizabeth put in. &quot;It&#39;s Indian pudding, and you make
-it out of Indian meal and molasses, and it cooks all
-day and makes whey, and eaten with ice-cream it&#39;s
-perfectly heavenly. Grandma is going to show me
-how to make it. I made a cake, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I heard about that cake,&quot; said Peggy, hastily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who&#39;s Grandma?&quot; Grandfather inquired, innocently.
-&quot;I thought we only had grandmothers
-around our place.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandma likes it better for me to call her that,&quot;
-Elizabeth answered, blushing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You needn&#39;t think you are getting out of telling
-us that story,&quot; Peggy cried, &quot;tell us about the time
-you went courting Grandmummy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t remember nothing about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell us about the time you took Eliza Perkins to
-the Harvest Dance,&quot; Elizabeth said, daringly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, apparently you know something about it
-already. Women do beat the Dutch, gossiping
-along about things that happened near fifty years
-ago as if &#39;twere yesterday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id="page124"></a>[pg&nbsp;124]</span>
-&quot;You needn&#39;t blame Grandma. I worm all her
-secrets out of her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll warrant you do. I calculated for her to remember
-that Harvest Dance as long as she lived.
-Did she tell you how she was dressed?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Was it a fancy dress party?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Certain it was, and I went as King of the Harvest.
-I had a velvet suit with corn tassels all down the
-seams, and a velvet tam o&#39;shanter with a big tassel
-on that. Your gram&#39;ma she was going to be Queen
-o&#39; the Harvest, till we had a little tiff, and she refused
-to have anything to do with me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She didn&#39;t tell us that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I calculated she hadn&#39;t. Well, she went as an
-apple, root and branch, all decked out in apple
-blossoms, with a staff, with artificial apples growing
-on it, and looking like an apple blossom herself, with
-her pretty pink cheeks and all the lacy fixings in the
-world trailing after her. I took Eliza Perkins, who
-was the best-natured and biggest-hearted girl I ever
-set eyes on, and the homeliest. Lord have mercy,
-wasn&#39;t she homely! I knew &#39;twould never do to take
-a pretty girl, so I picked her out to make your
-grandma jealous with, and I told her so. She was
-willing. &#39;I&#39;ll make Laury Ann just about jealous
-enough,&#39; she said. &#39;&#39;Twouldn&#39;t do to have her too
-jealous.&#39; And she certain played her part well.
-Your grandma asked me to come around to a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id="page125"></a>[pg&nbsp;125]</span>
-candy pull to her house, before the evening was
-over.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She didn&#39;t tell me any of this, the wretched woman!&quot;
-Peggy cried. &quot;Did you go to the candy pull?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I went sure enough.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you have a nice time?&quot; Elizabeth asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t have the kind of time I expected,&quot;
-Grandfather twinkled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why not?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There wasn&#39;t any candy, and there wasn&#39;t any
-pull.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What was there?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your grandma was there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, what did happen? Granddaddy, don&#39;t you
-see me shaking with excitement and suspense?&quot;
-Peggy demanded.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, Mother and me, we kind of come to an
-understanding. I guess it&#39;s about time I hitched
-up Lizzie and we started along. She&#39;s been a
-whining and a whinnying back there for some time
-now. Besides, your grandma calculates to make
-huckleberry dumplings for supper. She gave me
-special directions not to ask anybody in to eat &#39;em.
-She allowed she was only going to have enough for
-the immediate family.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That means I&#39;m coming!&quot; Peggy cried. &quot;I <i>am</i>
-the immediate family.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know what dress Grandma had on that night&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id="page126"></a>[pg&nbsp;126]</span>
-her pink muslin with dolman undersleeves, the one
-that Ruth tried on the other day,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;and you kissed her in.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, force o&#39; habit is strong. Get your berries
-together and hop back into the car, or I&#39;ll have to
-start without you.&quot; Grandfather led the way
-through the branches into the clearing where they
-had left the machine.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I half expected to see Lizzie grazing around without
-her harness on,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;Grandfather is so
-convincing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You take good care o&#39; that sister of yours.&quot;
-Grandfather was using most of his breath in the effort
-to crank Lizzie. &quot;Don&#39;t let any o&#39; these fat boys that
-is hanging around her try to run away with her.
-She&#39;s too precious.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He must have seen Piggy,&quot; Peggy said in an
-undertone to Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There was a fat boy hanging around your
-grandma once.&quot; He jumped into his seat with the
-agility of a boy himself, a thin boy, &quot;Giddap, giddap,
-Lizzie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know,&quot; Elizabeth leaned over the seat to say
-into his ear, &quot;Pork Joe.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;re a remarkable good guesser after you&#39;ve
-been told. Well, Peggy, as I was saying, don&#39;t
-let any young Pork Joe get that pretty sister of
-yours.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page127" id="page127"></a>[pg&nbsp;127]</span>
-&quot;Did she say anything more to you about that
-letter from Jean?&quot; Elizabeth asked, snuggling down
-into the seat beside Peggy again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not a word,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;Piggy Chambers is
-around all the time since he came down, and so I
-can&#39;t get much action. By the way, they want us to
-go to Provincetown with them to-morrow. Can you
-go? You&#39;d better. They need chaperoning.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think I can. I&#39;ll have to ask, of course.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Provincetown is way down on the tip toe of the
-Cape, you know. We live in the elbow.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Whoa, Lizzie.&quot; Grandfather threw in his clutch
-and stopped with a flourish just behind two figures
-who, laden with pails full of berries, and apparently
-oblivious of the oncoming machine, were plodding
-ahead in the dust. &quot;Want a ride, boys?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Two caps were whipped off with an amazing
-suddenness, exposing one blazing head of bright red
-hair and one inimitable grin.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, thank you, sir,&quot; two voices spoke as one.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;One will have to ride behind and one with me,&quot;
-Grandfather said. &quot;Elizabeth, these boys are Jim
-Robbins&#39; grandsons, and if they are anything like old
-Jim, they are good young fellows to know. They&#39;ll
-tell you their own names, I guess.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The red-headed boy on the front seat turned and
-smiled a trifle mischievously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m Tom Robbins, and this is my cousin, Will
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>[pg&nbsp;128]</span>
-Dean, Miss Elizabeth Swift and Miss Peggy Farraday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How do you do?&quot; Peggy said, gravely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How do you do?&quot; Elizabeth echoed, demurely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Captain Swift is pretty good about picking up
-passengers on the road, isn&#39;t he?&quot; asked the boy with
-the grin.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When you see two boys limping along in front of
-you everywhere you go, something&#39;s got to be done
-about it,&quot; Grandfather said good humouredly, &quot;anybody
-might almost think you boys follered me on
-purpose. Yesterday and day before and day before
-that, I come across them hoofing it along the road,&quot;
-he explained, &quot;going the same direction I was, and
-scurse able to take another step.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We didn&#39;t ask you for a ride <i>to-day</i>,&quot; the red-headed
-boy blushed. &quot;We didn&#39;t even know you were
-on the road till we looked up and saw you about a
-minute before you caught up to us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What&#39;s those girls giggling about?&quot; Grandfather
-inquired. &quot;I can&#39;t have a minute&#39;s serious conversation
-with anybody without this giggle-giggle-giggle
-business going on.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess I know what you are smiling about,&quot; the
-Dean boy lowered his voice, &quot;but honest, don&#39;t misjudge
-us just on account of that post-office business.
-We kind of wanted a chance to square it, you know.
-Your grandfather thinks we&#39;re all right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>[pg&nbsp;129]</span>
-&quot;It&#39;s been pretty dry weather for the gardens,
-hasn&#39;t it?&quot; Tom Robbins was saying to Grandfather.
-&quot;Have your vegetables suffered much?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Just about all they&#39;re capable of.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you see much prospect of a rainy spell?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;As fur as I&#39;m concerned, I don&#39;t know as it will
-ever rain again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s too bad.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ankle getting better?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What ankle?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The one you sprained the day before yesterday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes, sir, thank you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Which ankle was it, now?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The left&mdash;I mean, the right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suspected as much,&quot; said Grandfather, gravely.
-&quot;Well, they are pretty nice, clever little girls, ain&#39;t
-they?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, indeed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ever play checkers?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your cousin play checkers?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, he does.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, it might be good for lame ankles for you to
-come around and have a game o&#39; checkers with an old
-man once in a while. Always ask for me in particular
-because when anybody comes around to the house,
-especially when I&#39;ve got a young girl visiting me, I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>[pg&nbsp;130]</span>
-like to be the one that has the privilege of saying
-whether I&#39;m to home or not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you, Captain Swift. We&mdash;we will be
-glad to come.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Our girls don&#39;t go to the post office at night, but
-Saturday night around mail time they&#39;ll probably be
-dishing out Indian pudding and ice-cream to anybody
-that might happen along.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know two fellows that might happen in,&quot; Tom
-Robbins said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think those boys are really quite nice,&quot; Peggy
-said, as they sat under their favourite tree after supper.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think they are,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;but it was
-rather mortifying the way they followed us in the
-first place. They ought to have known better.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But it only needed a hint from us to make them
-realize.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think boys need those hints. It&#39;s the fault of
-girls if they aren&#39;t kept right up to the standard.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Some of the girls on the Cape are not very
-particular. They are just out after a good time and
-don&#39;t care how they get it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess that&#39;s mostly just thoughtlessness. Anyhow,
-these boys haven&#39;t been a bit&mdash;well&mdash;you
-know&mdash;familiar since that first minute.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, they haven&#39;t one bit. I think Will is quite
-good fun. Did you notice how he wouldn&#39;t sit on the
-seat with us for fear of crowding us, but just got
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page131" id="page131"></a>[pg&nbsp;131]</span>
-right down on the floor and stuck his feet out? I
-think that&#39;s the way they really are, and the other
-was just showing off.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think so, too,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;Anyway, I&#39;m
-awfully glad we told Grandmother about it. She
-knew who they were right away, and everything. I
-wouldn&#39;t have known whether I ever ought to speak
-to them again or not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It isn&#39;t every grandmother that you could tell
-a thing like that to,&quot; Peggy reflected. &quot;I didn&#39;t
-tell my mother. She just wouldn&#39;t have thought it
-was much account. She trusts me to know the right
-thing, and that&#39;s fine of her when I do know it, but
-when I don&#39;t, it&#39;s embarrassing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The thing about Grandmother,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;is that she remembers back so well. She knows
-what it&#39;s like to be a girl, and she thinks all the things
-that girls think are important. Lots of grown people
-don&#39;t. She imagines right into things, but she doesn&#39;t
-poke around them. She doesn&#39;t say much, either,
-but when you tell her a thing she listens to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wish any of my relations did that. Father just
-says, &#39;All right, Peggy, I&#39;ll take it all on trust&mdash;where&#39;s
-the morning paper?&#39; whatever I say to him,
-and Mother says, &#39;Put in that little wisp of hair,
-darling,&#39; or &#39;Look at your nails,&#39; no matter what I
-say to her. Sister doesn&#39;t listen to anything anybody
-says any more.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id="page132"></a>[pg&nbsp;132]</span>
-&quot;Not even to Mr. Chambers?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Him less than anybody, but she spends all her
-time with him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Peggy, don&#39;t you think she&#39;s got a heart?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know what she&#39;s got. She kept me awake
-last night by snivelling for about an hour, and when
-I got so sorry for her that I couldn&#39;t help it, I went
-in and tried to put my arms around her, and she just
-turned me out as if I&#39;d been an interloper. I don&#39;t
-know what to make of her lately. If you&#39;re looking
-for a nasty grown-up sister, I&#39;d dispose of her cheap.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m glad she&#39;s not happy,&quot; Elizabeth said, soberly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;m not. I&#39;m just sore at her about last
-night, but I&#39;ll get over that. You remember that in
-&#39;Little Women&#39; about not letting the sun go down
-upon your wrath. Well, I scarcely ever do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I try not to,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;It isn&#39;t getting
-angry so much that afflicts me. It&#39;s a lot of horrid,
-sensitive ideas that I have. I want to be loved the
-best, and have things just the way I think is about
-right&mdash;and if I don&#39;t, I brood over it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;m a more active nature,&quot; Peggy said.
-&quot;Haven&#39;t we had fun to-day?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Weren&#39;t the huckleberries fun&mdash;from bush to
-kettle, as it were? Weren&#39;t those boys cute, to get
-acquainted with Grandfather?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wasn&#39;t it funny we happened to pick them up,
-when they&#39;d been huckleberrying, too?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id="page133"></a>[pg&nbsp;133]</span>
-&quot;And oh! Wasn&#39;t Grandfather a darling all day&mdash;so
-funny&mdash;telling stories and making little surprises,
-and so nice with the boys and everything.
-Oh, Peggy, don&#39;t you&mdash;love my grandfather?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I certainly do,&quot; said Peggy, solemnly.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id="page134"></a>[pg&nbsp;134]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Provincetown and a Walk in the Woods</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth enjoyed her ride to Provincetown
-much more than she expected to.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The objectionable Mr. Piggy Chambers
-shared with Ruth the soft cushions of the back seat
-of the big touring car while the two girls occupied
-the folding seats forward, which were, as Peggy said,
-as luxurious as most stationary seats in machines of
-an ordinary make. The chauffeur was in a smart
-buff livery that matched the upholstery, and on either
-side of Peggy and Elizabeth were sliding panels that
-revealed at the touching of a button a vanity box
-and a smoking kit respectively. Peggy had found
-a green leather driving coat with buff facings for
-herself tucked away under the chauffeur&#39;s seat,
-and Mr. Chambers had produced a brown and blue
-coat of soft scotch wool for Elizabeth. Ruth was
-wearing a white wool cape of her own, and steadily
-refused any of the additional luxuries that the owner
-of the big car offered to produce.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I feel like an absolute traitor to Buddy to be
-taking a minute&#39;s comfort,&quot; Elizabeth thought,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>[pg&nbsp;135]</span>
-trying to keep firmly in mind the fact that Mr. Piggy
-Chambers had claimed industrial exemption from
-the service through which her brother had lost his
-health, and perhaps the girl he loved, &quot;but the car
-does roll smoothly, and the country is beautiful, and
-I&#39;m lucky to have a chance to see it, though my motives
-in coming were quite unmixed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You see, the Cape has everything,&quot; Peggy said
-with the air of a showman, &quot;salt-water ponds, and
-fresh-water ponds, and hills and woods and sand-dunes.
-If you want a walk through the pines to a
-leafy glade, walk this way, ladies and gentlemen.
-If you want rocks and breakwaters and sand-dunes
-and inlets, look out of the car on the other side.
-Every town has at least two or three of the oldest
-windmills on Cape Cod, and dancing pavilions and
-moving-picture palaces stare at us from every side,
-without in the least interfering with the general
-panorama.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you think you have talked enough,
-Peggy?&quot; Ruth suggested.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I honestly don&#39;t, but perhaps Mr. Chambers
-does.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This is Miss Ruth&#39;s party,&quot; Mr. Chambers
-smiled diplomatically. &quot;This country makes me
-think of English country, in one way,&quot; he added,
-smoothly. &quot;It is, of course, altogether different, but
-in England, especially in the north, you get a varied
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id="page136"></a>[pg&nbsp;136]</span>
-landscape in a limited area, as you do here. This is
-the only place in the states where you find just that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The Cape is only eight miles across at its widest
-point,&quot; Ruth said, &quot;and of course the whole scenic
-effect is miniature in proportion. We&#39;ll begin to
-see the sea on both sides of us presently.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What amuses me is the way the townships are
-cut up; a township of fifteen hundred people is cut
-into almost what you might call house lots. North,
-South, East, West Harwich, Harwich Port, Harwich
-Centre, and it doesn&#39;t take ten minutes to run
-through any one of these little villages, and get into
-the next.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are all very attractive,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-defensively, but not very loudly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d like to show you England,&quot; Mr. Chambers
-continued, in a lowered voice. &quot;I think you&#39;d like
-it over there, say in a year or two, after the children
-begin to get back their rosy cheeks again, and the
-gardens are flourishing a bit more. The war has left
-it all a bit ragged.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It hasn&#39;t left <i>you</i> ragged,&quot; Elizabeth thought.
-&quot;It&#39;s only left you fatter and complacenter and richer.
-I wish Buddy had a million.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You look like a snow maiden in those white
-clothes,&quot; Piggy Chambers was saying to Ruth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;Sweetheart, sweetheart, sweetheart,&#39;&quot; Elizabeth
-repeated to herself. &quot;&#39;I have never called you this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page137" id="page137"></a>[pg&nbsp;137]</span>
-and I have no right to call you so now.&#39;&quot; That
-was what her Buddy had written to Ruth Farraday,
-and Ruth Farraday, not knowing, was leaning back
-in Piggy Chambers&#39; great French car, and letting
-him tell her that she looked like a snow maiden.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My brother says that southern France is much
-more beautiful&mdash;<i>was</i> much more beautiful than
-England,&quot; she said aloud. &quot;He&mdash;he helped to break
-the Hindenburg Line, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did he?&quot; said Mr. Piggy Chambers, civilly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My&mdash;my father would have gone, I think, but
-he wasn&#39;t able to get away from his business.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If he was in the steel business, he would have
-been industrially exempted, anyway.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&mdash;he wouldn&#39;t have wanted to be industrially
-exempted,&quot; was on the tip of Elizabeth&#39;s tongue,
-but she remembered that she was talking to her host
-of the day. &quot;It won&#39;t get me very far to be ill-bred
-and impolite all of a sudden,&quot; she thought, sensibly.
-&quot;Mr. Piggy Chambers might just as well
-think that the members of our family are well brought
-up.&quot; Provincetown reminded Mr. Chambers a
-little of a Dutch fishing village, which he described
-at great length.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Anybody would think he had just discovered
-Abroad,&quot; Peggy scolded in an undertone. &quot;Ruth
-likes all that travelogue stuff, because she was so
-crazy to get there and couldn&#39;t. Now we are going
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id="page138"></a>[pg&nbsp;138]</span>
-to get out and walk, I am thankful to say, but if he
-tries to lose us, don&#39;t let him, that&#39;s all!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. Chambers did try to lose them. He tried
-bribing them with ice-cream and they took the ice-cream,
-but consumed it in time to join the two before
-they had strolled more than three blocks. He suggested
-that the chauffeur take the two girls in the
-car to examine the Truro lights a mile or two back
-from the course over which they had just come, while
-he and Miss Ruth strolled along the shore.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d rather stay here with Ruthie,&quot; Peggy insisted,
-flatly, and Elizabeth could not determine whether
-Ruth was pleased or displeased, for she made no display
-of either emotion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If she wanted us to go, I think perhaps she would
-say so, but I don&#39;t know. Grown-up girls don&#39;t seem
-to think they can say what they mean, the way
-children do,&quot; she thought.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Presently they were all walking along the beach,
-and Elizabeth found herself walking with Ruth,
-though she could not tell exactly how it had come
-about. No one seemed to have planned to pair off
-in that way. It just happened, though both Peggy
-and Mr. Chambers seemed to be very much dissatisfied
-with the arrangement.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Buddy would love a day like this,&quot; Elizabeth
-said. &quot;He&#39;s shut up in that old hospital, you know,
-and he can&#39;t get out till he gets better, and he can&#39;t
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page139" id="page139"></a>[pg&nbsp;139]</span>
-get better till he gets out. I want to get him down
-to the Cape, where I can take care of him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You must be very worried about him,&quot; Ruth
-said. &quot;I didn&#39;t even know that he wasn&#39;t discharged
-or anything about him, until Peggy found out all
-these things through you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s been too sick to write much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He writes to you, doesn&#39;t he?&quot; Ruth said, so
-very carelessly that Elizabeth&#39;s heart sank.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, he does. He says that I&#39;m the only girl that
-answers his letters whether he writes to them or not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Does he expect to have girls write to him that
-he doesn&#39;t take the trouble to inform of his whereabouts?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think he would be very pleased if they did.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why should they?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why&mdash;why shouldn&#39;t they?&quot; Elizabeth stammered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s probably devoted to dozens of girls,&quot; Ruth
-said, lightly, &quot;all waiting for a personal word from
-him. He&#39;s probably quite a Lothario, only little
-sisters aren&#39;t supposed to know that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t exactly remember what a Lothario is,&quot;
-Elizabeth said, &quot;but if you mean that he&#39;s a flirt and
-I don&#39;t know it, you&#39;re just awfully mistaken. I
-know things about Buddy that nobody else knows,
-that he doesn&#39;t even know that I know. I know what
-he&#39;s like, too, inside.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page140" id="page140"></a>[pg&nbsp;140]</span>
-&quot;You think he&#39;s very nice inside, don&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes,&quot; said Elizabeth, a little hostilely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;ll tell you a secret,&quot; said Ruth Farraday,
-still very lightly and gayly. &quot;I do, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then why&mdash;why do you go to Provincetown and
-things with Mr. Piggy Chambers?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr&mdash;Mr. <i>who</i>? Really, that&#39;s too bad of Peggy.
-I&#39;ll have to speak to her.&quot; Ruth Farraday seemed
-to have a sudden little coating of ice all over her.
-&quot;Would you mind telling Peggy that I want to speak
-to her alone a minute?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth obeyed meekly and so miserably that
-Mr. Chambers, at whose side she lingered, since there
-was nothing to do but take Peggy&#39;s place with him,
-asked her what was wrong.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m not feeling very well,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;the
-sun is so bright.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I find her rather bright myself,&quot; Mr. Piggy
-Chambers murmured. &quot;Would you like to do me
-a great favour?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, yes, indeed,&quot; Elizabeth said, untruthfully.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you take Miss Peggy and go back to the
-drug store where you had your ice-cream, and buy
-a five-pound box of the very best chocolates they
-have? If they haven&#39;t a five-pound box, get five
-one-pound boxes. Just use your own judgment
-about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will,&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;of course, Peggy might
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id="page141"></a>[pg&nbsp;141]</span>
-not want to go. She&mdash;I&mdash;we don&#39;t care very much
-about chocolates.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But Ruth does,&quot; said Mr. Chambers, decisively.
-&quot;I should very much appreciate it, and we&#39;ll come
-along and pick you up presently. You might like
-some more ice-cream.&quot; He slipped a five-dollar
-bill into her hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He asked me if I would do him a great favour,&quot;
-Elizabeth explained to the protesting Peggy, as they
-turned toward the quaint street on which the little
-shops were set, &quot;and I couldn&#39;t say no, could I? I
-couldn&#39;t say, &#39;Thank you for your lovely ride, but
-I don&#39;t feel obliging.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I just wish he&#39;d asked me. I would have said
-&#39;No!&#39; right out. Sister has been giving me fits because
-you told her that I called him Piggy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth&#39;s eyes filled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m not blaming you. I know you didn&#39;t spill
-the beans on purpose. I just wanted to know how it
-happened.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I just called him that. That&#39;s all,&quot; Elizabeth
-said, miserably.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, don&#39;t you care, darling,&quot; Peggy advised.
-&quot;Ruth was only upset about something else, and
-wanted to take it out on me. It will serve her right
-if Mr. Hoggy Chambers proposes while we&#39;re gone. I
-promised her I wouldn&#39;t call him Piggy any more.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think he means to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id="page142"></a>[pg&nbsp;142]</span>
-&quot;Well, if he does, I wonder what he&#39;ll say. Love
-me and the world is mine. I guess that&#39;s about what
-he will say. The world is my oyster and I&#39;ll let you
-keep it in your stew, if you&#39;ll be good.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Piggy Chambers,&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;Oh!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If she says &#39;yes&#39; to that freak, I&#39;ll&mdash;I&#39;ll disown her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, let&#39;s not think of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There isn&#39;t much else I can think of,&quot; Elizabeth
-said. &quot;Oh, but look! Sixty-four, sixty-five. Those
-are black Portuguese, and they count.&quot; Two
-swarthy fishermen in bright blouses were passing
-them on the narrow street.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ve caught up with me,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;I
-was four ahead of you for a long time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We&#39;ll probably get them all just in time to shake
-hands with Tommy Robbins and Billy Dean.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I won&#39;t,&quot; said Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You might have to,&quot; Elizabeth argued. &quot;Supposing
-we were going away and they came to say
-good-bye, and held out their hands to shake hands.
-We&#39;d have to shake them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d say I had a sore finger.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We couldn&#39;t both say we had sore fingers. Besides,
-they could see we hadn&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We might both have lame wrists, if we had been
-doing the same thing, rowing or playing tennis.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It would look rather suspicious.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wouldn&#39;t it be better to look a little suspicious
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id="page143"></a>[pg&nbsp;143]</span>
-than to tie yourself up for life that way, or run the
-chance of it? I know who you want to shake hands
-with. That Reynolds boy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t want to shake hands with anybody,&quot;
-Peggy said. &quot;We may like Tom and Bill a good deal
-better before the summer is over, though.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They really are quite nice,&quot; Elizabeth reflected.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Chambers is trying to get us to ride home
-in the front seat, with the chauffeur. He says the
-front seat is the most comfortable in the car, and
-was designed for three. I told him I&#39;d think it over.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t see what difference it makes now. He&#39;s
-talking to her alone, anyway.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think it&#39;s a terrible responsibility. They are
-both old enough to be married, and they ought to
-be old enough to know just what they want to do,
-instead of keeping a couple of kids&mdash;I mean children&mdash;worried
-to death all the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think Mr. Chambers knows what he wants to
-do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, but he ought to know better than to keep
-bothering a girl that doesn&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth and Peggy managed to eat a plate of
-ice-cream apiece in spite of their dejection, but Elizabeth
-steadfastly refused to break Mr. Chambers&#39;
-five-dollar bill, even to pay for the five pounds of
-candy she purchased for him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He can pay me the way he would a grown-up
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page144" id="page144"></a>[pg&nbsp;144]</span>
-person,&quot; she said. &quot;I prefer to buy our own ice-cream,
-and do his errands on a strictly business basis.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My goodness,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;I feel as if we had
-suffered enough, without having to buy our own refreshments.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They rode with the chauffeur only a part of the
-way home, because when they had travelled twenty
-miles of the forty between the tip and the elbow of
-the crooked right arm of Massachusetts a tire gave
-way and they all stepped out of the car and took a
-walk in the woods while they were waiting for repairs
-to be made.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. Chambers and Ruth slipped into a thread of
-a path going in the opposite direction from that
-taken by the two girls, but evidently made a detour
-and turned again toward them, for the moment in
-silence. When they heard the sound of voices just
-beyond Peggy put her finger to her lips.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am the kind of man who always gets what he
-wants,&quot; Mr. Chambers was saying. &quot;You won&#39;t
-give me the chance to tell you what I want, but you
-know pretty well what it is, and I think you know
-that I am going to get it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; said Ruth Farraday.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You know that I want you to marry me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I know that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You know that I love you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I don&#39;t know much about love.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>[pg&nbsp;145]</span>
-&quot;I can teach you,&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nobody can teach me anything that I can&#39;t find
-out for myself. If I don&#39;t know what this&mdash;this
-feeling people call Love is, from the inside, nobody
-can come and throw it over me, like a cloak.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oughtn&#39;t we to stuff our fingers in our ears?&quot;
-Elizabeth pantomimed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; Peggy shook her head, fiercely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wrapping it around you like a cloak is just what
-I should like to do. I should like to keep you warm
-and comfortable for the rest of your life.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And happy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know I could make you happy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Warmth comes from within, doesn&#39;t it? You
-wouldn&#39;t want an icicle of a woman.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am not afraid that you would be an icicle.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy was showing strong signs of disgust, but
-Elizabeth was listening with parted lips and shining
-eyes. She had forgotten that she was eavesdropping,
-forgotten everything except that Buddy&#39;s girl did
-not want to give up her chance of learning something
-that Buddy could teach her. She expected the next
-words when they came.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I would be an icicle&mdash;to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The suitor did not seem to realize the significance of
-this statement.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All I want is a chance to melt the icicle,&quot; he said,
-complacently.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>[pg&nbsp;146]</span>
-&quot;Goop!&quot; said Peggy in a loud whisper. Then she
-sneezed, but fortunately the speakers had passed far
-enough beyond to confuse the sound with the general
-blend of forest sounds, the whirring of wings in the
-underbrush, or the rustling in the trees overhead.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess he thought I was a startled quail,&quot;
-Peggy said, &quot;though I wouldn&#39;t have cared much if
-he had found me. I never heard such silliness, did
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t think it was silliness,&quot; Elizabeth said.
-&quot;It was quite a lot the way people talk in books, you
-know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It wasn&#39;t really mushy,&quot; Peggy agreed, &quot;only
-sort of peculiar. Well, I guess I am not going to
-have a new brother-in-law right away. Still, I
-notice she&#39;s keeping a string tied to him, just the
-same.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When they got back into the car Ruth suggested
-that the girls take the folding seats in the tonneau
-again, and Mr. Chambers quietly acquiesced in this
-arrangement. As they took their places Peggy
-gave her friend the benefit of a long, significant wink,
-and then subsided into the silence that encompassed
-them all during the remainder of the long drive home.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id="page147"></a>[pg&nbsp;147]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Little Eva</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">I come to tell you that my mother&#39;s sick,&quot;
-Moses said. &quot;She&#39;s hollering something awful.
-She said to tell Miss Laury Ann, but I can&#39;t
-find her nowhere.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s out with Grandfather,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;and I don&#39;t know when she&#39;ll be back.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Maybe Marmer&#39;ll be dead by that time. She&#39;s
-kind of turned green already.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She can&#39;t be going to die.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I arsked her was she going to die, and she said she
-guessed she was. I dunno nothing about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll go home with you,&quot; Elizabeth resolved suddenly.
-&quot;I&#39;ll get Judidy, and we&#39;ll go and see what we
-can do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Marmer didn&#39;t tell me to get no girls,&quot; Moses said,
-doubtfully, &quot;she told me to get Miss Laury Ann.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll be better than nobody, Moses.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, if you do come over to my house, I ain&#39;t
-agoing to wear no bloomer suit.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I shan&#39;t expect you to,&quot; Elizabeth said, hastily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Judidy was nowhere to be found, so leaving word
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id="page148"></a>[pg&nbsp;148]</span>
-with Zeckal, the good-natured hired man, to send
-either Judidy or her grandmother to the rescue as
-soon as possible, Elizabeth followed Moses to the
-tumbledown little red house that was his home. On
-an old horsehair sofa in the middle of the kitchen,
-which was the first room they entered, a young
-woman with her blonde hair straggling into blue eyes
-swimming with pain was lying in a huddled heap.
-In the middle of the floor was a wash-tub full of dirty
-water and half-submerged, grimy garments.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was trying to git some washing done when the
-pain struck me,&quot; a weak voice said. &quot;I ain&#39;t in no
-condition to receive visitors.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t come to visit,&quot; Elizabeth said, gently. &quot;I
-came to help.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A spasm of pain racked the sick woman. Elizabeth
-was down on her knees beside her in an instant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;re all corseted up!&quot; she said. &quot;I&#39;m going to
-rip these things off,&quot; for under the trailing, ragged
-garments that overlaid Mrs. Steppe she was wearing
-a corset like a board. Elizabeth tore at the strings
-until she released her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You shouldn&#39;t lace like that,&quot; she said, in horror.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t lace,&quot; the sick woman breathed, &quot;my
-waist is only&mdash;eighteen&mdash;inches&mdash;around. It&#39;s naturally&mdash;small.
-I guess if I could only get a little
-hot water to drink I would feel better.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth found a one-wick kerosene stove so
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>[pg&nbsp;149]</span>
-begrimed and choked with soot that she could
-scarcely light the sputtering wick, but thanks to her
-recent investigations in her grandmother&#39;s kitchen,
-she was able to heat a little water over it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A month ago I didn&#39;t even know there was such
-a thing as a one-wick kerosene stove,&quot; she thought.
-She caught sight of what at first glance looked like a
-small gray animal on the floor under the table. &quot;It&#39;s
-nothing but a piece of moldy bread, the kind that
-poor Madget was afraid would crawl out on her. Oh,
-dear!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where are the little girls?&quot; she asked, as the
-sufferer sat up and drank the steaming water in the
-cracked blue cup that was the only china receptacle
-of any kind that Elizabeth could find.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wasn&#39;t able to get them any breakfast, so they
-went out to see if they could pick some blue berries.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Madget is so little she ought to have milk in the
-morning.&quot; Elizabeth could not refrain from making
-this superfluous suggestion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Milk sours so.&quot; The spasm of pain that attacked
-her was of longer duration this time. Elizabeth
-began rubbing the afflicted area, and calling to
-Moses, who presently appeared, and gazed at his
-mother speculatively as she winced and writhed in
-agony.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Go and get a doctor, Moses. Any doctor you
-know about.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id="page150"></a>[pg&nbsp;150]</span>
-&quot;I don&#39;t believe in doctors,&quot; Mrs. Steppe
-breathed. &quot;I&mdash;I believe in spirit healing. Get a
-medium.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You get a doctor, Moses,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;Tell
-him that I&mdash;Captain John Swift&#39;s granddaughter&mdash;will
-settle the bill.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, all right,&quot; Moses said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know much about mediums,&quot; she explained
-to the sick woman, &quot;but I know that a doctor
-would be able to help you right away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I don&#39;t believe in medical healing,&quot; the woman
-moaned, &quot;but if you want to spend your money that
-way&mdash;the last time&mdash;I had a sick spell, Mis&#39; Abithy
-Hawes, she&#39;s a fine medium, she&mdash;come here and went
-into a trance&mdash;and had me cured in half an&mdash;hour.
-No doctor&mdash;could do&mdash;do like that. Her control
-is&mdash;Little Eva.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t try to talk,&quot; Elizabeth said, mystified.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The next half hour was one that she remembered
-all her life. The spasms of pain increased. Elizabeth&#39;s
-experience of acute illness was so limited that
-she earnestly believed she had a dying woman on her
-hands. Madget and Mabel came in whimpering and
-hungry, and Madget cried steadily and consistently
-from the moment when she caught her first glimpse of
-her mother&#39;s tortured face. Mrs. Steppe continued
-to call for Mis&#39; Abithy Hawes, and Elizabeth finally
-thought of sending Mabel to look for that lady.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>[pg&nbsp;151]</span>
-Mabel returned from this quest with amazing
-promptitude.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She had her hands in the flour dough,&quot; Mabel
-explained, &quot;and she can&#39;t come. She sent word
-that she couldn&#39;t have no trances till she got
-her work done up, and then she&#39;d see. She give me
-a cookie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you explain to her how sick your mother
-was?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, she said she couldn&#39;t have no trances now.
-She said Little Eva was cranky to-day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">By the time Moses appeared, with the word
-that the doctor would follow him shortly, Elizabeth
-was at the limit of her endurance and her
-ingenuity. She had been heating water in a leaky
-lard pail, and stripping off her own white petticoat to
-make hot compresses to relieve the increasing pain
-of her patient, quieting the ubiquitous Madget for a
-few seconds at a time only to provoke the din again
-as soon as she set her down from her lap; and trying
-in the intervals to reduce the slovenly room to something
-like order.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is she dead yet?&quot; Moses inquired, solemnly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth shook her head.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Moses, dear,&quot; she said, &quot;you mustn&#39;t talk like
-that. It&#39;s unfeeling.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; he said with unexpected docility, &quot;I
-won&#39;t. I just wanted to make some plans, that&#39;s all.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>[pg&nbsp;152]</span>
-I thought I might come to live with you, if Marmer
-died.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth put her arms around the forlorn little
-figure.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She isn&#39;t going to die,&quot; she said, &quot;at least, I don&#39;t
-think she is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you can&#39;t tell,&quot; said Moses, skeptically.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The doctor, who proved to be a portly being with a
-red beard and the kindest eyes Elizabeth had ever
-seen, as she told Peggy afterward, explained that the
-seizure was nothing more serious than neuralgia
-complicated with a slight gastric attack.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lack of nourishment, lack of exercise, lack of any
-sort of proper care for mind or body,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is neuralgia?&quot; Elizabeth asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Starved nerves in revolt is one way of putting
-it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought she had appendicitis or pleurisy or
-something.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She has nothing that a week&#39;s care won&#39;t
-bring her out of. If she isn&#39;t looked out for at
-least for that length of time the trouble is likely to
-increase. There isn&#39;t anybody to take care of her, is
-there?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, there is nobody but me,&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The doctor looked at her under quizzical eyebrows
-with an expression that reminded her of her grandfather.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>[pg&nbsp;153]</span>
-&quot;Give her this medicine regularly,&quot; he said, as if he
-found nothing remarkable in her statement, &quot;and
-see that she has three nourishing meals a day and
-keep her quiet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s easier to keep her quiet when you are here,&quot;
-Elizabeth said, indicating the awestruck Madget,
-Moses, and Mabel, who stood in a respectful row, at a
-respectful distance from the great man.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I understand these children are always quiet when
-they&#39;re asleep or when the doctor comes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;the better they feel that
-they know you the more noise they make. They
-treat me like an old friend now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I used to live in New York myself,&quot; the doctor
-observed, &quot;and I miss it a good deal more than most
-people suspect. I know all about you, you see. I
-know pretty well all the news of the comings and
-goings in town.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;re a New Yorker, and yet you stay down here
-all the year round,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;I don&#39;t see
-how you can, if you really liked New York.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I liked New York,&quot; he said, &quot;but you can&#39;t be a
-country doctor on Broadway. I&#39;d rather take care
-of these people than those.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, why?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They need it more,&quot; he said, simply. &quot;In a big
-city you don&#39;t get the same chance to find out what
-people do need. It isn&#39;t always sick bodies a doctor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>[pg&nbsp;154]</span>
-is called in to look out for, you know. A doctor
-down here has to be a kind of a lawyer and a justice of
-the peace and a plumber, into the bargain. In New
-York he doesn&#39;t get that kind of an opportunity.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That seems a funny kind of thing to call an opportunity,
-I think.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is one, though,&quot; the doctor said. &quot;Where is
-these children&#39;s father?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s on a coal barge. He only gets home once
-in a while.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He must make pretty good money.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He does, only she&mdash;&quot; Elizabeth, who had
-walked to the door with him, and was standing just
-outside it as they talked, indicated the woman in the
-room beyond&mdash;&quot;spends it on candy and novels and
-things, and then he gets discouraged, and doesn&#39;t
-send it to her, or drinks.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, call me again if you need me. No, I won&#39;t
-send you the bill. There isn&#39;t any bill. I&#39;m paid
-already.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I hope he didn&#39;t mean that it paid him just to
-see me here doing good,&quot; Elizabeth thought, when
-she realized that that was what he did mean. &quot;I
-don&#39;t want him thinking I&#39;m always looking after the
-poor when this is the first time I ever did it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The children crowded around her when the doctor
-left.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your mother is going to be well in a week,&quot; she
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>[pg&nbsp;155]</span>
-told Moses. &quot;I&#39;m going to wash your face, Mabel&mdash;and
-Madget, if you don&#39;t stop crying, do you know
-what I&#39;m going to do to you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Spank me!&quot; wailed Madget.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I&#39;m not. I&#39;m going to kiss you, but I guess
-it would be more to the purpose to feed you. What
-does your mother make oatmeal in when she makes
-it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She don&#39;t make none,&quot; Mabel said. &quot;Can you
-make oatmeal?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I could follow the directions on the package, I
-guess. I can make cake.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want some cake,&quot; cried Madget, promptly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth was trying to get some water &quot;boiling,
-foaming, scalding hot,&quot; according to directions, when
-Judidy appeared at the door, her moon face beaming
-over various pails and packages.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Land o&#39; Liberty!&quot; she said. &quot;You up here
-a-tending the sick, and me out skylarking with my
-feller. I brought some milk and sandwiches for the
-children. I guess she ain&#39;t sick much, is she?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m dretful sick, Judidy,&quot; a voice from the couch
-said, weakly; &quot;I had the doctor.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought you was a spiritualist, and didn&#39;t
-believe in no medicine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t believe that no doctor could doctor me as
-well as Little Eva could, but Mis&#39; Hawes she couldn&#39;t
-come. I was too sick to depend on a contrary control,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id="page156"></a>[pg&nbsp;156]</span>
-so we called the doctor, and he left me some
-kinder dark stuff to take, and some light-coloured
-pills that&#39;s kind o&#39; quieting.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Do</i> tell,&quot; said Judidy, politely. &quot;Now you
-drink to where I&#39;ve got my finger,&quot; she instructed
-Madget, as she held out the milk bottle, which
-the children were trying to reach, &quot;then Mabel,
-then&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pour a little out in this cup, and I&#39;ll feed Madget
-myself,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;I guess the other children
-had better drink out of the bottle.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Judidy looked at Elizabeth admiringly as she
-lifted the little girl on her lap.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My, ain&#39;t you a pretty picture,&quot; she said, heartily.
-&quot;You was just as stuck up, when you first came,
-with your ideas about having a demi-tassy after you
-had et, and laffing at the pump in the kitchen, and
-never eating anything between meals, and to see
-you now, a-taking up with the town&#39;s poor as if
-they was own relations.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you call us town&#39;s poor,&quot; Mrs. Steppe
-said, sitting up suddenly, and then falling back with
-a groan. &quot;I ain&#39;t never been called such a name,
-Judidy Eldredge.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You just lay still,&quot; Judidy said, &quot;and don&#39;t you
-worry. I&#39;ll stay now, Elizabeth, and you can go
-home and get ready for your dinner. It&#39;s a lucky
-thing I had it all arranged to have a day off on account
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>[pg&nbsp;157]</span>
-of my feller being home. Miss Laury Ann
-she told me to send you as soon as I got here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I don&#39;t want you to have to lose a day with
-your&mdash;feller,&quot; Elizabeth said, trying not to be guilty
-of the rudeness of correcting Judidy&#39;s pronunciation.
-&quot;I&#39;ll come back as soon as Grandma will let me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget began to whimper as she set her down, but
-Moses assured her that if his marmer died, he would
-&quot;come over there right away and tell her about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know whatever makes him so pleased to
-think of my dying,&quot; his mother said, plaintively,
-&quot;he has never known anybody that died or anything,
-if he is always burying birds with regular funeral
-preaching.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He doesn&#39;t want you to die,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;he
-just gets ideas in his mind.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, they aren&#39;t very cheerful ideas for a sick
-woman to hear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, they aren&#39;t,&quot; Elizabeth agreed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If I can get Mis&#39; Hawes over here, Little Eva
-will tell me if I&#39;m going to die. I&#39;d like to lick Moses
-once, anyway, whether I&#39;m going to die or not.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think anybody could &#39;a&#39; done any better,&quot;
-her grandmother said, when she told her the story.
-&quot;Hot compresses is the thing that always relieves
-pain, and what the whole situation needed was somebody
-to take charge and send for the doctor. You
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id="page158"></a>[pg&nbsp;158]</span>
-was a pretty brave, practical girl, I should say. The
-Swifts always had good contrivance, and come out
-strong when there was anything real to be done.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think that I managed so very well. The
-children kept crying and I couldn&#39;t stop them, and
-Mrs. Steppe kept asking for a medium that I couldn&#39;t
-get for her. What does she mean by Little Eva being
-Mrs. Hawes&#39; control?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To her surprise her grandmother began to laugh,
-and laughed until the tears ran down her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose it <i>is</i> funny,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;but I
-never thought of it that way. I suppose it&#39;s funny
-about Moses keeping on asking if his mother was
-going to die, but it didn&#39;t seem funny at the time, it
-just seemed queer and&mdash;and awfully hard to manage.
-I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&quot; to her chagrin, her lip began to tremble.
-&quot;What&mdash;what is a control, anyway?&quot; she wailed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It ain&#39;t nothing that you got to bother with just
-at present,&quot; her grandmother said, &quot;you come here.&quot;
-She sank into one of the numerous valanced rockers
-conveniently placed about the house, and held out
-her arms. &quot;You come here&mdash;to Grandma,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ll think I&#39;m an awful baby,&quot; Elizabeth
-sobbed on the comfortable bosom, snuggling a little
-closer in the protecting embrace. &quot;It isn&#39;t so much
-what I&#39;ve done that I mind, but what I&#39;ve got to do.
-It isn&#39;t very brave of me, but I dread taking care of
-that awful woman for a whole week. She&mdash;she
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>[pg&nbsp;159]</span>
-isn&#39;t very grateful, or anything. She&#39;d rather have
-a medium. But&mdash;but the children&mdash;they love me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth,&quot; her grandmother said, &quot;I ain&#39;t
-a-going to let you go there for any week.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But it&#39;s my duty, Grandmother. You aren&#39;t
-going to stop me doing my duty, are you? You
-can&#39;t spare Judidy, and there isn&#39;t anybody else.
-There aren&#39;t any real servants or charity organization
-societies here. I don&#39;t see what there is to do
-but just what Doctor Hartly does, go around and be
-anything that the people need you for.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You can&#39;t be all things to all men, Elizabeth,&quot;
-her grandmother said, sagely. &quot;If you can be like
-that Holland boy I&#39;ve heard tell of, that put his hand
-through a hole in the wall and kept the water from
-destroying a whole town, that&#39;s one thing, but the
-kind of a hole that the water&#39;ll roll through forever,
-the minute you take your arm out, is another. The
-Steppe family is going to be in need of any person&#39;s
-full strength as long as Mis&#39; Steppe continues to
-breathe, and we can&#39;t wish anybody&#39;s breath to stop,
-in spite of Moses. The best you can do for any set
-o&#39; people in that condition is just what you went
-and done to-day. Look out for &#39;em when they get
-way down, give &#39;em what extry strength and vittles
-you got at all times, but don&#39;t try to lift &#39;em up unless
-you can lift &#39;em all the way out. Mis&#39; Steppe will
-always sag back from her own weight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page160" id="page160"></a>[pg&nbsp;160]</span>
-&quot;Oh, dear,&quot; Elizabeth sighed. &quot;Don&#39;t you think
-she could be reformed?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She might, and then again she mightn&#39;t. I
-should say she couldn&#39;t be. She&#39;s always trying to
-get something for nothing, that woman is. This
-business of getting a medium to get her control to
-fix up things she&#39;s too lazy to fix for herself that&#39;s
-Mis&#39; Steppe all over.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But what is a control?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A control is a spirit guide that takes possession
-of a medium when she goes into a trance. Somebody
-that has lived and died, usually somebody
-kind o&#39; tricky, that has a hard time getting into communication
-with whoever &#39;tis they want to talk to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But that&#39;s just pure faking, isn&#39;t it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know whether &#39;tis or not. I don&#39;t understand
-it. My idea is, never to make too light of a
-thing that I don&#39;t understand.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t think there is a Little Eva, do you,
-Grandma?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I don&#39;t, but Mis&#39; Hawes does.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shouldn&#39;t think there was anything to do but
-laugh at Little Eva.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So wouldn&#39;t anybody, first off, but spiritualism
-is some people&#39;s religion. It ain&#39;t mine, but in general
-it ain&#39;t a good idea to laugh at anybody&#39;s religion,
-not even the cannibals&#39;.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What shall we do about the Steppes, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>[pg&nbsp;161]</span>
-&quot;I&#39;m going to get Judidy&#39;s sister to go over there
-and stay what she can. What she can&#39;t, you and
-me and Judidy&#39;ll make up between us. We&#39;ll have
-a kind of general care of &#39;em till they get out o&#39; this
-particular patch o&#39; woods. Then they&#39;ll have to go
-on their own gait again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It does seem sort of awful, not to really do anything.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, it does, but the thing to do is to keep people
-like that in the back of your mind, and when any
-chance comes that might benefit &#39;em, not to be too
-lazy to pass it along. I&#39;m kind of arguing with your
-grandfather about taking Moses to come and live
-with us. I ain&#39;t pushing the matter, but kind o&#39;
-working along easy. I&#39;ve got an idea of getting Mis&#39;
-Steppe interested in a different class o&#39; books. Any
-woman that&#39;ll get the notion out of a book that she
-can wear a eighteen-inch corset around her waist
-under her rags and stick to it can get some other
-more practical notion through her head in time.
-Anyhow, that&#39;s one thing to work on. I ain&#39;t very
-hopeful, but I thought of it. I keep at the Steppes,
-and little by little I hope to get something accomplished.
-I see that the children is fed up about once
-a day anyway, but I don&#39;t stick my wrist through
-the hole o&#39; their shiftlessness, I just bail out a little
-water as often as I can.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That <i>is</i> the way, isn&#39;t it?&quot; said Elizabeth. &quot;I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id="page162"></a>[pg&nbsp;162]</span>
-just thought I&#39;d have to go there and practically
-live for weeks. It&mdash;it seemed like a bottomless
-pit.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There ain&#39;t really no such thing as a bottomless
-pit,&quot; Grandmother said, sagely; &quot;there are only pits
-that we can&#39;t plumb the bottom of.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">She told the story of Elizabeth&#39;s activities to
-Grandfather that night and this time she did not
-laugh, even in recapitulating the difficulties the little
-girl had encountered in relation to Mrs. Steppe&#39;s
-religious convictions and her constant demand for
-Little Eva. On the contrary, she wiped her eyes
-quite openly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She was calculating to go there,&quot; she said, &quot;and
-take entire charge of that miserable Steppe family
-without any help from anybody, nurse that sick
-woman and feed those children for a week and longer
-if it was required of her. She would have done it,
-too, if I hadn&#39;t put a stop to it. I wish you could
-have seen that pretty, anxious little face, and those
-great eyes of hers brim full o&#39; tears but game as a
-fightin&#39; cock. I do wish you could have seen her,
-Father.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wish I could of,&quot; said Grandfather, gravely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Just one thought come into my mind as I set
-there talking to her, and it come so strong I almost
-up and said it aloud before I caught myself. I was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id="page163"></a>[pg&nbsp;163]</span>
-thinking o&#39; that first night she come, and the dejected
-way you sat in that chair there, after she had gone
-up to bed, and I said to myself, holding her there in
-my lap all exhausted and quivering, after a whole
-forenoon spent doing battle with the slothfulness of
-the Steppe family, &#39;Father Swift,&#39; I said to myself,
-&#39;what do you think o&#39; John&#39;s girl now?&#39; I said.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Didn&#39;t you hear what I spoke up and answered?
-Well, you couldn&#39;t &#39;a&#39; been listening very hard. When
-you said that, I had my answer ready to the dot. &#39;I
-think a whole lot better of her,&#39; that&#39;s what I said,
-&#39;and I have been doing so for some time back&#39;.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id="page164"></a>[pg&nbsp;164]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Buddy Wants to Know</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth had been to tea with the Farradays.
-The big, closed-in porch, which
-was practically their summer living room,
-gay with chintzes and strewn with all the appurtenances
-of luxurious modern existence, always gave her
-a little feeling of homesickness for the life to which she
-was used in town. The trim maid, quietly manipulating
-the tea wagon laden with the delicacies of the
-usual teatime meal, took on an almost pathetic
-glamour to the little exile.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. Chambers was in possession of the wicker
-chaise-longue. Ruth had poured tea with deft and
-dainty fingers, though she was unusually silent, even
-for her. Mrs. Farraday, who was as unlike Elizabeth&#39;s
-mother as it was possible for her to be, had yet,
-in a gown of blue linen, with rose-coloured net cuffs
-and neck piece, managed to suggest her vividly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy had behaved abominably. In intervals of
-passing cakes she had managed to get out of the line
-of vision and stand grimacing and contorting her
-face at Elizabeth. Usage demanded that Elizabeth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page165" id="page165"></a>[pg&nbsp;165]</span>
-return these impudent salutations in kind, and twice
-Peggy nearly made her do so.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I should have been mortified,&quot; she thought, &quot;if
-Mr. Piggy Chambers had caught me making faces,
-especially since I would naturally make that kind of
-faces about him, if it happened so. I guess Ruth
-would never speak to me again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can&#39;t help it,&quot; Peggy whispered, &quot;these tea
-fights on the veranda, with Piggy&mdash;I mean Hoggy&mdash;Chambers
-and Mother knitting as if she had just
-eaten the canary, and Ruthie saying nothing and
-sawing wood, and the other self-sufficient member
-of our little circle sitting there and owning the
-universe&mdash;they just make me wild. I feel as if
-I would like to get an Indian tomahawk and scalp
-&#39;em all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I like tea on your veranda, though,&quot; Elizabeth
-couldn&#39;t help admitting. &quot;Grandmother would
-think afternoon tea was ridiculous, and I am used
-to it in my own home. I&#39;m used to having my own
-mother around, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If your own mother were aiding and abetting the
-slaughter of your innocent sister,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;you
-might not feel so excruciatingly fond of her. I
-didn&#39;t make that remark all up. Father said it first.
-Our family is just completely mixed up over the whole
-affair. There&#39;s one ray of light. Ruthie isn&#39;t mushy
-about any of it. Only she makes me nervous.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id="page166"></a>[pg&nbsp;166]</span>
-&quot;I don&#39;t see how you can bear it at all,&quot; Elizabeth
-said. &quot;I can&#39;t, hardly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Can hardly, Miss Swift,&quot; Peggy mocked. &quot;You
-are more sensitive to things than I am, I guess. I
-throw &#39;em off after I&#39;ve howled for a while. My
-idea would be to fill Piggy&#39;s bed with flour and hair-brushes,
-or to stick a hair-pin in his tires. You&#39;d
-just give him mental treatment and take it awfully
-to heart.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess that&#39;s why we get on so well together.
-Opposites attract opposites.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If I were a man I think I should want to marry
-you, Elizabeth, but if I were a girl, I don&#39;t think I
-should want to be just like you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s not very flattering, because you are a girl
-already, and you couldn&#39;t be a man if you wanted to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I mean for myself I would like to be like you.
-You take things harder than I do. I can always go
-out and punch something.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There never seems to be anything I can punch,&quot;
-said poor Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy had walked with her as far as her own gate,
-and then she had gone in to get her belated morning
-mail. She had been so sure that there was no one to
-write to her until she had answered the letters with
-which her portfolio was stuffed that she had neglected
-to go to the post office as usual. She found, however,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id="page167"></a>[pg&nbsp;167]</span>
-a long letter from her brother and one from her
-mother. Buddy wrote:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Little Sister</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I am going to take you into my confidence in an important
-matter because, well, there is nobody else that I can ask any help
-of. You needn&#39;t get peeved at this way of putting it, because it
-stands to reason that if you weren&#39;t a pretty reliable little sport
-I wouldn&#39;t trust you. I don&#39;t have to. I only do.&mdash;Hope to
-die, and cross your heart?&mdash;Thank you.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Well, the thing is, I want to know something about Ruth
-Farraday. For reasons of my own I haven&#39;t been writing to
-her. Now, I might like to write to her once or twice, a friendly
-little note, you understand. A fellow gets so doggone lonesome.
-They won&#39;t let me go until they&#39;re satisfied I&#39;m fixed up. How
-you are going to fix up a fellow who has got some of the things
-I&#39;ve got the matter with me, I don&#39;t know. They think it&#39;s
-shell shock, among other things. Well, among other things, it
-isn&#39;t shell shock, it&#39;s&mdash;&mdash;Oh, well, it isn&#39;t shell shock. It&#39;s
-darned old discouragement, and homesickness for the things that
-never were on land or sea. That&#39;s poetry, my darling sister. I
-have some of that in my system, too.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Well, I&#39;ve been here alone so long that I want to know everything&mdash;<i>everything</i>
-about the people I care about. Ruth
-Farraday is one that I do care something about. She was
-mighty nice to me before I went to be a soldier. I think she
-would have been nicer if I had worked it around to get a commission
-instead of just plain enlisting, but this is only just conjecture.
-She is a beautiful girl, and her heart is in the right place wherever
-it is, but Sister, that&#39;s what I want to know. You&#39;re fooling
-around with the Farradays so much, you ought to get some line
-on this. I don&#39;t want to be idiot enough to start the poor, sick
-old friend stuff, <i>if</i> she&#39;s got her mind all off me or anybody that
-looks like me, and on somebody that doesn&#39;t. Does she wear a
-ring, and is she reported to be free or <i>cinched</i>, or <i>what</i>?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I can&#39;t stand not knowing any longer. That&#39;s the point. I
-may have been a darn fool in the way I&#39;ve warned you against
-talking to her about me. I&#39;ve just had all these notions one after
-another, kind of feverishly. I&#39;m going to write to her if you advise
-me to. Don&#39;t go making up anything. Tell me the truth.
-I&#39;ve got to know it, Kid. I&#39;m just all in&mdash;that&#39;s all.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Buddy</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">She opened her Mothers letter with eyes so full of
-tears she could scarcely distinguish its import.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Elizabeth Dear</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It is getting harder and harder to be away from you, especially
-since there is no immediate hope of Buddy&#39;s release. The poor
-boy doesn&#39;t get better. It is difficult to understand all the intricacies
-of the doctor&#39;s diagnosis. New conditions of warfare and
-of life breed new conditions of disease, physical and mental, he
-says, as well as new kinds of wounds and injuries, to be patiently
-handled by the new medicine and surgery. To a mother&#39;s eye,
-Buddy seems to be suffering from an old-fashioned set of causes
-and effects. But I don&#39;t know. All I know is that Buddy is not
-getting better, and that he has to be handled more carefully than
-ever. Elizabeth, dear, let me warn you again to be careful what
-you write him. He looks forward to your letters with the greatest
-interest, and yet when they come, to be perfectly frank, they
-often seem to fret him or to make him irritable. Perhaps you
-had best not mention your friends the Farradays. He used to
-know Ruth Farraday quite well, and sometimes the mention of
-these boys and girls that he used to have so many gay times with
-seems to make him morose. At other times he likes to look back
-at things he used to do. He is only a little boy, after all.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>[pg&nbsp;169]</span>
-Twenty-three doesn&#39;t seem much more to me than fourteen does,
-in spite of that stern look he has that all the men who have
-done any real fighting seem to come back with.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">My darling, take care of your health. Don&#39;t go out in all
-weathers without being suitably attired for cold or wet, as the
-case may be. Your letters are a great comfort to me. You
-are good to help Grandmother so much. She appreciates it, and
-so does</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Mother</span>.</p>
-
-<p>P. S. I wish I might have tasted that cake you made.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Mother,&quot; Elizabeth cried. &quot;Oh, you can&#39;t
-help me the least little bit in this, can you? What is
-the best thing for me to do for my Buddy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She tried to talk with her grandmother, very carefully,
-for fear of betraying Buddy&#39;s confidence, but
-for once her grandmother did not help her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It isn&#39;t a very good idea for little girls to think
-too much about such things,&quot; she said. &quot;Love is a
-mystery. One heart kinder gets clinging to another
-heart, and nobody knows how it all come about, or
-how to stop it. When your time comes it is about
-like your time coming to die or be born, and you can
-only pray that it ain&#39;t going to be too hard, with
-anybody concerned in it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, Grandmother, if you loved anybody and you
-were a man, and&mdash;and didn&#39;t tell her so because you
-were poor or anything, and she was all mixed up
-with somebody else, and&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>[pg&nbsp;170]</span>
-&quot;Well, I ain&#39;t going to be called on to be a man just
-at present,&quot; Grandmother said, &quot;and I guess that&#39;s
-just as well, for anybody that&#39;s got to make blueberry
-cake and biscuits for supper. Your grandfather is
-going to Hyannis to get a watermelon, perhaps you&#39;d
-like to go with him for the ride.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I would, only I&#39;ve got to write a letter to Buddy.
-He&mdash;he wants me to write him right away about
-something.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, give him Grandma&#39;s love and tell him to
-come down to the old place and get well.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m going to write Buddy just the way I would
-want to be written to if I was in love with Ruth
-Farraday,&quot; Elizabeth decided, &quot;only I am going to
-remember that he is sick. Supposing I was sick and
-supposing I was in trouble about something that was
-making me sicker, how would I want to be written
-to? Oh, dear Lord,&quot; she said, closing her eyes,
-suddenly, &quot;help me to write that kind of a letter and
-to get it right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She climbed the stairs slowly and opened the desk
-in her little room. The sisters Faith, Hope, and
-Charity smiled benignly down at her, as she began
-to write:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Buddy</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Cross my heart and hope to die. I am quite a lot more grown
-up than I was when you knew me, and I understand the sacredness
-of confidences as I didn&#39;t at that time. You don&#39;t need
-to worry about trusting me. I love Ruth Farraday very much,
-and I should think anybody might.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Well, she is not a happy girl. There is a man called Mr. Piggy
-Chambers&mdash;that is what Peggy calls him, anyway&mdash;who is
-in love with her and asked her to marry him. I heard him that
-day that I went to Provincetown with him in his car. I did not
-tell you that I went to Provincetown with him, because I do not
-like him anyway, and I did not want you to think I would go
-motoring with a man like that. The fact was that I went to
-chaperone him and her. Well, she told him that he could not
-teach her love because she would be an icicle to him, and she said
-she did not know much about love anyway, but he insisted, to no
-purpose. I ought to have stuffed my ears, and so had Peggy,
-but some way we didn&#39;t.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The only drawback is that he is around the place all the time,
-and does not seem to be discouraged in any way. Peggy is
-furious at him. Whenever I see him on their porch eating, in
-that wicker chaise-longue they have, I cannot tell you how I
-despise him, in spite of his being really very nice, if you like that
-kind. He doesn&#39;t seem to have any neck, to speak of, and his
-collars look as if they would choke him. His eyes are small,
-though bright and animated looking.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth Farraday comes here a great deal, and she asks for you
-sometimes, too. She loves Grandmother more than anybody
-does outside of the family. Their eyes look lovingly at each
-other even when they are not speaking, you know, like cousins
-or something. She is very kind to me, and never neglects a
-chance to do nice things for me. I told you how Granddaddy
-kissed her. She is sweet. She is just sweet. If I loved her,
-Buddy&mdash;(you told me not to talk this way to you once, but I am
-going to)&mdash;I would tell her I did, in some way. She is awfully
-little, for a girl as old as she is, and people protect her. Peggy
-protects her in a great many ways, and I know she is not happy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I guess there is one thing that I ought to repeat. Yesterday
-she said, &quot;How is your brother?&quot; and I said, &quot;He is about the
-same,&quot; and she said, &quot;I&#39;ve just discovered how ill he has been.
-I wish I had known it before,&quot; and I said, &quot;Well, he might get
-discharged soon,&quot; because I didn&#39;t know what else to say. She
-said, &quot;I should have written him, if I had thought he cared.&quot;
-Well, what could I say? I didn&#39;t say anything, because you have
-warned me so against blabbing. Then she said, &quot;I can&#39;t write
-him now very well. I can&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Well, so this is about all I know. I wish it were something
-helpful, but it seems like nothing at all. I am only trying to
-write as I would be written by. (See the Golden Rule.) If I
-have not made you sicker, and you love me into the bargain,
-please tell me so. When you are fourteen, responsibility frightens
-you a good deal. At fifteen or sixteen, you throw it off better.
-If you tell me anything to say to Ruth Farraday, I will say it.
-She is certainly sweet, and I certainly love her, and she is certainly
-not a happy girl.</p>
-
-<p class="right">Your sister
-<span class="smcap">Elizabeth</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">P. S. That day we went to Provincetown, when I was walking
-alone with her, she said you were probably devoted to dozens
-of girls, and I said positively that you weren&#39;t. She said she
-would tell me a secret, and that was, that she thought you were
-very nice. It doesn&#39;t sound much to write it, but I think she
-meant it, in spite of laughing at it when she said it. She is
-certainly sweet. I would write to her, if it was me.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">She made a special trip to the post office to mail
-this letter, and as she dropped it into the slot, she
-had a moment of dizziness, as if the floor of the post
-office had suddenly shaken itself under her feet.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page173" id="page173"></a>[pg&nbsp;173]</span>
-Even the blueberry cake did not tempt her to eat
-very heartily at supper.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth is growing up too fast,&quot; her grandmother
-complained, &quot;watermelon and blueberry
-cake don&#39;t interest her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I been trying to interest her with the account
-of the young red-head that rode with me to Hyannis
-when she wouldn&#39;t go along. He&#39;s a pretty likely
-young chap, mad about electricity, he says, and going
-to study to be an electrical engineer, but Elizabeth
-is too old for such light talk. Can&#39;t we think o&#39;
-something solid that&#39;ll kind o&#39; get her attention?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She don&#39;t feel very well to-night, I guess. Leave
-her alone, Father.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t feel sick,&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;but I feel
-about ninety years old. I&#39;ll just go and sit in Granddaddy&#39;s
-lap after supper and braid his beard, so there
-won&#39;t be any hard feeling.&quot; She liked nowadays
-to make her grandfather the kind of answer that
-would please him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She crept away to bed as early as she could, and
-lay with throbbing temples against the cool white
-pillows in Great-grandmother&#39;s guest-chamber bed,
-wondering if she had written wisely to her sick brother
-and praying that she might have helped, not hindered,
-his recovery.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was two days later that Peggy came to her with
-a troubled face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>[pg&nbsp;174]</span>
-&quot;We&#39;ve been having ructions over at our house,&quot;
-she said, &quot;and I&#39;m frightened. Mother and Ruth
-have had an awful row. I don&#39;t know how it&#39;s coming
-out. Mother is trying to egg Ruthie on to take
-Piggy for her lawful wedded. Anyhow, she claims
-Ruth ought to take him or leave him, with an accent
-on the <i>take</i>. Mother doesn&#39;t believe much in this
-soft stuff, you know. She wants everybody comfortable,
-without any rowing over expenses. She
-likes people to settle down and have large families,
-and large limousines, and large dinner parties, and
-so on. Her cry is that the country is going to
-the dogs, and our young men are all lame, halt, and
-blind from the late war, so why not pick a soft spot
-and let yourself down in it? She would. She wants
-Ruth to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Peggy, would you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know what I should do,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;I
-like the people I like awfully. I&#39;d rather be with
-them than be bothered. I don&#39;t see much use in
-being married, anyway.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sometimes,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;I&#39;ve thought it
-might be rather nice to be <i>just</i> married.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, Ruth, she&#39;s a puzzle to me. Something&#39;s
-eating her&mdash;&#39;scuse my elegance&mdash;I don&#39;t know
-whether it&#39;s wanting to be married, or not wanting
-to be. She told Mother that she&#39;d rather be the
-wife of a poor man that she was keen on, than to have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>[pg&nbsp;175]</span>
-a million. Mother said that Piggy Chambers had
-four million. Ruth said that made about two, or
-one and one half, since the purchasing power of a
-dollar was so reduced. I didn&#39;t know Ruthie had it
-in her to talk back that way. Mother said that the
-purchasing power of a dollar was reduced for our
-family as well as anybody&#39;s, did she ever think of
-that? And that girls were an expensive luxury
-nowadays. Whereupon Ruthie said that she hadn&#39;t
-thought of that, but she would, if that was the way
-Mother looked at it. Mother said it wasn&#39;t, but
-that was the way somebody a little more practical
-than Ruthie might have looked at it for themselves.
-Then she said that Ruth had been playing with
-Piggy, or nobody would have had any reason to
-think of the matter at all. It was all pretty raw, you
-know. I wouldn&#39;t tell any other soul on earth, but
-someway you are different.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A lot of people tell me things,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;and I love Ruth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your family is different,&quot; Peggy sighed. &quot;If
-Ruthie and I lived all alone, we&#39;d be different. I
-wish you&#39;d come on over to the house with me, Elizabeth.
-I&#39;m honestly almost afraid to go home. The
-atmosphere is so thick, you couldn&#39;t cut it with a
-knife unless it had just been sharpened.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right, I will,&quot; said Elizabeth. &quot;I was
-coming over there anyway. Grandma thought it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page176" id="page176"></a>[pg&nbsp;176]</span>
-would cheer me up. I&#39;ve been sort of mopey, myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, it&#39;s about as cheerful in the cottage as if it
-was a nice, cozy morgue, but perhaps we can amuse
-ourselves with croquet and raspberry shrub. Truth
-compels me to state that Cook has just completed
-a mocha-frosted cake with an icing about
-six feet high. Do we get any of that? The answer
-is, probably not, but while there is life there is
-hope.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you know that you have an awfully funny
-mind, Peggy? Amusing, I mean, and brilliant.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s a pretty embarrassing way for you to talk
-to an old friend,&quot; Peggy said, but she blushed in
-spite of her light laugh.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hello! Daddy&#39;s come,&quot; she cried, as they approached
-the Farraday porch. &quot;That makes it even
-more exciting, doesn&#39;t it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. and Mrs. Farraday were engaged in earnest
-conversation as the two girls opened the screen door
-and stepped into the dainty space within.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hello, Daddy, dearest,&quot; Peggy cried, flying to kiss
-him, &quot;this is a darling, unexpected pleasure.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. Farraday had a nice smile. He looked very
-much like his younger daughter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ruth phoned me to come down,&quot; he said.
-&quot;How&#39;s my son?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s feeling a lot better, dear, since she knows
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page177" id="page177"></a>[pg&nbsp;177]</span>
-you&#39;re in the house,&quot; Peggy flashed back. &quot;I&#39;m the
-only son he&#39;s got, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your father and I were talking, dear,&quot; Mrs.
-Farraday&#39;s smooth tones intervened.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth and I only looked in to see Cook, <i>in
-re</i> a large cake she&#39;s been making.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Farraday looked up. &quot;Here comes Ruth
-and Mr. Chambers, so you may as well stay here.
-I&#39;ve told Cook to serve that cake with our tea to-day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have your good points, Mother,&quot; Peggy
-said, saucily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth threw up her small head as she came out of
-the house. She was very pale, Elizabeth noticed, and
-Mr. Chambers was very red. He was smiling, but
-Ruth&#39;s face was entirely grave.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am glad you are here, Father,&quot; she said, &quot;for I
-have an announcement to make to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Shall I go?&quot; Elizabeth asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, dear, I want you to stay. It&#39;s not a secret.
-It is merely that Mr. Chambers has asked me to
-marry him, and I have said that I would.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Lord!&quot; Peggy cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you want me for a brother-in-law, Miss
-Peggy?&quot; Mr. Chambers asked. &quot;You don&#39;t sound
-very much pleased at our news.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t want any brother-in-law very much,&quot;
-Peggy said, &quot;but I do want my sister to do what she
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id="page178"></a>[pg&nbsp;178]</span>
-wants to, and&mdash;and to be happy,&quot; she finished,
-lamely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know what to say,&quot; Mr. Farraday said.
-&quot;I feel just about the way Peggy does. If&mdash;if you&#39;re
-both sure, you have my blessing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What nonsense!&quot; Mrs. Farraday cried. &quot;Of course
-they are both sure, and of course they have our
-blessing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How about you, little Miss Elizabeth?&quot; Piggy
-Chambers smiled at her and held out his hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I congratulate you,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And me?&quot; asked Ruth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you,&quot; Elizabeth said, not quite able to keep
-her voice steady, &quot;if you want to be congratulated by
-me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Kiss me, dear.&quot; Mrs. Farraday slipped an arm
-around her daughter&#39;s shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; said Ruth, sharply, &quot;no.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t see why anybody should want to kiss
-anybody,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;It&#39;s too exciting, anyway.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s rather usual,&quot; Mr. Farraday murmured,
-&quot;or it used to be, before this modern generation.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A telegram for Miss Ruth,&quot; the maid came in and
-crossed the porch to present it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth looked a little dully at the yellow envelope on
-the silver tray.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who can be telegraphing now?&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page179" id="page179"></a>[pg&nbsp;179]</span>
-&quot;Shall I open it, Sister?&quot; Peggy put out her hand
-protectingly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth tore the crackling paper slowly, her mouth
-set in pinched, tense lines which changed suddenly
-and quivered for an instant piteously. Then she
-regained her composure.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s just a telegram from your brother,&quot; she said
-to Elizabeth, &quot;a few lines to inquire about me and
-wish me good luck. It&#39;s funny it should have come
-<i>now</i>&mdash;isn&#39;t it?&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>[pg&nbsp;180]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Crabbing</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth&#39;s first impulse the next morning
-was to write to Jean. It was Jean who
-always helped her to think out her problems,
-and this was the greatest problem that she had ever
-been called to face. She could not entirely confide in
-her friend, still she was comforted by the mere act
-of opening her birthday writing-case, and filling the
-fountain pen with which she was going to write.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She wondered if the Christian Graces, when they
-looked down on her Aunt Helen, had ever found her
-in such a state of real trouble and dismay.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hope can&#39;t do me much good,&quot; she thought,
-&quot;and there is nobody to have any Charity for but
-Mr. Piggy Chambers. It&#39;s Faith I need for my
-guide, and she is the saddest looking sister of the lot.&quot;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Jean</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">All I can say is, I wish you were here, and I don&#39;t see how I am
-going to stop saying that and write anything else. Letters are
-such cold and far-away things. I hope you do know how I love
-you, and how the thought of you comforts me. I told you about
-Faith, Hope, and Charity. Well, there they stand grinning
-above me, and they don&#39;t offer much consolation.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>[pg&nbsp;181]</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">I am in trouble, Jean. I can tell you this much. Ruth Farraday
-is going to marry Mr. Chambers, and she was Buddy&#39;s
-girl. I can&#39;t tell you the ins and outs of it, because they are other
-people&#39;s different secrets, but I am afraid that this will kill Buddy,
-and I don&#39;t see one single thing to do about it. I feel like a criminal
-and a German spy, to tell you even this much, but I feel as
-if I should burst with grief&mdash;really burst. You know that feeling
-of suffocating you get after you have eaten a lot too much. I
-have that same feeling emotionally. I know this is a funny way
-to say it, but it&#39;s the only way I can express it. I wish we could
-be together, and I could hear you reading poetry or something
-soothing, and you could help me think how to break it to Buddy.
-It will have to be told him. After I write you, I am going to write
-him. So you see how much I value writing to you.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I will answer your questions some other time, when my mind
-is more free. Though I can only doubt if that time will ever
-come. I wish you could see Ruth Farraday. There is something
-about her that makes me think of the girl in the &quot;First Violin,&quot;
-though she isn&#39;t in the least like her. I don&#39;t know what it is.
-I guess it is the sadness that hangs about that book. There is a
-sadness hanging about her, and about me, too, Jeanie-that-I-love.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I am glad your friend Neil Seymour is at the Point. I liked him
-very much. If he still wants to send me &quot;Prometheus Bound,&quot;
-he may, Mother says. I guess she thinks anything that will keep
-me contented is a good idea. I think &quot;Prometheus Bound&quot;
-would help me, if it is anything like what I think it is.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When I write you, I feel a little as if I were right in the room
-with you. What I am doing now is to hang onto the door, not
-to have to shut it, and go into another room, where my sick
-Buddy is. Life is a strange thing. Good-bye&mdash;good-bye&mdash;good-bye.
-I love you&mdash;hard.</p>
-
-<p class="right">That old-fashioned girl,
-<span class="smcap">Elspeth</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page182" id="page182"></a>[pg&nbsp;182]</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">My Dear Brother</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I have got to use my own judgment about writing to you. I
-am to blame for writing you the way I did, but I did not know any
-better at that time. I only told you the truth. Now I have
-more truth to tell you. Buddy, will you brace up as if you were
-in the trenches again? You are a soldier, you know, and you&#39;ve
-got to fight another battle.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mother said I was not to tell you anything that might trouble
-you, but I have got to trouble you the worst of all. Buddy, Ruth
-Farraday is engaged to marry that goop, and her family have
-egged her on till she did not know which way to turn, and has
-turned this way. She told me and her family, and her face looked
-like death. I am not making this up. Peggy says so, and she
-knows. She loves Ruthie with all her heart, and she would not
-make anything up. She is not that kind. I am more that kind,
-but this is really and truly so. Ruth is not a happy girl, and we
-both know it. She has lost her lovely pink cheeks, and is a white
-apple blossom now. A pear blossom is more like it, only not
-pretty enough for her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Well, Buddy, I have never had any real, grown-up trouble,
-but the kind of fourteen-year-old trouble I have had has seemed
-pretty hard sometimes. Grandmother says that you&#39;ve always
-got to live, whether you can or not. I know you don&#39;t want my
-condolences, but I love you so that I can&#39;t help being sick over
-this. It&#39;s hard work for me to eat and sleep. I hope you can
-swear a little, because that will help you.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Sister</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t feel very much like going to Swan Pond
-crabbing,&quot; she thought, as she sealed her two letters,
-and set them before her on the desk, &quot;but I suppose
-people mustn&#39;t give up to things. Even if my heart
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id="page183"></a>[pg&nbsp;183]</span>
-is breaking, the Robbins boy and his cousin and
-Peggy ought not to have their plans spoiled.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She made her way through the chain of little
-rooms between her den and her sleeping chamber, unfastening,
-as she went, the blue linen gown, buttoned
-all the way down the back, that, with its pink twin,
-was her regular morning uniform. In her bed room
-she slipped into a blouse cut like a boy&#39;s, and dark
-blue woollen bloomers with wool stockings to match.
-With this she put on, very carefully, a blue tam o&#39; shanter.
-She saw in the glass that her face was
-drawn, and her eyes had dark shadows beneath them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If Tom Robbins notices how I look and asks me
-any questions, I shall only tell him that I am in deep
-trouble,&quot; she thought. &quot;I won&#39;t say anything like
-that to Bill. He would only grin and be embarrassed,
-but I think Tom Robbins would understand more
-about grief.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She was a little ashamed of having thought so much
-of her own trouble when she saw Peggy&#39;s stricken
-face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t ask me what has happened,&quot; Peggy whispered,
-as they clambered into the car and Grandfather
-started for the cross-roads where they were to
-pick up the two boys. &quot;I don&#39;t know what hasn&#39;t
-happened. Ruth has shut herself into her room,
-after some sort of a tragic heart-to-heart talk with
-Father, and Mother and Father are scarcely speaking,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page184" id="page184"></a>[pg&nbsp;184]</span>
-and the cook is mad, and ruined the breakfast
-muffins and gave us bad eggs, or baddish eggs, for
-breakfast, and Sister won&#39;t see me. Piggy sent her
-a huge box of flowers this morning. I&#39;ve got to stop
-calling him Piggy and call him Albert, I suppose.
-Wouldn&#39;t you know his name would be Albert? Isn&#39;t
-he the most Albertish person? Elizabeth, I never
-hated anybody so much in all my life. He never did
-me any harm, but I would be pleased and proud to&mdash;to
-choke him to death.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So would I,&quot; sighed Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wasn&#39;t it funny, her getting that telegram from
-your brother just when she did? Sometimes I think
-she was keen on your brother, and sort of peeved because
-he didn&#39;t ever write to her when he got back.
-You don&#39;t suppose she&#39;d get herself engaged to Piggy
-just out of pride, do you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I don&#39;t know,&quot; Elizabeth cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Anyhow, she took that telegram to bed with her,
-and it was all mussed up under her pillow. I know,
-because I made the beds this morning. Our treasure
-of a second maid went to mass, and stayed out to
-breakfast.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What&#39;s all that whispering about?&quot; Grandfather
-inquired, looking over his shoulder. &quot;I&#39;ve a great
-mind to just reach over and tech the whip to you,&quot;
-he made a movement toward an invisible whip
-socket. &quot;I guess I won&#39;t. It makes Lizzie nervous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id="page185"></a>[pg&nbsp;185]</span>
-to have me flourishing a whip around. I suppose
-you are trying to get all giggled and whispered up
-before you have to stop it and talk to the boys.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We aren&#39;t giggling much this morning,&quot; Elizabeth
-said. &quot;There they are on the corner, waving
-to us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you ever see such red hair?&quot; Peggy said. &quot;I
-like red-headed children and boys. I don&#39;t think I
-like red-headed girls so much. I think Mabel is awfully
-cunning with her red curls.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mabel? Oh, she has real auburn hair,&quot; Elizabeth
-said, &quot;and it&#39;s beautiful. How do you do?&quot; she
-returned Tom Robbins&#39; greeting with more than a
-touch of her customary shyness as he scrambled for
-a place on the floor of the car at her feet.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s my turn,&quot; he insisted, as his friend Bill tried
-to argue the matter. &quot;You ride with Captain
-Swift, and mind the rakes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ve got real nets!&quot; Peggy cried. &quot;How
-scrumptious! We just take rakes, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know as the Swan Pond crabs will consent
-to do anything but be raked in,&quot; Grandfather said.
-&quot;I heard of a boy once that caught a crab in one of
-those store nets, but it was a bad one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You wait and see,&quot; Tom said. &quot;Our object is to
-catch crabs, and we are going to catch them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So am I,&quot; said Grandfather.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They left the machine in a clearing by the roadside,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>[pg&nbsp;186]</span>
-and, laden with nets and bait, made their way
-through a path among the underbrush, until they
-stood on the shore of Swan Lake. A blue sky, with
-here and there a winging cloud, met the low horizon,
-skirted with the dense green of low-set pine and oak
-trees. The gray-green water lapped the shore
-alluringly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a general scramble to remove encumbering
-shoes and stockings.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If anybody says, &#39;Come on in, the water&#39;s fine,&#39;
-they&#39;ll owe me a pineapple college ice,&quot; Peggy
-declared, &quot;or, if you prefer it in New York-ese, a
-pineapple sundae&mdash;though why they should think
-over there that by spelling Sunday with an e, they
-can make it a soda-fountain dish, I don&#39;t know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you go jeering at the manners and customs
-of my native town,&quot; Elizabeth cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did your ancestors own most of New York?&quot;
-Grandfather asked, innocently. &quot;I thought most of
-Manhattan Island belonged to the Dutch.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know what my ancestors owned,&quot;
-Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They owned this, for instance,&quot; her grandfather
-waved a nonchalant hand at the beautiful country
-about him, &quot;forty or fifty acres around these parts.
-My Great-grandfather Swift, he got kinder tired of
-having so much property, and he sold a chunk to the
-town for a cemetery, and one thing and another.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>[pg&nbsp;187]</span>
-&quot;Where did he live?&quot; Elizabeth asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Up the road apiece, in a great house that was
-burnt down long before my time. He was quite a
-likely old fellow, though, from all I can hear of him.
-He had a lot of stories told about him. He started a
-bank, and all his money was carted up to it in ox
-teams, because they didn&#39;t have anything but silver
-money in those days.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Quite an influential old party, wasn&#39;t he?&quot;
-Peggy said. &quot;Doesn&#39;t it make you feel creepy,
-Elizabeth, to descend from the very oldest settlers,
-the way you do? I don&#39;t know anything about my
-ancestors.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I never did before,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The time is going to come when Elizabeth will be
-proud of what she comes from,&quot; her grandfather said.
-&quot;Well, if anybody really wants to go crabbing with
-me, I&#39;d advise them to&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come in while the water&#39;s fine,&quot; the boys chanted
-together.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I owe you a pineapple college ice,&quot; Bill grinned at
-Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I owe you a pineapple sundae,&quot; Tom told Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wasn&#39;t betting,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I was,&quot; Tom&#39;s grin was almost as broad as
-his cousin&#39;s. &quot;You can have a maple marshmallow
-sundae if you prefer it. I do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>[pg&nbsp;188]</span>
-&quot;Well, it&#39;s hard to choose,&quot; Elizabeth temporized.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You can have both,&quot; Tom decided. &quot;I&#39;ll show
-you how to use the crab catcher. You float the bait
-on this line, and when the crab comes to the surface,
-you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But Grandfather, scorning artificial allurements,
-caught the first crab. The crab was scurrying away
-over the pebbles and shells at the bottom of the
-transparent water when Grandfather&#39;s inexorable
-implement caught him in mid-career, and he was
-imprisoned in the covered basket they had brought
-for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t know that you could catch them so near
-the shore,&quot; Elizabeth said, looking down at her bare
-toes in some dismay, &quot;do they hurt when they bite
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The game is not to let them bite you,&quot; Peggy
-said. &quot;Hooray! One for me&mdash;us, I mean.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Three,&quot; said Grandfather, landing another.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve got the father and mother of all crabs here,&quot;
-Bill Dean said, as he dragged at the handle of his net.
-&quot;Look at old Grandfather Crab.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He isn&#39;t very pretty,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;but I prefer
-him to a raw lobster. I never saw a green lobster
-till the other day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She was just making Judidy throw it out when
-I caught her at it,&quot; Grandfather laughed, &quot;she said it
-was sick, and would give us all ptomaine poisoning,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id="page189"></a>[pg&nbsp;189]</span>
-and the lobster was so mad when he heard it that he
-tried to claw poor Judidy&#39;s hand off.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It <i>is</i> strange that they turn bright red after being
-bright green,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;I think I prefer
-crabs.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come with me, and we&#39;ll get some,&quot; Tom said,
-taking possession of her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess we can rest now,&quot; he said a little later, &quot;we
-got more than any of them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did we?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, we got as many, anyhow. I&#39;m hot, aren&#39;t
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth mopped her forehead and smiled by way
-of answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Look here,&quot; Tom said, &quot;there is something I want
-to ask you, Miss Swift. If you don&#39;t like it you just
-have to say so, and I will understand and not ask you
-again. I was just wondering if I couldn&#39;t call you
-Elizabeth. Bill he&#39;s going to ask Peggy, I mean Miss
-Farraday, the same thing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t know you had been calling me anything,&quot;
-Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I haven&#39;t. I think last names are rather
-stiff, you know, and I didn&#39;t like to use your first
-name without permission.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d just as soon have you call me by my first
-name,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;if&mdash;if only&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ve got something in your mind about me
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id="page190"></a>[pg&nbsp;190]</span>
-that you aren&#39;t saying. If you think it&#39;s&mdash;well&mdash;fresh&mdash;of
-me, to ask you that question about first
-names, you can say so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think that&#39;s fresh of you,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;but I&mdash;well, I don&#39;t feel like talking in any way but
-a very straightforward and truthful way to-day. The
-thing I don&#39;t like, really, is the way you tried to get
-acquainted with us. Every time I think of that, I
-feel as if&mdash;well, I wish it hadn&#39;t happened, that&#39;s all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So do I,&quot; said Tom Robbins, soberly, &quot;but I&#39;ll
-tell you something. I have never done anything like
-that before. We just made up our minds that we
-would, that&#39;s all. You know the way you make up
-your mind to try something that you&#39;ve seen other
-people do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I don&#39;t see why you tried it on us,&quot; said
-Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t see why we did, either, except that we
-wanted to know you the most of any girls.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t like to have a boy make me feel that he
-thinks I am a girl he can scrape acquaintance with,&quot;
-Elizabeth said. &quot;It hurts my feelings.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wouldn&#39;t hurt your feelings for anything, and
-you ought to know now that I am not the kind of boy
-that does things like that, except for a lark. Don&#39;t
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t I what?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Know that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>[pg&nbsp;191]</span>
-&quot;Yes, I guess I do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right, you can call me Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Peggy and I have caught more than you have,&quot;
-Bill shouted, as he came up with crawling crabs in
-his net.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess it worked all right,&quot; Tom whispered to
-Elizabeth, &quot;with them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bill asked if he could call me Peggy,&quot; that young
-lady whispered to Elizabeth, on the way home. &quot;I
-was so surprised I nearly fell over. I thought he
-always had. I&#39;ve always called him Bill.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think boys sort of make up their minds to do a
-certain kind of thing, and then they do it,&quot; said
-Elizabeth, &quot;without thinking whether it is really
-appropriate or not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess you are right,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;and now
-that we&#39;ve had this pleasant afternoon, we&#39;ll just
-have to take up the burden of our gloomy thoughts
-again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know it,&quot; said Elizabeth, forlornly.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id="page192"></a>[pg&nbsp;192]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Elizabeth Is Rude</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth and Moses took the shore road,
-and finally struck off across the fields and
-through the woods to make a short cut for
-the bathing beach. Moses was going to initiate
-the new bathing suit Elizabeth had bought him,
-and Elizabeth to sit on the beach and knit on a
-sweater she was making for Madget.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was a rehabilitated Moses that alternately
-darted and jogged along by her side. He was wearing
-one of the half-dozen shirts that Grandmother
-had cut and made by the famous Butterick pattern
-from which the girls had fashioned the garment he
-wore on his appearance at the bean supper. His
-trousers were the veritable &quot;pants&quot; of his dreams,
-and the rudiments of suspenders, with which he
-would not part, were tucked in under his belt. His
-face was comparatively clean, and he had allowed
-Elizabeth to brush his heavy, upstanding hair until
-it looked almost personable.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What are those things around your neck?&quot;
-Elizabeth cried, catching sight of an extraordinary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page193" id="page193"></a>[pg&nbsp;193]</span>
-decoration only partially concealed by his shirt
-collar.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Shark&#39;s teeth. I wear &#39;em for luck. I cut &#39;em
-out myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Cut them out of what?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sharks. What&#39;d you think I got &#39;em from?
-Cats or something?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Moses, you&#39;ve got to learn to be a little more respectful
-to me. I don&#39;t like the way you speak to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; he agreed, amiably.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where did you get those teeth from?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I told you I got &#39;em from sharks. I go down to
-the shore when the boats come in from their weir.
-You know, the men bring in a lot of fish every day.
-Well, yesterday they brought in four sharks and they
-let me cut out these teeth. I could of got more if my
-knife had been sharper, or I&#39;d had more time. Every
-night they give me a fish, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That doesn&#39;t sound a bit probable, about the
-sharks. Still, I never caught you telling a lie, Moses.
-What do you do with the fish they give you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I take &#39;em home and I cook &#39;em. Mis&#39; Laury
-Ann, she showed me how, one time. Mabel, I&#39;m
-learning her to cook, and Madget she wants I should
-learn her, but I don&#39;t think I shall.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, dear, I&#39;m afraid I&#39;ve rather neglected you
-lately,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;I haven&#39;t been to see
-your mother for a long time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page194" id="page194"></a>[pg&nbsp;194]</span>
-&quot;Well, Mis&#39; Laury Ann she comes, and Judidy.
-Mother says neglecting is all you can expect from
-girls.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s a whole lot better, isn&#39;t she?&quot; Elizabeth
-asked, hastily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sure. Mis&#39; Abithy Hawes she come around and
-got Little Eva to going it, and Little Eva she said
-that Mother had water on her lungs.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mercy!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But Mother she got to reading a book that said
-housework was a good cure for sickness. About
-sweeping bein&#39; good for the spine, and washing bein&#39;
-good for the stomick, and housecleaning a good thing
-for the figger. So she thought she&#39;d try that, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where did she get the book?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was one that Mis&#39; Laury Ann lent her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess Grandmother is working along the way
-she said she was going to,&quot; Elizabeth thought.
-&quot;Does your mother really do housework?&quot; she asked,
-aloud.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Most every day,&quot; Moses said, proudly, &quot;she
-bought me these pants, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Does she do any cooking?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She don&#39;t like to cook, and she ain&#39;t never learned.
-I kin learn her when I&#39;ve learned myself some more.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It does seem as if there were <i>some</i> improvement
-in your family&#39;s condition, doesn&#39;t it, Moses?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Judidy, she told Ma she was the town&#39;s poor,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>[pg&nbsp;195]</span>
-and Ma says she ain&#39;t. That kind of stuck in Ma&#39;s
-crop, and Madget cried and said she wouldn&#39;t go to
-the poor house. Now Ma says she is going to buy
-tea and coffee enough to git a premium set o&#39; dishes.
-I don&#39;t know whether she will or not. If she don&#39;t
-I&#39;m going to earn them. Captain Swift is going to let
-me sell some corn and string beans out of his garden.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The path emerged on the beach, and Moses disappeared
-abruptly in the direction of his favourite
-clump of pines, scorning a bath-house. He reappeared
-almost immediately, clad in a single garment
-of blue jersey that glistened with newness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You watch me pretending to be a whale,&quot; he
-said, &quot;first I&#39;ll dive. Then I&#39;ll come up spouting
-a whole mouthful of water.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s a good little swimmer,&quot; Elizabeth thought,
-as she watched his antics. &quot;I guess he&#39;ll turn out
-all right. How wonderful Grandmother is, always
-keeping her eye on them. It&#39;s so much easier to do
-a thing like that as hard as you can sometimes, and
-then drop it, than it is to keep pegging along at it all
-the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She was knitting so busily that she did not see
-Ruth Farraday approaching along the beach, and
-it was not until a long shadow fell across her work
-that she realized Ruth was near. Ruth in a pink
-voile frock, with a frilly, rose-coloured parasol,
-smiled down at her&mdash;a smile of the lips only.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page196" id="page196"></a>[pg&nbsp;196]</span>
-&quot;Shall I sit down beside you?&quot; she asked, in her
-low, clear voice. &quot;Peggy couldn&#39;t come down to the
-beach to-day. I was too lazy to go in swimming,
-but I thought I&#39;d like a smell of the sea, all the same.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I&#39;m very glad to see you,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m glad to see you. I haven&#39;t seen you since
-that other day at tea.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; said Elizabeth, gravely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I haven&#39;t been feeling very well since then. It
-was&mdash;nice of your brother to wire me, wasn&#39;t it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I told Buddy that I thought you would be pleased
-to hear from him. It was my fault. I shouldn&#39;t
-have told him, if I had known.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you had known what?&quot; asked Ruth Farraday,
-lightly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That you were going to marry somebody else.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Somebody else?&quot; she laughed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Somebody that wasn&#39;t Buddy,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-bravely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There never was any question of my marrying
-your brother. We were very good friends before
-he went abroad. Then he seemed to let it&mdash;our
-friendship, die a natural death.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I told you about his being sick,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;and I told you that there weren&#39;t any other girls.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There not being any other girls doesn&#39;t&mdash;didn&#39;t
-necessarily mean&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes, it does, with Buddy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page197" id="page197"></a>[pg&nbsp;197]</span>
-&quot;That&#39;s putting it rather ambiguously.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know how it&#39;s putting it,&quot; Elizabeth cried,
-&quot;but I do know that there wasn&#39;t any other girl.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He didn&#39;t tell you so, did he?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&mdash;he&mdash;&mdash;&quot; Elizabeth stammered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&mdash;you said that you told him to communicate
-with me?&quot; Ruth was having almost as much difficulty
-in speaking as Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He wrote and asked my advice, and I told him
-I would, if I were he, and that was why he did it,
-and then I had to write him that you were engaged.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you&#39;ve written him that already?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I had to,&quot; Elizabeth said, miserably. &quot;I had
-just told him that you weren&#39;t engaged to anybody
-else, and that you inquired about him, and that you&mdash;you
-might want to hear from him. He&#39;s very sick,
-and he wrote and asked me what to do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When did he write that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Just the other day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you wrote just the other day?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There was time for him to get my letter before
-he telegraphed to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And then you wrote again to say that I was
-engaged?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;m still engaged,&quot; Ruth Farraday said,
-lightly. &quot;When you write to him, won&#39;t you tell
-him that I thank him for remembering me so&mdash;so
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>[pg&nbsp;198]</span>
-pleasantly, but that I&#39;m a good deal occupied just
-at present.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I won&#39;t,&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Indeed?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s too sick, and it would bother him too much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, very well,&quot; said Ruth Farraday.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t mean to be rude,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You were, rather. I&#39;d like to send your brother
-a message, you see, and I&mdash;I can&#39;t write to him.
-I&#39;ve tried, and I can&#39;t. I don&#39;t want him to think
-I am altogether unappreciative. What message
-shall I send him, Elizabeth?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Send him your love, if you really mean it, and
-then not any message.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will. I do send him my love. I&#39;m sorry he&#39;s
-sick. Wouldn&#39;t it be wise to say that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Send him my love and tell him&mdash;oh, tell him he
-was a day too late.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will,&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">With one long, indrawn breath, Ruth Farraday
-turned and walked back along the beach.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s shivering as if she were cold,&quot; Elizabeth
-thought, as she watched the diminishing figure.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was high tide, and the deep blue waves were
-foam-crested. The wide sky was streaked with
-clouds, and a bright sun lay hot upon the sands.
-Elizabeth looked first at Moses&#39; bobbing head, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>[pg&nbsp;199]</span>
-then at the bobbing, rose-coloured parasol dwindling
-in the distance.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Life is a curious thing,&quot; she said to herself, slowly,
-&quot;it keeps changing so, getting better or worse all
-the time. Here&#39;s Moses and the Steppes, who were
-so perfectly hopeless and helpless, and there is an
-improvement in them. They are my friends and
-my responsibility&mdash;if I don&#39;t live up to it very well.
-Then here is Ruth Farraday, that I truly love, and
-everything about her is getting worse every minute,
-and it&#39;s all mixed up with me, somehow. I don&#39;t
-do much good, or anything, but it&#39;s mixed up with
-me all the same.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She knitted to the end of her row and pulled out
-her needle. She gave another long look at sea and sky.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Everything is a part of everything,&quot; she said,
-a little confusedly. &quot;Poor Buddy, dear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She wrote him a long letter that night, and told
-him what Ruth had said, and then she tried not to
-think about him at all for the next few days. She
-was afraid for what she had done. She had had no
-word from him in answer to her letter announcing
-Ruth&#39;s engagement, and only the briefest line from
-her mother, who was evidently gravely anxious about
-her son&#39;s condition. She knew that Buddy was
-worse, and she knew that the letter she had written
-him had made him worse; how much worse, Elizabeth
-could not bear to think.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id="page200"></a>[pg&nbsp;200]</span>
-It was five days after her meeting with Ruth upon
-the beach that the evening mail brought her two
-letters, one in her mother&#39;s handwriting and one in
-Buddy&#39;s. Judidy brought them in and put them in
-her lap.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We are going to lose Judidy next winter,&quot; her
-grandmother said when that young woman had
-blushed, giggled, and withdrawn to the back porch,
-from which the sound of a drawling, masculine voice
-was heard at intervals, interspersed with Judidy&#39;s
-high-pitched protestations. &quot;She&#39;s going to be
-married, she tells me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is she?&quot; said Elizabeth, trying to subdue the
-dizziness she felt at the sight of Buddy&#39;s familiar
-scrawl.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your grandfather and I thought we&#39;d give them a
-wedding. Judidy&#39;s folks won&#39;t. They are nice
-enough people, but peculiar&mdash;odd. They believe
-in saving trouble and expense on everything.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Grandmother,&quot; Elizabeth said, trembling,
-&quot;will you hold my hand while I read these letters?
-I&mdash;I am so worried about Buddy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Certain.&quot; Grandmother drew out the little footstool
-that matched the particular valanced rocker
-she was sitting in. &quot;You come here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth leaned her head against her grandmother&#39;s
-knee, with the feeling of faintness still upon
-her. Her grandmother stroked her hair gently.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id="page201"></a>[pg&nbsp;201]</span>
-&quot;I can&#39;t read them out loud, Grandma. They are
-private in a way. It&#39;s&mdash;it&#39;s the private things in
-them that frighten me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There ain&#39;t nothing in this world to be afraid of.
-There ain&#39;t,&quot; said Grandmother. &quot;Fear once killed
-a cat, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you ever get afraid, Grandma?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Certain I get afraid, but when I do, I just think
-that there ain&#39;t nothing in this world to be afraid of
-so much as of being afraid, and that kind of stops
-me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can&#39;t help being afraid of what&#39;s in this particular
-letter.&quot;</p>
-
-<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 454px;">
-<a name="illus215" id="illus215"></a>
-<img class="border" src="images/illus215.jpg" width="454" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">&quot;&#39;I can&#39;t help being afraid of what&#39;s in this particular
-letter&#39;&quot;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What are you afraid it&#39;s going to do to you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I don&#39;t know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you just open it up and read it, and after
-you&#39;ve opened it up, you&#39;ll just find you&#39;re sitting
-here the way you were before, with your grandma&#39;s
-arms around you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth pulled the kindly hand down to meet
-her lips.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; she said, &quot;I&#39;m going to read it now.&quot;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Little Sister</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I can&#39;t tell you how much I thank you for your two letters.
-They cured me. I&#39;ve been seeing ghosts, but &quot;being gone, I am a
-man again.&quot; I&#39;m going to get my discharge if I have to bust
-the whole darned hospital, and I&#39;m coming down to Cape Cod.
-While there, I shall tell you what I think of several things, including
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id="page202"></a>[pg&nbsp;202]</span>
-the opinion I have of a man who sits in a cloud of vapour
-all day in a United States Base Hospital, and lets things go some
-other man&#39;s way.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">You tell Miss Ruth Farraday that it&#39;s never too late. No,
-don&#39;t tell her anything, but whenever you see the man in the case,
-stick out your sweet little tongue at him. I&#39;m sick&mdash;sure I&#39;m
-sick, but I&#39;m a well man, just the same. You wait and see. I
-broke the news to Mother and she doesn&#39;t believe it. She thinks
-that I&#39;m probably delirious. Father sees that something significant
-has happened, but doesn&#39;t believe that I can bust out so
-easy. You wait, dear.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Keep your eye on Ruth and report to me.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I love and admire you, and you are my own darling sister,
-for whom and which I devoutly thank whatever gods there be.
-I am the Captain of my Soul.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Your Buddy.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth buried her face in the ample folds of
-her grandmother&#39;s white apron.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s better. He&#39;s going to get well,&quot; she sobbed.
-&quot;Oh, dear, I was afraid I had killed him, but I didn&#39;t.
-I did him good.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He needed something to rouse him,&quot; Grandmother
-said, &quot;your mother says the doctor has
-been saying that for some time. I don&#39;t know how
-you&#39;ve done it, but I guess you&#39;ve turned the
-trick.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He says he&#39;s going to get out and come down here
-right away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought &#39;twas about time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>[pg&nbsp;203]</span>
-&quot;He&#39;s so sweet and dear and handsome, and he
-was so brave, and oh, I love him so!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That don&#39;t seem to me to be anything to sob
-over.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I can&#39;t help it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I always cried more tears of joy than I ever cried
-of sorrow. It runs in the family.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess I can read Mother&#39;s letter aloud. It&#39;s
-longer than Buddy&#39;s.&quot;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Elizabeth Dear</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The strangest thing has happened to your brother. He has
-suddenly taken a new lease of life. Night before last I left him
-just as dull and discouraged and apathetic as ever, and this morning
-when I went to see him, at about ten o&#39;clock, he was another
-boy. The nurse said he had been that way ever since he got a
-letter from you in the morning mail. I suppose that was merely
-a coincidence. I don&#39;t mean to say that I found him in any
-seraphic mood. He was literally fighting mad at the hospital
-authorities, and his whole mind seemed concentrated on getting
-out. At first I thought his fever had risen, but the doctor assures
-me that the subtle cloud that has been resting over his mind has
-lifted. He says he has never known a case where the patient provided
-his own stimulus before, that usually it has come from the
-outside in the form of some kind of shock, pleasant or unpleasant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It hasn&#39;t been entirely a nervous case, you understand. He
-would probably have less trouble in getting away, if it had been
-just a matter of mind, but his mind has kept his body sick. It&#39;s
-been a vicious circle. He has believed, it now develops, that the
-physical matter was incurable. His old job was gone, you know,
-and that seemed to depress him. Your father was perfectly
-willing to keep him at home indefinitely, and we kept telling
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>[pg&nbsp;204]</span>
-him so, but in his poor, tortured mind he had construed our doing
-so into an admission that we never expected him to get well.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At any rate, the worst is over now. I believe we&#39;ll have our
-boy restored in mind and body very soon. I don&#39;t dare to hope
-we&#39;ll all get down to Cape Cod as soon as he thinks we shall
-but I am inclined to think that he is too lively a character for the
-United States Government to hold very much longer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">You have been my brave, darling daughter, and I love you
-more than I can tell you. I am sending your shoes by this post.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Mother.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I hope he&#39;ll get here while it&#39;s still cucumber
-season,&quot; Grandmother said. &quot;My, how that boy
-used to eat herrings and cucumbers! I cooked a
-whole half dozen once, and I vow he et the whole
-lot, and I don&#39;t know how many cucumbers. He was
-a dretful one to eat. He used to like to climb up
-in the pear tree in pear season, and pick the topmost
-pear on the tree and eat his way down.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you mind if I cry a little more, Grandma?
-I can stop, but I don&#39;t want to,&quot; Elizabeth sniffled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It will be good for the fern to have a little dampness
-in the air. You cry, and I&#39;ll knit a spell.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You tease just about as much as Grandfather
-does, don&#39;t&mdash;don&#39;t you? Only you&#39;re so&mdash;so sly
-about it, nobody realizes it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ain&#39;t that our ring on the telephone?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know. I just sit here and let it ring all
-the time. I forget to count whether it&#39;s fifteen or
-fourteen.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page205" id="page205"></a>[pg&nbsp;205]</span>
-&quot;Land, fourteen will wake me up out of a sound
-sleep when I&#39;m to bed upstairs. And I don&#39;t never
-hear fifteen no more&#39;n if it hadn&#39;t sounded.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It <i>is</i> fourteen,&quot; Elizabeth said, as the imperious
-instrument sounded one long and four short signals
-distinctly. &quot;I&#39;ll answer.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth, where have you been all day?&quot;
-Peggy&#39;s voice inquired. &quot;I particularly want to see
-you about something, but Mother insists it&#39;s too late
-for me to come over.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I went swimming with Moses,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;and finished Madget&#39;s sweater, and made a chocolate
-cake. What is it that you&#39;ve got to tell me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can&#39;t tell you very well over the phone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it pleasant or unpleasant?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Unpleasant,&quot; Peggy whispered, with her mouth
-close to the receiver.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hint it. Is it about Ruthie?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And it&#39;s unpleasant?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, there is something pleasant about it. The
-festivities will be pleasant.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Peggy, tell me. I&#39;ve just about got to know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, listen close. It&#39;s going to be hurried up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The&mdash;well&mdash;you know. Somebody&#39;s receiver is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page206" id="page206"></a>[pg&nbsp;206]</span>
-down. They are listening in. Don&#39;t you hear
-that clock ticking?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, don&#39;t mind that. Tell me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They&#39;ve hung up, I think. Guess what I mean.
-The festivities are going to be hurried up. We want
-you to take part in them. It&#39;s going to be in two
-weeks. Now do you know? It begins with w.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You mean Ruth is going to be&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, but don&#39;t breathe it. We want you at it&mdash;you
-know&mdash;the w. You and me, dressed alike in
-blue dimity. There won&#39;t be many people.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Peggy, I couldn&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, you can. The way I look at it is that we
-might as well be philosophical about it and have a
-good time, even if our hearts do hang down to our
-boots. Don&#39;t you say so? Mother is calling me
-and I&#39;ve got to go. Don&#39;t breathe a word. I&#39;ll
-tell you all about it to-morrow. I&#39;ll be over. Good-bye.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, good-bye!&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>[pg&nbsp;207]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Picking Chickens</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you want to come out and set with me in
-the woodshed while I pick a couple o&#39;
-chicken?&quot; Grandfather asked one morning
-at the breakfast table.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ye&mdash;es,&quot; said his granddaughter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t mind picking a chicken, but I do like
-encouragement while I&#39;m a-doing of it. All the pesky
-little pin feathers stick twice as tight when I&#39;m
-alone with &#39;em.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When do you begin?&quot; Elizabeth faltered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Soon&#39;s I can get to it. First I catch my chickens.
-After you have heard them squawking for a while,
-you get your knitting and come out to the shed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When he cuts off their heads, I just about pass
-into Kingdom Come,&quot; said Judidy. &quot;I hate to hear
-them squawking as much as I hate to hear a pig
-stuck.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, do you cut off their heads?&quot; Elizabeth asked,
-faintly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I wring their necks first.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t take Jehoshaphat, will you, Captain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id="page208"></a>[pg&nbsp;208]</span>
-Swift? I&#39;ve fed him about every day this year,
-and he eats out o&#39; my hand just as cute&#39;s the next
-one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t take Speckletop, will you, Grandfather?&quot;
-Elizabeth moaned.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s a setting hen. I don&#39;t calculate to eat no
-chicken pie made out o&#39; setting hens.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s dretful hard to eat your own hens,&quot; Grandmother
-said. &quot;You raise &#39;em from chickens, and you
-get to know every one from every t&#39;other one, and
-then some fine morning Father he puts their heads
-on the chopping block, and that&#39;s the last of them,
-but they do stick, going down, when I try to eat
-them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t have to worry, Mother. I know this
-is a pretty middling tender-hearted family, so I
-bought this pair o&#39; roosters over to Battletown.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where&#39;s Battletown?&quot; Elizabeth asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s the old-fashioned name for the region over
-yonder. This here was called Crocker Neck. You
-remind me and I&#39;ll tell you some poetry about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I hate to eat anybody else&#39;s hens,&quot; Grandmother
-said, &quot;you don&#39;t know how they been raised.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They say old Uncle Jonathan Swift won&#39;t take
-his vittles hot nor cold,&quot; Grandfather chuckled.
-&quot;Either way they hurt his teeth, he says.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you feel too squeamish about seeing those
-chickens picked, you just tell Grandfather, Elizabeth,&quot;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page209" id="page209"></a>[pg&nbsp;209]</span>
-her grandmother said after he had left the
-table. &quot;I used to feel pretty delicate about such
-things myself, till I decided I&#39;d got to get hardened.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How did you get hardened?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I took a spell to think about it. I can
-stand most anything if I can get my ideas fixed up
-about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, so can I,&quot; Elizabeth cried. &quot;I guess I inherited
-it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I couldn&#39;t stand the sight o&#39; blood, or hearing
-about killing a pig or a chicken, much less seeing
-the carcasses around. Well, I come to the conclusion
-that every time a chicken was killed somebody&#39;d
-have to pick it, and I could pick a chicken if anybody
-else could. I figured out that if it wasn&#39;t me, it
-would have to be somebody else, probably just as
-squeamish. So I went ahead and caught a chicken
-and wrung its neck. I couldn&#39;t of chopped off its head
-if I suffered, but after Father helped me out that far,
-I cleaned it and picked it just like a storekeeper.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose that&#39;s the way you do get character,
-just by doing things that you can&#39;t do&mdash;all the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, Providence sees that you have plenty of
-things to do that can&#39;t be done. I kinder hate to
-see young folks forcing themselves into it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess I&#39;ll go and see that chicken picked all the
-same, Grandmother,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She did not even put her fingers in her ears to shut
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page210" id="page210"></a>[pg&nbsp;210]</span>
-out the sounds of attack and slaughter in the chicken
-yard when she went out to the woodshed and took
-her place determinedly on the step, companionably
-near the three-legged stool that her grandfather had
-drawn up to the door.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What was the poetry you said you were going to
-say to me?&quot; she began, &quot;that poetry about Crocker
-Neck?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s just what the girls used to say to the boys
-when they went a-courting:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;Hasty pudding in the pot,</span>
-<span class="i0">Pumpkin in the lantern,</span>
-<span class="i0">If you hadn&#39;t come from Crocker Neck,</span>
-<span class="i0">You wouldn&#39;t be so handsome.&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It doesn&#39;t rhyme very well, does it?&quot; Elizabeth
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It used to kinder tickle the young folks. We
-used to have one that we said to the girls:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;The Cape Cod girls they have no combs.</span>
-<span class="i0">They comb their hair with the codfish bones.</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">I don&#39;t know as that rhymes any better, but
-young folks get up things that don&#39;t have much
-rhyme or reason.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The air was full of the scent of wet feathers.
-Elizabeth looked up in time to see him lift a dripping
-fowl from the pail of hot water at his side, and then
-hastily looked away again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page211" id="page211"></a>[pg&nbsp;211]</span>
-&quot;Grandfather, what did you do when you were a
-young man?&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I went to sea.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How old were you when you first went?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;Long about nine or ten. I started in by going
-cook.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Cook?&quot; Elizabeth cried. &quot;Cook? How&mdash;how
-did that happen?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All the boys went cook summers. We used to
-go to district school in the winter and then go to sea
-in the summer. I cooked for seventeen men my
-first trip, and I hadn&#39;t nothing to cook in but a baking
-kettle, neither.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What kind of boat did you go in?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandfather industriously plucked at the carcass
-in his hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A fishing vessel. She was called the <i>Good Intent</i>.
-I used to make seven loaves of bread at a time,
-and we had to eat it every scrap up before we could
-touch the new. It didn&#39;t make much difference,
-though, because we carried four bushels of meal,
-part Indian and part rye, and it all soured before we
-was out long, but we et it just the same. We used
-to stay out two or three weeks at a time, and bring
-in seven or eight thousand fish.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can&#39;t believe that you used to be a cook. It
-doesn&#39;t seem possible.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t used to be a cook,&quot; said Grandfather,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page212" id="page212"></a>[pg&nbsp;212]</span>
-quietly, &quot;I used to go cook on my grandfather&#39;s
-vessel. Have you heard from that friend of yours
-lately whose brother-in-law is a count?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. Yes, that is. She writes me quite regularly.&quot;
-Elizabeth blushed crimson. &quot;She&#39;s an awfully nice
-girl, with no nonsense about her at all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;Taint so much her that I&#39;m interested in as her
-brother-in-law,&quot; Grandfather said, solemnly, &quot;he
-must have been a pretty smart man, to earn that
-title of count by his own efforts.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I don&#39;t think he did,&quot; Elizabeth said, before
-she caught the twinkle in her grandfather&#39;s eye.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your grandmother&#39;s father he was a sailmaker,
-you know,&quot; he continued, soberly. &quot;He used to
-have a sail loft where he sat and sewed on sails.
-He used to pay your grandmother by the dozen
-for threading for him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t know,&quot; said Elizabeth. She looked
-up from her knitting for an instant, and saw the
-strange, prickly surface of the denuded fowl. &quot;I
-didn&#39;t realize that the reason they called it goose
-flesh when they got chilled was because your flesh
-looked like a goose&#39;s flesh&mdash;I mean a&mdash;a geese&#39;s,&quot; she
-added, hastily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, and sometimes the reason they call a young
-girl a little goose is that all of a sudden she begins
-to act like one. Pesky things, these little pin
-feathers!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page213" id="page213"></a>[pg&nbsp;213]</span>
-&quot;I&mdash;I can help you do that,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, put that towel over your lap and don&#39;t get
-any blood on you. Sure it won&#39;t make you sick?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m just about sure that it will,&quot; said Elizabeth,
-&quot;but&mdash;but what do I care? Did it make you sick
-when you first went to sea, Grandfather?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sick as a dog,&quot; said her grandfather, heartily,
-&quot;and the smell of that souring meal, and mouldy corn
-beef, and dead fish&mdash;well, I&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you poor, poor granddaddy,&quot; Elizabeth cried,
-&quot;you poor little boy, why did they make you go?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That was my father&#39;s idea of bringing me up. I
-ain&#39;t so sure it wasn&#39;t a pretty good one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you get paid for it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Six dollars a month and found. I had the promise
-of a new hat in the fall, but I never saw it. Times
-has changed considerable since I was a boy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I should think they had,&quot; said Elizabeth, fervently.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You see, Grandfather he owned a fleet of fishing
-vessels, he owned a dozen himself, and he was part
-owner with your grandmother&#39;s father in as many
-more.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I thought you said Grandmother&#39;s father
-was a&mdash;was just a sailmaker?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So he was, but he was a shipowner, too. He had
-to have an interest in a good many vessels in order
-to get the business of making sails for them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did he make them all by himself?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>[pg&nbsp;214]</span>
-Grandfather smiled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, not exactly. His will was good, but he
-couldn&#39;t manage to fit out more than a few hundred
-boats single-handed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You laugh at me every word you say, Grandfather.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;About every other word, I should call it. He
-went to sea a good part of his life, but he had learned
-his trade at sailmaking. Boys learned a trade those
-days, if they was real enterprising. My father he
-learned the cooper&#39;s trade when he was a boy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How big were these boats?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They carried from ten to twenty-five men.
-Grandfather he built a sailing vessel down here at
-the mouth of Herring River that went all around
-the world nearabout. &#39;Twas his boast that he built
-it from timber cut on his own land. I was on board
-of her just off New Bedford when the steamer
-<i>Morning Star</i> struck her amidships. She sunk in
-less&#39;n fifteen minutes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you&mdash;were saved?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I woke up when she struck, and I come up from
-below just as I was, in my underclothes. I saw a
-dark shape coming alongside, and that was all I
-knew. I jumped for her. They said I was the first
-one over the side. &#39;Twas the old coastwise steamer
-that saved us, nosing along in the dark. She was
-good enough for me to land on.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page215" id="page215"></a>[pg&nbsp;215]</span>
-&quot;All these things don&#39;t seem possible, Grandfather.
-I can&#39;t believe them. You must have been a brave
-little boy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know. I don&#39;t think boys is born brave,
-but they get the fear o&#39; God put into them one way
-or another, the same as little girls.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But all these things are like&mdash;story books.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Like enough. Story books is imitated from real
-life, as near as I can make out.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t think any things like these could happen
-to anybody I knew. I mean, things so exciting.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You never thought to sink so low as to be picking
-pin feathers out of the same fowl with a feller that
-had been cook on a fishing schooner.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This time Elizabeth met his twinkling gaze. She
-rose from her task long enough to deposit an emphatic
-kiss on the top of a shiny, bald pate.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who called me a goose?&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In the circles you&#39;re accustomed to, I suppose
-they don&#39;t call such names?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This is the circle in which I move,&quot; Elizabeth
-said, &quot;this circle of you and Grandmother and Judidy.
-Now I know where I inherited my cooking ability
-from&mdash;you, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, there was times when the crew could get
-their teeth into my pie crust,&quot; grandfather admitted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth slipped up to her room that afternoon,
-after her noonday dinner, and wrote to Jean:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id="page216"></a>[pg&nbsp;216]</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="smcap">Jeanie Dear</span>:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I have learned so much since I came to Cape Cod, that I don&#39;t
-see how there is going to be much more in the world to learn. I
-suppose there will be, but I don&#39;t think it can possibly be so
-important. I was an untried child when I came here, and now
-look at me. You can&#39;t, but I wish you could. I have grown
-a little taller and, I think, a lot sadder looking. Also, I am
-healthier. I feel a lot like Alice in Wonderland, mentally, however&mdash;I
-have to keep running and running, to stay in the same
-place, and then I don&#39;t.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">I have some things in my mind that I can hardly bear, and
-some that I can hardly wait for, and some that I can hardly believe.
-You know what they are all about. The first is Buddy&#39;s
-girl and her approaching wedding. I am to stand up with them.
-I couldn&#39;t refuse; how could I, Jean? It&#39;s just a terrible, terrible
-thing. Buddy doesn&#39;t know it, because he is coming out of the
-hospital and down here just as soon as he can, and I am afraid
-it would retard his recovery if I wrote him. So I am not telling
-him till he gets here. Do you wonder, Jean, that I feel like a so
-much older girl than I did when I first came down here? Sometimes
-I think that my hair ought to be quite gray, with all my
-responsibility. I lit a light once, in the middle of the night, and
-got up to see if I hadn&#39;t really got gray hair, I felt so gray. I
-keep having to decide what to tell Buddy and what not. I
-can&#39;t ask Mother, because Buddy would never forgive me if I
-did, and what he would do to me would turn me gray for a fact,
-I guess. I&#39;ve hinted it all out to you to keep from bursting, but
-Jeanie, it isn&#39;t the same thing as talking to you. It&#39;s only like
-saying my prayers or writing a diary. Besides, I haven&#39;t told
-you details. Only the general facts.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The things I can hardly wait for are my parents and Buddy
-coming&mdash;my own brother, that has come out of the jaws of death
-in two senses, since I have seen him. Once from the Trenches
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>[pg&nbsp;217]</span>
-and once from the U. S. Base Hospital. Having a brother is
-the strangest, sweetest thing. I&#39;d rather have one than a sister,
-though I do think Ruth Farraday is beautiful, and Peggy&#39;s lot is,
-next to mine, the most fortunate in that respect. I ought not
-to crow like this to an only child, though.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The things I can hardly believe are the things I&#39;ve been hearing
-about my ancestors. In a way, you know, I think it is more interesting
-to be an American than even to be a count. I&#39;ve
-lived along all my life with the idea that I was a New Yorker,
-or rather a New Jerseyite with one foot on Broadway or Fifth
-Avenue, and I thought the cook was the cook and the butcher
-the butcher, and that was all there was to it. I had a grandfather
-and grandmother that I had idealized in my imagination, all
-dressed up in city clothes and manners. I didn&#39;t stop to think
-what I came from, except that Mother was an Endicott, and that
-all her relations lived abroad most of the time.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">You know the rude shock I got when I came down here. The
-corner grocer is my distant uncle. The hired girl is a kind of
-cousin. The butcher that goes out selling things in a cart, meat
-all raw and pig pork that he has killed himself, is the family&#39;s
-friend. It seemed just plain awful to me at first. I didn&#39;t know
-what any of it <i>meant</i>. But now I&#39;m getting to. I talked with
-grandfather, who quite rightly understands my horrid scruples
-and teases me to pieces about them, and I talked with Peggy,
-whose father tells her a lot of things. (Those girls get their
-niceness from their father.)</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He says this early settlers&#39; blood is a wonderful thing. It was
-mostly the younger sons of aristocrat families that settled here,
-and a great many of them married their cooks or serving maids.
-(Perhaps that&#39;s why cooking is such a general talent.) They had
-to hew a living out of a very sterile soil, and to learn all the virtues
-of thrift and prudence from actual practise. They didn&#39;t
-have any houses or money or matches or anything. They just
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page218" id="page218"></a>[pg&nbsp;218]</span>
-had to make them, and learn not to be aristocrats, instead of
-learning to be. They had to <i>make</i> New England. Well, my
-grandparents and my great-great-great-greats did an awful lot
-about this. There wouldn&#39;t be any Cape Cod, if it hadn&#39;t been
-for these Industries that they were engaged in, and it&#39;s the most
-romantic thing, the way even young children lived this seagoing,
-hardy life in the school of hard knocks. My grandfather was a
-cook at a very early age, and was lost at sea, only he jumped into
-a coastwise steamer instead of being drowned.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It&#39;s all wonderful, about grandmother&#39;s being courted at a
-Harvest Ball, and her grandmother running to get fire in a swing-pail,
-and funny little old songs they sing. Do you know what
-I feel as if I had done? I feel my roots pushing right down into
-the ground, and I love the ground, and it loves my roots.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Also, I love you, my own Jeanie, and more so all the time as I
-grow better. Some time I am going to show you all this Cape.
-Well, now I must take up my cross and my scare again. I almost
-forgot it when I was writing.</p>
-
-<p class="right">Your
-<span class="smcap">Elizabeth</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">When she had finished and stamped this letter,
-Elizabeth took it in her hand and went slowly down
-the stairs. It was nearly time for the auto-bus from
-the morning train, the rumble of which could be
-heard distinctly on the street beyond that on which
-the old house stood. Elizabeth always waited for
-this before she went to the post office. She had heard
-the whistle of the train some time since.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her grandmother stood at the door.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The barge has turned in on our street, and it&#39;s
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page219" id="page219"></a>[pg&nbsp;219]</span>
-stopping here,&quot; she said, &quot;I guess we&#39;re going to
-have company. I&#39;m dretful glad Father killed
-those roosters this morning. There&#39;s plenty cooked.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who do you suppose it is?&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Some o&#39; Father&#39;s folks. They&#39;re always turning
-up when least expected.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth watched the high-set, curtained vehicle,
-a hybrid motor truck and picnic carryall that had
-been converted to its present use by the exigencies of
-&quot;depot&quot; traffic. A boy in overalls had descended
-from the driver&#39;s seat, and was lifting out a small
-motor trunk by its handle, and a big, pig-skin suitcase.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, that&#39;s like Mother&#39;s trunk,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;and that suitcase is like her suitcase.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A tall, blonde woman in a blue tailored suit and a
-blue veil jumped lightly out of the unwieldy conveyance,
-her hand touching that of the boy in overalls.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Shall I lift these here baggages into the house for
-you?&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, thank you. Thirty-five cents, isn&#39;t it? Oh,
-don&#39;t bother to make change. That&#39;s all right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For the Land o&#39; Liberty!&quot; Grandmother exclaimed.
-&quot;For the land sakes!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, it <i>is</i> Mother!&quot; cried Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id="page220"></a>[pg&nbsp;220]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Mother</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget was sitting on the floor, and singing
-to herself:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;I am a little love, and I&#39;m sitting on the floor.</span>
-<span class="i0">They put me here to sit and sing,</span>
-<span class="i0">Eating cookies as I sing,</span>
-<span class="i0">On Grandma Swiftie&#39;s lovely floor.</span>
-<span class="i0">A little girl I used to be</span>
-<span class="i0">Is sitting on the floor.&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you think you have sung almost enough,
-Madget?&quot; Mrs. Swift said. &quot;What&#39;s the matter,
-Elizabeth? Don&#39;t <i>you</i> think she has?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I don&#39;t know. I was just listening to the
-sound of your voice, Mother. It&#39;s so good to hear it
-again&mdash;saying anything.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I don&#39;t,&quot; said Madget, pausing between
-selections only long enough to reply literally to the
-question addressed to her:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;A little girl with yellow teeth</span>
-<span class="i0">Was sitting on the kitchen floor.</span>
-<span class="i0">She sat and sang most all day long,</span>
-<span class="i0">And et some cookies all day long,</span>
-<span class="i0">On Grandma Swiftie&#39;s lovely floor.&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id="page221"></a>[pg&nbsp;221]</span>
-&quot;She certainly has a keen sense of rhythm,&quot; Mrs.
-Swift laughed. &quot;You&#39;ve grown up so, Elizabeth, I
-hardly know my child.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m not really a child any longer, Mother, dear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t suppose you would care to walk down to
-the block and get a quart of ice-cream so soon after
-breakfast, would you, dear?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes, Mother, I can always eat ice-cream.&quot;
-Elizabeth swept the gingham frock she was making
-for Madget out of her lap and rose hastily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think I&#39;ve quite lost my little girl,&quot; Mrs.
-Swift smiled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For that, Mummy, darling, I won&#39;t go. You are
-just playing tricks on me, the way you always do, and
-I fall right into the trap the way I always do, and
-oh, it&#39;s so good to have it happening again!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You may go for ice-cream if you like, but a
-maturer Elizabeth might prefer to wait until it was a
-little nearer dinner time. When you sat down, you
-were going to whip all the seams in that dress before
-you moved again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want some ice-cream!&quot; wailed Madget.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You shall have some bye and bye, dear. Don&#39;t
-you know that nice little girls don&#39;t shriek like that?&quot;
-Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dear me,&quot; Mrs. Swift laughed, &quot;I think I&#39;ll have
-to make a kindergarten teacher out of you. You
-have the professionally maternal manner.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page222" id="page222"></a>[pg&nbsp;222]</span>
-&quot;But I have grown older, Mother, and soberer.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ve taken hold of life better. To tell you the
-truth, I was worried about you this spring, you
-seemed to be getting your sense of values so wrong.
-You were running around with nice, wholesome
-children enough, but your ideas of life seemed to be
-growing very artificial. That was one reason I sent
-you down here by yourself. I was pretty sure that
-you would learn some of the essential lessons.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess you would have been disappointed if I
-hadn&#39;t, Mother. I might not have. At first I just
-thought it was all horrid and&mdash;common.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And what, dear?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth hung her head.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you know that nice little girls don&#39;t use
-that word?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There isn&#39;t any other that says it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is one of the words which reflect on the
-user. It&#39;s one mostly used by people who have just
-come to realize that there is a difference in manners.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s awful to be a snob, isn&#39;t it, Mother?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s unfortunate.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve just discovered that I was one. Mother,
-what do you suppose made me so snobbish about the
-Cape when I first came down? You&#39;re not a snob,
-and Father isn&#39;t, nor Jeanie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am afraid it was the disadvantage of your bringing
-up, my dear. We had some pretty hard knocks
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page223" id="page223"></a>[pg&nbsp;223]</span>
-when you were growing up. Your father&#39;s advancement
-came late. We always lived nicely and had the
-same standards as other people, but we had a greater
-struggle to maintain them. Our lean years gave you
-a little sense of inferiority, my dear, that&#39;s all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Mother, how much you know and how wise
-you are! There is something I wish I could tell you
-about, Mother, dear, but I can&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You mean about Buddy and Ruth Farraday?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t know you knew,&quot; Elizabeth gasped.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t until the night I came away, and then
-Buddy told me. It was very brave and dear of him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Mother, what shall we do?&quot; Elizabeth wailed.
-&quot;Ruthie is going to be married next week. Maybe
-before Buddy gets here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandmother told me so last night. I don&#39;t
-think there is anything to do, excepting to let matters
-take their course.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But couldn&#39;t you go and see Ruth, and tell her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell her what? That my boy loves her and that
-she should have loved him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, she should. She almost does, I think.
-She&#39;s just marrying because her dreadful
-mother&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She <i>is</i> a dreadful mother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So are we all sometimes, but it takes our contemporaries
-to judge us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>[pg&nbsp;224]</span>
-&quot;But you are so nice, and she isn&#39;t, Mother, dear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth, if you are in the confidence of the
-Farraday family in any way that I am not, you must
-not share that confidence with me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But it&#39;s Buddy&#39;s future we are talking about, and
-if I know things that will help us to work it out, I
-think I ought to be allowed to tell them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think I can manage to get a perspective on
-Buddy&#39;s future without gossiping about the Farradays.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, why can&#39;t you go and tell Ruthie about
-Buddy? Tell her he&mdash;he loves her, right out?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why didn&#39;t you do that, dear?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I was scared to; besides, it would have been
-sneaky to Buddy, and&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Exactly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But now she&#39;ll be married if somebody doesn&#39;t
-do something.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am afraid there is nothing to be done but sit
-still and let her <i>be</i> married.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But how can you, Mother?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know how I can, to tell the truth. That&#39;s
-about the hardest thing any mother does, to sit still
-and let things happen that involve her children,
-but as your father says, a man&#39;s first duty is to mind
-his own business, and if at first you don&#39;t succeed,
-try, try again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, dear!&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>[pg&nbsp;225]</span>
-&quot;Oh, dear!&quot; echoed Madget.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Aren&#39;t you happy, Madget?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want some ice-cream and some doughnuts
-and some cookies and some boiled ham, and I want
-to come and sit on your lap.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You may have some ice-cream pretty soon and
-you may come and sit on my lap now. Will that
-do?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know who I love,&quot; Madget said, pushing aside
-the folds of gingham and climbing into the coveted
-place, &quot;but I won&#39;t tell.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you want to see the beautiful present that my
-mother brought me, Madget?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want a beautiful present,&quot; said Madget.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am going to give you a present,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;but not now, because you asked for it. It isn&#39;t nice
-to ask for things. You must just wait until people
-give them to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; Madget said, unexpectedly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s the way those children are,&quot; Elizabeth
-explained, seriously, &quot;Moses especially. You tell
-them what isn&#39;t nice, and then they agree with you,
-and there isn&#39;t any argument. It just leaves you
-feeling flat.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Madget is only waiting seraphically for her
-present to come without asking,&quot; Mrs. Swift said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;See what I have!&quot; Elizabeth took a gayly-coloured
-rubber cape and bathing cap to match from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page226" id="page226"></a>[pg&nbsp;226]</span>
-the back of the chair on which she was sitting, and
-spread them out for the child&#39;s inspection. &quot;I carry
-them around everywhere I go, Mother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Rainbows,&quot; said Madget, ecstatically.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is all the rainbow colours,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;isn&#39;t it lovely, Mother, dear?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m so glad you like it. I had a bad time making
-up my mind what to get.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;These capes look so grand when you come out of
-the water, and it&#39;s cold, too, running up to the bath-house.
-You really need something. Look here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget had insinuated her bobbing curls into the
-depths of the cap, and then, standing, was swathing
-herself in the folds of the bright cape.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She looks like one of the Stewart babies. I don&#39;t
-know why, but I suppose it&#39;s that dressed-up look
-they have. Her hair is clean, because I washed it
-myself. What are you laughing at, Mother?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It seems so extraordinary to have you in charge
-of a family of children.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, somebody had to take an interest in them.
-It&#39;s Grandmother that takes the real care of them,
-though. I only help as I can.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Swift smiled a smile of deep satisfaction into
-her embroidery.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am very pleased with you, dear,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mother,&quot; Elizabeth&#39;s gaze became fixed out of
-the window, &quot;a boy comes to call on me sometimes.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id="page227"></a>[pg&nbsp;227]</span>
-I don&#39;t think you would disapprove, because
-Grandfather invited him&mdash;but there he comes
-now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He looks like a nice boy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is. He&#39;s quite sensible, when you get to know
-him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, go to the door, Elizabeth. He looks
-as if he might run away if he wasn&#39;t admitted
-instantly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess he has heard you&#39;re here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How do you do?&quot; Tom Robbins said to the
-widening crack that gave him his glimpse of Elizabeth,
-&quot;I can&#39;t wait till you get the door open.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How do you do?&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is Captain Swift at home? I don&#39;t want to see
-him, but I have to ask for him because he told me
-to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, but my mother is,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I want to see <i>her</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here she is, then. Mother,&quot; Elizabeth led the
-way into the living room, &quot;this is Mr. Robbins.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m glad to meet Mr. Robbins. I think that his
-other name is Tom, or if it isn&#39;t it ought to be, for
-he&#39;s the image of the Tom Robbins I knew.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Father remembers you,&quot; Tom cried. &quot;He used
-to see you when you were first married.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Take some chairs,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s our joke,&quot; Tom explained, &quot;the first
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id="page228"></a>[pg&nbsp;228]</span>
-time I came here Captain Swift was so full of fun,
-and everything&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That, well, I got rattled,&quot; Elizabeth explained,
-&quot;so I said, &#39;take some chairs,&#39; and we always say it
-now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Taking chairs just about describes me when I
-go into a place. I move around a good deal,&quot; Tom
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If I could have my present,&quot; Madget interrupted
-from the sofa, &quot;I <i>would</i> be good.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At dinner time I am going to give it to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; Madget said, &quot;I&#39;ll go ask Grandma
-Swift to have my dinner.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Isn&#39;t she cunning?&quot; Tom looked after her as
-she trotted off. &quot;Oh, Elizabeth, I&#39;m going to give
-Moses my old bicycle. It isn&#39;t doing any one any
-good now. I&#39;m making him a rack to go in front,
-that he can carry milk bottles on.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandfather will give him a job carrying milk
-then,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;Won&#39;t that be fine?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It seems to me that you children are quite
-practical philanthropists. I think you are doing
-wonders for the Steppes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s all Elizabeth,&quot; Tom said, &quot;she&#39;s the one that
-got us all thinking of it. What I came in this morning
-for is this, Mrs. Swift. Our family is going to give
-a big, old-fashioned clambake on the beach the first
-pleasant day after Monday, and we wanted&mdash;that is,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id="page229"></a>[pg&nbsp;229]</span>
-I did&mdash;we thought perhaps Peggy and Elizabeth
-might like to come. It&#39;ll be great fun. Bill and I
-are going to help dig the clams. Of course it&#39;s just a
-family affair, and I don&#39;t know whether Father
-knows you are in town, Mrs. Swift, but I am sure if
-you would like to come, too, we should all be so very
-glad. We thought of Elizabeth and Peggy first, you
-see.&quot; Tom was very confused.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s very kind of you, Tom, but I shouldn&#39;t be
-able to go. I am expecting my husband and my sick
-son almost any day now, and my object in coming
-ahead of them is to get everything in running order
-for them, but I am sure Elizabeth would be delighted
-to go, and I should be very glad for her to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, thank you. Mrs. Farraday said that Peggy
-could come if Elizabeth could. I think it will be
-pretty good sport. It will be a regular, old-fashioned
-clambake, you know, with the clams banked in
-bricks and sand, and all the things wrapped in seaweed
-and steamed in&mdash;in their own steam. We have
-one every year, and some of our family comes from a
-long way to be there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think it will be beautiful,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;I
-am so glad Mummy will let me go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wish I had my twenty-seven white horses,&quot;
-she sighed, as she watched Tom&#39;s retreating figure.
-&quot;He&#39;s nice mannered, isn&#39;t he? He always whips
-off his hat at the gate, just like that. He&#39;d count for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id="page230"></a>[pg&nbsp;230]</span>
-one red-head so nicely. I got my ninety-nine
-Negroes, but the white horses are very hard to get.
-I&#39;ve only got four and a half, and I&#39;m not sure it
-wasn&#39;t the same white horse all the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Four and a half white horses?&quot; Mrs. Swift
-looked up inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A white goat. That&#39;s what I mean by half. We
-saw him one way down in Chatham. I don&#39;t really
-mean to count him unless we get desperate. I don&#39;t
-suppose it&#39;s quite fair.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We have to make a good many compromises in
-this day and age, but it doesn&#39;t seem to me that a
-goat would make an efficient substitute for a horse.
-Why stop there? Why not a pig or a bear?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I didn&#39;t really mean to count him. Peggy
-and I get discouraged, and then we try to think of
-encouraging things.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I haven&#39;t seen Peggy yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s coming soon, but she has to help Ruth
-make that dreadful trousseau. I&#39;m going upstairs
-and get Madget&#39;s doll, and then I&#39;m going to telephone
-and see where she is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Solemnly seated on the floor in the guest chamber,
-Elizabeth found Madget contemplating the Little
-Red Riding Hood doll that Mrs. Swift had brought
-for her. It stood upright on the bureau and returned
-her gaze complacently.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is that my present?&quot; Madget said. &quot;I want it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id="page231"></a>[pg&nbsp;231]</span>
-&quot;You shouldn&#39;t have come upstairs without being
-sent, Madget.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was sent. You sent me for a thimble.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But that was yesterday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here it is,&quot; Madget said, producing it with a
-wide smile.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, that&#39;s your present,&quot; Elizabeth said in
-despair. &quot;Take it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Madget took it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My baby dolly!&quot; she cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As Elizabeth started downstairs again, she heard
-Peggy&#39;s voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t need to telephone,&quot; Peggy cried, from
-the sitting room, &quot;I came and I brought the bride
-along with me, what there is left of her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t know it was going to be quite so much
-trouble to be married,&quot; Ruth Farraday was saying,
-&quot;perhaps if I had, I wouldn&#39;t have attempted it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, this is the last marriage I can ever have in
-my family,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;unless I ever take the fatal
-step myself, which I won&#39;t. You&#39;re just the same,
-aren&#39;t you, Elizabeth? You can only have one outside
-of your own.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think Buddy will ever marry,&quot; Elizabeth
-said, looking at Ruth Farraday.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My son is coming to-morrow or the next day,&quot;
-Mrs. Swift said, hastily, &quot;we hope that Cape Cod is
-really going to make him well again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>[pg&nbsp;232]</span>
-&quot;He&#39;ll be here in time for the wedding,&quot; Peggy
-said, &quot;if he is invited.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We were planning to have only the family,&quot;
-Ruth said, &quot;but not having two sisters to add the
-proper touch of picturesqueness, I asked Elizabeth to
-stand with Peggy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She never opened her mouth,&quot; said the incorrigible
-Peggy, indicating herself, &quot;excepting to put her
-foot into it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hush, Peggy,&quot; said Ruth, whitening a little,
-&quot;Mrs. Swift understands. Peggy regards this wedding
-as a sort of cross between a picnic and a visit to
-the dentist&#39;s.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I certainly do,&quot; said Peggy, &quot;only you don&#39;t
-have to have so many clothes on those occasions. I
-don&#39;t see why you can&#39;t just be married in what
-you&#39;ve got. Well, anyway, that clambake is going
-to be a ray of light through the gloom. That&#39;s
-something we can enjoy without any mixture of our
-emotions.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall have to come some day without Peggy,&quot;
-Ruth said, rising, &quot;this time we were just going by to
-the post office and she dragged me in.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She gets a letter every mail,&quot; Peggy explained,
-&quot;and sometimes two a mail. If you think I&#39;ve
-said awful things, Mrs. Swift, I&#39;m sorry, but&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I assure you they are nothing to the things she
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>[pg&nbsp;233]</span>
-could say,&quot; Ruth laughed. &quot;I&#39;m glad she has
-Elizabeth&#39;s restraining influence. I suppose the
-two are so different that that&#39;s the reason they get on
-so well.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth&#39;s a perfect lady,&quot; Peggy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Swift stood at the window and watched the
-two girls go down the path, Ruth&#39;s pink linen and
-close-fitting white sweater outlining her extreme
-slenderness and her little feet set with a delicate deliberation
-as she moved.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She <i>is</i> an apple-blossom girl,&quot; she said, thoughtfully,
-&quot;poor Buddy!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Mother, Mother, Mother,&quot; Elizabeth wailed,
-flinging her arms around her, &quot;isn&#39;t it perfectly
-terrible? I am so glad you are here. I don&#39;t
-believe I could have borne it another minute without
-you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, now, I guess you&#39;re satisfied,&quot; Grandfather
-said, coming in on this tableau. &quot;I guess you&#39;ve got
-about all you need to make you happy, ain&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth threw a forlorn glance at her mother.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I need other things to make me happy,&quot; she said,
-&quot;but I&#39;m perfectly satisfied with this darling person,
-all the same.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id="page234"></a>[pg&nbsp;234]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Elizabeth Is Scared</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, Baby.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, Daddy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth and her father were the first
-ones down to breakfast on the morning after his
-arrival with Buddy&mdash;the first of the visiting family,
-at least. Grandfather had been outside and at
-work since dawn, and Grandmother and Judidy had
-been in the kitchen almost as long, employed in
-magnificent preparations for feasting the returned
-sons of the house.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is all this radiance for this morning,
-Elizabeth? Me or Buddy or the new roadster?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You <i>and</i> Buddy <i>and</i> the new roadster, Father,
-darling. The roadster was the completest surprise,
-but I am more intimately fond of you and Buddy.
-I just can&#39;t believe you are here. I gave myself a
-good hard pinch every time I woke up in the night,
-to try to make myself believe it. The last time, I
-got up and sneaked to your door and listened to
-hear if you were breathing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, was I?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id="page235"></a>[pg&nbsp;235]</span>
-&quot;You were doing more than that, Daddy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where did you sleep when they turned you out of
-your room for John?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll show you bye and bye, Daddy. I&#39;ve got a
-room of my own, and all I had to do was to put a
-tiny, weeny little bed in it. I thought that was
-going to crowd it dreadfully. Instead, it is very
-becoming to it. Faith, Hope, and Charity guard my
-slumbers, only I couldn&#39;t slumber, I was so excited.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Faith, Hope, and Charity?&quot; her father looked
-inquiring.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are my guardian angels, borrowed from
-Aunt Helen by permission of Grandmother. Would
-you like to go out and see the pigs, Daddy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d like to but I don&#39;t think we&#39;ve time before
-breakfast.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, their names are Faith, Hope, and Charity,
-also&mdash;this new litter, I mean. Grandfather let me
-name them. They are excruciatingly cunning,
-Daddy. Faith and Hope keep themselves a little
-messily, but Charity is as clean as a kitten. She
-knows her name, too, and comes when you call her by
-it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, him or her. All their names are nice and
-non-committal. They can be boys or girls, whichever
-they like.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id="page236"></a>[pg&nbsp;236]</span>
-&quot;I should think they were committed to a great
-deal, in either event.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, children,&quot; Grandmother appeared behind
-a platter heaped high with crisp, hot doughnuts,
-&quot;have you got a good appetite for your breakfast?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It seems so funny to think of your being Grandmas
-child,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I am.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, it&#39;s hard to believe it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandfather, who had followed on his wife&#39;s heels,
-took his place at the head of the table, and shook out
-his napkin.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve heard tell of a feller that went driving down
-Chatham way one day,&quot; he said, &quot;and he come to an
-old house in the woods, and there he found a little
-old man sitting on the doorstep that was so old and
-palsied and shaky, he could hardly make out to
-speak at all. Well, this feller he wanted to find out
-how the old man happened to be left alone at his
-great age, with no care nor companionship nor
-nothing, so he asked him; he says &#39;Do you live all
-alone here?&#39; he says. The little old man he was
-so deaf he couldn&#39;t hardly hear nothing, but this
-feller he asked him again, and he put his hand up to
-his ears and just made out to catch the question.
-&#39;No,&#39; he says in his high-pitched, quavering voice,
-&#39;No, I don&#39;t live here all alone, I live here with my
-father.&#39;&mdash;&#39;Your father?&#39; this feller says, all taken
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>[pg&nbsp;237]</span>
-aback, &#39;Your father? Have you got a father?
-Where is he?&#39; The little old man he hardly made out
-to get this question at all, but after a long time,
-when it had been repeated to him over and over
-again, he managed to understand it. &#39;Where&#39;s
-Father?&#39; he says. &#39;You ask me where my father is?
-Well, where should he be, &#39;cepting upstairs, putting
-Grandfather to bed.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. Swift laughed immoderately.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose it does look a little like that to Elizabeth,&quot;
-he said. &quot;She&#39;s used to thinking of me as
-being about as old as that kind of relative gets to be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandfather&#39;s whole life is spent in teasing me,&quot;
-Elizabeth said, &quot;it&#39;s bread and butter and pie and
-cake to him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;By the way, Father, where is your pie this
-morning? I didn&#39;t know that you ever started the
-day without it, but I don&#39;t see it on the table.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, I am going to tell something on Father,&quot;
-Grandmother said, slyly. &quot;He ain&#39;t had a piece o&#39;
-pie for his breakfast since Elizabeth come, and he
-wouldn&#39;t let me put none on the table, either.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was afraid she&#39;d get to making it the way she
-makes cake, and I&#39;d have to eat it whether or no.&quot;
-Grandfather mopped his brow with a great show of
-vigour.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It warn&#39;t that,&quot; Grandmother smiled. &quot;He was
-just sprucing up for his city granddaughter a little.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id="page238"></a>[pg&nbsp;238]</span>
-He went down street and got two new neckties and a
-white cotton vest before she&#39;d been here a week. He
-had to kind of jerk Elizabeth down a peg and jerk
-himself up several to meet her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, Granddaddy <i>Swift</i>,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;have
-you been going without your breakfast pie on my
-account?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who said breakfast pie?&quot; a gaunt figure in
-khaki appeared in the doorway, and Elizabeth,
-with one admonishing finger still uplifted, turned
-from her grandfather and with one leap hurled
-herself upon it. &quot;I&#39;m going to get out of these clothes
-to-morrow,&quot; Buddy continued, calmly, holding his
-sister off with one hand, &quot;but I have forgotten how
-to get into regular trousers before breakfast. Emerson,
-the well-known sage of Concord, used to eat pie
-for his breakfast&mdash;pumpkin pie, and it goes very well
-with coffee.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Grandfather won&#39;t let me have so much as a
-snitch of coffee,&quot; Elizabeth pouted, still clinging to
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not even a demi-tassy,&quot; Grandfather put in, slyly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And a good thing, too,&quot; Buddy said. &quot;Granddad,
-your ideas of bringing up Elizabeth are a good
-deal like my own&mdash;a firm, strong hand applied wherever
-necessary.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And last but not least&mdash;Mother,&quot; said Elizabeth,
-pausing in the midst of a grimace at her brother. &quot;I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>[pg&nbsp;239]</span>
-never knew you to be the last one at the breakfast
-table in my life before, Mother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m glad,&quot; Mrs. Swift said, as she took her place
-between her children, &quot;and oh, John and I have our
-napkin rings! I was going to bear it with resignation
-if we didn&#39;t, but I am so glad to see them again.
-We had them on our honeymoon, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth had one for a while, but she didn&#39;t
-seem to admire it, not what you might call beyond
-reason,&quot; Grandfather said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, dear!&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;the instances keep
-piling up of the way he has seen right through me
-from the first minute of my coming, but now I&#39;m
-beginning to see through him,&quot; she added, triumphantly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When anybody makes up their mind they are
-beginning to see through Father, there is generally
-breakers ahead for them,&quot; Grandmother said,
-thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s from Father that I get whatever business
-acumen I have,&quot; John Swift said; &quot;let the other
-fellow think he is getting away with everything, and
-then when he has given himself entirely away, never
-let up on him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, that&#39;s my principle,&quot; Grandfather said,
-complacently.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m going into Father&#39;s office, did you know it?&quot;
-Buddy said. &quot;Until day before yesterday I might
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id="page240"></a>[pg&nbsp;240]</span>
-just as well have thought of getting a job with J. P.
-Morgan, and then suddenly this opening came, and
-my old boss recommended me for it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We lost a good man suddenly,&quot; John Swift explained,
-&quot;and yesterday morning old Howard came
-in to me and asked me what I knew of a youngster
-named John Smith that used to be with the Urner
-Company. I was pretty sure he had got the name
-wrong, so I told him I&#39;d call up the Urner office and
-find out if he was the one I thought he was. In the
-afternoon, just before I left, Howard asked me if I
-found out anything about the boy, and if I knew anything
-to his advantage or disadvantage. &#39;I do,&#39; I
-said, &#39;both. He&#39;s my son.&#39; &#39;We&#39;ll take him in,&#39;
-Howard said, &#39;I guess you know how to handle him
-by this time.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You see,&quot; Buddy explained, &quot;I began to get busy
-on the hospital wire just as soon as I realized I was
-cured, and my old boss is a white man, if ever there
-was one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not going to Russia just at present?&quot; his father
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not going to Russia,&quot; Buddy said, steadily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">After breakfast Elizabeth had her first minute
-alone with her brother. They were in the living room,
-in Grandmother&#39;s and Grandfather&#39;s chairs respectively,
-with the big fern branching between them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, Sister?&quot; Buddy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id="page241"></a>[pg&nbsp;241]</span>
-&quot;Well, Buddy!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What do you know about Ruth, now?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;About Ruth?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, Sister, darling, you heard me the first time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You mean how&mdash;how is she?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I mean, tell me everything you know that you
-haven&#39;t told me before.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Haven&#39;t you talked with Mother about her since
-you came?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not a word.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hasn&#39;t she told you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, I&#39;ve got to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You certainly have&mdash;and quick,&quot; said Buddy.
-&quot;What is it? Fire away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ruth&mdash;Ruth is going to&mdash;to get married next
-week&mdash;Thursday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh!&quot; Buddy&#39;s jaw shut on the monosyllable.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was hurried up all of a sudden. I saw her
-and talked with her on the beach once, and she said
-to tell you that your telegram was a day too late.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thanks,&quot; said Buddy, briefly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She sent her love, and said you were a day too
-late.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We&#39;ll see about that. Is this Chambers fellow
-around?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, he is in Boston, but he comes down to see
-her all the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page242" id="page242"></a>[pg&nbsp;242]</span>
-&quot;We&#39;ll see about that, too. What&#39;s her telephone
-number?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thirty-two, ring eleven. You have to ring in,
-you know&mdash;that handle on the box, and ask Central.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I know,&quot; said Buddy, &quot;telephone is nice
-and convenient, isn&#39;t it? Anybody on the farm can
-hear from this location,&quot; he picked up the instrument
-from the desk in the corner.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Shall I go?&quot; Elizabeth asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, dear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want to speak to Miss Ruth Farraday&mdash;Mr.
-Swift.&quot; He put his hand over the mouthpiece, the
-fingers trembled slightly, but his voice was cool, &quot;I
-guess that was your friend Peggy. Sounded like a
-flapper&#39;s voice. She&#39;s gone to call her. Oh, hello,
-Ruth,&quot; he said into the instrument, &quot;this is John.
-Yes, I managed to squirm out. Fine, thank you.
-A little under weight, that&#39;s all. I want to see you.
-Now, this morning, may I come over there? I
-wouldn&#39;t take up much time. Yes it <i>is</i> important.
-Oh, all right, that will be better yet. I am perfectly
-able to make it, but I&#39;d rather have you here if you&#39;ll
-come. All right. In about half an hour. All right.
-Good-bye.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s coming here,&quot; he explained to Elizabeth,
-&quot;she was starting out to do some errands. She
-didn&#39;t want me there, at any rate. Perhaps Chambers
-is expected.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page243" id="page243"></a>[pg&nbsp;243]</span>
-&quot;The walls of that house are as thin as paper,&quot;
-Elizabeth said, &quot;and I&#39;m glad you don&#39;t have to go
-there. Her mother might be around.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s awfully decent of her to come here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She <i>is</i> awfully decent.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s scared.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who wouldn&#39;t be?&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;My gracious!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose I ought to try to get into some kind of
-decent clothes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;stay in those.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I&#39;ve been mustered out. I ought to be in
-&#39;cits&#39;.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;d like you better in those,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-positively.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How do you know?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know how I know, but I know,&quot; Elizabeth
-said. &quot;I&#39;m a girl, and I know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess you are,&quot; Buddy said. &quot;I never thought
-of it before, but you&#39;re a girl and you&#39;ve got a line
-on girls. Do I look pretty punk to you? Cadaverous
-and all that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are the handsomest thing,&quot; Elizabeth cried,
-&quot;that I ever saw, Buddy. You used to be good looking,
-but now you&#39;ve got a kind of&mdash;look&mdash;a soulful
-look&mdash;that&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;ll do. I was only interested in my physical
-aspect.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>[pg&nbsp;244]</span>
-&quot;Well, that&#39;s perfect,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is my face clean?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let me see. Yes, it is, perfectly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then I won&#39;t go upstairs at all. You just sit
-around and help me kill time till she comes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Buddy, can I kiss you just once?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You cannot,&quot; said Buddy. &quot;I&#39;ve changed a
-good deal in a great many ways, but I haven&#39;t got
-to the point where I like to be kissed after breakfast
-yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You used to write pretty affectionately from those
-old trenches.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There was an ocean between us then, and it was
-perfectly safe.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think men are the funniest things,&quot; Elizabeth
-said. &quot;It isn&#39;t that they don&#39;t want to be
-loved&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, it isn&#39;t,&quot; said Buddy. &quot;So tell Mother to
-keep the coast clear, will you, and then come back.
-No, don&#39;t come back. I&#39;ll watch for Ruth and let
-her in. No, you watch for Ruth and let her in. You
-bring her in here, and then get out unless I tell you to
-stick around. See?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You can&#39;t tell me that before her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can tell anybody anything before her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;but&mdash;but I&#39;m scared,
-Buddy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&mdash;you go to the deuce,&quot; her brother said, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page245" id="page245"></a>[pg&nbsp;245]</span>
-only then did Elizabeth realize the strain under which
-he was labouring.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was with a face nearly as white as Buddy&#39;s own
-that she opened the door to Ruth a few minutes
-later.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Buddy&#39;s in there,&quot; she said, weakly, to Ruth&#39;s
-inquiry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come and show me,&quot; Ruth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Right this way,&quot; Elizabeth said, superfluously.
-&quot;Buddy, here&#39;s Ruth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; said Buddy, unfolding his long legs
-from the rocking chair, and advancing so slowly that
-Elizabeth knew he was trembling with weakness,
-&quot;you may go now, Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Please,&quot; said Ruth Farraday in her low voice,
-&quot;let her stay.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; said Buddy, &quot;you may stay, Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d rather go,&quot; said Elizabeth, miserably. But
-neither of the two paid any more attention to her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth put out her hand, and then when Buddy
-would have taken it, withdrew it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am going to be married,&quot; she said, &quot;next week.
-Did Elizabeth tell you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes,&quot; said Buddy. &quot;It&#39;s me you should be
-marrying. You know that, don&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; said Ruth Farraday. &quot;Yes, I do know it,
-I think. But it&#39;s too late now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id="page246"></a>[pg&nbsp;246]</span>
-&quot;It&#39;s not too late.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t seem to understand that I am going to
-be married&mdash;married next week.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I heard you the first time,&quot; said Buddy, grimly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are my girl,&quot; said Buddy, &quot;and you know
-it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Supposing I do,&quot; said Ruth Farraday, &quot;what
-then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then this marriage is a lie. It can&#39;t happen.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It has&mdash;happened, as far as I am concerned. I
-have given my word.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ruth, you can&#39;t mean that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It means a lifetime of misery for three people.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But it&#39;s all done, now. That&#39;s all there is to say.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You mean, you haven&#39;t the courage to break
-away?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I mean more than that. This has happened,
-that&#39;s all, I&#39;ve given my word. I&#39;ve let things get
-where they are. If you wanted to marry me, you
-should have told me when I was free. I waited for
-you, for just a word or a line from you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was sick.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wasn&#39;t waiting for you to get well, and write
-me you were well. I wanted to know that you
-thought of me when you were sick.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Ruth, I didn&#39;t think of anything else.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id="page247"></a>[pg&nbsp;247]</span>
-&quot;I waited as long as I could, that was all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ruth&mdash;&mdash;&quot; Buddy said, &quot;Ruth&mdash;&mdash;&quot; He took a
-long step toward her, &quot;Get out of this room, Elizabeth,&quot;
-he said, steadily, &quot;you are willing for her to go,
-dear, aren&#39;t you?&quot; he said, as Ruth put out a restraining
-hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I don&#39;t know. Oh, I don&#39;t know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d better go,&quot; said Elizabeth, and Buddy nodded
-to her as she slipped out. Before the door had
-closed on her, he had walked across the floor and
-taken Ruth Farraday in his arms.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was nearly half an hour later that Elizabeth,
-watching from the room above, saw Buddy walk with
-Ruth to the gate, open it for her, and stand with his
-head bared as she walked down the street. She ran
-down the stairs breathlessly to meet him as he came
-in.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it all right?&quot; she asked. &quot;Oh, Buddy, is it all
-right?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s all right, little sister,&quot; Buddy said, &quot;it&#39;s all
-right anyway, the way she wants it. She won&#39;t
-break it off. She thinks it wouldn&#39;t be honourable.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But she must break it off, Buddy. It&#39;ll kill you
-if she doesn&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, it won&#39;t. She must do what she wants to
-do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But she doesn&#39;t know what she wants,&quot; Elizabeth
-cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page248" id="page248"></a>[pg&nbsp;248]</span>
-&quot;She knows what&#39;s right for her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t believe she does at all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I do know this,&quot; Elizabeth cried, &quot;you can&#39;t
-stand it, Buddy, it will kill you. It will kill you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right, then,&quot; said Buddy, &quot;let it. But I don&#39;t
-think it&#39;s going to. She wouldn&#39;t want it to, you
-see.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>[pg&nbsp;249]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Elizabeth Shakes Hands</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; Peggy said, surveying the picnic
-tables set up in the pine grove beyond
-their customary bathing beach, &quot;this is
-certainly some party. I never saw so many pumpkin
-pies in conclave assembled in all my life.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pumpkin pies are just the background,&quot; Elizabeth
-said, &quot;all these regular New England dishes
-don&#39;t count; they always have them. Brown bread
-and biscuits and cake and watermelon. They always
-have them. The stuff they are baking is the real
-party.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This being your first clambake, you are just
-repeating what you&#39;ve been told. I know. It was
-nice of the boys to send for us, so we could be sure
-and be here early, but where are they?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mrs. Something-or-other Robbins, that tall
-woman with the earrings, told me the boys had been
-sent to Harwich for some more provisions, but they
-will be back right away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Rather a good-looking crowd of people, aren&#39;t
-they? And what a lot of work they&#39;ve done. These
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>[pg&nbsp;250]</span>
-tables were put up last night, and every family contributed
-some of this milder grub&mdash;I mean these
-foods on the tables, if I must be polite. The men
-dug the clams and furnished all the other things. I
-asked Tom how they managed. Look, there are
-Mabel and Madget down on the beach, right in the
-heart of the bake. I&#39;ll bet Tom told them they
-could hang around.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you know what, Peggy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What particular what?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mabel is my last red-head.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, she&#39;s my next to the last, come to think of
-it. It was lucky we went to the cattle show, and got
-all those white horses at once.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am not going to shake hands with anybody to-day.
-It&#39;s hard to remember, though. Just now I
-shook hands with Tom&#39;s father and his uncle.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Those old men don&#39;t count, anyway.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you sure? Tom&#39;s uncle is quite a young
-widower, Mother says.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you don&#39;t have to worry, because you didn&#39;t
-have Mabel when you shook hands. Now is the
-time to look out.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are safe until you see another red-head.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let&#39;s go down on the beach and see what the
-mound builders have accomplished,&quot; Peggy said,
-&quot;that large woman in the yellow skirt is going to
-come over here and entertain us if we don&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page251" id="page251"></a>[pg&nbsp;251]</span>
-&quot;I think we will go down on the beach,&quot; Elizabeth
-said to the large woman, as they turned to walk
-in her direction, &quot;of course we would like to help if
-we could, but Mrs. Robbins said there wasn&#39;t anything
-left to do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We have everything done, I think,&quot; said the
-woman, whose name they did not know. &quot;The
-boys are going to bring back some vines to trail over
-the table, and some paper napkins to twist up in the
-glasses. We do everything the same way every
-year, to keep up the tradition.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think it&#39;s awfully nice,&quot; said Peggy, &quot;and we
-appreciate being included.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We always have a table of young people. The
-boys are always privileged to invite their&mdash;friends.
-Dear me, I must count noses.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There she bustles off, counting noses,&quot; Peggy
-said. &quot;I don&#39;t like her so much, but I guess she&#39;s
-a good-hearted one. Now&#39;s our chance to break
-away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They scrambled down the steep embankment to
-the beach.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s the only time I ever didn&#39;t slide down,
-sitting,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;I don&#39;t believe in being
-civilized unless you have to. I only ate a cross-section
-of burnt toast this morning, and drank some
-feeble cocoa. I&#39;ll be too hungry to eat pretty soon.
-We now approach the most celebrated of all the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>[pg&nbsp;252]</span>
-relics of the mound builders, a perfectly intact mound
-about six feet long and broad in proportion. This
-mound is a perfect specimen of the mound builders
-art. It is made of bricks and sand. A huge fire
-was first built on the base of this erection, in the ashes
-of which are baking, at the present moment, luscious
-ears of corn dressed in their original wrappers, huge
-sweet, or garden potatoes, clams by the galore, as our
-cook says, and, I strongly suspect, lobsters and bluefish,
-to complete the assortment. Dost like the
-picture, Love?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What&#39;s all that seaweed sticking out?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The things are steamed in seaweed, darling.
-That&#39;s what gives them their galumptious flavour.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mabel and Madget drew near as they saw their
-friends approaching.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it a grave?&quot; Madget asked in an awed whisper,
-as she indicated the erection respectfully.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s a giant&#39;s grave,&quot; Peggy said. &quot;Fee, foo, fi, fum.
-Can&#39;t you smell the blood of an English giant?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I can&#39;t,&quot; said Mabel, &quot;them&#39;s just clams, and
-we&#39;m going to have some. Moses has gone to ride
-with Tom and he told me to stay here and watch, to
-see if the clams didn&#39;t burn. They ain&#39;t burnt yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How&#39;s your mother?&quot; Elizabeth asked, hastily,
-as she saw the rising laughter in Peggy&#39;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s better, and she&#39;s got a purple velvet dress,&quot;
-Mabel said, &quot;she got breakfast to-day, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>[pg&nbsp;253]</span>
-&quot;What did she get for breakfast?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Fried fish and potatoes, and elderberry wine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall choke,&quot; Peggy cried, &quot;anything anybody
-says to-day strikes me so funny.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You can laugh at me,&quot; Mabel said, unexpectedly,
-&quot;I don&#39;t care. I ain&#39;t funny.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Peggy sank on the sand and gave way to merriment.
-Mabel regarded her kindly, and Elizabeth
-took advantage of the occasion to tie four shoe-strings
-in double bows, and comb two curly heads
-with the side comb of which she relieved the helpless
-Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This week has been such an awful strain,&quot; Peggy
-said, wiping her eyes, &quot;that whenever I get a reaction,
-I&#39;m off. Oh, there come the boys, now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Awfully sorry,&quot; Tom said, hurrying down the
-beach. He gave a hand to Peggy, which she shook
-heartily, and then extended it to Elizabeth, who was
-a little farther away.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth gave a little shriek, and put her own
-hands behind her back.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve got a kind of a sore finger,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll remember and not scrunch it,&quot; Tom said,
-&quot;if I get the chance, that is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s going to be sore all the week, isn&#39;t it, Elizabeth?&quot;
-asked the irrepressible Peggy. &quot;I&#39;m all right,
-because I&#39;m&mdash;oh!&mdash;oh!&quot; she shrieked, glancing at
-Tom&#39;s blazing hair.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>[pg&nbsp;254]</span>
-&quot;What&#39;s all this mystery?&quot; Bill said, joining the
-group.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Peggy is just slightly indisposed, as usual,&quot; Tom
-said. &quot;She has one of her light attacks of mental
-derangement.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m a psycho&mdash;psycho&mdash;whatever&mdash;it&mdash;is case,&quot;
-Peggy said. &quot;I&#39;ll be all right when I have had most
-of what&#39;s under there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s a giant&#39;s grave full of clams and oysters and
-ice-cream and potato salud and pumpkin pie,&quot;
-Madget elucidated in a sing-song voice, &quot;and I am
-going to have some of all of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Doesn&#39;t leave much room for the giant, does it,
-Madget?&quot; Tom said, &quot;but you are right about
-having some of all of it. We have a nice New York
-guy coming pretty soon. I asked him specially for
-you, Elizabeth. I know you have a warm spot in
-your heart for anybody that lives around Grant&#39;s
-Tomb.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is he your cousin?&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, he&#39;s just a fellow I see around the town sometimes.
-We hit it off pretty well, and he doesn&#39;t
-know many people.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What&#39;s his name?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Stoddard, Robert Stoddard.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where does he live?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;New York City, New York State, Manhattan
-Island.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page255" id="page255"></a>[pg&nbsp;255]</span>
-&quot;I mean, what part of New York?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I don&#39;t know that. New York&#39;s all New
-York to me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m going to live in New York next year,&quot; Elizabeth
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought you always had.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, we lived in New Jersey, but now we&#39;re going
-to take an apartment in town. It&#39;s just been decided,
-and I am so excited about it, I can hardly breathe.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What about school?&quot; Peggy asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am going to study with Jean this winter. She
-has always had private teachers, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That will be fine for you,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;but
-don&#39;t let&#39;s think about next winter. When do we
-eat, Bill?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In about half an hour, or less.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come on up to the grove,&quot; Tom said. &quot;I told
-Bob I&#39;d meet him by the road and kind of work him
-in among the crowd. We sure have a raft of relations
-when they are all got together.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Shall we bring Madget and Mabel?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sure. Moses is up there now, right in the heart
-of the picnic. He was trying to catch watermelon
-juice between the cracks of the table, where they
-were cutting it, the last I saw of him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want some watermelon,&quot; said Madget, leading
-the procession.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you see what I did?&quot; Peggy whispered to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page256" id="page256"></a>[pg&nbsp;256]</span>
-Elizabeth as they followed the others. &quot;I shook
-hands with Tom. I never thought. I just did,
-that&#39;s all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you didn&#39;t have your last red-head.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He made the last red-head, don&#39;t you see?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I never thought of that. Do you think he counts
-that way?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know whether he does or not. I don&#39;t
-want to count him, but I want to play fair. Only
-I shouldn&#39;t think, as a general proposition, that shaking
-hands with your last red-head mattered one way
-or the other. I didn&#39;t even consciously remember
-that he was my last red-head.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, I don&#39;t think he&#39;s the one. If you
-had really counted him first as a red-head and then
-shaken hands with him, you&#39;d have to call him the
-first boy you shook hands with, but he really isn&#39;t, as
-it stands. Now that you&#39;ve counted him, if you
-shook hands with him again, why&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you bet I won&#39;t. I&#39;ll put my hands behind
-me the way you did.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought just in time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Tom dropped behind his friends.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bill wants you to walk with him,&quot; he said to
-Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sure I do, but Tom said it first,&quot; Bill grinned,
-&quot;he wants to walk with you, Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll beat you climbing up the bank,&quot; Peggy cried,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>[pg&nbsp;257]</span>
-making for the sheer wall of soil and roots ahead of
-them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You won&#39;t beat me,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;I&#39;ll go
-round by the road, thank you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Some people have a great amount of superfluous
-energy,&quot; Tom said, &quot;Bill and Peggy are
-pretty well matched for that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Peggy is only a tomboy at times,&quot; Elizabeth said,
-&quot;she really has quite an old mind, when you get to
-know her as well as I do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d rather get to know you as well as she
-does.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, she sees me every day, almost.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wish it hadn&#39;t been almost halfway through
-the summer before you and I met. I&#39;ve got to go
-home Monday,&quot; Tom said, mournfully.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t know that. I thought you were going
-to stay through September, like the rest of us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, it&#39;s all decided for Monday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s too bad. It will break up our summer
-crowd, sort of.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is that all you care?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I&#39;m sorry,&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I suppose I ought to be thankful for small
-favours. I haven&#39;t hardly seen you, except around
-at your grandfather&#39;s, and with Peggy and everything.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think we&#39;ve had a good time,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page258" id="page258"></a>[pg&nbsp;258]</span>
-Tom kicked out at a giant horseshoe that obstructed
-his path.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Darn the good time,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; said Elizabeth, hastily, &quot;we&#39;d better catch
-up with the children. I don&#39;t know what they&#39;ll
-be into.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They&#39;ll be all right,&quot; Tom muttered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Isn&#39;t that your friend waiting up there by the
-path?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I suppose so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tom,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;don&#39;t be cross. I
-haven&#39;t done anything, have I?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, and you won&#39;t do anything. That&#39;s the
-trouble. Even say a kind word. Come ahead, I
-suppose I&#39;ve got to collect that guy and drag him
-round among the animals.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That isn&#39;t a very nice way to speak of your
-relations.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Elizabeth, there&#39;s Bill and Peggy talking to
-Bob&mdash;he&#39;ll keep a minute. Aren&#39;t you sorry that
-I&#39;m going away Monday?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Of course I am.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How sorry?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Quite a lot.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you write?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If Mother&#39;ll let me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Does she usually let you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, she never has.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page259" id="page259"></a>[pg&nbsp;259]</span>
-&quot;You told me yourself that Peggy wrote to a boy.
-Bill&#39;s going to get her to write to him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I said I would if my mother will let me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The question is&mdash;will she?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If she does, I will. Aren&#39;t you satisfied?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, you are just saying that to please me!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you want to be pleased?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not like that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know what you want me to say.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Would you say it if you did?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How do I know?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Girls are the hardest things to get anything out
-of&mdash;Elizabeth&quot;&mdash;little beads of dampness stood out
-on Tom&#39;s forehead&mdash;&quot;Elizabeth, will you, I mean,
-do you, I mean, would you care&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hurry up there,&quot; Peggy called.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Everybody&#39;s supposed to take their places,&quot; Bill
-cried, &quot;come ahead, you two.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They want us,&quot; Elizabeth said, relieved that the
-tête-à-tête was over.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We&#39;re all introduced,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;but Elizabeth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Swift, I want you to meet my friend Mr.
-Stoddard,&quot; Tom said, doing the honours.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The tall boy standing between Peggy and Bill
-put out his hand, and Elizabeth slipped hers into it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am very glad to meet you, Mr. Stoddard,&quot; she
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page260" id="page260"></a>[pg&nbsp;260]</span>
-The warning cry from Peggy came too late.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, you&#39;ve done it!&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What has she done?&quot; the tall boy asked. His
-eyes were brown and amused, and he had to look
-down several inches even to reach the level of the
-lanky Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing, really. She had a&mdash;sore finger, and
-I was afraid&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve heard about that sore finger before,&quot; Bill
-said, &quot;there&#39;s some kind of a mystery about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We&#39;re just full of the dickens to-day,&quot; Peggy
-explained, hastily, &quot;this sparkly air has gone to my
-head&mdash;our heads, I guess. Elizabeth always behaves
-better than I do, but she&#39;s as far gone as she
-ever is to-day. We&#39;ve just been giggling at nothing
-all the morning.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you can call Mabel and Madget nothing,&quot;
-Elizabeth supplemented.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let&#39;s go eat, let&#39;s go eat, let&#39;s go eat,&quot; Bill chanted.
-&quot;I am so starved, I am weak. Tom and I didn&#39;t
-eat any breakfast this morning.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess that&#39;s what&#39;s the matter with him,&quot;
-Elizabeth smiled at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; Tom said in an undertone. &quot;I&#39;ll
-come out of it&mdash;for you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was me that you went into it for,&quot; Elizabeth
-whispered, saucily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Steppe children in a comparatively decorous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page261" id="page261"></a>[pg&nbsp;261]</span>
-row were much more nearly a social success than on
-their first public appearance. They ate steadily
-and conscientiously, and their table manners compared
-not unfavourably with those of the other children
-of the party. Most of these ate with their
-parents. Two boys of thirteen, twins, and two girls
-a little younger than Peggy and Elizabeth were at
-the low table, at the end of the two long rows
-of family tables that Tom had designed for his
-guests.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bet you I can eat more clams than you can,&quot;
-Bill challenged Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I hope you can,&quot; said Peggy, &quot;my idea is to go
-easy on the clams, eat two sweet potatoes, one
-lobster, a soupçon of bluefish, all the corn I can hold,
-because that&#39;s the best of all, with that grand, sea-weedy
-taste it&#39;s got, and this lovely, gooey, trickly
-butter. Then I shall really fill up on cake and pie.
-I&#39;m not going to eat any bread, because that takes
-room.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are going to eat watermelon?&quot; Bill asked,
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m going to take one of those boatshaped pieces
-and get in,&quot; Peggy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The beauty of this party,&quot; Bob Stoddard said,
-&quot;is that you can treat everything like that. You
-can snuggle right down into all the edibles.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m snuggling into my clams,&quot; Elizabeth said.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page262" id="page262"></a>[pg&nbsp;262]</span>
-&quot;Isn&#39;t it funny that the clams you get in New York
-are so distinct from these clams? They are just like
-different animals.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They <i>are</i> different animals,&quot; Bob said. &quot;You
-like New York, don&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Love it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, here&#39;s to it, then,&quot; he lifted his clam shell
-gayly, and Elizabeth gravely lifted one of her own.
-They drained the liquor ceremoniously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I hope I shall see you in the winter,&quot; Bob Stoddard
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ll see me,&quot; Tom interposed quickly, &quot;I&#39;m
-coming on to visit you in my Christmas vacation.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You said that last year.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, this year I&#39;m coming.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m in a comatose condition,&quot; Peggy complained
-at dusk, as they lingered under their favourite tree to
-talk over the events of the day. &quot;I hope nobody will
-ever mention any kind or variety of food to me
-again. If Tom hadn&#39;t brought all that candy, I
-should feel better, and I think those ice-cream cones
-we had on the way were nasty.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They tasted nice and cooling at the time,&quot;
-Elizabeth said. &quot;I wouldn&#39;t want another one right
-now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And your family are all in the house there, eating,&quot;
-Peggy said. &quot;Can&#39;t you hear the merry clatter
-of their knives and forks?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page263" id="page263"></a>[pg&nbsp;263]</span>
-&quot;Don&#39;t mention it, Peggy. Do you realize what
-happened to me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You shook hands with that boy, you mean. I
-tried to warn you, but it was all over before I could
-even cough.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know it, and I had been fortifying myself all
-summer long against doing anything like that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you won&#39;t have to remain in suspense like
-me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Maybe it&#39;s Tom for you, after all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I know it isn&#39;t. That&#39;s a nice boy, though.
-It would be funny if you really did grow up and
-marry him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;d rather marry somebody that I knew a little
-better.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, if you do marry him, you will know him
-better, that&#39;s one comfort. How&#39;s your brother?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s pretty good. He&mdash;he&mdash;&mdash;Oh, he&#39;s the best
-we could hope for him to be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s awfully handsome. Do you know what&#39;s
-happened over at my house? My sister is getting
-ready to marry a man she isn&#39;t even on speaking
-terms with. They had some kind of a ruction last
-night about the war or something. He drove down,
-meaning to stay two or three days, and they had this
-row, and he just turned around and went back.
-Meantime, we merrily make trousseau and wedding
-chest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page264" id="page264"></a>[pg&nbsp;264]</span>
-&quot;I wish that he&#39;d never come,&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, but he will. He&#39;ll be back to-morrow morning,
-with the bells on, and the flags flying, and a
-footman on the step of his car to show how classy
-he is. Just you wait.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, dear,&quot; said Elizabeth, with a glance toward
-the open window of the dining room where her
-brother was sitting, &quot;oh, dear, Peggy!&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page265" id="page265"></a>[pg&nbsp;265]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Ruth</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">The small reception room in the Farraday
-cottage had been converted into a temporary
-sewing room, and here Elizabeth and Peggy
-were sewing on their own blue dimity frocks, fitted to
-them by the Boston seamstress, who had been
-working in the house, and finished except for the
-hemstitching to be done on sleeves and collar.
-Peggy sewed neatly but erratically, exploding into
-violent protestations when her thread knotted or her
-scissors fell. Elizabeth found the steady rhythm of
-hemming rather soothing to her, especially to-day,
-when her heart was so heavy for her brother.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Piggy&#39;s&mdash;I mean, Mr. Chambers&#39; parents have
-sent the flat silver,&quot; Peggy announced, &quot;and to my
-taste it&#39;s very hideous. It&#39;s the kind with a beading all
-around it. If you are going to have elaborate silver,
-why&mdash;have it. Have Cupids and little birds building
-nests, but if you are going to have it simple, why, then
-it&#39;s a crime, I think, to have a <i>little</i> trimming on it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ve got very good natural taste, Peggy&mdash;my
-mother says so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>[pg&nbsp;266]</span>
-&quot;I know it. So&#39;s Ruth. I bet she hates this.
-Just think, Elizabeth, if you marry a man it&#39;s not
-only for keeps, but it&#39;s for every day, all the time,
-whether he likes the things you loathe or not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have you shaken hands with anybody yet,
-Peggy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I haven&#39;t. Have you seen your future
-husband again?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I passed him on the street yesterday. I like a
-boy that really takes his hat off, instead of fumbling
-at it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tom certainly takes his hat off&mdash;like a streak.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Too much like a streak. Besides, he always wears
-a cap.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I like caps,&quot; said Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t. I like hats. Bob Stoddard had a hat
-even at the picnic.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Look here, Elizabeth,&quot; Peggy said, seriously,
-&quot;I hope you really won&#39;t get interested in that
-Stoddard boy. It would be kind of uncanny, and I
-should feel too awfully responsible.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You didn&#39;t do anything about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I got you into this counting business. I don&#39;t
-really think there is anything in it, but if there was, I
-should feel guilty all the rest of my life. I don&#39;t
-want to have your marital unhappiness to consider,
-the way I expect to consider Ruth&#39;s.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Chambers came back, didn&#39;t he?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page267" id="page267"></a>[pg&nbsp;267]</span>
-&quot;I told you he would. They are on the porch
-now, having a pow-wow. Mother was so rejoiced
-over the prodigal&#39;s return that it was pitiful.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Peggy, don&#39;t you wish that Ruth had just happened
-to fancy my Buddy, and to have married him
-instead?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Goodness, yes. Anybody. That doesn&#39;t sound
-very flattering. You know I would have adored it,
-but that&#39;s too great a piece of luck even to contemplate.
-I&#39;d rather she&#39;d marry&mdash;Bill Dean than
-Piggy Chambers.</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;I do not like you, Doctor Fell (Chambers)</span>
-<span class="i0">The reason why I cannot tell,</span>
-<span class="i0">But this alone I know full well,</span>
-<span class="i0">I do not like you, Doctor Fell (Chambers).&quot;</span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It would be nice to have lots of money,&quot; Elizabeth
-said, &quot;and to have chauffeurs, and butlers, and
-tall, elegant footmen in green livery, and estates and
-things.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes, it would, if you didn&#39;t have to take any
-incumbrances with them. If you had to be handcuffed
-to a fat man, in addition, that would be
-something else again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Life is very bewildering. Don&#39;t you think so,
-Peggy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It doesn&#39;t bewilder me. It disgusts me sometimes.
-All these mixups could be avoided, if people
-only wouldn&#39;t be short-sighted.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page268" id="page268"></a>[pg&nbsp;268]</span>
-&quot;Some trouble seems to come from other sources.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, but most all the things that people suffer
-from could be avoided if they weren&#39;t so silly. I
-notice that all the time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, so do I.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hark,&quot; said Peggy, &quot;they&#39;re at it again. If they
-row like that before they are married, what will
-happen to them in their honeymoon stages?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s going,&quot; Elizabeth said; &quot;she&#39;s letting him
-out of the front door.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good riddance to perfectly good rubbish,&quot; said
-Peggy, &quot;till dinner time.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; Ruth&#39;s clear voice rose, distinctly, &quot;no, no.
-I mean what I say.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So do I mean what I say. I&#39;ll see you at dinner.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you like.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I like!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At seven then.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At seven.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The door closed after him, and Ruth, looking
-wearier and paler than Elizabeth had ever seen her,
-opened the door that led from the reception room
-to the hallway, and came in.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Take some seats,&quot; said Peggy, hospitably.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth sank into a big wicker armchair without
-speaking.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lovely weather we&#39;re having for this time of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page269" id="page269"></a>[pg&nbsp;269]</span>
-year,&quot; Peggy continued, conversationally. &quot;Ruth,
-dear, I love you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m glad of that,&quot; Ruth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So do I!&quot; said Elizabeth, timidly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m glad of that, too,&quot; said Ruth Farraday, with
-her charming, wistful smile. &quot;Well, children, you
-don&#39;t need to go on with those dresses. You won&#39;t
-have occasion to wear them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What?&quot; said Peggy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve just told Mr. Chambers that I won&#39;t marry
-him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Does he know it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, not exactly, Peggy&mdash;that&#39;s his trouble&mdash;but
-he will know it. I&#39;m&mdash;I&#39;m through.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t believe it,&quot; Peggy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I do, and that&#39;s the principal thing,&quot; Ruth said.
-&quot;I never realized how he felt about certain things
-before. I hadn&#39;t given much thought to his attitude
-about the war and all that. I knew he had been a
-sort of pacifist, and that he had German friends and
-business connections. I like men to be broad-minded.
-I don&#39;t mind a man that sticks to honest
-conclusions, if they&#39;re sincere, but when I find they are
-coloured by physical or moral cowardice, why, then I&mdash;I&#39;m
-through. Albert Chambers is a coward, and he&#39;s
-a selfish coward. We&#39;ve had it all out and I know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hooray,&quot; said Peggy, &quot;I could have told you
-that any time this summer.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page270" id="page270"></a>[pg&nbsp;270]</span>
-&quot;And I&#39;m through with marriage or any idea of
-marriage, so there we are.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t envy you the sweet task of breaking it to
-Mother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Haven&#39;t you got any feeling, Peggy? Don&#39;t
-you care how hard the things are I&#39;ve been going
-through?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t I?&quot; said Peggy. She flung the folds of muslin
-wide, and made an impetuous dive for her sister.
-&quot;Oh, Ruthie, Ruthie, Ruthie,&quot; she cried, &quot;I&#39;m so
-glad, I&#39;m trying not to believe it, for fear it isn&#39;t so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth clung to her wordlessly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I love you, I love you,&quot; Peggy whispered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I tried to do the right thing,&quot; Ruth said. &quot;It&#39;s
-been hard to know what was right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>You&#39;re</i> all right,&quot; said Peggy, feebly. &quot;Excuse
-these tears all down your back, Ruthie.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve got to be at home for lunch,&quot; Elizabeth said.
-&quot;I&mdash;I&mdash;they&#39;re expecting me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t mind us,&quot; Peggy said, &quot;this is only a
-small family reunion.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think I&#39;d really better go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll write a note to your brother, Elizabeth, when
-it&#39;s settled. Mr. Chambers doesn&#39;t even understand
-it yet, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wouldn&#39;t have told Buddy unless you had told
-me to,&quot; Elizabeth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ruth smiled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page271" id="page271"></a>[pg&nbsp;271]</span>
-&quot;I might have known you wouldn&#39;t,&quot; she said,
-&quot;your own kind of people have your own sense of
-decency, and the others never have.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m so glad I seem to you like your own kind of
-people.&quot; Elizabeth took Ruth Farraday&#39;s out-stretched
-hand gratefully.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you do, dear, and you always have. On
-your own account, I mean.&quot; she added, quickly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s what I meant, too,&quot; said Elizabeth, shyly.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">It was hard to sit through the mid-day meal with
-the secret that would change Buddy&#39;s world for him
-locked in her breast, still Elizabeth managed it somehow.
-He looked very pale and worn, but the three
-men kept up a lively discussion of the impending
-Presidential campaign and other political matters.
-She noticed the respect that both her father and
-Buddy paid to Grandfather&#39;s opinions on all these
-subjects.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth wondered how it could be that Buddy
-could laugh his hearty laugh, before he knew the
-thing that she could have told him or how, when
-the conversation turned to the question of bait for a
-day&#39;s fishing on the banks that the three men
-contemplated, he could discuss worms and fishing
-tackle so eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Speaking of fish,&quot; Buddy said, &quot;it seems to me
-that these are extraordinarily good herrings we are
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page272" id="page272"></a>[pg&nbsp;272]</span>
-eating. I don&#39;t suppose there is any difference in
-herrings, but&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you don&#39;t suppose right, then,&quot; Grandfather
-said, &quot;there is as much difference in the
-herrings that come from Herring River and those you
-get over to the westward as there is between some
-folks. The meat&#39;s whiter and sweeter in the Herring
-River herrings. I used to think it was a great thing to
-go after them in the spring. It don&#39;t make no difference
-where a herring has been putting in his time in
-the other seasons, come spring he makes for the
-river bed where he was born. I&#39;ve seen them so
-thick on their way up Herring River that they
-couldn&#39;t swim straight, but had to kind of flop over
-one side to make way for t&#39;other. I used to get five
-cents a hundred for &#39;em, and kitch &#39;em as fast as I
-could haul &#39;em out.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That isn&#39;t true, is it?&quot; asked Elizabeth. &quot;Do
-herrings go back to the place where they were born?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, and sometimes they swim a great many
-hundreds of miles to get there. They seek the
-Southern waters in the cold weather, you know, but
-they always come back once a year to the stream in
-which they were born,&quot; Elizabeth&#39;s father explained
-to her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The place where their great-grandfathers were
-spawned. It&#39;s natural,&quot; Grandfather said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess it is natural,&quot; Elizabeth said, soberly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page273" id="page273"></a>[pg&nbsp;273]</span>
-&quot;You bet it is,&quot; said Buddy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They took a drive in the new roadster that afternoon,
-and Buddy seemed so happy and so free during
-the entire course of the day that Elizabeth was
-entirely unprepared to find him, as she found him
-some time after supper, flung across the bottom of
-the big four-poster bed in the guest room, with his
-head buried in his hands.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Buddy,&quot; she said, &quot;Buddy, dear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I&#39;m all right, Sis. Run along.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought perhaps you wanted to walk with me to
-the post office.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I do, but it isn&#39;t time yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s nearly time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When it&#39;s time, we&#39;ll go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Buddy, I wouldn&#39;t feel too bad. Things
-mightn&#39;t be so dreadful as you think.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They might, and then again they mightn&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wouldn&#39;t give up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve given up everything I can give up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You seem&mdash;pretty much all right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Live or die, sink or swim, survive or perish.
-Them&#39;s my slogans. I&#39;ll come through all right. I
-<i>am</i> all right. Got to be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Buddy,&quot; Elizabeth said, &quot;you <i>will</i> be all
-right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s a funny thing, little sister, that you don&#39;t
-irritate me more. It seems to me that you used to be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page274" id="page274"></a>[pg&nbsp;274]</span>
-quite an irritating child, and now I scarcely mind
-you, no matter how Paul Pryish or Polly Anna-ish you
-get.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I could irritate you more if I wanted to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m perfectly willing to take that for granted.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">Just as they reached the post office they met the
-Chambers&#39; car piled with a full luggage equipment.
-Albert Chambers sat in lonely state within, looking
-neither to right nor left.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He didn&#39;t go back to dinner, after all,&quot; Elizabeth
-thought, &quot;or at any rate, he didn&#39;t stay.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Buddy made no comment on this encounter, but
-he walked composedly through the crowd overflowing
-the little building, his head held high, and all the
-colour drained from his white face. He even insisted
-on stopping at the drug store and regaling Elizabeth
-with her favourite marshmallow and maple nut
-sundae, though he refused all refreshment for himself.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;One thing that the life over there taught you was
-that you&#39;ve got to get through every day somehow,&quot;
-he said, thoughtfully. &quot;I wish ice-cream soda didn&#39;t
-drip so much. There&#39;s a row of pink rings and
-chocolate rings all along this counter. I don&#39;t like
-them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He thinks everything is perfectly horrid,&quot; Elizabeth
-said to herself, &quot;and yet he doesn&#39;t give in.
-Oh, I think he&#39;s perfectly splendid!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page275" id="page275"></a>[pg&nbsp;275]</span>
-They made a detour and came out by the Flatiron
-field, where the station road divided itself into two
-separate byways in the crux of which was a letter
-box. Ruth Farraday was in the act of mailing a
-letter there. It dropped inside as Elizabeth and
-Buddy approached.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was just mailing you a letter,&quot; Ruth said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Can&#39;t I get it out?&quot; Buddy asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; Ruth said, &quot;turn and walk with me home,
-and I&#39;ll tell you. Elizabeth knows already. I&#39;ve
-broken my engagement. No, don&#39;t say anything.
-I&mdash;I just want to tell you, that&#39;s all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is so much I <i>might</i> say!&quot; Buddy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The reason I broke it has nothing to do with
-anything else&mdash;except that I broke it,&quot; she explained,
-incoherently. &quot;It doesn&#39;t mean anything but that.
-I shall never marry now, I&#39;m going into reconstruction
-work abroad.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not&mdash;not right away,&quot; Buddy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;As soon as I can make my plans&mdash;but there is
-one thing I want you to believe. I&#39;ve written it in
-the letter, but I don&#39;t know whether I&#39;ve managed
-to make it as clear as I meant to. I&#39;ve broken
-my engagement only because Mr. Chambers and I
-were not suited to each other.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;know that,&quot; Buddy said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So this might just as well be good-bye between us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you wish it so?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page276" id="page276"></a>[pg&nbsp;276]</span>
-&quot;Do you doubt I wish it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; Buddy said, &quot;I know how you feel.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then&mdash;then good-bye.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Right here?&quot; said Buddy. &quot;I thought we were
-going to walk home with you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m nearly home,&quot; Ruth said. &quot;Say it now,
-please.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-bye,&quot; said Buddy. He stood looking at
-her for a moment, levelly into her eyes. Then he
-turned away, wheeling as if he were under orders
-to march.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me what you know, Elizabeth,&quot; he said, as
-they walked on, and Elizabeth told him of what had
-happened at the Farradays that morning.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I thought things were going to be all fixed,&quot;
-she concluded, miserably, &quot;and now they seem to be
-in a worse tangle than ever. I don&#39;t see what she&#39;s
-sending you away for.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s all right,&quot; said Buddy. &quot;I see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But she said it was good-bye between you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s all right. It&#39;s an ethical question with
-her. She split up with him because she couldn&#39;t
-stand him, not because she wanted me. It&#39;s like
-a gentleman&#39;s agreement, you see. You enter into
-a mutual arrangement under the supposition that
-the other fellow is as decent as yourself. When
-you find he isn&#39;t, that releases you, unless the contract
-is actually signed. If he&#39;d been all right, she
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page277" id="page277"></a>[pg&nbsp;277]</span>
-would have stuck. She wants me to understand
-that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you do understand it, and I don&#39;t see why
-she has to be so cool.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want her to be cool,&quot; said Buddy. &quot;What do
-you think I wanted? To go in and spend the
-evening?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, that would be better than this.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, it wouldn&#39;t,&quot; said Buddy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t understand you,&quot; Elizabeth said. &quot;Perhaps
-you are not feeling very well, Buddy. You
-looked awfully pale there in the post office.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m not pale now, am I?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No-o, but you look so kind of queer, and you
-act queer, too, Buddy. I understood why you respected
-her feelings when she wouldn&#39;t break her
-engagement, but now that she has, I don&#39;t see why
-you go right on respecting them. I&mdash;I thought you
-wanted to marry her yourself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Marry her? Why, I&#39;m going to,&quot; said Buddy.
-&quot;That&#39;s the point.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When&mdash;when?&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Just as soon as I can get three weeks&#39; salary in
-my jeans.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But she said she was going away, and&mdash;and
-everything.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I&#39;ll attend to all that!&quot; said Buddy, happily.
-&quot;Don&#39;t you worry, Sister.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page278" id="page278"></a>[pg&nbsp;278]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
-
-<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">Good-bye</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth was making a round of farewell
-calls. Her summer on Cape Cod was over.
-Her trunk had already been packed and sent
-by express to New York, with all the other family
-baggage excepting the light motor trunk and bags
-that they were to carry in the car.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Moses and Madget and Mabel surrounded her
-when she arrived at the Steppes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You look like a lady in them clothes,&quot; Moses
-said, &quot;I didn&#39;t know you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s got gloves on,&quot; Mabel said, &quot;and a pink
-hat.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Loverly gloves,&quot; said Madget, dreamily. &quot;I
-want a pink hat.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want flowers on <i>my</i> hat,&quot; said Mabel, critically.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How nice your house looks,&quot; Elizabeth said.
-&quot;The kitchen floor is clean, and everything put
-away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mis&#39; Laury Ann, she&#39;s learning me how to do
-housework, and I learn Mabel pretty good. Marmer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page279" id="page279"></a>[pg&nbsp;279]</span>
-she bought some dishes. See &#39;em there. Mabel and
-me, we like to keep &#39;em shined up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the two shelves over the pump an array of
-formidably coloured, coarse crockery had made its
-appearance. Large pink roses heavily smeared with
-gilt were the prevailing decoration. Three pink
-coffee cups, with a gilded moustache protector in
-each, occupied a place of honour.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Me and Marmer and Mabel has these,&quot; Moses
-informed her proudly. &quot;Madget, she drinks out of
-a mug. It&#39;s only a plain white mug, so we don&#39;t
-put it where it will show. Ma, she says she had just
-as soon we would eat out o&#39; them dishes if we&#39;ll clean
-&#39;em up after.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who does the cooking?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I told you I done the cooking once,&quot; Moses said,
-&quot;how many times have you got to be said it over to?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Moses!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; said Moses, argumentatively, &quot;if you was
-old enough to boss me, it would be different, but
-you ain&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m bigger than you are, Moses, and you are not
-big enough to boss me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; said Moses, &quot;but I&#39;m big enough to fight
-you to see who&#39;s got the most strength. Only girls
-can&#39;t fight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Only morally,&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Huh?&quot; said Moses, staring blankly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page280" id="page280"></a>[pg&nbsp;280]</span>
-&quot;Well, never mind. You take care of your mother
-and sister and be a nice, clean boy, and&mdash;and learn
-your lessons at school.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then what&#39;ll I get?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You&#39;ll get to be comfortable and happy by your
-own efforts.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I ain&#39;t going to do what anybody tells me&mdash;much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell yourself, Moses. Tell yourself to be good,
-and then mind yourself. I do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you&#39;m a girl,&quot; Moses said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It doesn&#39;t make any difference who you are,
-Moses. If you don&#39;t try to learn that lesson about
-minding yourself, you won&#39;t get on very well.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who says so?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Laury Ann says so, for one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did she tell you to mind yourself?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&mdash;she showed me how to do it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Does she mind herself?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Always, that&#39;s what makes her&mdash;so nice and kind.
-You see, Moses, you are the man of the family, and the
-man of the family has to be responsible for it and have
-a good control of it. So you&#39;ve got to have a good
-control of yourself.&quot; The word was unfortunate.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ma&#39;s got a control,&quot; Moses said. &quot;Little Eva.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t mean that kind of control, Moses. I
-meant&mdash;well, you just think what I meant. I want
-you to promise me that you will watch yourself and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page281" id="page281"></a>[pg&nbsp;281]</span>
-tell yourself what&#39;s right and wrong, just as if you
-were telling it to somebody else.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;ll see about it,&quot; said Moses, &quot;but if I
-do it, <i>they</i> got to,&quot; he pointed to his sisters.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Try it a while for yourself, and then if it works,
-teach it to them,&quot; said Elizabeth with sudden inspiration.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;ll teach it to them, anyway,&quot; Moses decided.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here comes Marmer,&quot; Mabel cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I just slipped over to Mis&#39; Hawes&#39;,&quot; Mrs. Steppe
-explained, apologetically. &quot;I had a matter I wanted
-to consult her about. My spine kinder give way
-last night, and I thought when she was going into a
-trance, she might see if Little Eva had anything to
-say about it. It ain&#39;t important enough for her to
-go into one special for.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Elizabeth stared at the vision in purple velvet&mdash;a
-tight-fitting basque of obsolete make gripped the
-eighteen-inch waist inexorably, and the skirt, cut
-to the prevailing eight inches above the floor, exposed
-high white canvas shoes with knotted laces, shoes
-that had apparently never been cleaned in the course
-of their long and useful existence. Mrs. Steppe had
-not prefaced this elaborate toilet by arranging her
-hair, and the light strands stood out from her face,
-straggling and unkempt as usual.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m glad to see you,&quot; Elizabeth said, a little
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page282" id="page282"></a>[pg&nbsp;282]</span>
-confusedly. &quot;I just came in to say good-bye. I&#39;m
-going away to-night, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What train be you taking?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m not taking any train. We&#39;re motoring.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; said Mrs. Steppe. &quot;I&#39;m glad you got an
-automobile to go in. I&#39;m one of those that likes to
-see my friends get on in the world.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So&mdash;so do I,&quot; said Elizabeth. &quot;What a pretty
-colour that dress is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I like to wear silks and velvets,&quot; Mrs. Steppe
-said, with the slightest emphasis on the <i>I</i>. &quot;Some
-people don&#39;t care nothing about it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I love silks and velvets myself, and that&#39;s a lovely
-quality.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When I put my money in anything, I like to put
-it in something good.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, indeed. I think that&#39;s my brother tooting
-his horn for me, so I&#39;ll have to say good-bye.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s quite a little car, ain&#39;t it?&quot; Mrs. Steppe
-surveyed the new roadster from the vantage point
-of the window. &quot;For my taste, I like these limousines,
-but anything that will go is better than nothing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, indeed,&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;good-bye.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-bye,&quot; said Mrs. Steppe, &quot;take care of
-yourself. I hope you&#39;ll find me in better health
-next summer than you have this.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-bye, Mabel. Good-bye, Madget.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-bye,&quot; said Mabel, &quot;come again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page283" id="page283"></a>[pg&nbsp;283]</span>
-&quot;Kiss me again, Madget,&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;aren&#39;t
-you a little sorry I am going? Oh, be good children,
-won&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bring me a present some time,&quot; said Mabel.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, if you say you will, you will&mdash;I know that,&quot;
-said Mabel.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Leggo,&quot; said their mother, &quot;leggo. That little
-automobile out there is waiting for her. Tell Moses
-to get off that front seat and come back into the
-house. I don&#39;t know where the boy&#39;s manners is. I
-ain&#39;t never seen any sign of them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, dear!&quot; said Elizabeth, as she drove away with
-Buddy, &quot;it doesn&#39;t seem as if anybody with so little
-intelligence could be so selfish as that Mis&#39; Steppe is.
-It saddens me every time I go there. I know I&#39;ve
-had a funny call, but it doesn&#39;t seem funny to me.
-It never does.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, you want to be dropped at Peggy&#39;s, don&#39;t
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, please.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Give Peggy my love and tell her to keep us informed
-about her sister.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess you&#39;ve kept informed about her ever
-since she left.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A little additional information at times won&#39;t
-do any harm. I don&#39;t want her to spring anything
-on me&mdash;like getting out of the country.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page284" id="page284"></a>[pg&nbsp;284]</span>
-&quot;She&#39;s getting ready to go abroad.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She thinks she&#39;s getting ready to go abroad. I
-just want about ten days before the day she thinks
-she&#39;s going.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s getting her passport.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want her to,&quot; said Buddy, affectionately, &quot;I
-want her to have everything go the way she thinks
-she wants it to go, and then at the end I want to
-step right in and smash it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Just like that?&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Just like that,&quot; said Buddy, happily.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t believe I&#39;m going to be able to bear this,&quot;
-said Peggy. &quot;I thought it was going to be all right
-to say good-bye. Everybody has to at this time
-of the year, but&mdash;but that doesn&#39;t make it any easier.
-I don&#39;t want to part with you at all. I couldn&#39;t sleep
-last night, thinking of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Neither could I,&quot; said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s a whole year till next summer.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I figured it out. It will be at least two hundred
-and seventy-two days before we are down here together
-again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will it? We might visit each other in the winter.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We might, but will we? You know my parents
-and I know yours. They always have other plans
-for their offspring in the vacations.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page285" id="page285"></a>[pg&nbsp;285]</span>
-&quot;How is your mother?&quot; Elizabeth asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s pretty good. I did Mother an injustice.
-She&#39;s a better loser than I thought she&#39;d be. She&#39;s
-been awfully decent to Ruth. Elizabeth, do you
-know what I found out about Ruth?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, what?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I found out why she broke her engagement. I
-would have broken mine. She found out that he
-falsified his income tax report. He bragged about
-it to her. He thought it was smart. She wouldn&#39;t
-stand for it, that&#39;s all. If he hadn&#39;t given himself
-away, she&#39;d be Mrs. Millionaire-slacker-Piggy
-Chambers, and half over to Europe by this time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t like to think of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, think of me,&quot; said Peggy. &quot;You
-don&#39;t care as much as I care. You are going back
-to your Jean and you like her best. There, I said
-I would bite my tongue out before I said that to you,
-and now I&#39;ve gone and said it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let&#39;s not care what we say,&quot; Elizabeth said.
-&quot;I do love Jean. Grandmother always says it
-doesn&#39;t make any difference how many children
-a woman has, she always has a different place in her
-heart for every one. I guess that&#39;s the way it is with
-friends. None of them can occupy the same place.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I only have one in my place,&quot; said Peggy, &quot;you
-are my most intimate friend and I am not yours.
-Well, I guess I&#39;ll have to get reconciled to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page286" id="page286"></a>[pg&nbsp;286]</span>
-&quot;I have two most intimate friends,&quot; said Elizabeth,
-&quot;don&#39;t cry, Peggy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you&#39;re crying yourself, that&#39;s something.
-It&#39;s&mdash;it&#39;s a great deal.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-bye,&quot; said Elizabeth, &quot;there&#39;s Buddy&#39;s
-horn again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-bye,&quot; said Peggy. &quot;Oh, I won&#39;t say good-bye.
-I&mdash;I guess I&#39;ll come over there and see you off.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She won&#39;t,&quot; Elizabeth thought, &quot;she&#39;s just saying
-that to postpone the evil hour. All right, Peggy,
-dear,&quot; she said aloud, &quot;good-bye till&mdash;good-bye!&quot;
-and she flung her arms around Peggy&#39;s neck in a
-suffocating embrace.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">In the old valanced rocking chairs before the living-room
-windows Grandfather and Grandmother Swift
-sat alone in the gathering darkness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;House seems kinder lonesome to-night, don&#39;t
-it, Mother? Hard lines to lose the whole family
-all to once. They ought to gone off one by one, so&#39;s
-we wouldn&#39;t notice it so much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Times come and seasons change,&quot; said Grandmother.
-&quot;We have to expect to let &#39;em go. We
-are lucky to have them coming, even if we do have
-to let them go again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Young John&mdash;Buddy she calls him&mdash;is as likely
-a young feller as I ever see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And as handsome.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page287" id="page287"></a>[pg&nbsp;287]</span>
-&quot;John&mdash;he&#39;s made a fine job of his business and a
-fine job of his life, as far as I can see. He keeps remarkable
-young for a man of his way of living, too.
-Don&#39;t dissipate none. I expect that&#39;s the secret
-of it. He picked himself up a pretty likely wife, too&mdash;good
-looking and sweet natured and no nonsense
-about her. <i>She</i> looks like her, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s going to be about her mother&#39;s size, I
-should say, when she gets her growth. She ain&#39;t
-quite so fair, but she&#39;s got the same eyes, and the
-same long, light-coloured lashes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But her mouth&#39;s all Swift,&quot; said Grandfather.
-&quot;You know that tintype we got of John. Why,
-cut her hair off, and put her in a boy&#39;s shirt and necktie
-and she&#39;d be the image of him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When they stood up there together by the door
-just before they started, and he put his arm around
-your shoulder, the likeness stood out plain then.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where&#39;s Judidy to-night? Gone out with her
-feller?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, not to-night. The poor critter felt so bad
-when she see that car pulling out of the yard that
-she burst out into a fit of crying, and put her apron
-over her head and run off. She hasn&#39;t been heard
-from since.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Judidy was fond of <i>her</i>, and she had cause to be.
-I guess she give her almost a complete wedding outfit
-out of her own fixings that she brought down.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page288" id="page288"></a>[pg&nbsp;288]</span>
-&quot;It was pretty cunning of her to give away the silk
-things she set such a store by. She washed &#39;em all
-out herself and run new ribbons in them, and then
-went and laid them out on Judidy&#39;s bed, with her eyes
-full of tears because she was parting with them.
-She found out that Judidy had set her heart on silk
-underwear for her wedding outfit, and she thought
-it all out that she had ought to give them to her. &#39;I
-have about everything I want, Grandma,&#39; she said,
-&#39;and I&#39;ve had a summer&#39;s wear out of them.&#39; She
-don&#39;t exaggerate nothing much, that she does.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She&#39;s been pretty plucky, the way she took right
-hold helping you in the kitchen. She&#39;s helped me,
-too. When we was getting in the hay, and Zeckal
-was busy all the time she mixed up the hog&#39;s vittles
-and fed the hens, and carted big pails of water
-around. Faith, Hope, and Charity, they&#39;ve been
-squealing considerable to-night, I notice. I guess
-they kinder feel the absence of a friend.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You remember the first night she come, Father?
-You was kind o&#39; disappointed in her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So was you, but you didn&#39;t let on nothing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You said that you kinder hoped that John&#39;s girl
-was going to be a little more like folks.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Grandfather chuckled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did I?&quot; he said. &quot;Well, she turned out to be a
-good deal more like folks than most people ever gets
-to be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page289" id="page289"></a>[pg&nbsp;289]</span>
-Grandmother wiped her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There,&quot; she said, &quot;I&#39;m most always able to be
-philosophical about everything, but to tell the truth,
-I don&#39;t know how I am going to be able to get along
-without that child.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well&mdash;&quot; Grandfather took off his spectacles
-and wiped them carefully before he transferred his
-attention to the process of mopping his forehead&mdash;&quot;well,
-I don&#39;t know how I&#39;m going to get along without
-her, either,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page290" id="page290"></a>[pg&nbsp;290]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img src="images/illus304.jpg" width="327" height="312" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
-GARDEN CITY, N. Y.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="tnote">
-<h2>Transcriber Notes:</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of
-the speakers. Those words were retained as-is.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The illustrations have been moved so that they do not break up
-paragraphs and so that they are next to the text they illustrate.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
-unless otherwise noted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In the caption of the illustration on page 46, a period was added at
-the end of the last sentence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 6, &quot;look a might&quot; was replaced with &quot;look a mite&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 40, &quot;strangers smile&quot; was replaced with &quot;stranger&#39;s smile&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 60, &quot;Peggy s!&quot; was replaced with &quot;Peggy&#39;s&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 181, &quot;Promethueus Bound&quot; was replaced with &quot;Prometheus Bound&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 185, a single quotation mark was replaced with a double
-quotation mark.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 207, a quotation mark was added before &quot;Do you want to come&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 279, &quot;overt he pump&quot; was replaced with &quot;over the pump&quot;.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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