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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78169 ***
+
+
+
+
+ MY LADY
+ VALENTINE
+
+
+ [Illustration: _My Lady Valentine_]
+
+
+
+
+ _My Lady
+ Valentine_
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ _by Octavia
+ Roberts_
+
+ _The A.M. Davis Co.
+ Boston-Mass._
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1916, by
+ A. M. DAVIS
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+ TO MY
+ HUSBAND
+
+
+
+
+MY LADY VALENTINE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Caleb Whitman was in a bad humor. The task of editing the Valentine
+Special with which _Better Every Week_ was planning to celebrate its
+tenth anniversary, was far from his taste. The theme of this number was
+to be--as one might surmise--Love; and Whitman did not believe in love,
+at least not in the violent emotion which the story writers were so
+fond of describing.
+
+“Do you suppose,” he said to his friend Radding, who had dropped in
+upon him one hot August afternoon, “that any man in his senses ever
+carried on over a girl as these story-book fellows do? Do you think any
+man ever felt like saying the sickly things the poets write? I can’t
+see why writers want to turn out such stuff. I can’t see why anybody
+reads the silly yarns when we print them.... How do you account for it,
+Rad? You’re a philosopher.”
+
+Radding smiled and yawned. He moved out of the direct draft of the
+electric fan which blew his thin brown hair about his high, intelligent
+forehead:
+
+“There are three classes of people,” he said. “Those who have been in
+love; those who are in love; and those who hope to be in love.”
+
+“What’s that got to do with it?” asked Whitman.
+
+“The first class read love stories to recall past happiness, the
+second to intensify present happiness, the third to anticipate future
+happiness.”
+
+“I must be in a class all by myself, then,” stormed Whitman, “for the
+more time I put in on this bunch of stuff the more determined I am
+never to be a lover. Why, Rad, it takes a man’s reason--”
+
+“Yes,” Radding admitted, “it does.”
+
+“It warps his judgment.”
+
+“It certainly does that.”
+
+“It causes as much misery as joy, apparently.”
+
+“The evidence is all with you.”
+
+“Then what on earth does it give in return?”
+
+“That,” said Radding, smiling at the younger man’s vehemence, “is what
+you will some day find out.”
+
+“Not I,” boasted Whitman.
+
+“You mean that you have set yourself against marriage?” his friend
+inquired.
+
+“Not at all. I’ve merely set myself against the emotional state of the
+story-book lover. When I pick out a wife, I’ll do it with my head. I’ll
+look first of all for a rational human being, secondly for a healthy
+human being.”
+
+“You might not like her, you know,” Radding reminded him.
+
+Whitman looked up from the manuscript he was glancing over to say, “I
+don’t want to like her in the crazy way these lovers do. All I want to
+feel is a calm regard. I don’t want to have my heart thump every time
+she comes around the corner. I don’t want to be a prey to jealousy
+every time another man looks at her. Above all, I don’t want to sink
+into second childhood and call her silly names.”
+
+“What names, for instance?” Radding asked.
+
+“‘Darling.’ ‘Birdie.’ ‘Honey-Love,’” quoted Whitman scornfully from the
+ardent page before him.
+
+“Oh, that kind of names!” said Radding, with a nod of understanding.
+“What shall you call her?”
+
+“‘Mary,’ if that’s her name; ‘Susan’ if that’s what she was christened;
+and I shall expect her to call me ‘Caleb.’”
+
+“You even let me turn it into ‘Caley,’” Radding reminded him.
+
+“You’re different,” said Whitman, honest affection shining in his eyes.
+“You’re all the family I have, Rad; the best friend I have in the
+world. Don’t let me get started on you, or I’ll turn as sentimental as
+the novelists.... By the way, I’m going to try my own hand at a novel
+this vacation.”
+
+“I thought you didn’t believe in them?”
+
+“I believe in this one. It’s to be the story of a sane courtship, like
+the one I’ve been outlining to you. I’ve been planning it ever since
+I was assigned to this job of getting out the Valentine Special. I
+believe that there are thousands of people who will read my kind of
+love story with relief.”
+
+“You can but try it,” Radding granted. And then he asked, “Where are
+you going on your vacation, anyway?”
+
+“Up in the hills, to a camp I know of--a kind of writers’ colony.”
+
+“When do you start?”
+
+Whitman did not answer. He was lost in the contents of the last of the
+envelopes which he had taken up from the great pile before him.
+
+“Got hold of something good?” asked Radding, noticing his preoccupation.
+
+“I’ve come upon something odd,” Whitman explained, raising his eyes for
+only a fleeting moment from the letter he was reading.
+
+“What is it?”
+
+“A poem, a letter--and a signature.”
+
+“Want to share them with me, or am I in your way?”
+
+“Not in my way. I’m going to knock off in a minute and go home with
+you.”
+
+“Is it a good poem?”
+
+“Not very; but it may do with editing. We are going to have two pages
+of light verse. The idea of this is at least new. Something kind of
+winsome about it. But it’s the personality behind it that piques my
+curiosity. Take a look at it, Rad.” And Whitman held out a thin sheet
+of cross-barred country paper on which some one had written in a firm
+hand:
+
+ “TO MY UNKNOWN LOVER
+
+ “I know not where thou art,
+ Thy name I do not know,
+ And yet for thee my heart lives on
+ Like violets under snow.
+
+ For some day thou wilt come,
+ Dear Lover, all unknown;
+ And find thy waiting, faithful love
+ And claim her for thine own.
+
+ How shalt thou know me thine?
+ Remember, dear, by this:
+ My lilies all will ring their bells,
+ My foxgloves waft a kiss.
+
+ My cedar tree will offer shade,
+ My vines will dance with glee,
+ My garden gate will stand ajar--
+ So loneliness may flee.
+
+ I know not where thou art,
+ Thy name I do not know,
+ And yet for thee my heart lives on
+ Like violets under snow.”
+
+“Rather forthputting,” said Radding, handing the paper back.
+
+“Oh, I don’t know,” said Whitman. “Now listen to the letter which
+accompanies it;” and he read:
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+
+ “Dear Editor of _Better Every Week_:
+
+ “Here are some verses that grew in a garden. Please buy them. You
+ would, I feel sure, if you knew what it would mean to me. I must make
+ money”--
+
+“I suppose they all say that,” ejaculated Radding.
+
+“They don’t say it in this way,” said Whitman, continuing to read:
+
+ “I must make money--a certain sum within a specified time.”
+
+“Been playing cards or following the ponies?” Radding joked.
+
+Whitman didn’t smile. “Don’t, Rad,” he said. “The writer is in real
+trouble. Listen:”
+
+ “It isn’t easy to earn anything when one lives in a little village
+ that has been asleep these hundred years. It isn’t easy to sell
+ anything in a town where the only demand is for peppermint candy,
+ gray yarn and dry groceries.
+
+ “Please take my poem. If you are an old man--I imagine you with gray
+ side-whiskers, a round red face that wrinkles into smiles, and a
+ thick gold watch chain stretched across a white waistcoat”--
+
+At this point Whitman looked up with a smile, as if to invite Radding
+to share his amusement. With his red hair, keen gray eyes, straight
+shoulders, the young editor could not have been less like the writer’s
+vision.
+
+Again he went on:
+
+ “say to yourself ‘a little encouragement from me may make a
+ difference in this person’s whole life.’
+
+ “If you are young--but oh, dear, how should I know how to appeal to a
+ young man. I don’t know anything about young men. They all left Deep
+ Harbor long ago. The last one that was seen here was in, well, 1812
+ at the very latest.”
+
+Whitman paused for dramatic effect before reading impressively:
+
+ “Yours respectfully,
+ “HENRY B. LUFFKIN.”
+
+“Well?” said Radding.
+
+“Well,” said Whitman. “Of course no man wrote that note and no man
+wrote those verses.”
+
+“Why not?” asked Radding. “Every village of over two hundred
+inhabitants has a poet. Deep Harbor has Henry. I can see him plainly.
+He’s pale, and watery blue eyed, with tow colored hair, which he wears
+long. He ties his cuffs with ribbons. He owes a soda water bill at the
+village drug store and hopes that you will pay him enough for the poem
+to square it.”
+
+“Rad,” said Caleb, “you don’t believe that.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Why not! Because every word of that letter and every line of that poem
+was written by a girl. Look here. This _proves_ it--it isn’t dated.”
+
+“Henry wouldn’t date it,” said Radding. “He’d think it was commercial.”
+
+“I can just see that village,” Whitman continued, ignoring Radding’s
+chaffing. “A lonely little place, at the end of the earth, with
+a deserted harbor where no ships ever come; sagging old wharves,
+ruminating old fishermen, and somewhere in it--this girl, panting for a
+wider world. You see, I know, Rad, because I spent my boyhood in that
+kind of place.”
+
+“What are you going to do about the poem?” asked Radding.
+
+“I’m going to take it. We can edit it a bit, and stick it in somewhere.
+At space rates she won’t be much richer, but she may be happier.”
+
+“Buy that poem, and you’ll have Henry on your hands for the rest of
+your life,” Radding warned him.
+
+“I can’t take you seriously,” said Whitman stubbornly, “because I feel
+certain that Henry--isn’t Henry.”
+
+“Do you want to back your judgment?” Radding demanded.
+
+“I’ll stake a dinner on it.”
+
+“All right, my boy. If I win, the toast will be to Henry Luffkin,
+village poet.”
+
+“And if I win,” Whitman laughed, entering into the spirit of Radding’s
+fun, “the toast will be to--Lady Valentine.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+“I like to eat at Tony’s, because he cuts out the din.” As he spoke,
+Whitman lifted the cover from two of the thick, juicy English chops
+which were the restaurant’s specialty, and passed one to Radding. “I
+don’t care to compete with a Hungarian orchestra and a cabaret show
+when I have something to say,” he finished.
+
+“Have you something to say?”
+
+The question caused Whitman to flush consciously. Radding was so
+unfailingly logical.
+
+“Nothing special,” the younger man parried; and through the rest of the
+meal he discreetly confined his conversation to commonplaces. It was
+not until after the soufflé that he said with forced nonchalance:
+
+“By the way, Rad, it looks as if I’d won the bet.”
+
+“What bet?”
+
+“What bet! The one about the writer of the letter from Deep Harbor.”
+
+“Ah,” said Radding carelessly, “I’d forgotten.”
+
+“Forgotten!” Whitman looked at his friend closely, as if to test his
+sincerity. He could never be sure when Radding was quizzing him.
+
+“Heard something, have you?” Radding asked.
+
+For answer Whitman fumbled in his breast pocket and drew out a letter
+which he spread on the table before them. “This came this morning, in
+answer to my acceptance of the poem,” he said.
+
+“What did you say in your acceptance? I’m not sure that doesn’t
+interest me more than ‘Henry’s’ reply.”
+
+“Why?” There was a hint of defiance in Whitman’s manner.
+
+“I don’t know; I just wondered.”
+
+“I said we’d give five dollars for the poem,” said Whitman. “I wish it
+might have been more.”
+
+“Is that all you said?”
+
+“All except--”
+
+“Except--?”
+
+“I did speak of her”--
+
+“_His_,” corrected Radding, plainly enjoying Whitman’s resentment at
+the change of pronoun.
+
+“I did speak of _her_ trouble,” continued Whitman. “I think I’d have
+been a brute not to have mentioned it.”
+
+“Are you so tender with all your contributors?”
+
+“I never had much to do with the correspondence before,” the young
+editor explained. “They put me on the job because the office is short
+handed at this time of year.”
+
+“Ah, I see. And so you told ‘Henry’ that you were sympathetic with him
+in his difficulty?”
+
+“Not that exactly. I told _the girl who wrote the letter_ that I hoped
+the encouragement from the magazine would be the beginning of better
+things for her.”
+
+“Anything more?”
+
+“Hang it, Rad. Why are you so curious?... Let me see. The whole letter
+was only a few typewritten words. Nothing very personal in that, you’ll
+admit.”
+
+“Dictate the letter?”
+
+“No, I happened to write it myself.”
+
+“I see! Go on.”
+
+“Go on! I can’t remember what I was going to say, you pick me up so
+every other word.”
+
+“I’ll promise not to do it again. What else was in the letter?”
+
+“That was about all, except I did say I knew how he felt (I had to say
+‘he’ until I’d proved that the name was a blind.)”--
+
+“Yes; or the truth.”
+
+“And I told her that I spent my boyhood in a village like Deep Harbor.”
+
+“Did you let ‘Henry’ know what a short time ago that was?”
+
+Whitman showed his white, even teeth in a broad, conscious smile, as
+he met Radding’s twinkling eyes across the table. “Rad, I’ve a guilty
+conscience,” he confessed. “I hope it was fair; but if she could
+pretend to be a man, I thought I might pretend to be an old one. A
+fatherly friend seemed to be what she needed.”
+
+“Um umph.”
+
+“I did not say I corresponded to her picture of me; but I did say that
+no matter how gray my whiskers or how ample my white waistcoat, I could
+never forget my own early struggle for a footing.”
+
+Radding nodded. “I see,” he said. “Now we’ve had the prologue, let’s
+have the letter.”
+
+“Shall I read it, or will you?” asked Whitman.
+
+“You read it, if you will. That kind of angular hand-writing makes my
+eyes tired.”
+
+“She thought it was manly to write that way,” Whitman defended the
+writer. He began to read the letter, lowering his voice so that the
+good German family near them could not hear.
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+
+ “Dear Editor of _Better Every Week_:
+
+ “Thank you, thank you for your letter and the money. I can’t tell you
+ how I felt when I got the courage to look into Box 37 and made sure
+ that there was an envelope between the seed catalogue and the weekly
+ copy of _The Harbor_.
+
+ “All the way down the road I had said to myself ‘there won’t be a
+ letter there. I know there won’t. I don’t expect any;’ but that was
+ just to keep up my courage in case another empty day awaited me. Did
+ you ever cheat yourself that way when you were young? But when I got
+ to the Post Office there was my letter.
+
+ “I made up my mind not to open it until I was at home with the door
+ locked. Then if you had returned my verses, I could have had a good
+ cry. But as I ran down the road, I loosened the flap, put in one
+ finger and felt the check. I can’t tell you what it meant. It wasn’t
+ just money. It was HOPE.
+
+ “And your letter,--your dear, kind letter. I can’t find the right
+ words to thank you for that. With five dollars that I have earned,
+ and a friend, I know I can accomplish anything!
+
+ “I hope you will accept a very tiny present as a mark of my
+ appreciation of your kindness, just a simple little gift from Deep
+ Harbor. I hoped if you are old, it might please you. Grandfather used
+ to wear them.
+ “Gratefully yours,
+ “HENRY LUFFKIN.”
+
+“What was the present?” Radding asked, not attempting to conceal his
+amusement.
+
+Whitman hesitated. Then he reached into his pocket and took out a
+soft gray ball, which he kept in his own hands, smoothing it gently.
+“Wristlets,” he said. “Gray worsted wristlets.”
+
+“What on earth are wristlets?”
+
+“That shows you weren’t brought up in the country, Rad.” He slipped
+the bands on his wrists and held his hands out, smiling. “You can saw
+wood, milk cows, pump water, do all sorts of things that are best done
+with bare hands, and yet keep warm, if you have wristlets. I wouldn’t
+take anything for them. Not that I’ll use them in New York; but because
+they’ll bring up my boyhood every time I look at them.”
+
+Radding examined them curiously. “I see,” he said. “I wonder where
+‘Henry’ bought them.”
+
+“Henry!” protested Whitman. “Henry! Won’t you acknowledge you’re
+beaten, yet? Did ‘Henry’ knit wristlets? Did ‘Henry’ write that letter?”
+
+“You haven’t proved he didn’t, not to my entire satisfaction.”
+
+“What other proof do you want?”
+
+“Well, I’ll have to think it over. I’ll try my own hand at the
+detective business. Dine here again a week from to-night, and I’ll have
+some evidence.”
+
+“Very well, a week from to-night--but Rad, you know more about girls
+than I do, I’ve always avoided them. Girl stenographers can’t spell and
+lady contributors cry if you criticize their copy. But tell me this, if
+Henry _is_ a girl isn’t he unusually interesting, something out of the
+ordinary?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+A week later, well before the appointed hour, Caleb Whitman was at the
+table, which he and Radding always occupied, under the cuckoo clock.
+From time to time he peered intently down the aisle between the rows
+of tables overhung with festoons of paper flowers, in search of his
+friend. He neglected to unfold the evening paper he had bought at the
+door. He ignored the menu which the German waiter had thrust before
+him. He merely waited, with impatience in which there was no ill
+nature, but only eager expectancy. And then, at last, he saw Radding
+leisurely strolling down the room.
+
+“Well,” said Whitman, as his friend drew out the chair opposite. “I had
+about given you up.”
+
+Radding consulted his watch. “I am late,” he said dryly, “three
+minutes.”
+
+“Three minutes seems an eternity when a fellow is hungry,” Whitman
+defended himself.
+
+“If you are as hungry as that,” Radding drawled, his mouth twisted into
+a whimsical smile, “I’ll wait until later to show you what I have in my
+pocket.”
+
+“What is it, Rad? Show it to me and quit your kidding.”
+
+“Nothing of importance; just a letter.”
+
+“Let’s see it. Hand it over.”
+
+Radding turned to the waiter, deliberately. “Well, Otto, what shall we
+have to-night? And, Caleb, what do you feel like eating?”
+
+“I’m not hungry.”
+
+“Not hungry? That’s good; because this dinner’s to be on you.”
+
+“Like thunder it is.”
+
+“Yes. I’ll produce the evidence that wins me the bet with the coffee.”
+
+“Then I’ll have my coffee with my dinner,” Whitman threatened.
+
+Radding was not to be hurried. He ordered the dinner with the care
+and the interest of a man whose time is abundant and whose palate is
+discriminating, stopping continually to consult the young man opposite
+as to details, ignoring the indifferent shrugs with which his questions
+were received.
+
+When the waiter had gone, Whitman leaned across the table. “I call your
+hand,” he said. “I hold a better one.”
+
+“If you have, we’d better wait. Then each of us can enjoy his dinner in
+the pleasant belief that it’s on the other fellow.”
+
+“All right,” agreed Whitman, with no very good grace; and with well
+assumed indifference he applied himself to his dinner.
+
+“Want a demi-tasse?” Radding asked, when the end of the meal had at
+last been reached.
+
+“No, I don’t. Look here, Rad, if you think you are teasing me, you are
+mistaken.”
+
+“Teasing!” Radding protested. “Am I teasing? You like coffee, don’t
+you?”
+
+For answer, Whitman held out his hand. “Come on, Rad; what have you?
+Hand it over.”
+
+Radding searched his coat pockets. “By Jove,” he muttered, “I must have
+forgotten it.”
+
+“No, you didn’t. Look again.”
+
+“Ah, here it is.”
+
+As Radding drew forth the letter, Whitman caught a glimpse of the
+writing. “That’s not her writing,” he said.
+
+“Whose writing?”
+
+“You know--Lady Valentine’s.”
+
+Radding feigned surprise. “Oh, no, I haven’t a letter from ‘Henry.’”
+
+“The deuce you haven’t. Have you been stringing me for the last half
+hour? Did you think I was interested in your general correspondence?”
+
+“I thought you might like to see this letter, I confess.” Radding’s
+tone conveyed a sense of injury. “It can wait, however, for some other
+time.”
+
+“Of course I’m interested, old man, in anything that interests you,”
+Whitman cried in quick contrition. “Who’s the letter from? What’s it
+about?”
+
+“It’s from Deep Harbor,” Radding remarked casually, adjusting his
+glasses, “and it’s about--Henry.”
+
+Whitman’s interest instantly revived. “You old fraud,” he said. “Give
+it to me. Honestly, you ought to have a job operating a rack.”
+
+“Here it is,” Radding said at last, passing the letter across the
+table, deep-seated amusement hovering in his eyes; and Whitman read:
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+ “Aug. 9th, 191--
+
+ “Mr. James Radding,
+ “Dear Sir:
+
+ “In reply to your inquiry concerning identity of one Henry Luffkin,
+ will say that same has resided in Deep Harbor for past fifty years;
+ is church member in good standing, engaged in ferry business.
+
+ “Yours respectfully,
+ “W. L. WILSON, Postmaster.”
+
+“Well,” Radding’s voice recalled Whitman from the perusal of the
+letter. “It looks as if you paid for the dinner.”
+
+“It does, does it?” Whitman retorted. “I’ve a little evidence
+myself. I’ve been holding it back until you produced yours.” Whitman
+reached into his own pocket and drew out a second letter. “This came
+yesterday,” he said. “I did a little detective work myself. I’m not
+very proud of it, either. If that little girl wants to go incognito”--
+
+“What girl?” Radding asked innocently.
+
+“What girl! My girl; Lady Valentine.”
+
+“Ah, I see.”
+
+“Here’s my letter. Listen to this, and tell me if a ferryman, aged
+fifty, wrote it.” There was challenge in the toss of Whitman’s red head.
+
+“What’s the prologue to this one?”
+
+“When I thanked her for the wristlets, I sent her a box of candy and a
+box of cigars.”
+
+“That sounds promising. What was the result?”
+
+“This was the result;” and Whitman began to read:
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+
+ “Dear Editor of _Better Every Week_:
+
+ “I’m very glad you liked the wristlets. Have you really wished for
+ them ever since you were a boy?
+
+ “I can’t half express to you how much I enjoyed your candy. I never
+ tasted anything more delicious than those chocolates, especially the
+ ones with cocoanut inside. I feel like a person in a story book with
+ such a wonderful gift.
+
+ “Thank you over and over again.
+
+ “Sincerely yours,
+ “HENRY LUFFKIN.
+
+ “P. S. The cigars were perfectly lovely, too.”
+
+Radding chuckled appreciatively, while Whitman’s smile was not wholly
+one of amusement. “Rad,” he said, “does the man live who would
+call cigars ‘perfectly lovely’ or forget to mention them until the
+postscript?”
+
+His friend’s amusement had not yet spent itself.
+
+“What are you laughing at?” Whitman demanded.
+
+“To think”--
+
+“To think what? Stop laughing.”
+
+“To think--to think,” gasped Radding, “you should spend your good
+money--”
+
+“Yes; go on; I never begrudged money less.”
+
+“On a middle aged ferryman who happens to have a sweet tooth.”
+
+Compassionate silence was the only answer Whitman deigned to make.
+
+At last Radding controlled himself sufficiently to say, “Well, it’s
+plain we shall have to call it a tie.... The next step I suppose is to
+run up there and make a personal investigation. Too bad that you are
+going to that camp for your vacation. Engaged a place there some time
+ago, didn’t you?”
+
+“Y-e-s, I’m off Monday.”
+
+“Well, it makes no difference especially. I can get away myself in
+another week. I’ll hunt up Deep Harbor in the ‘Blue Book,’ and run up
+there in my machine. I won’t mind the jaunt in the least.”
+
+“What are you going to do when you get there?” Whitman demanded.
+“Nothing to make it embarrassing for the girl, remember that.”
+
+“I’ll be careful. I expect to get a lot of fun out of it. If the
+valentine poet proves to be the ferry man, I’ll sail with him. If the
+poet proves to be a girl, I’ll persuade her to sail with me.”
+
+“You will, will you? Pretty sure of yourself, aren’t you, Rad?”
+
+“Yes,” Radding admitted, after thinking the matter over for a few
+moments; “yes, I suppose that I am; but you see, Caley, even though
+I’m hard on forty I still enjoy girls. I have none of your prejudice
+against them.”
+
+“So that’s it,” said Whitman dryly, and he pushed back his chair from
+the table and rose decisively. “I’m getting tired of this joint,”
+he said. “I think I’ll take a walk. I don’t know when I’ve felt so
+restless.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+ “Aug. 16, 191--
+
+ “Dear Rad:
+
+ “Yes; stare as hard as you will, rub your eyes, put on your glasses.
+ The postmark of this letter _is_ Deep Harbor, and the illegible
+ scrawl _is_ that of Caleb Whitman, editor and would-be novelist.
+
+ “When we parted Saturday night I fully intended to carry out my plan
+ of going to the camp. Indeed, on the following morning I bought
+ my ticket, seated myself in the car for Utica (which was as far
+ as I could go on the through train) and tried to lose myself in
+ contemplation of the expected joys before me.
+
+ “Then what happened? Why didn’t I get to my destination? Why am I not
+ at this very moment sitting near a camp fire listening to the stories
+ of how-the-trout-got-away? I can’t entirely explain it myself. The
+ human mind is an intricate piece of machinery, and you know my
+ stupidity is boundless when I am asked to explain the workings of a
+ machine. All I know is that the wheels of the car had no sooner begun
+ to grind under my particular chair than the prospect of the weeks in
+ the camp affected me exactly like cold pan cakes.
+
+ “However, there I sat, letting myself be borne along nearer and
+ nearer to the bacon, the cornmeal, the old yarns, and the straw bed
+ under the canvas. When we reached Utica, I clambered out, to wait for
+ the jerk-water accommodation that was to take me to the end of my
+ journey. It was hotter than a greenhouse in summer. I made for the
+ magazine stand, bought a copy of our own sheet, just to see how it
+ would strike me coming off the news stand, and--I won’t blame it to
+ _Better Every Week_--I fell asleep. I was awakened by the uniformed
+ human megaphone bawling out a train. Looking at my watch I saw that
+ it was time for my own old ice wagon to start into the hills; so,
+ seizing my bag, my gun, my fishing tackle and a few other little
+ trifles, I ran to the tracks, just in time to see a train pulling out.
+
+ “‘You can make it,’ a passenger shouted, stretching out a hand for my
+ bag. So I ran, and he stretched, until finally, with his help, I made
+ the step, bags and all.
+
+ “‘Well,’ he said good-naturedly, ‘that was something of a sprint;’
+ and together we made for the smoking car. There we exchanged the
+ usual confidences as to politics and occupation. After a while I told
+ him my destination. He was solemn faced. He stared at me contritely.
+ ‘Partner,’ he said sorrowfully, ‘I’ve done you a bad turn. I’ve
+ h’isted you on the wrong train. This here goes west. You’re headed
+ for Jackson.’
+
+ “‘What’s Jackson like?’ I asked hopefully.
+
+ “‘Jackson is a fust rate town--electric lights, trolley car, cement
+ sidewalks.’ He stared at me uncertainly. ‘Don’t it make no difference
+ to you where you land?’
+
+ “‘Not much,’ I said. ‘I’m on my vacation. Is there anything to do at
+ Jackson? Any water there? Fishing, that sort of thing?’
+
+ “‘Well, no, not at Jackson. But we are only ten miles from the lake.’
+
+ “‘What lake?’
+
+ “‘What lake! Good Lord; don’t you know in what direction you are
+ going? Lake Ontario, of course.’
+
+ “Lake Ontario! You have no idea how cool that sounded, Rad. I let my
+ mind drift away for a moment from the hot car, the stale old camp,
+ out, out over the miles of shining blue waters. It sounded good to me.
+
+ “‘Know any quiet place on the lake where I can board for a week or
+ two?’
+
+ “‘Well, no place with _style_.’ (You see, Rad, _he_ was properly
+ impressed by my general appearance. He saw that I was a man of
+ fashion--which is more than you ever discovered). He hesitated:
+ ‘There’s awful good fishing and sailing at Deep Harbor.’
+
+ “Deep Harbor! If that innocent citizen had discharged a cannon in my
+ ear, I could not have been more startled. ‘Deep Harbor! Deep Harbor!
+ Am I on the way to Deep Harbor? Of all places on earth, that’s the
+ one I want to go to most.’
+
+ “‘Well,’ he said, looking at me narrowly, as if to detect signs of a
+ disordered mind. ‘You’re the fust I ever heard say that. Most people
+ wants to get away from there. It’s deader than--well, deader than
+ dead fish. It’s quieter than an empty house. It’s more monotonous
+ than an old schooner when they ain’t no wind.’
+
+ “‘How do you get there?’ was all I said for answer.
+
+ “‘You wait two hours in Jackson, and get the dummy. You can’t count
+ on it being on time, either.’
+
+ “‘I’ll wait,’ I said; and then, as the conductor approached--he
+ had been delayed by an argument with a mother as to whether a boy
+ of twelve was over five--I said ‘Ticket for Jackson,’ and all was
+ settled.
+
+ “Then Jackson and supper. It was very good, too, served in a neat
+ country hotel. Opposite me was a young sergeant of the regulars
+ (it seems there’s a post somewhere in this locality), uncommonly
+ good looking and uncommonly entertaining, so that the time passed
+ very pleasantly before we parted--I for the dummy, he for the army
+ daugherty, drawn by two splendid mules. I hope we meet again.
+
+ “Then Deep Harbor in the blackness of a summer evening with just
+ enough light for me to see that the one village street of any
+ pretension slopes down to the water; that the town stands high on
+ the bluffs; and that it looks out over a great expanse of water.
+
+ “As for the hotel, it has the appearance of a moulting bird. My
+ ink is as thick as curdled custard; my pen is as rusty as I am on
+ the war of 1812 (one of the naval battles of that war was fought
+ in this harbor); and my table is as unsteady as a ship without a
+ center board. Not very promising you say? I’m not so sure. I look for
+ adventure to-morrow. In the meantime,
+
+ “Yours for the quest,
+ “CALEY.”
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+ “Aug. 17, 191--
+
+ “Dear Rad:
+
+ “When I tell you that I have not only seen Henry Luffkin, but that
+ I have been talking to him all this long sunny morning; that I have
+ arranged to board with him and his sister in a cottage as white as
+ the lake is blue, doubtless you will think that the quest is over;
+ that I cry ‘Nuff,’ and that the dinner is on me.
+
+ “Nothing of the kind. The chase has just begun. For not even you,
+ Radding, could suspect Henry of writing verse, knitting wristlets or
+ having ‘a good cry.’
+
+ “I found him in the early morning unreefing the sail of the
+ ‘ferry’--a cat boat with a motor attachment. He is a rugged,
+ squarely built man with an eye, honest and steady and very blue--as
+ sailor men’s eyes so often are, from long gazing at sea, I suppose.
+ Suspecting that he was the ferryman of the postmaster’s report, I
+ made the sail with him--across the bay to a hamlet that boasts a
+ cheese factory.
+
+ “Occasional, reluctant monosyllables, were all I succeeded in drawing
+ from Henry by my efforts at conversation. I own I questioned him
+ shamelessly, veiling my curiosity by frank confidences of my own. I
+ was a writer, an editor, by trade; was he interested in the modern
+ periodical?
+
+ “Only in _The Harbor_, a sailor’s weekly.
+
+ “I supposed a seafaring man like him could not understand what kept
+ men at their pens.
+
+ “No, he couldn’t. Thought it would be monotonous. With sailing it was
+ different. No two days were alike.
+
+ “Had he any children? A daughter, for instance?
+
+ “No, he was a bachelor. His sister kept the house. She to be sure
+ was a great reader. When the old post office was torn down, he had
+ fetched her over a wheelbarrow full of old newspapers, and she wasn’t
+ done reading them yet!
+
+ “‘It’s the sister,’ I determined. But when (the captain having
+ admitted they had an extra room) I went to inspect the cottage and
+ made Sister Abby’s acquaintance, I saw I would have to drop that
+ solution of our little mystery.
+
+ “For Abby was a drab woman, with capable, worn hands, whose
+ conversation was limited to the frequent repetition of ‘Well, for
+ pity sakes!’ and whose interest was divided between keeping the white
+ cottage white and tending a bed of Johnny-jump-ups, neatly surrounded
+ by variegated pebbles.
+
+ “‘This is a beautiful country,’ I said, as she threw open my one
+ window, neatly protected by mosquito bar. ‘I don’t know of any place
+ on the coast with a finer view.’
+
+ “‘For pity sakes!’ said Sister Abby.
+
+ “‘They tell me the British fired a good many balls into these old
+ banks in 1812,’ I tried again, undaunted.
+
+ “‘They drunk from our well,’ said Abby, pointing out to an open well
+ in the sandy yard below.
+
+ “‘I should think,’ said I, ‘that you would all turn story writers in
+ this country, with such a background.’
+
+ “‘For pity sakes!’ said Abby. ‘Who’d do the work?’
+
+ “‘Don’t any of the village ladies write?’
+
+ “‘Yes, sir, all of ’em.’
+
+ “‘_All_ of them?’ This was more than I had bargained for.
+
+ “‘Some writes better hands than others, of course.’
+
+ “‘I meant fiction,’ I explained, ‘poems, stories, that sort of thing.’
+
+ “‘For pity sakes,’ said Sister Abby.
+
+ “I am sure she will make me comfortable and forgive me anything
+ but setting a sandy shoe on her braided rugs. In the meantime I
+ have taken out my paper, sharpened my pencils and begun the novel.
+ It ought to be easy to write a sane novel in such matter of fact
+ surroundings--there’s nothing about Captain Luffkin or Sister Abby to
+ give a romantic turn to my yarn.
+
+ “As ever,
+ “CALEY.”
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+ “Aug. 20, 191--
+
+ “Dear Rad:
+
+ “Your letter, with its amazing conclusions, just received. Honestly,
+ old man, I don’t know what has come over you. I used to think you
+ were one of the most astute judges of human nature I ever knew, with
+ more penetration and intuition than any man of my acquaintance. And
+ yet, in this letter, open before me, you say, ‘I am convinced that
+ we were both wrong. Neither a pale faced youth, nor a charming girl
+ wrote the verse and the letters. Abby wrote them!’ And to prove that
+ absurd assertion, you find proof of a poetical temperament in Abby’s
+ love of Johnny-jump-ups; you find evidence of exquisite sensitiveness
+ in a nature that shrinks from the rough intruder (otherwise me) and
+ hides its real feelings and aspirations in the single phrase, ‘For
+ pity sakes;’ and you find a sense of humor attested by the remark,
+ ‘Yes, they all write; some writes better hands than others.’ Really,
+ Rad, I don’t know what to make of you.
+
+ “And yet I am no nearer proving who did write those letters and
+ knit my wristlets than I was when I came. Surely it was none of the
+ village girls whom I met on my solitary walks, fresh and comely as
+ many of them are. Lady Valentine wouldn’t nudge, nor giggle, nor
+ stand and watch the dummy come in, with her mouth wide open like a
+ slot machine.
+
+ “You ask about the novel. It goes haltingly. My hero is made of
+ sawdust, and my girl--I don’t know what ails her. Perhaps she is
+ _too_ sane. I don’t like her, and neither does the hero.
+
+ “CALEY.”
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+ “Aug. 22, 191--
+
+ “Dear Rad:
+
+ “Something has happened. I have a clue--very slight, but a clue. I
+ give it to you for what it’s worth.
+
+ “Yesterday the novel dragged. I can’t make my sane hero very
+ convincing. Sanity in love is all very well in real life--I wish
+ there were more of it--but on paper it’s dull. I got discouraged and
+ nervous. The hens clucked too loud: Abby said ‘For pity sakes’ once
+ too often. Sometime in the middle of the afternoon I picked up my
+ papers, stuck them in my pocket and went forth in search of peace.
+
+ “The bluffs which form the shores of the bay are of a soft limestone.
+ They look, from the ferry, exactly like children’s slates piled
+ neatly one on top of the other. I walked along the narrow beach
+ for a mile or more, enjoying the quiet and the smell of the water.
+ Sometimes the beach disappeared altogether, and then I clung to the
+ cliffs and crept along the rocks until I found another footing. Well,
+ when I had done this for an hour, the beach suddenly came to such
+ an abrupt end that there was no hope of continuing my walk unless
+ I wanted to swim! Rather than retrace my steps, I managed to pull
+ myself up the steep cliff--it was some fifty feet high--so it was no
+ easy task.
+
+ “When I reached the summit, decidedly the worse for the scramble,
+ there, to my surprise, was a most charming old brick mansion, the
+ kind with fire wings on the sides. I felt as if it were looking at my
+ untied cravat, my stained trousers and my sandy shoes, in dignified
+ surprise.
+
+ “‘Hello,’ I said, ‘where did you come from?’ But, the mansion making
+ no answer except to stare harder out of its eight eye-like windows
+ that faced the road, I approached it and stared over the hedge by
+ which it was surrounded. A flag stone walk, sunken and worn, led
+ through tall grass to the loveliest old doorway you ever saw: a
+ door painted white, with a brass knocker, at the top of long steps
+ crowned by a small latticed porch; all overgrown with some flowering
+ vine, and looking like a sweet face peering out of a poke bonnet.
+
+ “There was something about the place that said, ‘Nobody at home.’
+ Most of the shades were drawn. The steps were littered with the
+ leaves which drifted from the vine every time a fresh puff of wind
+ came off the lake; so I made bold to push open the gate, walk up the
+ steps and pull the bell, which jangled lonesomely through the silence.
+
+ “Nobody came. I grew bolder and pressed my nose to the slits of
+ windows on either side of the door and found myself looking directly
+ into a wide hall, hung with family portraits, furnished in old
+ mahogany. A delicately balustraded stairway wound upward, hinting at
+ bed chambers sweet with lavender and orris. Through an open door I
+ caught a glimpse, a very small glimpse, of the state room, papered
+ with one of those old landscape papers we sometimes see reproduced.
+ I have no doubt it’s been there since 1812, and that the oriental
+ figures in turbans, majestically ascending and descending the broad
+ steps, have seen history made.
+
+ “I wandered around to the rear of the place. The grounds, some four
+ acres I should say, are all to the back, the mansion itself being
+ comfortably near the front gate.
+
+ “A path led me through some funereal evergreens into a thicket, at
+ the far end of the garden, near the road that runs past the rear; and
+ here I found a summer house, completely concealed in the thicket.
+ Inside there was a rustic table, and a rough seat encircled the walls.
+
+ “I seated myself as if I were the owner--I wish I were--brushed off
+ the leaves that covered the table and began to revise my novel then
+ and there. I am going to have my heroine live in that house and see
+ if her surroundings won’t humanize her. I am going to write every day
+ until somebody comes home and drives me out.
+
+ “The clue! I almost forgot. On the rustic table, among the leaves, I
+ found a bit of cross-barred paper, torn across, on which some one had
+ written in angular characters, ‘Dear Editor of _Better Every Week_:’
+ I suppose you will argue, Rad, that any one could have written those
+ words--some old lady who meant to subscribe for the magazine, for
+ instance. Think what you will. As for me--well, I’ll tell you what I
+ think when I write again.
+
+ “Yours,
+ “CALEY.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+Three days passed. Each afternoon Caleb Whitman put his manuscript
+under his arm and sought the garden. He skirted the curious village in
+a wide circle, and came upon the red walls of the mansion by the little
+used road that ran past the rear of its grounds.
+
+The place was still deserted. He was free to drink from the open well,
+to pick the grapes which were ripening slowly on the untrimmed vines
+that covered the long arbor stretching from the kitchen door to the
+stile. Above all he was free to make use of the woodland bower hidden
+securely in the far corner. Here he spread his papers broadcast and
+worked on his novel, heavily, laboriously, hour after hour. Sometimes
+he paused to sigh, sometimes--to listen.
+
+A bird chirped contentedly in a bush. A woodpecker drummed on a tree.
+Insects whirred faintly in the grass. The wind rustled in the woodbine
+that covered the bower. Far in the distance a cock sent forth his
+triumphant cry. And that was all--no other sound of life--for three
+long summer afternoons.
+
+It was natural, therefore, that Whitman should be startled as he
+approached the house on the fourth day, to see a huckster’s wagon
+standing near the stile. As he hesitated whether to turn back, the
+huckster came toward him down the arbor. “Know when the folks are
+expected back?” he called, as he caught sight of Whitman.
+
+“I do not,” answered Whitman; “I’m a stranger here.” Then he put the
+question that he had hesitated to put to the captain. “Who lives in
+this beautiful old place?”
+
+“Old Miss Lowell.”
+
+“Old Miss--”
+
+“Yes, a maiden lady, Miss Roxana Lowell. She’s our aristocracy about
+here. Brought up proud, you might say. Been here pretty near as long as
+the house--and that’s some time, I can tell you.... You can’t use no
+huckleberries, I suppose, if you are a stranger here?”
+
+“No,” Whitman smiled; and he waited to enter the garden until the
+huckster had rattled down the road and disappeared.
+
+“Miss Roxana Lowell,” he murmured, seating himself at the table in
+the retreat. “That’s one on both Rad and me.” And he began to write,
+impulsively.
+
+ “Dear Rad:
+
+ “Alas for Henry; alas for Lady Valentine; alas for romance!”
+
+Then he pushed the paper away. “Old Miss Lowell,” he repeated
+ironically, and lost himself in reverie. Quite suddenly the garden
+seemed to him the loneliest spot in the world. The bower where he sat
+ceased to be a snug retreat; it became simply a summer house, with
+unpainted, rotting latticed walls, damp and a little cold.
+
+He took up a fresh sheet of paper and began--
+
+ “Dear Rad:
+
+ “I’m coming back. This place has gotten on my nerves. The novel won’t
+ go”--
+
+Something snapped. He raised his head to listen. Only silence, except
+for the whir of a thrush in the woods, and the distant plaintive cry of
+a gull. Again he bent over the paper.
+
+And then the branches of the low hanging trees parted like a screen,
+the bows snapped back into place, and a girl stood in the archway of
+the bower.
+
+“Who are you? What are you doing in my summer house?”
+
+The voice was clear and sweet. Caleb Whitman raised his head and looked
+into gray eyes with long dark lashes, eyes that did not fall nor
+quiver, though the color that flooded the girl’s cheeks and the quick
+breathing that stirred her quaint muslin gown, attested suppressed
+excitement. There was something birdlike in the quick startled glance
+of her eyes, in the poise of her vibrant little figure as she hovered
+at the door ready for instant flight. Whitman sprang to his feet.
+
+“Is this Miss Roxana Lowell?”
+
+“No, I’m just Nancy, her niece.”
+
+She waited for him to continue, a hand on either side of the doorway
+barring all retreat.
+
+“I’m a summer visitor,” he hastened to explain. “I am staying in the
+village. I found your house deserted--I supposed for the summer--and I
+have been making bold to bring my papers out here and make use of your
+bower for a study. I’m going to make bolder, and ask you--if it would
+be possible for me to continue to come? Your garden is so large--I’ve
+become so attached to it”--
+
+“Oh, I’m so sorry. For you see--you must go--this instant, never to
+come back.”
+
+“Are you in earnest? Couldn’t we make some arrangement? I can get
+letters, you know, to prove I’m a respectable person--that sort of
+thing.”
+
+“You couldn’t get letters proving you weren’t a man,” said Nancy, “and
+above all things a man is what Aunt Roxana most abhors. She won’t have
+one about the premises. She won’t let even a very little boy come to
+weed the garden. She hires a woman to cut the grass.”
+
+“And are men equally distasteful to you?”
+
+“I’ve never known any, except the village people; and they’re quite
+old. But Aunt Roxana says that men, especially young men, are the cause
+of all the trouble in the world.... And they certainly have been the
+cause of her trouble.”
+
+“We haven’t always made a good record for ourselves,” Whitman
+confessed, smiling into the earnest little face across the table. “But
+if one man would promise, very solemnly, to try to the best of his
+ability”--
+
+“It wouldn’t do any good. She wouldn’t believe you,” the girl sighed.
+
+“Wouldn’t it melt her heart, ever so little, if I went in and told
+her”--
+
+Nancy’s hands tightened on the arched doorway.
+
+“No,” she said fearfully, looking over her shoulder in the direction
+of the house. “No, you mustn’t ask her anything. If she knew you were
+here, you would have to go--at once.”
+
+A smile quivered on Whitman’s lips.
+
+“Then I don’t have to go--at once?”
+
+Nancy sank provisionally onto the round seat that circled the latticed
+house, and Caleb, after a moment, seated himself also, on the far end.
+
+“You may stay--just long enough--to tell me what you were doing here
+when I came.”
+
+“I was writing a novel.”
+
+“A novel”--
+
+“Yes, and I’ve been so bold as to put your house and your garden in my
+story.”
+
+“Oh, if Aunt Roxana knew that!”
+
+“Would--it please her? It’s such a beautiful old place, I really
+couldn’t help it.”
+
+“Please her! She dislikes novels almost as much as men. If she knew
+there was a _man_ in her garden, writing a _novel_”--
+
+Nancy did not try to complete her sentence, leaving it to Whitman to
+imagine the state of Aunt Roxana’s mind under the double provocation.
+She lightly touched one of the pages--
+
+“Perhaps, though, this is not a love story? It’s love stories she
+dislikes most.”
+
+“This isn’t much of a love story,” the young man explained eagerly,
+hoping to gain favor. He moved a very little nearer, and took up the
+pages as if to outline the plot. “You see, this novel endeavors to deal
+truthfully with life,” he began.
+
+“Yes; that’s what Aunt Roxana thinks they fail to do.”
+
+“My hero is a sane hero”--
+
+“A sane hero?” questioned Nancy. She had propped her elbow on the table
+and supported her chin in the cup of one pink palm. Her eyes, soft and
+trusting, were fixed intently on the young man’s face.
+
+“Yes,” continued Whitman, his mind wandering from his hero to the way
+Nancy’s black, silky hair grew about her white brow and waved over her
+little ears. “A sensible chap,” he went on automatically, “who doesn’t
+fall in love”--
+
+“Never--in his whole life?”
+
+Whitman stopped short. “I didn’t mean to have him do so,” he said,
+doubtfully. “You see he picked out his intended wife with his head”--
+
+“Like Aunt Roxana does her dresses,” mused Nancy.
+
+“He didn’t think she was the most beautiful woman in the world”--
+
+“Was she?”
+
+“No,” the author said gayly, with joyful recognition of the fact.
+
+“What was she like?”
+
+“She was a great raw boned creature, that could walk ten miles at a
+stretch and leap higher than any girl in the gymnasium.”
+
+“That wasn’t quite genteel, was it?” Nancy smiled, as if they must be
+of one accord on that point.
+
+“It wasn’t very attractive--someway.”
+
+“Were her clothes--pretty?”
+
+The gray eyes dropped to the skirt of her muslin dress, the white hands
+played with a tiny brooch of pearls at her throat.
+
+“She wore mostly a short skirt and a jumper, and large loose shoes.”
+
+“Didn’t they make her feet look very large?”
+
+Whitman caught a glimpse of a small foot in a black slipper with a peep
+of white stocking.
+
+“Yes,” he smiled, “they looked exactly like flat boats.”
+
+“Was her hair pretty?” A delicate hand smoothed back one soft lock at
+the nape of her neck.
+
+“No, she wore it short--to save time for more important things.”
+
+“What kind of things?”
+
+“I hadn’t gotten that far.”
+
+Whitman paused, in doubt. But the eager questions continued.
+
+“What did your lovers call each other?”
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+“What names? Aunt Roxana always crossed out the love names, with a
+black pencil, in my stories.”
+
+“He called her ‘Mary.’ She called him ‘John,’” he admitted. Then he
+asked eagerly, “Do you like--love names?”
+
+Nancy’s answer was indirect. “In the Song of Songs,” she murmured
+dreamily, “the lovers called each other ‘beloved’ and ‘he whom my soul
+loves;’ and they said--but maybe you aren’t interested? I don’t think
+King Solomon was a very sensible lover”--
+
+“Yes, yes, I am interested. What did they call each other?”
+
+The girl’s lashes veiled her bright eyes, the roses sprang to her
+cheeks as she repeated the ardent words softly, for the ear so near her
+own. “Solomon said to the Shulamite, ‘As a lily among thorns, so is my
+love among the daughters’”--
+
+“Yes,” murmured Whitman, his eyes on Nancy’s face, and his heart, he
+did not pretend to explain why, giving an extra beat.
+
+“And the Shulamite said of Solomon”--the girl raised her lashes and
+spoke clearly, looking straight ahead, “‘As the apple tree among the
+trees of the wood, so is my beloved among the sons of men.’ And I’ve
+always thought,” said Nancy, “that unless a man felt that way about a
+girl, and a girl felt that way about a man, it wasn’t love.”
+
+“Nor is it,” cried Whitman, with conviction. He drew a long breath;
+then he deliberately took up his papers and tore them straight through
+the middle.
+
+“Oh,” said Nancy, “why did you do that?”
+
+“To mark the end,” said he, “once for all, of that sane love story.”
+
+“Will you write another?”
+
+“Yes, if I may come here again to-morrow.”
+
+She hesitated as she rose. “I don’t know--”
+
+“Just once--for luck,” he urged.
+
+“Well--just once more.”
+
+“And you will come, too?”
+
+“If I do,” said Nancy, moving towards the door, and looking back
+irresolutely over one shoulder, “it will be just to tell you to go.”
+
+“Of course,” Whitman agreed. And then, as she disappeared, he picked up
+the scattered papers and stuffed them in his pocket.
+
+“There’s no doubt about it,” he whispered softly as he left the garden;
+“I’ve found you, my little Lady Valentine.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+The Luffkins’ twelve o’clock dinner left Whitman free to seek the bower
+the next day when the sun was still high in the zenith. He told himself
+that he went early in order to have a long afternoon to devote to the
+revised version of his book--and there were moments when he believed
+himself.
+
+When he reached the Lowell place, he slackened his step and loitered
+by, letting his eyes roam boldly over such portions of the grounds
+as he could glimpse between the tall, untrimmed boughs of the hedge.
+He had approached by the rear so that he looked onto the comfortable
+kitchen porch, the vegetable garden, Nancy’s flowers and the clothes
+line where white fluttering garments proclaimed the family’s return. At
+the turnstile he paused to peer down the arbor’s leafy tunnel. Surely,
+a woman moved toward the gate.
+
+“It’s Nancy,” he said, and waited.
+
+In another moment he saw his mistake. Though erect as a poplar, the
+woman was no longer young. Her carriage, straight and unyielding, was
+that of a past generation.
+
+“It’s Aunt Roxana,” Whitman decided, and he strolled on his way in some
+trepidation, just as the old lady turned the stile and walked down the
+road in the direction of the village, holding her gray skirts just
+high enough to reveal congress gaiters and white stockings.
+
+“Well,” the young man sighed, “if the angel with flaming sword leaves
+Eden unguarded, I suppose no one can blame Adam for stealing back”; and
+a moment after, he found the break in the thicket he had used the day
+before as an exit, and made his way to the bower.
+
+He had half hoped to find Nancy awaiting him; but the little retreat
+was empty. The sun played through the woodbine, making patterns on the
+rustic table and on the round seat where he and Nancy had sat such a
+short time since. In its rays gleamed a bit of folded paper, on the
+center of the table.
+
+“A note,” said the young man; and his heart sank with foreboding even
+as his eager fingers reached for it.
+
+“For the Man in the Garden,” the note was addressed. Unfolding it, he
+read:
+
+ “If you are in the garden, will you please go away at once, or at
+ least before three o’clock; for at that hour I am coming out with my
+ cross stitch--and of course I can’t stay if you are there.
+
+ “NANCY ROSE.”
+
+Whitman’s laugh startled a curious sparrow. “Nancy Rose,” he said, “if
+you’d ever had any practice, I should say you were past mistress of
+the art of flirting. Did you really think any son of Adam would obey
+an order like that?” and he folded the little note into his pocket
+book. As he did so, he came upon the three letters, with the masculine
+signature, which had so whetted his curiosity less than a month past.
+Spreading them out before him, he now compared the penmanship with that
+of the note he had just found. Again he laughed and shook his head. For
+all the writer’s determined boldness on the pen’s downward stroke, the
+note and the letters were unmistakably by the same hand.
+
+And then, while the minutes crawled toward the promised hour of three,
+he read all the letters again, trying to deduce the motive that had led
+the girl to borrow the captain’s honest name.
+
+If Nancy had literary ambitions, he reasoned, she would have deluged
+the magazine with further contributions, once her little verses had
+been accepted. If she had masqueraded for mere love of adventure, she
+would have gained more by dropping the mask once her letter had been
+answered. If she had only wanted money for some girlish whim, why was
+such secrecy necessary?
+
+He could not guess her motive, but whatever it was, he determined to
+respect the innocent incognito until Nancy herself should care to throw
+it aside. In the meantime he would become her friend, he decided; not
+a shadowy well wisher in the editorial office of _Better Every Week_,
+pretending to age, but a young friend such as he was sure she needed;
+such as with care he might hope to become even in the fortnight left
+him.
+
+He turned to his book. He had worked on the new chapters all the
+evening before in the expectation that he would have something to show
+two bright eyes when they peeped through the trees.
+
+At last she came. Her reproachful, “Oh! you stayed!” brought him
+back from the world of his dreams. She was standing in the door
+irresolutely, a little beaded reticule on her arm from which some
+needlework protruded.
+
+“Is it three?” he said, with a poor feint of surprise.
+
+“Yes, it is three.”
+
+He pretended preoccupation. “I’m in a very important place in the
+novel; would you mind very much if I finished a paragraph, just a word
+or two describing the new heroine, before I go away?”
+
+“N-o-o, not if you’ll make haste.”
+
+She stood patiently by the door, her black head against the crimson
+vines. Whitman looked up.
+
+“Oh, if you won’t sit down and sew,” he said, “just exactly as if I
+were not here, I shall feel too guilty to linger. And I have just a
+word more--then I’ll be off for good and all.”
+
+She dropped onto the seat. After a moment’s hesitation he saw her
+fingers slide into the depths of the reticule and bring forth a tiny
+square of linen. A moment later bright cotton threads lay on her lap,
+her needle pricked the pattern and drew the gay strands through the
+cloth.
+
+The man at the table wrote on, more silent than the afternoon.
+
+“Is she pretty?” asked Nancy.
+
+The writer pulled himself together, apparently from deep abstraction.
+
+“Who?”
+
+“Your heroine.”
+
+“I don’t know. Ideas of beauty differ so radically.”
+
+He bent again over the table. Nancy selected a long crimson thread.
+
+“Does she live in my house?”
+
+“Yes; you don’t mind?”
+
+“No, not if she’s not that bold jumping woman you described yesterday.”
+
+“She’s not.”
+
+“I hate to disturb you; but naturally I feel interested--in a girl that
+lives here.”
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“Would you mind telling me what color her eyes are and what kind of
+hair she has, and if she’s tall?”
+
+Whitman looked up and met the wistful eagerness of Nancy’s eyes.
+
+“They’re gray,” he said, making a sudden decision, “hazel gray. Her
+hair is black, black as the black bird’s wing; and around her white
+neck and around her little white ears it looks blacker still.”
+
+“I suppose she’s very tall,” ventured Nancy, threading her needle with
+a long orange thread.
+
+“Not very. She’s small and piquant, quick in her motions like a bird.
+If she should peep into this summer house this minute you might easily
+take her for a wood pecker, with her bright eyes, black head and top
+knot of scarlet ribbon.”
+
+“Does she wear a red ribbon?” Nancy’s hand strayed to her own dark
+hair. “These are berries, rowan berries from the tree across the road.”
+
+The author courageously faced his mistake. “This girl wears a red
+ribbon,” he said.
+
+He did not pretend to resume his writing; but, his arms locked on the
+table before him, he leaned forward watching Nancy sew.
+
+“Would you mind,” she said, after another pause, “telling me a little
+about the hero? I feel interested on account of the girl living in my
+house, you see.”
+
+“My hero is a little shadowy,” he confessed; “I can’t seem to see him
+myself. I may sketch from life--though I don’t allow myself to do that
+very often--and give the heroine the best man I know.”
+
+“Who’s that?” she asked, looking up from her work.
+
+“My chum, Jim Radding,” he said, with a reluctance he could not quite
+fathom for making Radding the hero.
+
+“What color hair has he?”
+
+Whitman laughed. “Rad isn’t much on hair. It’s, let me see, brown, a
+little thin, but he brushes it over the bald spots.”
+
+“Not bright like yours, then?”
+
+Again the young man laughed. “No, fortunately for his own peace, he’s
+not cursed with a head like a bon-fire.”
+
+“I think red hair is cheerful,” Nancy said judicially. “I always
+notice that when any one with red hair appears, interesting things
+begin to happen.”
+
+“Do you?” he glowed. “Well, interesting things begin to happen when Rad
+comes, too, for he’s the best fellow in the world. You might not think
+so to look at him; his eyes are sad and his mouth droops at the corners
+a little when he’s quiet, but it turns up into the funniest, driest
+kind of smile when he begins to talk. You’d like Rad, there’s no doubt
+about it.”
+
+“Umph, umph,” she said dubiously. “Umph, umph, but I never did like a
+drooping mouth; they’re like flags on a still day.”
+
+The young man’s own lips curved into a smile at this announcement, so
+gay, so joyous that she might well have likened it to a flag in the
+wind.
+
+“I’ll tell you,” he bargained, “as long as I’ve put your house into my
+story, I don’t know why you shouldn’t order a hero to suit yourself.
+What kind of man do you prefer?”
+
+She considered his offer gravely, her eyes drifting from her work to
+the face across the table. Then she asked:
+
+“Could you make a hero who would take the lonesomeness out of the
+world?”
+
+“Yes, I can make that kind of man,” was the eager promise.
+
+“Out of everything?” Her voice was wistful, as if warning him he might
+be promising more than he would find it easy to perform.
+
+“Out of everything--for the girl who loved him.”
+
+“Out of moonlight nights in this great empty garden?”
+
+“Yes, even out of moonlight nights in Venice.”
+
+“Out of Sunday afternoons, when all the world is asleep and the lake
+shines blue for miles and miles?”
+
+“Yes, and out of long city streets, when the rain comes down, and the
+lights of the boulevard shine through the mist.”
+
+“Even out of frosty nights, when one looks out of the long window up,
+up into the sky full of stars, and then back into a great long room,
+with nobody there but just Aunt, asleep by the Franklin stove?”
+
+“Yes,” said Whitman boldly, “for the man would be there beside her,
+looking up into the stars, too, and they’d stand close to the window so
+that the curtain would fall behind them, and his arm would go round her
+waist, and her head would find its place on his shoulder, and they’d
+discover that the whole wide universe isn’t lonely to lovers--”
+
+“Lovers!” exclaimed Nancy. “Is your hero going to fall in love after
+all?”
+
+“Yes,” the author affirmed positively. “Yes, he is. I’m not sure but he
+is going to fall madly in love.”
+
+“What’s it like to be madly in love?” asked Nancy with frank curiosity.
+“How does it differ from friendship?”
+
+“There’s as much difference between love and friendship,” began the
+young man, without hesitation, “as there is between the waters of a
+fountain, sparkling, leaping, breaking in the air, and rain water
+standing in a barrel.”
+
+“That’s a very vivid contrast,” Nancy decided after a moment’s
+consideration. “Could you tell me anything more about love? You see,
+Aunt Roxana holding the views she does, it is the only chance I’m ever
+likely to have to learn.... Is there any more to it?”
+
+“Yes,” Whitman asserted, losing himself in thought for a few minutes
+before speaking, as if to gather his material. “There’s a good deal
+more to it. It’s funny, love is; it upsets all the accepted standards.”
+
+“How?”
+
+“Well, it upsets all one ever learned about space, at least as I see
+it.”
+
+“For instance?”
+
+“For instance, a mile isn’t always the same length.”
+
+“Really?”
+
+“No. When it stands between a man and the girl he loves, it’s much
+longer than when it lies between the man and even his very best friend.”
+
+“That’s very curious,” mused Nancy.
+
+“Love does funnier things than that to Time,” moralized the instructor,
+in a kind of growing surprise at the discoveries he was making.
+
+“What does Love do to Time?”
+
+“The very same thing it does to space--it overthrows all the old
+gauges. Sixty minutes spent with even the best of friends is about ten
+times longer than sixty minutes spent with the girl one’s been longing
+to see since day break.”
+
+“How do you know all these things?” asked Nancy suddenly.
+
+“How do I know them? Why, why”--the young man flushed and hesitated.
+“Why, I don’t know _how_ I know them. I just dug them out of my inner
+consciousness somewhere, I suppose. I didn’t know I had such knowledge
+myself--an hour ago.”
+
+“An hour ago!” cried Nancy; and she rose to her feet in alarm. “Aunt
+Roxana was to be back from sewing circle at four. She will be looking
+for me. It must be four now.” She peeped up at the sky, through the
+trees that screened them from the house.
+
+Whitman looked at his watch. “By Jove!” he cried. “It’s five!”
+
+“Five!” gasped Nancy, gathering up her needlework. “Five! are you sure,
+Mr.--”
+
+“Caleb Whitman,” he supplied.
+
+“Five!” she said again; and then she laughed in surprise. “Well, then,
+Mr. Caleb Whitman, it’s not only with lovers that time runs fast, is
+it? for these hours have run fast just for us.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+“I presume,” began Captain Luffkin in a confidential rumble, addressing
+Caleb Whitman, “that a young feller like you knows all there’s to know
+about girls.”
+
+“It’s the last claim I should make for myself,” his companion
+deprecated, smilingly.
+
+The Captain ruminated, his hand on the tiller, his eyes straying from
+the face of his passenger to the mark on the shore toward which he
+automatically steered.
+
+“Knowed no end of ’em, I presume,” he continued, after a pause.
+
+“Considerably fewer than that,” Whitman corrected.
+
+The Captain did not heed the denial. “What I’d like to know,” he began
+again, puckering his brow in a troubled frown, “is what makes ’em cry.”
+
+“Cry! Do girls cry?”
+
+“One I know does,” the Captain confided, lowering his voice and looking
+uneasily over the water as if he would guard his confidence even from
+the gulls. “Cries her pretty eyes out,” he added for good measure.
+
+“Tell me something about her.” Whitman’s manner, in spite of himself,
+was indifferent; for his thoughts were far from the good captain that
+afternoon, circling instead about a leafy nook and a dark haired girl,
+with a tempting mouth and a piquant chin, whom with stern self denial
+he had not sought for three interminable days.
+
+“Well,” the Captain began again, “I don’t want to tell tales, but I
+suspect I’m responsible for one girl’s tears.”
+
+“Really!” There was something so absurd in the prospect of sentimental
+confidences from the gruff old captain, that Whitman found it hard not
+to smile. And yet one look into the weather-beaten face and honest eyes
+opposite, sobered him. There was a natural dignity in the ferryman’s
+manner that made mockery impossible.
+
+“You see,” the Captain continued, “I’m one of this girl’s few friends,
+having knowed her since she was about so high.” (At this point, the
+Captain measured off about six inches.) “Well, some time back, I seed
+she was low in her mind, and well she might be, for this town ain’t
+what it should be for young folks these days. So one day when she come
+to me and asked if she could borrow my name, receiving a few letters
+addressed to Luffkin--”
+
+There was no question of the passenger’s interest now. “Yes,” he
+prompted eagerly.
+
+“I was willing enough,” the Captain went on, “for I knowed how strict
+she was held down and hedged in, and how curious the postmaster was.
+So, sez I, ‘Sure, get all the mail you want’; and I give her a key to
+my box, No. 37.”
+
+“Yes; and then?”
+
+“Well, her spirits come up, and nobody could be gladder than I was. I
+saw she had something to interest her, and, sez I, ‘That’s good.’ But
+suddenly the wind shifted and another spell of bad weather set in.”
+
+“Since when?” The young man’s hand trembled as he rolled one of the
+cigarettes the Captain scorned.
+
+“Well, I can’t say just when the trouble set in, because I ain’t seen
+her until to-day.”
+
+“To-day?”
+
+“She crossed with me last trip. I presume she’s waiting on the other
+side now to be fetched back. She never lifted her pretty head from her
+arm all the way over.”
+
+“Didn’t she!” The sole passenger’s voice was husky with emotion. He
+looked straight out to sea, wondering if Nancy’s fall in spirits could
+possibly be coincident with the neglect his conscience had dictated.
+
+“Now,” asked the Captain, loosening the main sheet from the cleat,
+preparatory to going about, “to come back to where we started, what
+makes her cry?”
+
+“What’s your theory?” Whitman forced himself to say, overcoming the
+temptation to tell the Captain what he knew of Nancy.
+
+“I suspect a man,” said the Captain with energy.
+
+“A man?”
+
+“Yes; you know we’ve an army post some ten miles from here, and I’ve
+been wondering if my little girl hadn’t gotten in with one of them
+yellow jackets. I’ve had several things to make me think that might be
+so, and that he ain’t treating her right. Why else would she want to
+get letters unbeknownst to those that has her in charge?”
+
+“She might be attempting some business venture,” Whitman suggested,
+“writing for a magazine, selling drawings, something of that kind. Has
+she literary ambitions?”
+
+“Not that I ever heard of. It strikes me natur’ made her too pretty to
+be a lady writer.”
+
+“Does she lack for money?”
+
+The Captain considered the possibilities suggested by this question.
+“It don’t seem likely,” he said. “Old Miss Lowell is reputed well to
+do.”
+
+He brought the ferry about and made a neat landing at the port called
+Fair View, where a group of country folk waited. A quick glance showed
+Whitman that Nancy was not among them; but just as the Captain cast off
+for the return voyage, she ran breathlessly down the pier.
+
+“Well,” said the Captain, sighting her at the same moment that Whitman
+did. “Here’s my girl. I was afraid she wasn’t coming.” And he held the
+bobbing cat boat to the pier with one hairy hand while Nancy clambered
+aboard.
+
+“I was delayed,” she explained confusedly, seating herself between two
+substantial village women.
+
+If she saw Caleb Whitman, she made no sign of recognition, unless a
+shy flutter of her eyelids in his direction, and a cheek that grew
+a little rosier could be called an acknowledgment of their former
+meetings.
+
+The man who had denied himself a sight of her for three long days
+let his eyes rest hungrily on the little figure squeezed between the
+village women. The Captain was right. She had been crying. Could it
+be, Whitman wondered, that his avoidance accounted for the change. The
+thought was so disturbing, so deliciously disturbing, that he refrained
+with difficulty from forcibly removing the stout protectors on either
+side of Nancy and taking his place beside her.
+
+Suddenly, as if he read Whitman’s thoughts, the good old Captain spoke.
+“Nancy,” he said, “would you mind setting on this side? The boat don’t
+ride right.”
+
+The girl looked at him demurely, as the cat boat stole steadily across
+the bay in the light summer wind. “Wouldn’t you rather have somebody a
+little heavier, Captain?” she teased; and her glance suggested a fat
+woman with a basket.
+
+“You’re just the right weight,” the Captain affirmed shamelessly; and
+he made room for her between Whitman and himself. “Miss Rose,” he said
+formally, when the change had been made, “let me make you acquainted
+with Mr. Whitman. He’s summering with me. Mr. Whitman, let me make you
+acquainted with Miss Rose. She lives down the road about a mile from
+the village, in a house you may have noticed, built before the war. A
+British ball took off part of the roof, didn’t it, Nancy?”
+
+“Yes,” the girl nodded listlessly.
+
+“I’ve seen the house,” Whitman managed to say. “I don’t wonder the
+British singled it out. I’ve done the same thing myself.”
+
+“Did you like it?” Nancy asked.
+
+Whitman’s answer was prompt. “So much that I haven’t been able to
+forget it for the past three days.”
+
+Nancy did not answer but leaned over the gunwale, letting one small
+hand drag in the water. Whitman leaned towards her. “Nancy,” he
+whispered under his breath, “is something wrong? What’s the matter?
+Won’t you tell me? Don’t you know I want to help you?”
+
+“Do you?” The luminous eyes that had been fixed on the dancing water
+searched his face.
+
+“I do, indeed. You must know that.”
+
+“Then where have you been?”
+
+The words so innocently uttered, accompanied by a glance from soft gray
+eyes where tears still lurked, gave Whitman a thrill of joy. “Why,
+Nancy,” he whispered ardently, “you yourself told me I was not to come.”
+
+“I hadn’t finished telling you so,” said Nancy tremulously.
+
+“Hadn’t you?” The man’s voice was very tender. “I’ve only stayed away
+from a sense of duty. I thought about you every hour of the day. I’ve
+been trying to find some excuse to appear openly. Isn’t there some way
+I can meet you with your aunt’s consent?”
+
+She shook her head. “Not yet. Not unless I can bring the Great
+Happiness to pass.”
+
+“The Great Happiness?” he questioned.
+
+“Yes.” She sighed. “It seems a long way off to-day.”
+
+“Won’t you tell me what you mean?”
+
+“No. I can tell no one. It’s a secret. But once it comes, everything
+will change.” She lifted her eyes to the sky line, like a prophet who
+sees a vision.
+
+“Is the Great Happiness so much to you, Nancy?” Whitman murmured,
+struck by the solemnity of her manner.
+
+“It’s everything,” she said unsmilingly, turning her earnest eyes to
+his. “It’s what I live for. When I think it will never come, my heart
+is like a stone. When I think it _will_ come--and it must, oh, it
+must--then my heart is like thistledown.”
+
+“Nancy,” Whitman said, “surely you will let me help you to bring your
+joy to pass. Have you any other friend to whom to turn?”
+
+“One other,” was the unexpected answer.
+
+“The Captain?”
+
+“No, not the Captain.”
+
+“Tell me who it is.” He did not know that the emotion that welled in
+his breast was jealousy.
+
+“I can’t.”
+
+“Is it a man?”
+
+“Yes, it’s a man. The best man in the world, I fancy.”
+
+“Nancy, are you joking?”
+
+“No, just telling the truth.”
+
+Captain Luffkin’s supposition of a soldier at the post, flashed across
+Whitman’s mind. “Does he live near here?” he demanded.
+
+“Would you call New York near?”
+
+“He lives in New York, then?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“A man who lives in New York, who would do more for you than I would.”
+
+“I didn’t say that.”
+
+“It amounted to the same thing.” Whitman stared gloomily across the
+boat, scowling unconsciously at the row of passengers opposite. “What’s
+his name?”
+
+“I can’t tell you.”
+
+“You mean you don’t choose to tell me.”
+
+“I mean what I say.” Nancy was dimpling. “I _can’t_ tell you.”
+
+“Well,” he began after a moment’s stormy thought, “it’s not my affair,
+but I have your welfare at heart, Miss Rose” (Nancy started in surprise
+at the formality of his address), “and so I can’t help warning you
+against confiding in strange men. I hope you understand the spirit in
+which I say this.”
+
+“What spirit is it?” Nancy asked innocently.
+
+Caleb Whitman hesitated, checked for a moment in his moralizing. Then
+he said with conviction, “It’s the spirit of a big brother.”
+
+“Oh,” said Nancy.
+
+“You’re an inexperienced girl,” Whitman went on.
+
+“Yes, I am.”
+
+“And so I’m going to be very bold indeed, and ask you a few questions,
+which of course you need not answer.”
+
+“Of course not,” Nancy disconcertingly agreed.
+
+“And yet--I hope you will answer.”
+
+“What’s the first question?”
+
+“Where did you meet this man from New York?”
+
+“I’ve never really met him.”
+
+“Never really met him?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Then how can you say that you know him?”
+
+“I know him from his letters--and his presents.”
+
+“Nancy!” Caleb Whitman cried aghast; and then he added with conviction,
+“He’s a scoundrel. New York is full of them. Did he see you somewhere
+and force a correspondence upon you?”
+
+“No,” Nancy weighed the question. “I suppose you would say I forced it
+on him,” she said.
+
+“For heaven’s sake, Nancy, tell me what you mean. Speak low, one of
+those women opposite is trying to hear what we are saying.”
+
+“I wrote to him first. He answered--very kindly. I sent him a present.
+He sent me two.”
+
+“Nancy Rose, are you teasing me?”
+
+“I’m answering your question.”
+
+Whitman was silent a moment, racked by a thousand fears. He forced his
+lips to ask one more question. “What kind of a man is your friend?”
+
+“He’s very old,” said Nancy, turning her candid eyes to his; “that’s
+the only thing I’d like to change about him.”
+
+“Old!” The young man by her side gave a start of joyful recognition.
+He had forgotten the past shadowy acquaintance with Nancy in the
+intoxication of actual meeting. “Old, Nancy?” his voice shook with
+eagerness.
+
+“Yes, old and fat, with chin whiskers, a white waistcoat and a thick
+watch chain. Old and kind. Don’t you think it’s safe to trust him?”
+
+“Yes,” said Whitman softly. “Yes, trust him, Nancy. But promise me one
+thing.”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“Don’t make any other friend by correspondence.”
+
+“I won’t,” she promised sweetly. And the cat boat having crept to the
+pier at Deep Harbor, she followed in the wake of the other passengers,
+clambered out the boat and disappeared down the street.
+
+“Well,” said the Captain as he and Whitman were left alone, “wasn’t I
+right? Hadn’t she been crying?”
+
+“Yes,” the young man admitted.
+
+“What I want to know,” the Captain continued, “is who’s making her cry.”
+
+“You think it’s a person?”
+
+“I’m sure it is. Moreover, I think I’ve spotted him.”
+
+For a moment Whitman feared the Captain’s glance, bent upon himself,
+was accusing. Then the ferryman asked: “See any one loitering on the
+bank across the water?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Well, I did. And he was one of them yellow jackets. As soon as he
+sighted the ferry he disappeared into the trees. Notice the little girl
+was late in getting aboard?”
+
+Unwillingly Whitman was forced to admit that Nancy had been late, and
+flustered in her manner.
+
+“Well,” the Captain finished grimly, “I’ll bet you dollars to doughnuts
+that the yellow jacket has coaxed her over there to meet him, and
+what’s more that it’s not the first time he’s done it.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+“Well,” said the Captain with heavy jocularity, extending half a dozen
+letters to his boarder, “when you get done reading that batch of mail,
+you might give it to me for ballast.”
+
+From his seat on the Captain’s lawn Whitman smiled, and taking out
+his knife he slit open the envelopes one by one. The editor-in-chief
+assured him everything was going well at the office. Radding chid him
+for his silence and pretended to find it ominous. A real estate broker
+wanted to sell him some land. A man who owed him money asked for more.
+An acquaintance announced his marriage.
+
+To Whitman mail had never been very interesting. He had wondered
+sometimes at other men’s eagerness for letters. With a yawn he opened
+the last envelope. Then he started, and by the northern twilight he
+read twice over the words that were written in a familiar hand on
+cross-barred stationery.
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+
+ “Dear Editor of _Better Every Week_:
+
+ “In one of your kind and beautiful letters, you told me that if you
+ ever could be of service, I was to call upon you. I am sure that you
+ meant what you said, and so I am turning to you for help once more.
+ Do you think there is any one in New York who would be willing to
+ give money for the following articles (they are my very own. I have
+ the right to sell them):
+
+ “One bridal veil of real lace, one hundred years old.
+
+ “One cameo pin; head of cherub.
+
+ “One bracelet; chased gold. (Clasp broken.)
+
+ “One man’s watch; hunting case; gold face; won’t go any more, but
+ might be repaired.
+
+ “One pink coral necklace. (I hate to sell this; it’s perfectly
+ beautiful.)
+
+ “If you think there is a chance of getting money for any of these
+ things, I will send them to you at once. I must have fifty dollars,
+ and I must have it soon.
+
+ “Very truly yours,
+ “HENRY B. LUFFKIN.”
+
+As usual, the writer had not dated the letter, but Whitman made out
+from the postmark that it had reached New York some days ago. On the
+margin his stenographer, Smith, had written: “This letter has been to
+every one on the staff but you. No one seems to know anything about
+the writer.” Whitman winced. He did not fancy Nancy’s letters making
+the rounds of the office. A moment after, he left the Captain beneath
+the trees, engaged in mending a net, and began to tramp up and down
+the bluff, looking out over the waters as if the evening breeze that
+rippled their wide expanse might waft an idea to him for helping Nancy.
+
+At last he went into the cottage, and seating himself beneath the oil
+lamp, he drew out paper and ink and wrote his friend.
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.,
+ “Aug. 21, 191--
+
+ “Dear Rad:
+
+ “I have become interested in helping Henry Luffkin dispose of some
+ heirlooms. I can’t buy them myself very well, and I want you to
+ pretend to be a dealer in antiques and buy them for me. Write this
+ letter for me, Rad, and write it at once, enclosing fifty dollars
+ in currency. Here’s my check for the amount. ‘Henry Luffkin. Dear
+ Sir: The Editor of _Better Every Week_ has told me that you want
+ to dispose of some old lace and pieces of jewelry, of which he has
+ given me a description. I am a collector of antiques and I am willing
+ to pay fifty dollars for the lace, the bracelet, the watch and the
+ cameo. I am not interested in coral. You may send your goods to the
+ following address.’ Then sign your own name, Rad, and give your
+ address.
+
+ “I find this is an ideal spot for my vacation. You will be glad to
+ know that I am making good progress with my novel, although it has
+ taken a more romantic turn that I had planned.
+
+ “Yours,
+ “CALEY.”
+
+The letter finished, Whitman turned to the Captain, who was seated on
+the other side of the table, lost in his weekly paper.
+
+“Captain,” he began, “I have been thinking about what you told me
+concerning Miss Rose and her mail.”
+
+The Captain looked furtively toward the kitchen, where Sister Abby
+washed the evening dishes, and Whitman lowered his voice.
+
+“If you get the mail and give her the letters,” he continued, “you can
+surely tell the nature of her correspondence.”
+
+The Captain shook his head. “No, I can’t,” he said. “I give her an
+extra key to the box. She gets there first and takes what’s coming to
+her and leaves me the rest.”
+
+“Have you ever seen anything that made you suspicious?” Whitman
+inquired.
+
+“Well,” said the Captain, “a check come once I didn’t like the looks
+of; but she said it was prize money she’d got in some kind of a
+contest, so I endorsed it and said nothing.”
+
+“She’s an interesting girl. I wish I might get better acquainted with
+her.” Whitman hoped his manner was casual.
+
+“I wish you might,” said the Captain. “I’ve kind of had it in mind from
+the first. I done what I could for you the other day in the boat. Don’t
+know as you seen through it or not.”
+
+Whitman repressed a smile. “How can I see more of her?” he asked.
+
+“That’s hard to say. She don’t cross with me more than once or twice
+a month. She goes to church Sundays, but her aunt’s always with her.
+Sometimes she sets in the graveyard with her sewing.”
+
+“The graveyard?”
+
+“Yes. Haven’t you passed it out on the wagon road near her place? It’s
+pleasant there; quiet and shady, and makes a change from the garden.
+You ought to go out and see the monuments. Lots of soldiers buried
+there, that fell in 1812. Summer folks are always interested in the old
+stones, though the new ones are a sight handsomer.”
+
+“A graveyard seems a strange place for a young girl to sit,” Whitman
+mused.
+
+“Well, it’s one of the few places her aunt approves,” the Captain
+chuckled, one eye on the paper; “and when you come to think of it, a
+pretty girl is mighty safe in the company of dead generals and admirals
+who, even if they come to life, would be kin to her.”
+
+Whitman smiled absently at the Captain’s jocularity. “I’ll go to town
+and post this letter,” he said. “I want to get it off to-night.”
+
+On his walk to the village, Caleb Whitman turned Nancy’s latest letter
+over and over in his mind, trying to reconcile his conception of her
+character with her eager, insatiable desire for money. Sometimes he
+told himself that the desire sprang merely from the wish to gratify
+some girlish fancy. Again he was half convinced that she was planning
+to run away, to escape forever the tedium of life in the garden; but
+her own words echoed in his heart, overturning his fears. “I don’t want
+to escape,” she had said. “I want to open the gate and let the world
+in.” Was she in debt? The thought was absurd. With her comfortable
+home, her guarded, restricted circuit, she had small temptation and
+little opportunity to incur obligations.
+
+“I give it up,” said Whitman to himself, at last. “All I know is that I
+want for you what you want for yourself, Nancy Rose, and that I’ll give
+it to you, if it lies in my power to do so.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Want a lift?”
+
+Whitman started, and looked up through the dusk to see the covered van
+of the army post which he had learned to call a “daugherty.” A young
+man in olive drab uniform on the front seat had drawn four mules to a
+standstill and was good-naturedly offering the pedestrian a seat.
+
+“Thank you,” Whitman answered, “but I’m only going to the village to
+post this letter.”
+
+“Want me to take it to Jackson?” the soldier asked obligingly. “It will
+make better time.”
+
+Whitman handed the letter over the high wheel. “That’s awfully good of
+you.” Then he asked, before the soldier had started the mules on their
+way: “Haven’t we met before, somewhere?”
+
+The man in uniform, who was a dashing, well-built fellow, looked
+uneasily at Caleb Whitman’s upturned face, and muttered, “I think not.”
+Then, without another word, he put the letter in his pocket, cut the
+mules lightly with his whip and drove on his way.
+
+Lost in thought, Caleb Whitman looked after the van for a long moment.
+“I have seen you,” he said to himself, “though I can’t tell where, for
+the life of me.” And he recalled again the ruddy face, the gay, dark
+eyes, the splendid shoulders of the man in the daugherty. “I don’t know
+so many army people that I ought to confuse them,” he said to himself,
+“and that particular chap is too good looking to be easily forgotten.
+He didn’t fancy my claiming acquaintance, however. High spirited chap,”
+Whitman concluded. “I don’t wonder the ‘yellow jackets,’ as the Captain
+calls them, play havoc with the girls, if they’re all as good looking
+as he.”
+
+His excuse for the trip to the village gone, he retraced his way back
+to the cottage, trying idly to recall the identity of the man who drove
+the daugherty. “I have it,” he said aloud, just as he reached the
+cottage door. “You’re Sergeant Wilson, the chap I ate supper with the
+night I got to Jackson.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+“Can I sell you a ticket for the box sociable, Mr. Whitman?” Sister
+Abby’s lack lustre eyes shone with something akin to excitement as she
+reached into the pocket of her apron and extended a bit of cardboard.
+
+“A box sociable, Miss Abby? I don’t believe I know what you mean; but
+you can sell me a ticket to anything you’ll recommend.”
+
+The afternoon was fair, the sun shone on the sparkling expanse of
+the lake below the bluffs, the summer wind was fresh and sweet, the
+morning’s work on the novel had gone well: Caleb Whitman, on his
+way out of the Captain’s gate, listened to Miss Abby’s plea with
+good-humored tolerance.
+
+“The money’s for a new carpet for the minister’s study,” Abby explained
+further. “The tickets are ten cents each. If you draw a good box,
+you’ll not think they’re dear.”
+
+Whitman produced a dime with cheerful alacrity. “But, Miss Abby,” he
+asked, “I don’t know yet what I’m in for. Why do I draw a box and what
+do I do with it when I get it?”
+
+Sister Abby stared at him. “Don’t you know what a box sociable is, and
+you living in New York City?”
+
+“No,” the young man confessed with becoming humility, “they have
+almost everything in New York, to be sure, but I don’t believe I ever
+went to a box sociable.”
+
+“Well, they’re grand,” Sister Abby sighed in pleasant retrospection.
+“We give one every year on somebody’s lawn. There’s long tables under
+the trees, and lanterns strung everywhere. I can’t tell you how pretty
+it looks. Then every girl and woman in the village brings a box with
+supper put up for two.”
+
+“I see.”
+
+“Sam Tupman gets the boxes all together and auctions them off. Some
+boxes fetches as much as a dollar.”
+
+“Is it possible?”
+
+“Yes, the boys gets excited and bids kind of reckless. When everybody
+has got a box, they open them up and find the cards of the ladies who
+have put up the lunches. Then each man finds his partner, and her and
+him eats supper together.”
+
+“Well, that’s very interesting. I should think, however, the custom of
+bidding in the dark, as one might say, would bring all sorts of queer
+people together.”
+
+“Well, you might say it does,” admitted Sister Abby; “but when a body
+is eating, he don’t care much who his company happens to be. Then
+there’s ways of getting around it, too. Nearly every girl ties up her
+box in some special way and gives the secret to somebody particular.”
+
+“Ah, I see, that makes a difference.”
+
+“The girls ties their boxes with ribbons, and we old folks mostly ties
+ours with twine. One year I got kind of tired of string, and I tied up
+my box with blue ribbon. Well, young Sammy Brown bid for it and run the
+price up to seventy-five cents. When he opened the box and found my
+name, he looked real disappointed; but he got over it when he tasted my
+crullers. You think you’d like to come, don’t you?”
+
+“I wouldn’t miss it for a good deal.” Whitman’s hand stole to the latch
+of the gate. The day was fair and time was fleeting.
+
+“Going anywhere particular?”
+
+“Well,” Whitman hesitated, “I had thought of going out to the old
+burying ground--to see the head stones. The Captain said some of them
+were quite historic.”
+
+“Yes, summer folks seem to care for them.” Sister Abby’s manner had
+changed from expectancy to mild disappointment.
+
+“Can I do anything for you, Miss Abby?”
+
+“No, nothing particular. I kind of hoped that you’d stop at the post
+office and see if the lanterns had come.”
+
+“Surely, I will.”
+
+“If they have, you might just drop in at the minister’s--the sociable
+is to be there--and offer to help him string them up. He’s kind of
+sawed off, the minister is, and he can’t reach anything but the low
+boughs on the trees.”
+
+“Surely, I’ll offer to string them up for him,” Whitman promised. Then
+in order to keep the afternoon free for possible adventure, he added:
+“Late in the afternoon will do, I presume?”
+
+“Sure, if you’ve your mind set on seeing the monuments.”
+
+“I should like to see them,” Whitman stoutly averred. “You see my
+vacation is drawing to an end, and every moment of it seems precious.”
+He smiled back at the drab figure of Sister Abby. “I won’t forget the
+lanterns,” he promised, and he started down the road, his mind drifting
+from Sister Abby and her affairs to the possibility of meeting Nancy on
+the road.
+
+If Radding had followed instructions, the letter for Nancy, alias Henry
+Luffkin (the pseudonym always made Whitman smile) must lie in the post
+office box by this time. He was determined not to lose the pleasure of
+seeing Nancy’s joy.
+
+He did not know why he found all that concerned Nancy Rose so
+engrossing. He only knew that her first letter had diverted and amused
+him; that each letter that followed had quickened his interest; and
+that since he had met her face to face, his interest had deepened into
+absorption.
+
+He had made up his mind to find her before the close of this long
+bright day; and he recalled, one by one, the clues to her possible
+haunts which the Captain had let fall. It was not patriotic interest,
+but the Captain’s hint that Nancy was often to be found there, that led
+him to the ancient burying ground.
+
+It lay close to the Lowell place, on the other side of the wagon road
+that ran from Deep Harbor past the rear of the mansion. The young
+man could already discern the arch of the wooden gate which shut the
+sleeping soldiers from the world. And then he saw what made his pulses
+leap. A woman turned the Lowell stile, crossed the road and disappeared
+among the trees in the graveyard. It was Nancy, he concluded; and
+quickening his steps, he entered the silent acres and looked about him.
+At the far end of the quiet spot, he could see a woman’s form bending
+over some flower beds.
+
+He strolled cautiously in that direction, saying to himself that he
+must not startle Nancy. In the hope that she would turn and see him
+before he was forced to break in upon her solitude, he paused before
+an old wooden monument, swaying uncertainly on its base, and tried to
+decipher the inscription. Suddenly, when he had gotten no further than,
+“Killed in battle on these shores in 1813,” a voice behind him asked:
+“Are you interested in the historic past of our little town?”
+
+With a start, Caleb Whitman turned from the battered inscription and
+faced--Aunt Roxana. He knew her instantly by her erect carriage, her
+wide skirt of stiff silk, her white stockings--she carried her dress
+high to avoid the grass stains.
+
+Caleb Whitman raised his hat and smiled down into Aunt Roxana’s face as
+fearlessly as he smiled at Sister Abby and all the village world. “I
+am indeed,” he said. “I was only wishing that I might find some one to
+give me accurate information.”
+
+The lady hesitated. Whitman had rightly guessed that her vulnerable
+point was Deep Harbor’s past. She unbent enough to say: “This monument
+was erected over the graves of gallant men who died in defense of
+these shores,” and she repeated the inscription, even supplying the
+obliterated words of the scriptural line.
+
+“My own people were all soldiers,” she vouchsafed, “and did their part
+by giving their life blood to save this nation.”
+
+The summer visitor had an inspiration. “Then you must be one of the
+Lowell family,” he said. “I’ve promised myself to see your stones. But
+of course if I am intruding--”
+
+A flush of pleasure mingled with pride swept over the good lady’s
+austere countenance.
+
+“You are quite welcome to view them,” she said. “I am glad that I
+happen to be here to assist you in your studies. The contemplation of
+the last resting places of patriots must ever be an inspiration to
+youth.”
+
+“Yes, indeed,” the pilgrim murmured, as the lady led the way through
+the long grass to a line of time-worn head stones, with inscriptions
+faint and illegible.
+
+“This,” she said, “was my great uncle, who died in service. This, my
+grandfather. This a more distant kinsman, who died of wounds,” and so
+on and on she read the names, giving the man by her side, in many a
+touching anecdote, the history of the past, when Deep Harbor had been
+glowing with life and high enterprise.
+
+“You have had many soldiers in your family,” Whitman said, his eyes
+searching the road for some glimpse of Nancy.
+
+The lady’s head tossed high. “Yes,” she said proudly, “we have done our
+part.” She sighed. “As a child I could not forgive myself for being
+born a girl.”
+
+“I see.” Whitman was quick to catch her meaning. “You would have liked
+to have been a general.”
+
+“Or an admiral,” she said gravely. “Our men fought by sea as well as by
+land.”
+
+She led the way toward the gate, and Whitman followed meekly in her
+train. There was something in the stately lady’s devotion to the past
+that touched his imagination. For her sake, he could almost have
+wished that Nancy might have been of the sex out of which generals and
+admirals are made.
+
+And then, at that very moment, Nancy tripped across the road and
+entered the gate, a little poke bonnet shading her eyes, a funny pair
+of old fashioned mits, that displayed her pink finger tips, drawn over
+her hands and arms.
+
+“Aunt,” she called; and then, seeing Whitman, she stopped short, the
+color sweeping her face to the rim of the poke hat.
+
+Miss Roxana ignored the girl’s surprise. As if it had been an every-day
+occurrence for her to stroll through the graveyard with a good-looking
+young man in flannels, she said with her unbroken dignity: “This young
+man is interested in Deep Harbor’s past. I have been reading and
+explaining the inscriptions.”
+
+Her manner said as plainly as words, “The interview is over.” And
+Whitman, surmising that there was nothing to be gained by lingering,
+lifted his hat and wandered a step or two in another direction, making
+a feint of further study of the old head stones.
+
+“You are going to the village?” he heard Aunt Roxana question Nancy.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Have you the list of commodities to be purchased?”
+
+“I think so.”
+
+“Read it.” Aunt Roxana might have been one of the sleeping generals of
+her line, issuing military commands.
+
+“‘Three pounds of sugar,’” Nancy obediently began; “‘pound of coffee,
+pound of tea--’”
+
+“Half a pound,” corrected Aunt Roxana.
+
+“‘Go to library. Get copy of Bunyan’s “Holy War.”’” Nancy looked up.
+“That’s all.”
+
+“The ribbon,” Aunt Roxana prompted.
+
+“Oh, yes, the ribbon. What color did you tell the minister it would be
+this year?” The girl’s tone was listless.
+
+“Seal brown. I thought it a decorous shade, that would not attract
+unseemly attention.”
+
+“I hate seal brown,” said Nancy wilfully. “Why can’t I have a bright
+color, cherry red?”
+
+“Seal brown,” repeated Aunt Roxana, unmoved. “A yard and a half ought
+to be a great sufficiency.”
+
+At this point Whitman gave up the hope that Aunt Roxana would go her
+way. With a slight bow, therefore, he passed the two ladies, and slowly
+returned to the village, hoping that Nancy would soon overtake him.
+
+“A passing traveller,” he heard Aunt Roxana explain to her niece, as he
+made his retreat, “commendably interested in his country’s history.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+Stroll as slowly as he would, stop as often as he dared, Caleb Whitman
+reached the village streets without being overtaken by Nancy. Aunt
+Roxana had decided to keep her at home, he concluded rebelliously, and
+he remembered with concern how soon he was due in New York.
+
+As he passed the post office, he remembered his promise to Sister Abby
+to ask for the package of Chinese lanterns. Upon entering the building,
+he found that the distribution of a late mail was in progress, so that
+he was obliged to await the completion of that work before he could
+hope for attention. With interest that bordered on excitement, he
+watched the Captain’s box, and drew a breath of relief when a letter on
+the granite gray paper Radding affected was thrust into the pigeon hole.
+
+A moment later the postmaster appeared at the delivery window and
+Whitman remembered to ask for his own mail as well as for the lanterns.
+The single letter the postmaster produced was enclosed in a granite
+gray envelope like the one that awaited Nancy.
+
+ “New York, Sept. 1, 191--
+
+ “Dear Caley:” (Rad had written in his small, crabbed hand)
+
+ “I have sent the fifty per instructions. I hate to take the
+ Captain’s bracelet and cameo pin from him. I am sure they were
+ becoming or you wouldn’t be so philanthropic.
+
+ “Yours,
+ “RAD.”
+
+The note made the reader laugh in spite of himself. “That letter is
+like Rad,” he said to himself. “I’d give a good deal to know if he
+followed my instructions about writing to Nancy.”
+
+“Here are the lanterns you were asking for,” the postmaster reminded
+him, and pushed a clumsy bundle out the little window.
+
+“I’ll take them to the minister’s and be rid of them,” Whitman
+concluded; and, leaving the post office, he went slowly down the one
+business street, peering into the grocer’s, the milliner’s, the store
+of small wares, in search of a shopper in a poke bonnet. So far she was
+still nowhere in sight.
+
+It was not until after he had left the bundle at the minister’s that
+he remembered that Nancy had been bidden to go to the library. Where
+was it? He looked in vain down the long shady street, sloping to the
+wharfs. He searched his memory. “Where’s the library?” he finally asked
+a solitary passer-by.
+
+The woman pointed to the church. “There,” she said, and plodded on her
+way. “The church?” Whitman called after her. “The tower,” she said.
+
+The church did indeed boast a tower, and upon approach Whitman saw
+that a sign on the door announced that the library was open Tuesday
+and Thursday afternoons. He determined to wait here for Nancy. From
+the windows in the church’s square tower he could sweep half the
+countryside. He entered eagerly, and following the directions of a
+painted arrow, ran up a winding stair. At the top of the first flight
+he paused at the door of a small room stacked with books. An attendant
+rose as he entered.
+
+“I’m a stranger in Deep Harbor--” he began.
+
+“Boarding with the Captain,” she supplied glibly.
+
+“Yes,” Whitman admitted, wondering if anything above the earth or under
+the waters of the earth was hidden from the inhabitants of a small
+village.
+
+“Look around and make yourself at home,” the attendant looked up from
+her crocheting to say.
+
+It occurred to the visitor that this would not take long to do, as the
+tower room was only some ten feet square.
+
+“Any book you want particular?” the attendant asked.
+
+“No, I just came to make a general survey.”
+
+“Like to go upstairs?”
+
+“Upstairs?”
+
+“Yes, the library goes on up the tower; next floor is Religion and
+Non-Fiction; top floor Juvenile.”
+
+“I’d like to look over the religious books,” said Whitman.
+
+This pious desire sprang from a sudden recollection of the book Aunt
+Roxana had put on Nancy’s list.
+
+“Shall I go with you?” the attendant asked, as the visitor started up
+the second flight.
+
+“No, indeed, I just want to look about a bit. I fancy there’s a fine
+view up higher?”
+
+“I suppose there is,” the girl conceded indifferently. “You can see out
+as far as the cemetery, and all over the town.”
+
+As these were the points of interest to Whitman, he quickly ascended
+another flight of stairs and stationed himself in the window. As the
+girl had promised, his view commanded the country side. He looked down
+on the beautiful little village, with its white spires and gray roofs
+peeping through the trees. He identified the Captain’s cottage on its
+lonely bluff. He found the chimney of the mansion where Nancy lived.
+Dear old town, steeped in memories! He had grown to love it. There
+was a charm in the sagging wharfs, in the sleepy street bordered with
+little stores with diamond paned shop windows.
+
+Abruptly his revery ended. A little figure in a poke bonnet, whose
+presence lent enchantment to every corner of the town, had just come
+out of the post office. She was hastening down the street, a basket on
+her arm, walking rapidly in the direction of the tower. A few minutes
+later Whitman heard her step on the stair. Evidently she knew the
+library sufficiently well to come directly to the shelves where the
+religious books were stacked, for she did not pause on the floor below.
+
+“Oh,” she said, breathlessly, appearing in the doorway and discovering
+the young man, “I thought there was no one here.”
+
+The man in the window seat arose. “I’ll go, Nancy, if you want to be
+alone.”
+
+“No,” she said, after a momentary pause, “I don’t mind; but go on
+reading, please. I want to look over a letter.”
+
+She took a hat pin from her bonnet and slit open a gray envelope as she
+spoke. Caleb Whitman did not raise his eyes from his book.
+
+“Oh!” cried Nancy, after a long moment, as if she were smothering,
+“oh!” and again, “oh!”
+
+Whitman sprang from his seat and hurried to her side. The face she
+lifted to his was bathed in tears. She let them fall quite openly as
+she pressed the letter to her breast.
+
+“What’s the matter, dearest?” Whitman cried, unconscious of using the
+endearing term. “Tell me Nancy, has something hurt you?”
+
+His hands clenched. If Radding had played false, he would not be
+forgiven in a hurry.
+
+“Matter!” she sobbed. “I’m just smothering with joy, that’s all.”
+
+She let him seize her hand, without protest, her pink fingers curling
+around his, her overflowing eyes on his eager face.
+
+“If you are happy, Nancy,” he pleaded, “why do you cry?”
+
+He stooped over her trembling little form, and taking out a generous
+sized handkerchief, he wiped her eyes as if she had been a child.
+
+“I don’t know,” she sobbed on a long, uneven breath. “Don’t you ever
+cry when you are happy?” An uncertain smile broke through her tears.
+“April is the happiest month of all, and she cries all the time.”
+
+He laughed his delight in her fancy. “Is it the Great Happiness, Nancy?”
+
+“It’s the key to it,” she said. “Everything is going to begin now, for
+me and for those I love.”
+
+“I’m so glad, so glad,” he glowed, his warm hand enclosing hers. “Will
+it mean anything for me, Nancy, or am I quite on the outside?”
+
+Two eyes like stars were raised to his. “The gate of the garden will
+open,” she said.
+
+“When it does, Nancy, may I be the first to enter?”
+
+“I want you to be,” she murmured....
+
+“Get what you wanted, Miss Rose?” The voice was that of the attendant
+at the bottom of the stairs. Nancy dried her eyes.
+
+“I forget what I came for,” she whispered to Whitman in consternation.
+
+“‘Bunyan’s Holy War,’” he prompted, and he found the volume on the
+shelf and gave it into Nancy’s keeping before the head of the attendant
+had more than appeared at the top step of the stairs.
+
+“Yes,” said Nancy, handing over the heavy volume for registration,
+“I’ve found it.”
+
+“Going to the box social?” the girl asked, stamping Nancy’s card.
+
+“Yes.” Nancy stole a glance at the summer visitor, fumbling among the
+book shelves.
+
+“That’s good,” said the attendant. “I hope for your sake the minister
+doesn’t draw your box again. It’s awful dull for you to eat with him
+every year.”
+
+“He’ll always draw my box,” said Nancy in a clear, sweet voice.
+
+“How’s that?”
+
+“Because Aunt ties it up herself, and tells him the color of the
+ribbon. It’s the only way she’ll let me go. She says she couldn’t
+consider leaving it to chance.”
+
+“I see,” said the girl.
+
+“Good-bye,” said Nancy, with a glance so tender, a face so suffused
+with joy that it was like an April sun.
+
+“Going straight home?” the attendant called after her.
+
+“No,” said Nancy; and her voice rang clear. “I’ve another errand to do
+first. I have to get some seal brown ribbon at the store.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+“How much for this box, gentlemen?” Sam Tupman begged, from his stand
+on a packing case. “Ten cents!” the auctioneer reproached. “I’m ashamed
+of you, Jim Lyman. There’s more than ten cents’ worth of butter on the
+bread. Twenty-five? That’s better. Don’t insult the young lady who put
+up this box. Thirty-five? Come, thirty-five. That’s right, Henshaw. A
+fellow with a mouth as large as yours ought to pay thirty-five cents
+for looking at a box like this.”
+
+The laughter that rolled up from the village people who had gathered
+on the minister’s lawn added to the fun at the grinning country boy’s
+expense. The bidding mounted. It soared. A box, tied with flaming
+orange, was knocked down to the boy with the large mouth for _sixty
+cents_! The minister’s carpet began to assume reality.
+
+From his seat under the trees, Caleb Whitman laughed and enjoyed the
+fun with the others. It seemed to him that nothing the city offered
+could compare with this little village fête for pure and innocent
+enjoyment. The spirit of neighborliness everywhere manifested, the
+tingling excitement of the young people in the auction, the hearty
+enjoyment the country found in Sam Tupman’s humor, all gave to the
+simple entertainment an air, or so the man from the city thought, as
+wholesome as the breeze that came in exhilarating puffs from the blue
+waters of Ontario. He thought of New York, with its chill indifference
+and hard worldliness with profound distaste.
+
+And then from his seat under the bobbing lanterns which he had helped
+to suspend from the splendid old maple trees, he turned his eyes again
+to Nancy, who sat with the neighbors to whom Aunt Roxana had entrusted
+her, persons whose dress and manner proclaimed for them special
+distinction in the community. At each successive meeting he had told
+himself that Nancy’s beauty and charm had reached their height. But
+never before had he seen her with her eyes shining with ecstasy, her
+cheeks flying banners of joy, her girlish throat encircled by a coral
+necklace, her happy face peeping from beneath a white lace hat, with
+a rose tucked beneath the brim. It was plainly Nancy’s gala hat, and
+Nancy’s gala day.
+
+The Captain, looking very spruce in his black Sunday suit, his white
+collar, dazzlingly polished, scraping his ears, leaned toward his
+summer boarder. “The boxes are going fast; you’d better begin bidding
+unless you want to go hungry,” he warned.
+
+“I’ve got my eye on one.”
+
+Whitman’s assurance made the Captain chuckle. “Don’t need no looking
+after by me,” he said; and he settled back to enjoy the fun of Sam
+Tupman’s antics.
+
+The auction was coming to a close. Most of the men present were
+balancing generous boxes on their knees, awaiting the signal to open
+them, to search for the packers’ names.
+
+Sam Tupman looked at the minister, a fat, short, benevolent little man
+of sixty years, in a rusty coat. Then he picked up a box from among the
+few left on the table, a box that looked as if it had once contained
+five pounds of candy, wrapped neatly in white tissue paper, bound
+sedately with seal brown ribbon; but, alas for Aunt Roxana’s decorum,
+with a big moss rose thrust coquettishly through the bow.
+
+“How much?” said Sam Tupman, omitting his usual raillery.
+
+The minister murmured: “Twenty-five cents.”
+
+“Fifty,” said Whitman promptly.
+
+The auctioneer hesitated. The minister put on his glasses and looked
+his flock over to see whence the voice of the interloper came.
+“Fifty-five,” he said at last, with careful deliberation. The Captain
+shook with inward laughter. “Go it,” he challenged Whitman admiringly.
+
+“Seventy-five,” said the stranger within the gates.
+
+“Eighty,” said the minister.
+
+“One dollar!” Whitman’s voice rang out.
+
+The auctioneer paused. “Parson,” he cried above the laughter, “if you’d
+auctioned as long as I have, you’d know when to quit by the ring in the
+other fellow’s voice. That boy ain’t got onto his real wind yet.”
+
+“A dollar ten,” said the minister firmly.
+
+“Two dollars,” from Whitman.
+
+The minister wiped his forehead. “You’re right, Sam,” he called
+good-naturedly. “I can’t tire him out; but I gave him a run for his
+money.”
+
+The worldly phrase from the guileless little minister caused a rumble
+of laughter from his flock, that died only to rise again.
+
+“Well,” sighed Miss Abby, leaning toward Whitman, “there ain’t been
+such excitement in Deep Harbor in many a day. I hope you got a good
+box. I meant to give you a hint about mine.”
+
+Ten minutes later the tables were spread. The young people as well as
+the elderly folk (age far outnumbered youth in the old town) opened the
+boxes and found their partners’ names.
+
+Caleb Whitman left his seat with the Luffkins and crossed the lawn.
+“Come, Nancy,” he said.
+
+The friends to whom she had been entrusted had wandered away, leaving
+her for the moment alone. With an adorable readiness, quite unlike the
+giggling reluctance the village girls were feigning, Nancy arose.
+
+“Oh,” she reproached the young man, her lips parting in a smile. “How
+did you dare?”
+
+“They told me to bid on a box.” Whitman laughed down into her upturned
+face. “If it happened to be yours--” His gesture implied that such
+being the case, he was not to blame.
+
+“I did not tell you the color of the ribbon, did I?” She waited
+anxiously for his answer, as if to gather assurance for future defense.
+
+“Certainly not,” he affirmed unblushingly, leading her to a seat
+between two maple trees.
+
+“But,” Nancy persisted, “how did you know that it was my box, if you
+didn’t know the color of my ribbon? You haven’t opened it to find my
+name.”
+
+Whitman’s answer was ready. “I knew it by the sign of the rose,” he
+said, taking the flower from the box, to pin it on his coat. “It’s your
+symbol, Nancy--a moss rose in an old fashioned garden.”
+
+When they were seated on the board seat Nancy opened her box revealing
+a loaf of almond cake (made with orange flower wine) and piles of
+little sandwiches, tied bewitchingly with cherry colored ribbons.
+
+“I’m sorry for the minister,” the man beside her said, making one
+mouthful of a little square of bread and butter, “he’ll miss the cherry
+ribbons.”
+
+“He’s never had them,” Nancy replied quickly; and then she blushed.
+
+“Were they--for me, Nancy?”
+
+“For the highest bidder,” said Nancy. Aunt Roxana’s lessons in
+discretion had not been in vain. Then she added, anxiously: “Those
+sandwiches look very small, some way, for your mouth.”
+
+“They were measured for a rose bud,” he replied, looking straight at
+two red lips.
+
+“The minister never said things like that.”
+
+“Perhaps he did not dare.”
+
+“No,” Nancy decided judicially. “I think it was because he was too busy
+eating bread and butter. On the way home, though, he sometimes paid me
+the compliment of telling me I was a good girl, and a comfort to my
+Aunt.”
+
+“On the way home? Has it been his custom to take you home?”
+
+She sighed and nodded.
+
+“He’s not going to do it, to-night. You’re going with me.”
+
+She looked her longing. Then she sighed again. “No, it would never do.”
+
+“Yes,” he pleaded.
+
+She hesitated, catching her breath. “Then we must start early--before
+nine,” she decided.
+
+“Well,” he conceded, wondering if the earlier hour would appease Aunt
+Roxana’s disapproval.
+
+“What are you going to say to the minister?”
+
+“I’ll trust to inspiration. It’s never hard to persuade a fat man to
+sit still. I’ll tell him that the privilege of taking you home goes
+with the box.”
+
+He picked up the cover, which had served him for a plate. “Hello,” he
+said, “a New York candy box.”
+
+“Yes,” said Nancy. “The old man with gray whiskers, of whom I told you,
+sent me the candy. It was a wonderful box. A revelation in candy, after
+peppermint sticks in paper bags. I have thought of New York ever since
+as a splendid box of bon bons, each layer more wonderful than the last.
+Is it like that?”
+
+The city which had seemed so distasteful a moment before, assumed
+brighter form with Nancy’s words. He thought suddenly of all the
+treasures of art gathered there, of the shops and the play houses,
+the ships on the river, the gayety of the avenue; and he began to tell
+Nancy of the side of New York that was indeed like a candy box, lined
+with paper lace, all ready, should she come there, for the pinch of her
+golden tongs.
+
+“And you will come, Nancy?” he pleaded as the shadows lengthened.
+
+“Maybe,” she promised. “Anything seems possible--now.” And then she
+asked, quite suddenly, “Didn’t you once mention a man named Radding to
+me?”
+
+“Perhaps,” he said, startled.
+
+“Who is he?”
+
+“There are dozens of people of that name in New York. The one I know is
+a scholar and a gentleman.”
+
+“What does he do for his living?”
+
+“He writes a little and lives on his income.”
+
+“Ah!” Her sigh was one of relief.
+
+“Do you write, Nancy? I should think you might, with that pretty fancy
+of yours.” He waited expectantly, hoping for her confession of the
+authorship of the poem.
+
+She shook her head. “No. I feel things, but I don’t draw them, or sing
+them, or write them.”
+
+The long northern twilight grew dimmer. Black night set in. Some one
+lighted the lanterns, which bobbed from the high branches where Whitman
+had strung them, like huge fire flies among the trees. A vast content
+with the present, an eager expectancy of the future, flooded his
+being. Life was a spring of living water, to which he pressed his lips.
+
+“Come,” said Nancy suddenly. “We must start. I did not know it was so
+late. Time had wings, to-night.”
+
+When Whitman begged for the privilege of taking Nancy home the minister
+demurred. “You are a stranger to Miss Roxana,” he said.
+
+“I spent all yesterday afternoon with her,” Whitman argued.
+
+“Well,” the minister gave in, “if she says anything, send her to me. If
+she never finds it out, let it be on my conscience.” He patted Nancy on
+the shoulder and gave his fat little hand to Whitman in farewell. “It
+was good of you,” he said, his eyes twinkling, “to bid so generously
+this evening in order to help the church.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+The walk home, down the long country road, under the summer stars, was
+at an end. Nancy paused decisively at the stile. “Good night,” she
+said. “I can find my way in alone.”
+
+“I don’t like to leave you, Nancy, for that great black, shuttered
+house to swallow up.”
+
+“I’m used to it, Mr. Whitman.”
+
+“What will you tell Aunt Roxana about to-night?”
+
+“I’ll tell her--” the Cupid’s bow arched over the white, even teeth.
+
+“Yes,” eagerly, his hand retaining hers.
+
+“That miles aren’t always the same length; that the walk to the village
+to buy brown ribbon is much longer than the walk back in the evening
+after the ribbon has been untied.”
+
+“Ah, Nancy.”
+
+But she had darted from him, to run fleetly toward the house, like a
+Cinderella who hears the strike of the clock. He watched the shadowy
+form disappear into the deep blackness of the tunneled arbor, hoping
+to learn through the sound of her great door key in the lock or the
+flicker of her candle at some window, that she was safe within the
+lonely dwelling. No such signal came to him, but still he lingered at
+the gate, his thoughts tumultuous.
+
+To return to the village fête without Nancy, after those wonderful
+moments together, beneath the old trees, seemed impossible--an
+anti-climax to an evening that had mounted steadily in significance and
+enjoyment. How much they had found to say to one another. How much they
+had left unsaid. He was haunted by the thought that in spite of the
+long, uninterrupted tête-à-tête, he had let Nancy go without telling
+her something of the utmost importance. What was it? He searched his
+memory. Ah, at last he knew. Sweet and disturbing, for the first time
+the truth swept over him. He wanted to tell Nancy that--he loved her.
+
+His mind leaped to their next meeting, only to be stunned by the
+thought that his last days in the old town might yield him no
+opportunity to pour out to Nancy the new and amazing discovery. Against
+such a possibility his will beat with stubborn resistance, as he
+pondered the question of how to bring about a tryst. A penciled note,
+written by the light of a match, and left in the bower, might catch her
+eye, with slight risk of being found by any one else. He would take
+that chance; and, having so decided, he strolled down the road until he
+came to the corner of the hedge that surrounded the estate where the
+latticed summer house rose black among the shrubbery. In order to leave
+no betraying footsteps in Aunt Roxana’s realm, he planned to enter by
+the break in the thicket.
+
+The trees sighed and creaked as he bent his head to creep under their
+branches. The woodbine that draped Nancy’s bower rustled ominously. The
+night, under the overhanging boughs of the trees, among the tangle of
+syringa and lilacs, was an unbroken sheet of black. Suddenly Whitman
+paused, and looked again. From within the summer house’s inky interior
+a tiny spark of fire pricked the darkness with an intermittent glow.
+No man could mistake that light. Whitman stopped short. “A man in the
+bower,” he said to himself, even before the odor of tobacco mingled
+with the garden scents. A moment after, a burnt out cigarette was flung
+carelessly through the brush. A man came to the door and whistled
+a faint bugle call, softly, persistently. Even in the dim light of
+stars his service hat, his tight blouse and his high leggins gave to
+his silhouette a distinctive outline not to be mistaken for that of a
+civilian.
+
+Caleb Whitman could not have taken a step without betraying his
+presence. Uncertain what course to pursue, torn with vague fears, he
+waited. The stone nymph with the broken arm was not more silent than he.
+
+Again the guarded whistle fluted through the silence.
+
+“I’m coming,” cried a sweet voice, down the gravel path. And now
+Whitman could not have moved had he wished. His feet, his hands, his
+very tongue in his parched mouth, seemed paralyzed with foreboding.
+
+The boughs overhanging the path parted wide and Nancy’s white form
+flashed into the grassy plot before the bower.
+
+“Is that you, Bob?” The voice was gay with expectation.
+
+“Yes. A pretty time you’ve kept me waiting. I was just about to give
+you up.”
+
+Whitman’s hands clenched at the easy nonchalance of that reply, and
+then his fingers loosened lifelessly; for the girl he loved had tripped
+toward the waiting soldier and flung her arms about his neck.
+
+“Oh, Bob, Bob, precious,” her voice came to the man who watched. “I’m
+so happy. Did you get my note?”
+
+“Yes, I got it, Nance; that’s why I’m here. Don’t break my ribs even if
+you are glad to see me.”
+
+A primitive instinct to grapple with a man who treated Nancy’s love
+with that easy tolerance swept over Whitman.
+
+“What kept you so late?” The soldier lighted another cigarette. By the
+glow of the match Whitman recognized the handsome face of Sergeant
+Wilson with sickening certainty.
+
+“I came home promptly, Bob,” Nancy explained; “but some one who came
+with me lingered at the gate. I did not dare come out to you until I
+was sure he had gone.”
+
+“Well, now I’m here, what do you want? I gave up a jolly good game of
+pool to come.”
+
+The tone was one of affectionate indulgence, with no hint of a lover’s
+rapture. Its assurance struck a chill to Whitman’s heart.
+
+“I wanted to tell you, Bob, that we can send old Goldstein about his
+business. Your trouble is over. I have the money.”
+
+“You haven’t!” The soldier seized something which Nancy took from her
+bosom, felt it, then drew her to him with one strong arm, kissed her
+soundly, and said: “All I can say is that you’re a brick. How did you
+do it? Appeal to the Czarina?”
+
+“No, that would have spoiled everything. I did it in my own way. I’ll
+tell you how some day. Now go, or you’ll be late.”
+
+“Let me go then.” The tone was bantering, but Whitman winced. “I’ll not
+forget what you’ve done, Nance. I’ll make you proud of me yet. That’s
+the only way I can repay you.”
+
+“I’ve always known you would, Bob,” she said, sealing the promise with
+a kiss.
+
+“Good-bye, kid. I’ll be late for ‘check’ if I don’t skip.”
+
+He strode toward the path that led to the stile, with Nancy in his
+wake. Whitman waited until he heard the sergeant’s gay whistle well
+down the road before he moved. Then he staggered into the bower, and
+bowed his head on his arms over the rustic table, his brain whirling
+with agonizing, discordant thoughts. How long he sat there he could
+not remember; nor how long it took him to stumble blindly back to the
+village, silent and sleeping, and out the country road to the Captain’s
+cottage.
+
+At his step in the house, Miss Abby appeared at her door. “Well,” she
+said, “Henry and I thought you must have got drowned. I couldn’t sleep
+for thinking of you.” She held a candle aloft and peered from her room
+at Whitman, whose step was already on the stair.
+
+“What time does the first train leave for New York to-morrow, Miss
+Abby?” he asked heavily.
+
+“There’s none until night, unless you want to go over to Fairview with
+Brother Henry on his first trip and catch the interurban to Adams.”
+
+“Yes, I’ll do that. Something has come up to shorten my vacation. I’m
+going back to work as quick as I can.”
+
+Miss Abby stared. “Well, for pity’s sakes,” she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+The fourteenth of February had come. The windows of candy shops were
+stacked high with heart shaped boxes. The girls behind the counters of
+sweets took orders with lightning rapidity. The florists were hurrying
+off bouquets of violets and roses which must be delivered before the
+day died, without fail. Little boys tip-toed up steps, rang bells and
+ran away, leaving embossed envelopes on the stoops. From the news
+stands _Better Every Week_, in its new dress, cried to the world in
+bold, black letters that the Valentine Special was on the market. From
+its cover, Cupid in a biplane winged a world with his arrows.
+
+“Looks pretty good, doesn’t it?” Radding suggested to the young editor,
+as they paused for a fleeting moment in the subway to ask the girl
+behind the news stand how the edition was going.
+
+“Yes, Rad, it does. I worked hard on it. Funny, isn’t it, that I should
+have edited a valentine number, when I have neither sent nor received a
+valentine in my life?”
+
+“How did that happen?” asked Radding, as they found seats in the train.
+
+“You know my boyhood. An orphan on my uncle’s farm, small chance I had
+of receiving or sending sentimental offerings.”
+
+“Caley,” said Radding whimsically, “say the word and I’ll send you a
+tribute to-day. Which shall it be,--violets or mixed chocolates?”
+
+Radding’s foolery made Whitman smile at his own expense. “The new
+magazine is valentine enough for me, Rad,” he said; “I’m feeling pretty
+good over it.”
+
+He suddenly noticed that a man beside him was lost in the pages of the
+number. “Funny, isn’t it, Rad,” he whispered, indicating the reader,
+“that a bullet headed chap like that likes sentiment as well as a girl?
+I never get over it.”
+
+At this moment, the man took out his knife and cut something from a
+column of the magazine, which he folded into his bill case before he
+flung the “Special” down and left the car. Whitman reached for the
+paper.
+
+“I’m curious to see what caught his fancy,” he said.
+
+“Yes,” Rad drawled, “when a writer’s stuff gets into vest pockets and
+shopping bags, an editor had better hold onto him.”
+
+He watched with interest as Whitman turned the pages to see what was
+missing.
+
+“What was it?” he asked, as Whitman gazed at the hole the knife had
+made.
+
+“Nothing.” The words came stiffly. “Just”--Whitman turned his eyes
+heavily toward his friend. “Just Nancy’s poem. You know,--Lady
+Valentine.”
+
+He looked steadily in front of him for a long moment, without a word.
+
+Radding watched him narrowly. It was the first time either of them
+had mentioned the girl in Deep Harbor since that day last September
+when Whitman had come back, looking worn and haggard. “Don’t chaff me,
+Rad, please. I can’t stand it,” was all he had said in response to his
+friend’s badinage over his unexpected return. And Radding had respected
+that request. The subject had been dropped. Now, however, Radding
+seized the chance to say something that had long been in his mind.
+
+“Caley,” he began gently, “I haven’t had a chance to tell you that I
+felt pretty bad over the outcome of our fun. I’ve never ceased to blame
+myself for fanning your interest in that girl; for teasing you to go up
+there.”
+
+“You didn’t know--You thought it was the Captain who wrote the letters.”
+
+Radding shook his head. “No, I didn’t. I can’t excuse myself that way.”
+
+“Then why--”
+
+“I wanted to get you out of the bachelor’s rut you were falling into
+from my bad example.”
+
+“It wouldn’t have made any difference, Rad. I’d have gone anyway. I was
+taken with her from the first.”
+
+“Are you sure,” Radding began carefully, “that there was no mistake?
+Are you sure that she didn’t feel the same way about you?”
+
+Whitman’s laugh was bitter. “I’m certain,” he said.
+
+“Did she tell you so? Forgive my persistence.”
+
+“She didn’t have to. There was--another man.”
+
+“How do you know?”
+
+“I learned it accidentally.”
+
+“Have you ever heard from her since?”
+
+“Early in the year I had a letter from Luffkin--the real
+Luffkin--corroborating all my fears. A week ago, I had one from her,
+asking me not to publish her poem, written as usual under the Captain’s
+name. The poem was already in press and had to go through, of course. I
+wrote a line telling her so, and that’s the end of it all.”
+
+“Let me see the Captain’s letter some time, if you haven’t destroyed
+it,” Radding suggested.
+
+Whitman promptly produced it from his pocket. “I saved it,” he said,
+“to keep me from indulging in any more foolish hopes.”
+
+Rad pinched on his glasses and read:
+
+ “Deep Harbor, N. Y.
+ “Jan. 3, 191--
+
+ “Friend Whitman:
+
+ “Concerning suspicions I had last summer of a certain party, would
+ say all come out well long since, as you have probably heard. My
+ girl kept her secret well, and Aunt was about struck dead when the
+ sergeant walked in on her and told her that he’d got a commission.
+ Aunt’s head was pretty high before. Now, I’m thinking, it won’t never
+ come down no more. With a lieutenant in the family, things are
+ settling back like they used to be.
+
+ “Hoping this finds you in health.
+
+ “Respectfully,
+ “HENRY B. LUFFKIN.”
+
+“Was the sergeant the fellow?” asked Radding, when he had come to the
+Captain’s carefully lettered signature.
+
+Whitman nodded, his face set.
+
+Further comment was impossible, for at this moment the train pulled
+into Radding’s station.
+
+“Wait for me at your office,” he said, as he rose. “I’ll be there about
+five.”
+
+“It’s a half holiday,” Whitman reminded him.
+
+“Better yet. Make it two, then. We’ll do something together.” And
+Radding was gone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a quarter after two by the office clock. Whitman was about
+to close his desk and give Radding up, when the janitor, a draggled
+individual with the discouraged slant of a worn out broom, appeared in
+the door and croaked: “Party outside asking for a Mr. Radding. There’s
+no such person here, is there?”
+
+“He’ll be here any minute,” Whitman replied. “Show the visitor in. I’ll
+talk to him.”
+
+The janitor ambled down the long hall in the direction of the waiting
+room. Whitman once more took up the proofs of his novel, which he had
+laid aside preparatory to leaving. The visitor’s coming gave him fresh
+hope that Radding would finally appear. Engrossed in his work, Whitman
+had forgotten the invitation he had sent by the janitor, when he was
+aroused by a timid knock on the door. It was followed, upon his giving
+permission to enter, by the turning of the knob, the soft rustle of a
+woman’s garments, and an exclamation that was stifled almost before it
+escaped.
+
+The young man raised his eyes. In the doorway stood a girl, in a
+fur hat and sable furs upon which the snow had frozen in glistening
+crystals. At the sight of Whitman, her face blanched beneath her veil.
+
+“Nancy!” Whitman breathed, doubting the evidence of his eyes.
+
+It was some moments before she attempted to speak. Then her lips moved
+stiffly:
+
+“Who are you?” she said. “Why are you here?”
+
+Whitman got to his feet. He did not move toward her, but steadying
+himself by a hand that found his desk, he spoke, the length of the room
+between them:
+
+“I’m the Editor of _Better Every Week_, Nancy.”
+
+“You deceived me, then. If I’d known--”
+
+The young man finished the sentence for her, bitterly:
+
+“You mean if you’d known that, you wouldn’t have come?”
+
+“No, I would not have come.”
+
+“Are you sorry, Nancy, to find me here?”
+
+“I’m sorry that the old man in whom you let me believe is not a
+reality. I liked to think that I had a friend.”
+
+“You surely know that I am your friend, Nancy; a thousand fold more
+sincerely your friend than he could ever have been--had he existed. I
+was your friend from the beginning. I am your friend now.”
+
+To these protestations she made no answer.
+
+“If Mr. Radding is not here,” she said at last, with an effort to
+control her voice, “I think that I must go.”
+
+The dignity inherited from a long line of gentlewomen showed in the
+slight inclination of her head in his direction.
+
+“He’ll be here,” Whitman promised, recklessly, feeling anything was
+more bearable than her going. “What did you want of him, Nancy?”
+
+“I wanted to buy back some heirlooms I sold him when I was in trouble.
+Bob won’t hear of anything else, now that our necessity is over.”
+
+“Is Bob--Sergeant Wilson?”
+
+“He was; but the War Department has allowed him to change his name.”
+
+“Is he with you?”
+
+“Yes. He came to get measured for some new uniforms, and I came with
+him. He’s to call here for me and take me back to the hotel.”
+
+“Nancy,” Whitman pleaded, looking down at her averted eyes, “tell me,
+are you happy? I can bear anything if you are.”
+
+“I have everything to make me happy,” Nancy evaded him. “Aunt Roxana
+is radiant.” She smiled faintly. “She is going to give a ball to the
+whole regiment. She is so happy she has even forgiven me about the
+poem.”
+
+“The poem?”
+
+“The one you bought.”
+
+“What was there to forgive?”
+
+“It was her heart’s secret. She had written it when she was a girl like
+me. I did not know that, of course, when I sent it to you. I found it
+in a secret drawer. I thought some one long dead had written it.”
+
+It was Whitman’s turn to be silent. When he spoke his voice trembled.
+“You can’t realize, Nancy, what it means to me to learn that those
+verses were not yours. I seem to have lost my last illusion.”
+
+“You mean it was wicked to sell them? That’s what Aunt said until she
+learned what I wanted to do with the money.”
+
+“Of course I don’t mean any such thing,” Whitman protested,
+indignantly. “I mean that I loved to think that it was your heart that
+waited there ‘Like violets under snow.’”
+
+Nancy shook her head. “I didn’t write them, but I loved them. They
+taught me something that has helped me to go on.”
+
+“What did they teach you, Nancy?”
+
+“They taught me that love is always answered by love, at last. Aunt
+Roxana never had a lover, but Bob came, and filled her heart. Perhaps,”
+the sweet voice quavered, “it will be Bob’s son who will fill mine.”
+
+Whitman’s voice was so tense it sounded hard.
+
+“Nancy,” he said sternly, “did you marry without loving?”
+
+“Marry!” A deep flush swept the pale cheeks, to the brim of the little
+fur hat. “I am not married.”
+
+“Not yet?”
+
+“Certainly not.”
+
+“But you have a lover?”
+
+The ghost of the old Nancy flickered in her uncertain smile. “I’m not
+sure,” she breathed.
+
+“Please don’t tease me, Nancy.” A hot hand locked over hers. “Once for
+all, tell me who it was that came to you in the bower, that you kissed,
+that you let clasp you in his arms.”
+
+“Why, Mr. Whitman,” she laughed on a long sobbing breath, while one
+little hand stole contritely into his. “Didn’t you know? That was Bob,
+my brother.”
+
+“Your brother!”
+
+Without waiting for another word; without asking where he stood in her
+affections, Whitman gathered the slight figure, muffled in furs, tight
+within his arms. He kissed the beautiful eyes until they laughed up at
+him once more. He kissed the cheeks until they bloomed. He kissed the
+mouth until the Cupid’s bow arched in its old, playful smile.
+
+“Why, Caleb,” she gasped between his kisses, “didn’t you really know?”
+
+“Know! Did you suppose if I had known I should have left Deep Harbor
+without one word, after that last night together? What did you think of
+me, Nancy? What could you have thought of me?”
+
+The dark head drooped against his shoulder, as if glad to be at rest.
+“At first I thought all that Aunt had said of men was true. Then I
+found the moss rose I had given you, in the bower. I knew you must have
+seen me meet Bob, and I thought you could not have understood. And
+so, the moment the secret was out and Bob had his commission, I asked
+Captain Luffkin to write you--and still you did not come. Didn’t you
+get the letter?”
+
+“Get the letter!” roared Whitman. “Of course I got the letter. It
+destroyed the last spark of hope within me. The blundering old walrus!
+He never once mentioned your relationship to the sergeant. If he
+steered a boat with no more skill than he writes letters, he’d be
+aground in five minutes.”
+
+Nancy laughed softly. “It’s all over now,” she sighed contentedly. “My
+troubles and yours have vanished, as well as Bob’s.”
+
+“Did Bob have such heavy troubles, dear?”
+
+“Yes; I forgot you didn’t know. They explain everything. You see, Bob
+had been in the Academy--West Point, you know--but something happened,
+and they--dismissed him.”
+
+“That was hard, wasn’t it, Sweetheart?”
+
+“Aunt Roxana wrote him a terrible letter, and told him that he had
+disgraced his forefathers; that he must never enter our gate again.”
+
+“Poor chap! Pretty rough on him, wasn’t it?”
+
+“I used to think so, but it made a man of him. He enlisted in the ranks
+under the name of Wilson, and won his commission the very year his
+class graduated. In all that time Aunt Roxana had not heard one word of
+his whereabouts. I alone knew the secret. Oh! If you had seen her the
+day when Bob threw open the garden gate and strode up the walk with his
+head as high as hers, the straps on his shoulders.”
+
+“She was pleased, was she, darling?”
+
+“Pleased!” Nancy ejaculated, smiling. “She’s never talked of anything
+else since. She’s never looked at another person. And to think,” she
+sighed reminiscently, “how near he came to failing. If it hadn’t been
+for your buying my poem and your telling Mr. Radding, the collector,
+about my things, Bob might never have got his commission.”
+
+“What had that to do with it, my own?”
+
+“Ah, you don’t know. There was an old debt from Academy days that had
+to be paid. A cruel creature named Goldstein found out that Bob was in
+the ranks, and he threatened to tell the commanding officer the whole
+story, unless he was paid. It was life or death with us at that crucial
+time, to get the money. Bob raised all that he could--”
+
+“Then my little general took a hand.”
+
+“What sweet things you always say.” Her cheek caressed his sleeve.
+“I missed you so when you went away. It was winter in the garden and
+winter in my heart.”
+
+“It’s spring now, beloved, forever and forever.”
+
+A discreet knock on the wall of the corridor, well outside the open
+door, caused Nancy to retreat from Whitman’s arms and hurriedly put her
+hat to rights.
+
+“Yes?” shouted Whitman fiercely, peering out to find the intruder.
+
+The janitor coughed and smiled apologetically, “Sorry to interrupt you,
+Mr. Whitman, but this note just came for you.”
+
+Whitman opened it, while his arm again drew Nancy close.
+
+ “Dear Caley:” (He read)
+
+ “I hope the ‘Valentine’ I ventured to send met with your approval.
+ I’m afraid the dinner is on me, after all. I have ordered covers laid
+ for four at Delmonico’s at eight. I insist that the sergeant come, to
+ keep me company.
+
+ “‘If her name is Mary, call her Mary; if she was christened Susan,
+ call her Susan.’
+ “As ever,
+ “RAD.”
+
+“What does he mean?” asked Nancy, reading the note from the shelter of
+her lover’s arm.
+
+“He’ll tell you at dinner, Rose of the World, in his own whimsical way.”
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
+
+
+ Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
+
+ Perceived typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78169 ***
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78169 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt=""></div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h1>MY LADY<br>
+
+VALENTINE</h1>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" alt=""></div>
+
+<p class="caption"><i>My Lady<br>
+Valentine</i></p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/titlepage.jpg" alt="title page"></div>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="titlepage">
+<p><span class="xxlarge"><i>My Lady<br>
+ Valentine</i></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/titlepagedeco.jpg" alt=""></div>
+
+<p><span class="large"><i>by Octavia<br>
+ Roberts</i></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="xlarge"><i>The A.M. Davis Co.</i></span><br>
+<span class="large"><i>Boston-Mass.</i></span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center">Copyright, 1916, by<br>
+ A. M. DAVIS</p>
+<hr class="tiny">
+<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center">TO MY<br>
+<span class="large">HUSBAND</span></p>
+
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
+<p class="ph2">MY LADY VALENTINE</p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">CALEB WHITMAN was in a bad humor. The
+task of editing the Valentine Special with
+which <i>Better Every Week</i> was planning to celebrate
+its tenth anniversary, was far from his taste.
+The theme of this number was to be—as one
+might surmise—Love; and Whitman did not believe
+in love, at least not in the violent emotion
+which the story writers were so fond of describing.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you suppose,” he said to his friend Radding,
+who had dropped in upon him one hot August afternoon,
+“that any man in his senses ever carried on
+over a girl as these story-book fellows do? Do
+you think any man ever felt like saying the sickly
+things the poets write? I can’t see why writers
+want to turn out such stuff. I can’t see why anybody
+reads the silly yarns when we print them....
+How do you account for it, Rad? You’re a philosopher.”</p>
+
+<p>Radding smiled and yawned. He moved out of
+the direct draft of the electric fan which blew his
+thin brown hair about his high, intelligent forehead:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>“There are three classes of people,” he said.
+“Those who have been in love; those who are in
+love; and those who hope to be in love.”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s that got to do with it?” asked Whitman.</p>
+
+<p>“The first class read love stories to recall past
+happiness, the second to intensify present happiness,
+the third to anticipate future happiness.”</p>
+
+<p>“I must be in a class all by myself, then,” stormed
+Whitman, “for the more time I put in on this bunch
+of stuff the more determined I am never to be a
+lover. Why, Rad, it takes a man’s reason—”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Radding admitted, “it does.”</p>
+
+<p>“It warps his judgment.”</p>
+
+<p>“It certainly does that.”</p>
+
+<p>“It causes as much misery as joy, apparently.”</p>
+
+<p>“The evidence is all with you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then what on earth does it give in return?”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said Radding, smiling at the younger
+man’s vehemence, “is what you will some day find
+out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not I,” boasted Whitman.</p>
+
+<p>“You mean that you have set yourself against
+marriage?” his friend inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Not at all. I’ve merely set myself against the
+emotional state of the story-book lover. When I
+pick out a wife, I’ll do it with my head. I’ll look
+first of all for a rational human being, secondly for
+a healthy human being.”</p>
+
+<p>“You might not like her, you know,” Radding reminded
+him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>Whitman looked up from the manuscript he was
+glancing over to say, “I don’t want to like her in
+the crazy way these lovers do. All I want to feel
+is a calm regard. I don’t want to have my heart
+thump every time she comes around the corner. I
+don’t want to be a prey to jealousy every time another
+man looks at her. Above all, I don’t want to
+sink into second childhood and call her silly
+names.”</p>
+
+<p>“What names, for instance?” Radding asked.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Darling.’ ‘Birdie.’ ‘Honey-Love,’” quoted
+Whitman scornfully from the ardent page before
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, that kind of names!” said Radding, with
+a nod of understanding. “What shall you call
+her?”</p>
+
+<p>“‘Mary,’ if that’s her name; ‘Susan’ if that’s
+what she was christened; and I shall expect her to
+call me ‘Caleb.’”</p>
+
+<p>“You even let me turn it into ‘Caley,’” Radding
+reminded him.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re different,” said Whitman, honest affection
+shining in his eyes. “You’re all the family I
+have, Rad; the best friend I have in the world.
+Don’t let me get started on you, or I’ll turn as sentimental
+as the novelists.... By the way, I’m
+going to try my own hand at a novel this vacation.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you didn’t believe in them?”</p>
+
+<p>“I believe in this one. It’s to be the story of a
+sane courtship, like the one I’ve been outlining to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>you. I’ve been planning it ever since I was assigned
+to this job of getting out the Valentine
+Special. I believe that there are thousands of people
+who will read my kind of love story with relief.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can but try it,” Radding granted. And
+then he asked, “Where are you going on your
+vacation, anyway?”</p>
+
+<p>“Up in the hills, to a camp I know of—a kind
+of writers’ colony.”</p>
+
+<p>“When do you start?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman did not answer. He was lost in the
+contents of the last of the envelopes which he had
+taken up from the great pile before him.</p>
+
+<p>“Got hold of something good?” asked Radding,
+noticing his preoccupation.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve come upon something odd,” Whitman explained,
+raising his eyes for only a fleeting moment
+from the letter he was reading.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it?”</p>
+
+<p>“A poem, a letter—and a signature.”</p>
+
+<p>“Want to share them with me, or am I in your
+way?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not in my way. I’m going to knock off in a
+minute and go home with you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it a good poem?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not very; but it may do with editing. We are
+going to have two pages of light verse. The idea
+of this is at least new. Something kind of winsome
+about it. But it’s the personality behind it
+that piques my curiosity. Take a look at it, Rad.”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>And Whitman held out a thin sheet of cross-barred
+country paper on which some one had written in
+a firm hand:</p>
+
+<p class="center">“TO MY UNKNOWN LOVER</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="first">“I know not where thou art,</div>
+<div class="indent">Thy name I do not know,</div>
+<div class="verse">And yet for thee my heart lives on</div>
+<div class="indent">Like violets under snow.</div>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="verse">For some day thou wilt come,</div>
+<div class="indent">Dear Lover, all unknown;</div>
+<div class="verse">And find thy waiting, faithful love</div>
+<div class="indent">And claim her for thine own.</div>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="verse">How shalt thou know me thine?</div>
+<div class="indent">Remember, dear, by this:</div>
+<div class="verse">My lilies all will ring their bells,</div>
+<div class="indent">My foxgloves waft a kiss.</div>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="verse">My cedar tree will offer shade,</div>
+<div class="indent">My vines will dance with glee,</div>
+<div class="verse">My garden gate will stand ajar—</div>
+<div class="indent">So loneliness may flee.</div>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="verse">I know not where thou art,</div>
+<div class="indent">Thy name I do not know,</div>
+<div class="verse">And yet for thee my heart lives on</div>
+<div class="indent">Like violets under snow.”</div>
+</div></div></div>
+
+<p>“Rather forthputting,” said Radding, handing
+the paper back.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” said Whitman. “Now
+listen to the letter which accompanies it;” and he
+read:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Editor of <i>Better Every Week</i>:</p>
+
+<p>“Here are some verses that grew in a garden.
+Please buy them. You would, I feel sure, if you
+knew what it would mean to me. I must make
+money”—</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“I suppose they all say that,” ejaculated Radding.</p>
+
+<p>“They don’t say it in this way,” said Whitman,
+continuing to read:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>“I must make money—a certain sum within
+a specified time.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Been playing cards or following the ponies?”
+Radding joked.</p>
+
+<p>Whitman didn’t smile. “Don’t, Rad,” he said.
+“The writer is in real trouble. Listen:”</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>“It isn’t easy to earn anything when one lives
+in a little village that has been asleep these hundred
+years. It isn’t easy to sell anything in a
+town where the only demand is for peppermint
+candy, gray yarn and dry groceries.</p>
+
+<p>“Please take my poem. If you are an old
+man—I imagine you with gray side-whiskers, a
+round red face that wrinkles into smiles, and a
+thick gold watch chain stretched across a white
+waistcoat”—</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>At this point Whitman looked up with a smile,
+as if to invite Radding to share his amusement.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>With his red hair, keen gray eyes, straight shoulders,
+the young editor could not have been less like
+the writer’s vision.</p>
+
+<p>Again he went on:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>“say to yourself ‘a little encouragement from me
+may make a difference in this person’s whole
+life.’</p>
+
+<p>“If you are young—but oh, dear, how should
+I know how to appeal to a young man. I don’t
+know anything about young men. They all left
+Deep Harbor long ago. The last one that was
+seen here was in, well, 1812 at the very latest.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Whitman paused for dramatic effect before reading
+impressively:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Yours respectfully,</span><br>
+
+“<span class="smcap">Henry B. Luffkin</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Well?” said Radding.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Whitman. “Of course no man
+wrote that note and no man wrote those verses.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?” asked Radding. “Every village
+of over two hundred inhabitants has a poet. Deep
+Harbor has Henry. I can see him plainly. He’s
+pale, and watery blue eyed, with tow colored hair,
+which he wears long. He ties his cuffs with ribbons.
+He owes a soda water bill at the village
+drug store and hopes that you will pay him enough
+for the poem to square it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Rad,” said Caleb, “you don’t believe that.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not! Because every word of that letter
+and every line of that poem was written by a girl.
+Look here. This <i>proves</i> it—it isn’t dated.”</p>
+
+<p>“Henry wouldn’t date it,” said Radding. “He’d
+think it was commercial.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can just see that village,” Whitman continued,
+ignoring Radding’s chaffing. “A lonely little place,
+at the end of the earth, with a deserted harbor where
+no ships ever come; sagging old wharves, ruminating
+old fishermen, and somewhere in it—this girl,
+panting for a wider world. You see, I know, Rad,
+because I spent my boyhood in that kind of place.”</p>
+
+<p>“What are you going to do about the poem?”
+asked Radding.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to take it. We can edit it a bit, and
+stick it in somewhere. At space rates she won’t be
+much richer, but she may be happier.”</p>
+
+<p>“Buy that poem, and you’ll have Henry on your
+hands for the rest of your life,” Radding warned
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t take you seriously,” said Whitman stubbornly,
+“because I feel certain that Henry—isn’t
+Henry.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you want to back your judgment?” Radding
+demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll stake a dinner on it.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right, my boy. If I win, the toast will be
+to Henry Luffkin, village poet.”</p>
+
+<p>“And if I win,” Whitman laughed, entering into
+the spirit of Radding’s fun, “the toast will be to—Lady
+Valentine.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">“I&#8202; LIKE to eat at Tony’s, because he cuts out
+the din.” As he spoke, Whitman lifted the
+cover from two of the thick, juicy English chops
+which were the restaurant’s specialty, and passed
+one to Radding. “I don’t care to compete with
+a Hungarian orchestra and a cabaret show when
+I have something to say,” he finished.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you something to say?”</p>
+
+<p>The question caused Whitman to flush consciously.
+Radding was so unfailingly logical.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing special,” the younger man parried; and
+through the rest of the meal he discreetly confined
+his conversation to commonplaces. It was not until
+after the soufflé that he said with forced nonchalance:</p>
+
+<p>“By the way, Rad, it looks as if I’d won the
+bet.”</p>
+
+<p>“What bet?”</p>
+
+<p>“What bet! The one about the writer of the
+letter from Deep Harbor.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah,” said Radding carelessly, “I’d forgotten.”</p>
+
+<p>“Forgotten!” Whitman looked at his friend
+closely, as if to test his sincerity. He could never
+be sure when Radding was quizzing him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>“Heard something, have you?” Radding asked.</p>
+
+<p>For answer Whitman fumbled in his breast
+pocket and drew out a letter which he spread on
+the table before them. “This came this morning,
+in answer to my acceptance of the poem,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“What did you say in your acceptance? I’m
+not sure that doesn’t interest me more than
+‘Henry’s’ reply.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?” There was a hint of defiance in Whitman’s
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know; I just wondered.”</p>
+
+<p>“I said we’d give five dollars for the poem,” said
+Whitman. “I wish it might have been more.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that all you said?”</p>
+
+<p>“All except—”</p>
+
+<p>“Except—?”</p>
+
+<p>“I did speak of her”—</p>
+
+<p>“<i>His</i>,” corrected Radding, plainly enjoying
+Whitman’s resentment at the change of pronoun.</p>
+
+<p>“I did speak of <i>her</i> trouble,” continued Whitman.
+“I think I’d have been a brute not to have
+mentioned it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you so tender with all your contributors?”</p>
+
+<p>“I never had much to do with the correspondence
+before,” the young editor explained. “They put
+me on the job because the office is short handed at
+this time of year.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, I see. And so you told ‘Henry’ that you
+were sympathetic with him in his difficulty?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not that exactly. I told <i>the girl who wrote
+the letter</i> that I hoped the encouragement from the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>magazine would be the beginning of better things
+for her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Anything more?”</p>
+
+<p>“Hang it, Rad. Why are you so curious?...
+Let me see. The whole letter was only a few typewritten
+words. Nothing very personal in that,
+you’ll admit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dictate the letter?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I happened to write it myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see! Go on.”</p>
+
+<p>“Go on! I can’t remember what I was going to
+say, you pick me up so every other word.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll promise not to do it again. What else was
+in the letter?”</p>
+
+<p>“That was about all, except I did say I knew how
+he felt (I had to say ‘he’ until I’d proved that the
+name was a blind.)”—</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; or the truth.”</p>
+
+<p>“And I told her that I spent my boyhood in a
+village like Deep Harbor.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you let ‘Henry’ know what a short time
+ago that was?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman showed his white, even teeth in a broad,
+conscious smile, as he met Radding’s twinkling eyes
+across the table. “Rad, I’ve a guilty conscience,”
+he confessed. “I hope it was fair; but if she could
+pretend to be a man, I thought I might pretend to
+be an old one. A fatherly friend seemed to be
+what she needed.”</p>
+
+<p>“Um umph.”</p>
+
+<p>“I did not say I corresponded to her picture of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>me; but I did say that no matter how gray my
+whiskers or how ample my white waistcoat, I could
+never forget my own early struggle for a footing.”</p>
+
+<p>Radding nodded. “I see,” he said. “Now
+we’ve had the prologue, let’s have the letter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I read it, or will you?” asked Whitman.</p>
+
+<p>“You read it, if you will. That kind of angular
+hand-writing makes my eyes tired.”</p>
+
+<p>“She thought it was manly to write that way,”
+Whitman defended the writer. He began to read
+the letter, lowering his voice so that the good German
+family near them could not hear.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Editor of <i>Better Every Week</i>:</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, thank you for your letter and the
+money. I can’t tell you how I felt when I got
+the courage to look into Box 37 and made sure
+that there was an envelope between the seed
+catalogue and the weekly copy of <i>The Harbor</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“All the way down the road I had said to myself
+‘there won’t be a letter there. I know there
+won’t. I don’t expect any;’ but that was just
+to keep up my courage in case another empty day
+awaited me. Did you ever cheat yourself that
+way when you were young? But when I got to
+the Post Office there was my letter.</p>
+
+<p>“I made up my mind not to open it until I
+was at home with the door locked. Then if you
+had returned my verses, I could have had a good
+cry. But as I ran down the road, I loosened the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>flap, put in one finger and felt the check. I can’t
+tell you what it meant. It wasn’t just money.
+It was HOPE.</p>
+
+<p>“And your letter,—your dear, kind letter. I
+can’t find the right words to thank you for that.
+With five dollars that I have earned, and a friend,
+I know I can accomplish anything!</p>
+
+<p>“I hope you will accept a very tiny present as
+a mark of my appreciation of your kindness, just
+a simple little gift from Deep Harbor. I hoped
+if you are old, it might please you. Grandfather
+used to wear them.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Gratefully yours,</span><br>
+
+“<span class="smcap">Henry Luffkin</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“What was the present?” Radding asked, not attempting
+to conceal his amusement.</p>
+
+<p>Whitman hesitated. Then he reached into his
+pocket and took out a soft gray ball, which he kept
+in his own hands, smoothing it gently. “Wristlets,”
+he said. “Gray worsted wristlets.”</p>
+
+<p>“What on earth are wristlets?”</p>
+
+<p>“That shows you weren’t brought up in the country,
+Rad.” He slipped the bands on his wrists and
+held his hands out, smiling. “You can saw wood,
+milk cows, pump water, do all sorts of things that
+are best done with bare hands, and yet keep warm,
+if you have wristlets. I wouldn’t take anything
+for them. Not that I’ll use them in New York;
+but because they’ll bring up my boyhood every time
+I look at them.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>Radding examined them curiously. “I see,” he
+said. “I wonder where ‘Henry’ bought them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Henry!” protested Whitman. “Henry!
+Won’t you acknowledge you’re beaten, yet? Did
+‘Henry’ knit wristlets? Did ‘Henry’ write that
+letter?”</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t proved he didn’t, not to my entire
+satisfaction.”</p>
+
+<p>“What other proof do you want?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll have to think it over. I’ll try my
+own hand at the detective business. Dine here
+again a week from to-night, and I’ll have some evidence.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well, a week from to-night—but Rad,
+you know more about girls than I do, I’ve always
+avoided them. Girl stenographers can’t spell and
+lady contributors cry if you criticize their copy.
+But tell me this, if Henry <i>is</i> a girl isn’t he unusually
+interesting, something out of the ordinary?”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">A WEEK later, well before the appointed hour,
+Caleb Whitman was at the table, which he
+and Radding always occupied, under the cuckoo
+clock. From time to time he peered intently down
+the aisle between the rows of tables overhung with
+festoons of paper flowers, in search of his friend.
+He neglected to unfold the evening paper he had
+bought at the door. He ignored the menu which
+the German waiter had thrust before him. He
+merely waited, with impatience in which there was
+no ill nature, but only eager expectancy. And then,
+at last, he saw Radding leisurely strolling down the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Whitman, as his friend drew out
+the chair opposite. “I had about given you up.”</p>
+
+<p>Radding consulted his watch. “I am late,” he
+said dryly, “three minutes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Three minutes seems an eternity when a fellow
+is hungry,” Whitman defended himself.</p>
+
+<p>“If you are as hungry as that,” Radding drawled,
+his mouth twisted into a whimsical smile, “I’ll wait
+until later to show you what I have in my pocket.”</p>
+
+<p>“What is it, Rad? Show it to me and quit your
+kidding.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing of importance; just a letter.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>“Let’s see it. Hand it over.”</p>
+
+<p>Radding turned to the waiter, deliberately.
+“Well, Otto, what shall we have to-night? And,
+Caleb, what do you feel like eating?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not hungry.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not hungry? That’s good; because this dinner’s
+to be on you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Like thunder it is.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. I’ll produce the evidence that wins me
+the bet with the coffee.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I’ll have my coffee with my dinner,” Whitman
+threatened.</p>
+
+<p>Radding was not to be hurried. He ordered the
+dinner with the care and the interest of a man whose
+time is abundant and whose palate is discriminating,
+stopping continually to consult the young man opposite
+as to details, ignoring the indifferent shrugs
+with which his questions were received.</p>
+
+<p>When the waiter had gone, Whitman leaned
+across the table. “I call your hand,” he said. “I
+hold a better one.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you have, we’d better wait. Then each of
+us can enjoy his dinner in the pleasant belief that
+it’s on the other fellow.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” agreed Whitman, with no very good
+grace; and with well assumed indifference he applied
+himself to his dinner.</p>
+
+<p>“Want a demi-tasse?” Radding asked, when the
+end of the meal had at last been reached.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I don’t. Look here, Rad, if you think you
+are teasing me, you are mistaken.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>“Teasing!” Radding protested. “Am I teasing?
+You like coffee, don’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>For answer, Whitman held out his hand.
+“Come on, Rad; what have you? Hand it over.”</p>
+
+<p>Radding searched his coat pockets. “By Jove,”
+he muttered, “I must have forgotten it.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, you didn’t. Look again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, here it is.”</p>
+
+<p>As Radding drew forth the letter, Whitman
+caught a glimpse of the writing. “That’s not her
+writing,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Whose writing?”</p>
+
+<p>“You know—Lady Valentine’s.”</p>
+
+<p>Radding feigned surprise. “Oh, no, I haven’t a
+letter from ‘Henry.’”</p>
+
+<p>“The deuce you haven’t. Have you been stringing
+me for the last half hour? Did you think I was
+interested in your general correspondence?”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you might like to see this letter, I
+confess.” Radding’s tone conveyed a sense of injury.
+“It can wait, however, for some other time.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I’m interested, old man, in anything
+that interests you,” Whitman cried in quick contrition.
+“Who’s the letter from? What’s it
+about?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s from Deep Harbor,” Radding remarked
+casually, adjusting his glasses, “and it’s about—Henry.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman’s interest instantly revived. “You old
+fraud,” he said. “Give it to me. Honestly, you
+ought to have a job operating a rack.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>“Here it is,” Radding said at last, passing the
+letter across the table, deep-seated amusement hovering
+in his eyes; and Whitman read:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y. &#160; &#160;<br>
+“Aug. 9th, 191—</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. James Radding,<br>
+“Dear Sir:</p>
+
+<p>“In reply to your inquiry concerning identity
+of one Henry Luffkin, will say that same has
+resided in Deep Harbor for past fifty years; is
+church member in good standing, engaged in
+ferry business.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Yours respectfully,</span><br>
+
+“<span class="smcap">W. L. Wilson</span>, Postmaster.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Well,” Radding’s voice recalled Whitman from
+the perusal of the letter. “It looks as if you paid
+for the dinner.”</p>
+
+<p>“It does, does it?” Whitman retorted. “I’ve a
+little evidence myself. I’ve been holding it back
+until you produced yours.” Whitman reached into
+his own pocket and drew out a second letter.
+“This came yesterday,” he said. “I did a little
+detective work myself. I’m not very proud of it,
+either. If that little girl wants to go incognito”—</p>
+
+<p>“What girl?” Radding asked innocently.</p>
+
+<p>“What girl! My girl; Lady Valentine.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, I see.”</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s my letter. Listen to this, and tell me if
+a ferryman, aged fifty, wrote it.” There was challenge
+in the toss of Whitman’s red head.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>“What’s the prologue to this one?”</p>
+
+<p>“When I thanked her for the wristlets, I sent her
+a box of candy and a box of cigars.”</p>
+
+<p>“That sounds promising. What was the result?”</p>
+
+<p>“This was the result;” and Whitman began to
+read:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Editor of <i>Better Every Week</i>:</p>
+
+<p>“I’m very glad you liked the wristlets. Have
+you really wished for them ever since you were a
+boy?</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t half express to you how much I enjoyed
+your candy. I never tasted anything more
+delicious than those chocolates, especially the ones
+with cocoanut inside. I feel like a person in a
+story book with such a wonderful gift.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you over and over again.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Sincerely yours,</span><br>
+
+“<span class="smcap">Henry Luffkin</span>.</p>
+
+<p>“P. S. The cigars were perfectly lovely, too.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Radding chuckled appreciatively, while Whitman’s
+smile was not wholly one of amusement. “Rad,”
+he said, “does the man live who would call cigars
+‘perfectly lovely’ or forget to mention them until
+the postscript?”</p>
+
+<p>His friend’s amusement had not yet spent itself.</p>
+
+<p>“What are you laughing at?” Whitman demanded.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>“To think”—</p>
+
+<p>“To think what? Stop laughing.”</p>
+
+<p>“To think—to think,” gasped Radding, “you
+should spend your good money—”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; go on; I never begrudged money less.”</p>
+
+<p>“On a middle aged ferryman who happens to
+have a sweet tooth.”</p>
+
+<p>Compassionate silence was the only answer Whitman
+deigned to make.</p>
+
+<p>At last Radding controlled himself sufficiently to
+say, “Well, it’s plain we shall have to call it a tie....
+The next step I suppose is to run up there and
+make a personal investigation. Too bad that you
+are going to that camp for your vacation. Engaged
+a place there some time ago, didn’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Y-e-s, I’m off Monday.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it makes no difference especially. I can
+get away myself in another week. I’ll hunt up
+Deep Harbor in the ‘Blue Book,’ and run up there
+in my machine. I won’t mind the jaunt in the
+least.”</p>
+
+<p>“What are you going to do when you get there?”
+Whitman demanded. “Nothing to make it embarrassing
+for the girl, remember that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll be careful. I expect to get a lot of fun out
+of it. If the valentine poet proves to be the ferry
+man, I’ll sail with him. If the poet proves to be a
+girl, I’ll persuade her to sail with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will, will you? Pretty sure of yourself,
+aren’t you, Rad?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Radding admitted, after thinking the matter
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>over for a few moments; “yes, I suppose that
+I am; but you see, Caley, even though I’m hard on
+forty I still enjoy girls. I have none of your
+prejudice against them.”</p>
+
+<p>“So that’s it,” said Whitman dryly, and he pushed
+back his chair from the table and rose decisively.
+“I’m getting tired of this joint,” he said. “I think
+I’ll take a walk. I don’t know when I’ve felt so
+restless.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y. &#160; &#160;<br>
+“Aug. 16, 191—</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Rad:</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; stare as hard as you will, rub your eyes,
+put on your glasses. The postmark of this letter
+<i>is</i> Deep Harbor, and the illegible scrawl <i>is</i> that
+of Caleb Whitman, editor and would-be novelist.</p>
+
+<p>“When we parted Saturday night I fully intended
+to carry out my plan of going to the camp.
+Indeed, on the following morning I bought my
+ticket, seated myself in the car for Utica (which
+was as far as I could go on the through train)
+and tried to lose myself in contemplation of the
+expected joys before me.</p>
+
+<p>“Then what happened? Why didn’t I get to
+my destination? Why am I not at this very moment
+sitting near a camp fire listening to the stories
+of how-the-trout-got-away? I can’t entirely explain
+it myself. The human mind is an intricate
+piece of machinery, and you know my stupidity is
+boundless when I am asked to explain the workings
+of a machine. All I know is that the wheels
+of the car had no sooner begun to grind under my
+particular chair than the prospect of the weeks in
+the camp affected me exactly like cold pan cakes.</p>
+
+<p>“However, there I sat, letting myself be borne
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>along nearer and nearer to the bacon, the cornmeal,
+the old yarns, and the straw bed under the
+canvas. When we reached Utica, I clambered
+out, to wait for the jerk-water accommodation
+that was to take me to the end of my journey.
+It was hotter than a greenhouse in summer. I
+made for the magazine stand, bought a copy of
+our own sheet, just to see how it would strike me
+coming off the news stand, and—I won’t blame
+it to <i>Better Every Week</i>—I fell asleep. I was
+awakened by the uniformed human megaphone
+bawling out a train. Looking at my watch I saw
+that it was time for my own old ice wagon to
+start into the hills; so, seizing my bag, my gun,
+my fishing tackle and a few other little trifles, I
+ran to the tracks, just in time to see a train pulling
+out.</p>
+
+<p>“‘You can make it,’ a passenger shouted,
+stretching out a hand for my bag. So I ran, and
+he stretched, until finally, with his help, I made
+the step, bags and all.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Well,’ he said good-naturedly, ‘that was
+something of a sprint;’ and together we made for
+the smoking car. There we exchanged the usual
+confidences as to politics and occupation. After
+a while I told him my destination. He was
+solemn faced. He stared at me contritely.
+‘Partner,’ he said sorrowfully, ‘I’ve done you a
+bad turn. I’ve h’isted you on the wrong train.
+This here goes west. You’re headed for Jackson.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>“‘What’s Jackson like?’ I asked hopefully.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Jackson is a fust rate town—electric lights,
+trolley car, cement sidewalks.’ He stared at me
+uncertainly. ‘Don’t it make no difference to you
+where you land?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Not much,’ I said. ‘I’m on my vacation.
+Is there anything to do at Jackson? Any water
+there? Fishing, that sort of thing?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Well, no, not at Jackson. But we are only
+ten miles from the lake.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘What lake?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘What lake! Good Lord; don’t you know in
+what direction you are going? Lake Ontario, of
+course.’</p>
+
+<p>“Lake Ontario! You have no idea how cool
+that sounded, Rad. I let my mind drift away
+for a moment from the hot car, the stale old camp,
+out, out over the miles of shining blue waters. It
+sounded good to me.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Know any quiet place on the lake where I
+can board for a week or two?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Well, no place with <i>style</i>.’ (You see, Rad,
+<i>he</i> was properly impressed by my general appearance.
+He saw that I was a man of fashion—which
+is more than you ever discovered). He
+hesitated: ‘There’s awful good fishing and sailing
+at Deep Harbor.’</p>
+
+<p>“Deep Harbor! If that innocent citizen had
+discharged a cannon in my ear, I could not have
+been more startled. ‘Deep Harbor! Deep Harbor!
+Am I on the way to Deep Harbor? Of all
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>places on earth, that’s the one I want to go to
+most.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Well,’ he said, looking at me narrowly, as if
+to detect signs of a disordered mind. ‘You’re
+the fust I ever heard say that. Most people wants
+to get away from there. It’s deader than—well,
+deader than dead fish. It’s quieter than an
+empty house. It’s more monotonous than an old
+schooner when they ain’t no wind.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘How do you get there?’ was all I said for
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>“‘You wait two hours in Jackson, and get the
+dummy. You can’t count on it being on time,
+either.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘I’ll wait,’ I said; and then, as the conductor
+approached—he had been delayed by an argument
+with a mother as to whether a boy of twelve
+was over five—I said ‘Ticket for Jackson,’ and
+all was settled.</p>
+
+<p>“Then Jackson and supper. It was very good,
+too, served in a neat country hotel. Opposite me
+was a young sergeant of the regulars (it seems
+there’s a post somewhere in this locality), uncommonly
+good looking and uncommonly entertaining,
+so that the time passed very pleasantly before
+we parted—I for the dummy, he for the army
+daugherty, drawn by two splendid mules. I hope
+we meet again.</p>
+
+<p>“Then Deep Harbor in the blackness of a summer
+evening with just enough light for me to see
+that the one village street of any pretension slopes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>down to the water; that the town stands high on
+the bluffs; and that it looks out over a great expanse
+of water.</p>
+
+<p>“As for the hotel, it has the appearance of a
+moulting bird. My ink is as thick as curdled
+custard; my pen is as rusty as I am on the war of
+1812 (one of the naval battles of that war was
+fought in this harbor); and my table is as unsteady
+as a ship without a center board. Not
+very promising you say? I’m not so sure. I
+look for adventure to-morrow. In the meantime,</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Yours for the quest,</span><br>
+ “<span class="smcap">Caley</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="tiny">
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right"> “Deep Harbor, N. Y.<br>
+“Aug. 17, 191—</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Rad:</p>
+
+<p>“When I tell you that I have not only seen
+Henry Luffkin, but that I have been talking to
+him all this long sunny morning; that I have arranged
+to board with him and his sister in a cottage
+as white as the lake is blue, doubtless you
+will think that the quest is over; that I cry ‘Nuff,’
+and that the dinner is on me.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing of the kind. The chase has just begun.
+For not even you, Radding, could suspect
+Henry of writing verse, knitting wristlets or having
+‘a good cry.’</p>
+
+<p>“I found him in the early morning unreefing
+the sail of the ‘ferry’—a cat boat with a motor
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>attachment. He is a rugged, squarely built man
+with an eye, honest and steady and very blue—as
+sailor men’s eyes so often are, from long
+gazing at sea, I suppose. Suspecting that he was
+the ferryman of the postmaster’s report, I made
+the sail with him—across the bay to a hamlet
+that boasts a cheese factory.</p>
+
+<p>“Occasional, reluctant monosyllables, were all
+I succeeded in drawing from Henry by my efforts
+at conversation. I own I questioned him
+shamelessly, veiling my curiosity by frank confidences
+of my own. I was a writer, an editor, by
+trade; was he interested in the modern periodical?</p>
+
+<p>“Only in <i>The Harbor</i>, a sailor’s weekly.</p>
+
+<p>“I supposed a seafaring man like him could
+not understand what kept men at their pens.</p>
+
+<p>“No, he couldn’t. Thought it would be monotonous.
+With sailing it was different. No two
+days were alike.</p>
+
+<p>“Had he any children? A daughter, for instance?</p>
+
+<p>“No, he was a bachelor. His sister kept the
+house. She to be sure was a great reader. When
+the old post office was torn down, he had fetched
+her over a wheelbarrow full of old newspapers,
+and she wasn’t done reading them yet!</p>
+
+<p>“‘It’s the sister,’ I determined. But when
+(the captain having admitted they had an extra
+room) I went to inspect the cottage and made
+Sister Abby’s acquaintance, I saw I would have to
+drop that solution of our little mystery.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>“For Abby was a drab woman, with capable,
+worn hands, whose conversation was limited to
+the frequent repetition of ‘Well, for pity sakes!’
+and whose interest was divided between keeping
+the white cottage white and tending a bed of
+Johnny-jump-ups, neatly surrounded by variegated
+pebbles.</p>
+
+<p>“‘This is a beautiful country,’ I said, as she
+threw open my one window, neatly protected by
+mosquito bar. ‘I don’t know of any place on the
+coast with a finer view.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘For pity sakes!’ said Sister Abby.</p>
+
+<p>“‘They tell me the British fired a good many
+balls into these old banks in 1812,’ I tried again,
+undaunted.</p>
+
+<p>“‘They drunk from our well,’ said Abby,
+pointing out to an open well in the sandy yard below.</p>
+
+<p>“‘I should think,’ said I, ‘that you would all
+turn story writers in this country, with such a
+background.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘For pity sakes!’ said Abby. ‘Who’d do the
+work?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Don’t any of the village ladies write?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Yes, sir, all of ’em.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘<i>All</i> of them?’ This was more than I had
+bargained for.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Some writes better hands than others, of
+course.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘I meant fiction,’ I explained, ‘poems, stories,
+that sort of thing.’</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>“‘For pity sakes,’ said Sister Abby.</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure she will make me comfortable and
+forgive me anything but setting a sandy shoe on
+her braided rugs. In the meantime I have taken
+out my paper, sharpened my pencils and begun the
+novel. It ought to be easy to write a sane novel
+in such matter of fact surroundings—there’s
+nothing about Captain Luffkin or Sister Abby to
+give a romantic turn to my yarn.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“As ever,</span><br>
+
+“<span class="smcap">Caley</span>.”</p>
+
+</div>
+<hr class="tiny">
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y. &#160; &#160;<br>
+
+“Aug. 20, 191—</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Rad:</p>
+
+<p>“Your letter, with its amazing conclusions, just
+received. Honestly, old man, I don’t know what
+has come over you. I used to think you were one
+of the most astute judges of human nature I ever
+knew, with more penetration and intuition than
+any man of my acquaintance. And yet, in this
+letter, open before me, you say, ‘I am convinced
+that we were both wrong. Neither a pale faced
+youth, nor a charming girl wrote the verse and
+the letters. Abby wrote them!’ And to prove
+that absurd assertion, you find proof of a poetical
+temperament in Abby’s love of Johnny-jump-ups;
+you find evidence of exquisite sensitiveness
+in a nature that shrinks from the rough intruder
+(otherwise me) and hides its real feelings and
+aspirations in the single phrase, ‘For pity sakes;’
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>and you find a sense of humor attested by the remark,
+‘Yes, they all write; some writes better
+hands than others.’ Really, Rad, I don’t know
+what to make of you.</p>
+
+<p>“And yet I am no nearer proving who did write
+those letters and knit my wristlets than I was
+when I came. Surely it was none of the village
+girls whom I met on my solitary walks, fresh and
+comely as many of them are. Lady Valentine
+wouldn’t nudge, nor giggle, nor stand and watch
+the dummy come in, with her mouth wide open
+like a slot machine.</p>
+
+<p>“You ask about the novel. It goes haltingly.
+My hero is made of sawdust, and my girl—I
+don’t know what ails her. Perhaps she is <i>too</i>
+sane. I don’t like her, and neither does the hero.</p>
+
+<p>
+ “<span class="smcap">Caley.</span>”
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="tiny">
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y. &#160; &#160;<br>
+
+“Aug. 22, 191—</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Rad:</p>
+
+<p>“Something has happened. I have a clue—very
+slight, but a clue. I give it to you for what
+it’s worth.</p>
+
+<p>“Yesterday the novel dragged. I can’t make
+my sane hero very convincing. Sanity in love is
+all very well in real life—I wish there were more
+of it—but on paper it’s dull. I got discouraged
+and nervous. The hens clucked too loud: Abby
+said ‘For pity sakes’ once too often. Sometime
+in the middle of the afternoon I picked up my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>papers, stuck them in my pocket and went forth
+in search of peace.</p>
+
+<p>“The bluffs which form the shores of the bay
+are of a soft limestone. They look, from the
+ferry, exactly like children’s slates piled neatly
+one on top of the other. I walked along the narrow
+beach for a mile or more, enjoying the quiet
+and the smell of the water. Sometimes the beach
+disappeared altogether, and then I clung to the
+cliffs and crept along the rocks until I found another
+footing. Well, when I had done this for
+an hour, the beach suddenly came to such an abrupt
+end that there was no hope of continuing
+my walk unless I wanted to swim! Rather than
+retrace my steps, I managed to pull myself up the
+steep cliff—it was some fifty feet high—so it
+was no easy task.</p>
+
+<p>“When I reached the summit, decidedly the
+worse for the scramble, there, to my surprise, was
+a most charming old brick mansion, the kind with
+fire wings on the sides. I felt as if it were looking
+at my untied cravat, my stained trousers and
+my sandy shoes, in dignified surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Hello,’ I said, ‘where did you come from?’
+But, the mansion making no answer except to
+stare harder out of its eight eye-like windows that
+faced the road, I approached it and stared over the
+hedge by which it was surrounded. A flag stone
+walk, sunken and worn, led through tall grass
+to the loveliest old doorway you ever saw: a door
+painted white, with a brass knocker, at the top of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>long steps crowned by a small latticed porch; all
+overgrown with some flowering vine, and looking
+like a sweet face peering out of a poke bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>“There was something about the place that
+said, ‘Nobody at home.’ Most of the shades were
+drawn. The steps were littered with the leaves
+which drifted from the vine every time a fresh
+puff of wind came off the lake; so I made bold to
+push open the gate, walk up the steps and pull the
+bell, which jangled lonesomely through the silence.</p>
+
+<p>“Nobody came. I grew bolder and pressed
+my nose to the slits of windows on either side of
+the door and found myself looking directly into
+a wide hall, hung with family portraits, furnished
+in old mahogany. A delicately balustraded stairway
+wound upward, hinting at bed chambers sweet
+with lavender and orris. Through an open door
+I caught a glimpse, a very small glimpse, of the
+state room, papered with one of those old landscape
+papers we sometimes see reproduced. I
+have no doubt it’s been there since 1812, and that
+the oriental figures in turbans, majestically ascending
+and descending the broad steps, have seen
+history made.</p>
+
+<p>“I wandered around to the rear of the place.
+The grounds, some four acres I should say, are
+all to the back, the mansion itself being comfortably
+near the front gate.</p>
+
+<p>“A path led me through some funereal evergreens
+into a thicket, at the far end of the garden,
+near the road that runs past the rear; and here I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>found a summer house, completely concealed in
+the thicket. Inside there was a rustic table, and
+a rough seat encircled the walls.</p>
+
+<p>“I seated myself as if I were the owner—I
+wish I were—brushed off the leaves that covered
+the table and began to revise my novel then and
+there. I am going to have my heroine live in
+that house and see if her surroundings won’t
+humanize her. I am going to write every day until
+somebody comes home and drives me out.</p>
+
+<p>“The clue! I almost forgot. On the rustic
+table, among the leaves, I found a bit of cross-barred
+paper, torn across, on which some one had
+written in angular characters, ‘Dear Editor of
+<i>Better Every Week</i>:’ I suppose you will argue,
+Rad, that any one could have written those words—some
+old lady who meant to subscribe for the
+magazine, for instance. Think what you will.
+As for me—well, I’ll tell you what I think when
+I write again.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Yours,</span><br>
+
+“<span class="smcap">Caley</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">THREE days passed. Each afternoon Caleb
+Whitman put his manuscript under his arm
+and sought the garden. He skirted the curious
+village in a wide circle, and came upon the red walls
+of the mansion by the little used road that ran past
+the rear of its grounds.</p>
+
+<p>The place was still deserted. He was free to
+drink from the open well, to pick the grapes which
+were ripening slowly on the untrimmed vines that
+covered the long arbor stretching from the kitchen
+door to the stile. Above all he was free to make use
+of the woodland bower hidden securely in the far
+corner. Here he spread his papers broadcast and
+worked on his novel, heavily, laboriously, hour after
+hour. Sometimes he paused to sigh, sometimes—to
+listen.</p>
+
+<p>A bird chirped contentedly in a bush. A woodpecker
+drummed on a tree. Insects whirred faintly
+in the grass. The wind rustled in the woodbine
+that covered the bower. Far in the distance a cock
+sent forth his triumphant cry. And that was all—no
+other sound of life—for three long summer
+afternoons.</p>
+
+<p>It was natural, therefore, that Whitman should be
+startled as he approached the house on the fourth
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>day, to see a huckster’s wagon standing near the stile.
+As he hesitated whether to turn back, the huckster
+came toward him down the arbor. “Know when
+the folks are expected back?” he called, as he caught
+sight of Whitman.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not,” answered Whitman; “I’m a stranger
+here.” Then he put the question that he had hesitated
+to put to the captain. “Who lives in this
+beautiful old place?”</p>
+
+<p>“Old Miss Lowell.”</p>
+
+<p>“Old Miss—”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, a maiden lady, Miss Roxana Lowell.
+She’s our aristocracy about here. Brought up
+proud, you might say. Been here pretty near as
+long as the house—and that’s some time, I can tell
+you.... You can’t use no huckleberries, I suppose,
+if you are a stranger here?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Whitman smiled; and he waited to enter
+the garden until the huckster had rattled down the
+road and disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Roxana Lowell,” he murmured, seating
+himself at the table in the retreat. “That’s one on
+both Rad and me.” And he began to write, impulsively.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>“Dear Rad:</p>
+
+<p>“Alas for Henry; alas for Lady Valentine;
+alas for romance!”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then he pushed the paper away. “Old Miss
+Lowell,” he repeated ironically, and lost himself in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>reverie. Quite suddenly the garden seemed to him
+the loneliest spot in the world. The bower where he
+sat ceased to be a snug retreat; it became simply a
+summer house, with unpainted, rotting latticed walls,
+damp and a little cold.</p>
+
+<p>He took up a fresh sheet of paper and began—</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>“Dear Rad:</p>
+
+<p>“I’m coming back. This place has gotten on
+my nerves. The novel won’t go”—</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Something snapped. He raised his head to listen.
+Only silence, except for the whir of a thrush in the
+woods, and the distant plaintive cry of a gull.
+Again he bent over the paper.</p>
+
+<p>And then the branches of the low hanging trees
+parted like a screen, the bows snapped back into
+place, and a girl stood in the archway of the bower.</p>
+
+<p>“Who are you? What are you doing in my summer
+house?”</p>
+
+<p>The voice was clear and sweet. Caleb Whitman
+raised his head and looked into gray eyes with long
+dark lashes, eyes that did not fall nor quiver, though
+the color that flooded the girl’s cheeks and the quick
+breathing that stirred her quaint muslin gown, attested
+suppressed excitement. There was something
+birdlike in the quick startled glance of her eyes, in
+the poise of her vibrant little figure as she hovered at
+the door ready for instant flight. Whitman sprang
+to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>“Is this Miss Roxana Lowell?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>“No, I’m just Nancy, her niece.”</p>
+
+<p>She waited for him to continue, a hand on either
+side of the doorway barring all retreat.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m a summer visitor,” he hastened to explain.
+“I am staying in the village. I found your house
+deserted—I supposed for the summer—and I have
+been making bold to bring my papers out here and
+make use of your bower for a study. I’m going to
+make bolder, and ask you—if it would be possible
+for me to continue to come? Your garden is so
+large—I’ve become so attached to it”—</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I’m so sorry. For you see—you must go—this
+instant, never to come back.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you in earnest? Couldn’t we make some
+arrangement? I can get letters, you know, to prove
+I’m a respectable person—that sort of thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“You couldn’t get letters proving you weren’t a
+man,” said Nancy, “and above all things a man is
+what Aunt Roxana most abhors. She won’t have
+one about the premises. She won’t let even a very
+little boy come to weed the garden. She hires a
+woman to cut the grass.”</p>
+
+<p>“And are men equally distasteful to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve never known any, except the village people;
+and they’re quite old. But Aunt Roxana says that
+men, especially young men, are the cause of all the
+trouble in the world.... And they certainly have
+been the cause of her trouble.”</p>
+
+<p>“We haven’t always made a good record for ourselves,”
+Whitman confessed, smiling into the earnest
+little face across the table. “But if one man would
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>promise, very solemnly, to try to the best of his
+ability”—</p>
+
+<p>“It wouldn’t do any good. She wouldn’t believe
+you,” the girl sighed.</p>
+
+<p>“Wouldn’t it melt her heart, ever so little, if I
+went in and told her”—</p>
+
+<p>Nancy’s hands tightened on the arched doorway.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said fearfully, looking over her shoulder
+in the direction of the house. “No, you
+mustn’t ask her anything. If she knew you were
+here, you would have to go—at once.”</p>
+
+<p>A smile quivered on Whitman’s lips.</p>
+
+<p>“Then I don’t have to go—at once?”</p>
+
+<p>Nancy sank provisionally onto the round seat that
+circled the latticed house, and Caleb, after a moment,
+seated himself also, on the far end.</p>
+
+<p>“You may stay—just long enough—to tell me
+what you were doing here when I came.”</p>
+
+<p>“I was writing a novel.”</p>
+
+<p>“A novel”—</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, and I’ve been so bold as to put your house
+and your garden in my story.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, if Aunt Roxana knew that!”</p>
+
+<p>“Would—it please her? It’s such a beautiful
+old place, I really couldn’t help it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Please her! She dislikes novels almost as much
+as men. If she knew there was a <i>man</i> in her
+garden, writing a <i>novel</i>”—</p>
+
+<p>Nancy did not try to complete her sentence, leaving
+it to Whitman to imagine the state of Aunt
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>Roxana’s mind under the double provocation. She
+lightly touched one of the pages—</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps, though, this is not a love story? It’s
+love stories she dislikes most.”</p>
+
+<p>“This isn’t much of a love story,” the young man
+explained eagerly, hoping to gain favor. He moved
+a very little nearer, and took up the pages as if to
+outline the plot. “You see, this novel endeavors to
+deal truthfully with life,” he began.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; that’s what Aunt Roxana thinks they fail
+to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“My hero is a sane hero”—</p>
+
+<p>“A sane hero?” questioned Nancy. She had
+propped her elbow on the table and supported her
+chin in the cup of one pink palm. Her eyes, soft
+and trusting, were fixed intently on the young man’s
+face.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” continued Whitman, his mind wandering
+from his hero to the way Nancy’s black, silky hair
+grew about her white brow and waved over her little
+ears. “A sensible chap,” he went on automatically,
+“who doesn’t fall in love”—</p>
+
+<p>“Never—in his whole life?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman stopped short. “I didn’t mean to have
+him do so,” he said, doubtfully. “You see he picked
+out his intended wife with his head”—</p>
+
+<p>“Like Aunt Roxana does her dresses,” mused
+Nancy.</p>
+
+<p>“He didn’t think she was the most beautiful
+woman in the world”—</p>
+
+<p>“Was she?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>“No,” the author said gayly, with joyful recognition
+of the fact.</p>
+
+<p>“What was she like?”</p>
+
+<p>“She was a great raw boned creature, that could
+walk ten miles at a stretch and leap higher than any
+girl in the gymnasium.”</p>
+
+<p>“That wasn’t quite genteel, was it?” Nancy
+smiled, as if they must be of one accord on that point.</p>
+
+<p>“It wasn’t very attractive—someway.”</p>
+
+<p>“Were her clothes—pretty?”</p>
+
+<p>The gray eyes dropped to the skirt of her muslin
+dress, the white hands played with a tiny brooch of
+pearls at her throat.</p>
+
+<p>“She wore mostly a short skirt and a jumper,
+and large loose shoes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Didn’t they make her feet look very large?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman caught a glimpse of a small foot in a
+black slipper with a peep of white stocking.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he smiled, “they looked exactly like flat
+boats.”</p>
+
+<p>“Was her hair pretty?” A delicate hand
+smoothed back one soft lock at the nape of her
+neck.</p>
+
+<p>“No, she wore it short—to save time for more
+important things.”</p>
+
+<p>“What kind of things?”</p>
+
+<p>“I hadn’t gotten that far.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman paused, in doubt. But the eager questions
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>“What did your lovers call each other?”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>“What names? Aunt Roxana always crossed
+out the love names, with a black pencil, in my stories.”</p>
+
+<p>“He called her ‘Mary.’ She called him ‘John,’”
+he admitted. Then he asked eagerly, “Do you like—love
+names?”</p>
+
+<p>Nancy’s answer was indirect. “In the Song of
+Songs,” she murmured dreamily, “the lovers called
+each other ‘beloved’ and ‘he whom my soul loves;’
+and they said—but maybe you aren’t interested?
+I don’t think King Solomon was a very sensible
+lover”—</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes, I am interested. What did they call
+each other?”</p>
+
+<p>The girl’s lashes veiled her bright eyes, the roses
+sprang to her cheeks as she repeated the ardent
+words softly, for the ear so near her own. “Solomon
+said to the Shulamite, ‘As a lily among thorns,
+so is my love among the daughters’”—</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” murmured Whitman, his eyes on Nancy’s
+face, and his heart, he did not pretend to explain
+why, giving an extra beat.</p>
+
+<p>“And the Shulamite said of Solomon”—the girl
+raised her lashes and spoke clearly, looking straight
+ahead, “‘As the apple tree among the trees of the
+wood, so is my beloved among the sons of men.’
+And I’ve always thought,” said Nancy, “that unless
+a man felt that way about a girl, and a girl felt
+that way about a man, it wasn’t love.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nor is it,” cried Whitman, with conviction. He
+drew a long breath; then he deliberately took up
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>his papers and tore them straight through the
+middle.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” said Nancy, “why did you do that?”</p>
+
+<p>“To mark the end,” said he, “once for all, of that
+sane love story.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you write another?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, if I may come here again to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated as she rose. “I don’t know—”</p>
+
+<p>“Just once—for luck,” he urged.</p>
+
+<p>“Well—just once more.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you will come, too?”</p>
+
+<p>“If I do,” said Nancy, moving towards the door,
+and looking back irresolutely over one shoulder, “it
+will be just to tell you to go.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” Whitman agreed. And then, as
+she disappeared, he picked up the scattered papers
+and stuffed them in his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s no doubt about it,” he whispered softly
+as he left the garden; “I’ve found you, my little
+Lady Valentine.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">THE Luffkins’ twelve o’clock dinner left Whitman
+free to seek the bower the next day when
+the sun was still high in the zenith. He told himself
+that he went early in order to have a long afternoon
+to devote to the revised version of his book—and
+there were moments when he believed himself.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached the Lowell place, he slackened
+his step and loitered by, letting his eyes roam boldly
+over such portions of the grounds as he could
+glimpse between the tall, untrimmed boughs of the
+hedge. He had approached by the rear so that he
+looked onto the comfortable kitchen porch, the vegetable
+garden, Nancy’s flowers and the clothes line
+where white fluttering garments proclaimed the family’s
+return. At the turnstile he paused to peer
+down the arbor’s leafy tunnel. Surely, a woman
+moved toward the gate.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s Nancy,” he said, and waited.</p>
+
+<p>In another moment he saw his mistake. Though
+erect as a poplar, the woman was no longer young.
+Her carriage, straight and unyielding, was that of a
+past generation.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s Aunt Roxana,” Whitman decided, and he
+strolled on his way in some trepidation, just as the
+old lady turned the stile and walked down the road
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>in the direction of the village, holding her gray skirts
+just high enough to reveal congress gaiters and
+white stockings.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” the young man sighed, “if the angel with
+flaming sword leaves Eden unguarded, I suppose no
+one can blame Adam for stealing back”; and a moment
+after, he found the break in the thicket he had
+used the day before as an exit, and made his way to
+the bower.</p>
+
+<p>He had half hoped to find Nancy awaiting him;
+but the little retreat was empty. The sun played
+through the woodbine, making patterns on the rustic
+table and on the round seat where he and Nancy had
+sat such a short time since. In its rays gleamed a
+bit of folded paper, on the center of the table.</p>
+
+<p>“A note,” said the young man; and his heart sank
+with foreboding even as his eager fingers reached
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>“For the Man in the Garden,” the note was addressed.
+Unfolding it, he read:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>“If you are in the garden, will you please go
+away at once, or at least before three o’clock; for
+at that hour I am coming out with my cross stitch—and
+of course I can’t stay if you are there.</p>
+
+<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Nancy Rose.</span>”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Whitman’s laugh startled a curious sparrow.
+“Nancy Rose,” he said, “if you’d ever had any
+practice, I should say you were past mistress of the
+art of flirting. Did you really think any son of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>Adam would obey an order like that?” and he
+folded the little note into his pocket book. As he
+did so, he came upon the three letters, with the masculine
+signature, which had so whetted his curiosity
+less than a month past. Spreading them out before
+him, he now compared the penmanship with that of
+the note he had just found. Again he laughed and
+shook his head. For all the writer’s determined
+boldness on the pen’s downward stroke, the note and
+the letters were unmistakably by the same hand.</p>
+
+<p>And then, while the minutes crawled toward the
+promised hour of three, he read all the letters again,
+trying to deduce the motive that had led the girl to
+borrow the captain’s honest name.</p>
+
+<p>If Nancy had literary ambitions, he reasoned, she
+would have deluged the magazine with further contributions,
+once her little verses had been accepted.
+If she had masqueraded for mere love of adventure,
+she would have gained more by dropping the mask
+once her letter had been answered. If she had only
+wanted money for some girlish whim, why was such
+secrecy necessary?</p>
+
+<p>He could not guess her motive, but whatever it
+was, he determined to respect the innocent incognito
+until Nancy herself should care to throw it aside.
+In the meantime he would become her friend, he
+decided; not a shadowy well wisher in the editorial
+office of <i>Better Every Week</i>, pretending to age, but
+a young friend such as he was sure she needed; such
+as with care he might hope to become even in the
+fortnight left him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>He turned to his book. He had worked on the
+new chapters all the evening before in the expectation
+that he would have something to show two
+bright eyes when they peeped through the trees.</p>
+
+<p>At last she came. Her reproachful, “Oh! you
+stayed!” brought him back from the world of his
+dreams. She was standing in the door irresolutely,
+a little beaded reticule on her arm from which some
+needlework protruded.</p>
+
+<p>“Is it three?” he said, with a poor feint of surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, it is three.”</p>
+
+<p>He pretended preoccupation. “I’m in a very important
+place in the novel; would you mind very
+much if I finished a paragraph, just a word or two
+describing the new heroine, before I go away?”</p>
+
+<p>“N-o-o, not if you’ll make haste.”</p>
+
+<p>She stood patiently by the door, her black head
+against the crimson vines. Whitman looked up.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, if you won’t sit down and sew,” he said,
+“just exactly as if I were not here, I shall feel too
+guilty to linger. And I have just a word more—then
+I’ll be off for good and all.”</p>
+
+<p>She dropped onto the seat. After a moment’s
+hesitation he saw her fingers slide into the depths of
+the reticule and bring forth a tiny square of linen.
+A moment later bright cotton threads lay on her lap,
+her needle pricked the pattern and drew the gay
+strands through the cloth.</p>
+
+<p>The man at the table wrote on, more silent than
+the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>“Is she pretty?” asked Nancy.</p>
+
+<p>The writer pulled himself together, apparently
+from deep abstraction.</p>
+
+<p>“Who?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your heroine.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. Ideas of beauty differ so radically.”</p>
+
+<p>He bent again over the table. Nancy selected a
+long crimson thread.</p>
+
+<p>“Does she live in my house?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; you don’t mind?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not if she’s not that bold jumping woman
+you described yesterday.”</p>
+
+<p>“She’s not.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hate to disturb you; but naturally I feel interested—in
+a girl that lives here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?”</p>
+
+<p>“Would you mind telling me what color her eyes
+are and what kind of hair she has, and if she’s
+tall?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman looked up and met the wistful eagerness
+of Nancy’s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“They’re gray,” he said, making a sudden decision,
+“hazel gray. Her hair is black, black as the
+black bird’s wing; and around her white neck and
+around her little white ears it looks blacker still.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose she’s very tall,” ventured Nancy,
+threading her needle with a long orange thread.</p>
+
+<p>“Not very. She’s small and piquant, quick in
+her motions like a bird. If she should peep into this
+summer house this minute you might easily take her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>for a wood pecker, with her bright eyes, black head
+and top knot of scarlet ribbon.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does she wear a red ribbon?” Nancy’s hand
+strayed to her own dark hair. “These are berries,
+rowan berries from the tree across the road.”</p>
+
+<p>The author courageously faced his mistake.
+“This girl wears a red ribbon,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>He did not pretend to resume his writing; but, his
+arms locked on the table before him, he leaned forward
+watching Nancy sew.</p>
+
+<p>“Would you mind,” she said, after another pause,
+“telling me a little about the hero? I feel interested
+on account of the girl living in my house, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>“My hero is a little shadowy,” he confessed; “I
+can’t seem to see him myself. I may sketch from
+life—though I don’t allow myself to do that very
+often—and give the heroine the best man I know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who’s that?” she asked, looking up from her
+work.</p>
+
+<p>“My chum, Jim Radding,” he said, with a reluctance
+he could not quite fathom for making Radding
+the hero.</p>
+
+<p>“What color hair has he?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman laughed. “Rad isn’t much on hair.
+It’s, let me see, brown, a little thin, but he brushes
+it over the bald spots.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not bright like yours, then?”</p>
+
+<p>Again the young man laughed. “No, fortunately
+for his own peace, he’s not cursed with a head
+like a bon-fire.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think red hair is cheerful,” Nancy said judicially.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>“I always notice that when any one with
+red hair appears, interesting things begin to
+happen.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you?” he glowed. “Well, interesting
+things begin to happen when Rad comes, too, for
+he’s the best fellow in the world. You might not
+think so to look at him; his eyes are sad and his
+mouth droops at the corners a little when he’s quiet,
+but it turns up into the funniest, driest kind of smile
+when he begins to talk. You’d like Rad, there’s no
+doubt about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Umph, umph,” she said dubiously. “Umph,
+umph, but I never did like a drooping mouth; they’re
+like flags on a still day.”</p>
+
+<p>The young man’s own lips curved into a smile at
+this announcement, so gay, so joyous that she might
+well have likened it to a flag in the wind.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll tell you,” he bargained, “as long as I’ve put
+your house into my story, I don’t know why you
+shouldn’t order a hero to suit yourself. What kind
+of man do you prefer?”</p>
+
+<p>She considered his offer gravely, her eyes drifting
+from her work to the face across the table. Then
+she asked:</p>
+
+<p>“Could you make a hero who would take the
+lonesomeness out of the world?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I can make that kind of man,” was the
+eager promise.</p>
+
+<p>“Out of everything?” Her voice was wistful,
+as if warning him he might be promising more than
+he would find it easy to perform.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>“Out of everything—for the girl who loved
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Out of moonlight nights in this great empty
+garden?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, even out of moonlight nights in Venice.”</p>
+
+<p>“Out of Sunday afternoons, when all the world
+is asleep and the lake shines blue for miles and
+miles?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, and out of long city streets, when the rain
+comes down, and the lights of the boulevard shine
+through the mist.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even out of frosty nights, when one looks out
+of the long window up, up into the sky full of stars,
+and then back into a great long room, with nobody
+there but just Aunt, asleep by the Franklin stove?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Whitman boldly, “for the man would
+be there beside her, looking up into the stars, too,
+and they’d stand close to the window so that the curtain
+would fall behind them, and his arm would go
+round her waist, and her head would find its place
+on his shoulder, and they’d discover that the whole
+wide universe isn’t lonely to lovers—”</p>
+
+<p>“Lovers!” exclaimed Nancy. “Is your hero going
+to fall in love after all?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” the author affirmed positively. “Yes, he
+is. I’m not sure but he is going to fall madly in
+love.”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s it like to be madly in love?” asked
+Nancy with frank curiosity. “How does it differ
+from friendship?”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s as much difference between love and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>friendship,” began the young man, without hesitation,
+“as there is between the waters of a fountain,
+sparkling, leaping, breaking in the air, and rain
+water standing in a barrel.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s a very vivid contrast,” Nancy decided
+after a moment’s consideration. “Could you tell
+me anything more about love? You see, Aunt Roxana
+holding the views she does, it is the only chance
+I’m ever likely to have to learn.... Is there any
+more to it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Whitman asserted, losing himself in
+thought for a few minutes before speaking, as if to
+gather his material. “There’s a good deal more to
+it. It’s funny, love is; it upsets all the accepted
+standards.”</p>
+
+<p>“How?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it upsets all one ever learned about space,
+at least as I see it.”</p>
+
+<p>“For instance?”</p>
+
+<p>“For instance, a mile isn’t always the same
+length.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. When it stands between a man and the
+girl he loves, it’s much longer than when it lies
+between the man and even his very best friend.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s very curious,” mused Nancy.</p>
+
+<p>“Love does funnier things than that to Time,”
+moralized the instructor, in a kind of growing surprise
+at the discoveries he was making.</p>
+
+<p>“What does Love do to Time?”</p>
+
+<p>“The very same thing it does to space—it overthrows
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>all the old gauges. Sixty minutes spent with
+even the best of friends is about ten times longer
+than sixty minutes spent with the girl one’s been
+longing to see since day break.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know all these things?” asked
+Nancy suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>“How do I know them? Why, why”—the
+young man flushed and hesitated. “Why, I don’t
+know <i>how</i> I know them. I just dug them out of my
+inner consciousness somewhere, I suppose. I didn’t
+know I had such knowledge myself—an hour ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“An hour ago!” cried Nancy; and she rose to her
+feet in alarm. “Aunt Roxana was to be back from
+sewing circle at four. She will be looking for me.
+It must be four now.” She peeped up at the sky,
+through the trees that screened them from the house.</p>
+
+<p>Whitman looked at his watch. “By Jove!” he
+cried. “It’s five!”</p>
+
+<p>“Five!” gasped Nancy, gathering up her needlework.
+“Five! are you sure, Mr.—”</p>
+
+<p>“Caleb Whitman,” he supplied.</p>
+
+<p>“Five!” she said again; and then she laughed in
+surprise. “Well, then, Mr. Caleb Whitman, it’s
+not only with lovers that time runs fast, is it? for
+these hours have run fast just for us.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">“I&#8202; PRESUME,” began Captain Luffkin in a confidential
+rumble, addressing Caleb Whitman,
+“that a young feller like you knows all there’s to
+know about girls.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s the last claim I should make for myself,”
+his companion deprecated, smilingly.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain ruminated, his hand on the tiller, his
+eyes straying from the face of his passenger to the
+mark on the shore toward which he automatically
+steered.</p>
+
+<p>“Knowed no end of ’em, I presume,” he continued,
+after a pause.</p>
+
+<p>“Considerably fewer than that,” Whitman corrected.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain did not heed the denial. “What I’d
+like to know,” he began again, puckering his brow
+in a troubled frown, “is what makes ’em cry.”</p>
+
+<p>“Cry! Do girls cry?”</p>
+
+<p>“One I know does,” the Captain confided, lowering
+his voice and looking uneasily over the water as
+if he would guard his confidence even from the gulls.
+“Cries her pretty eyes out,” he added for good
+measure.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me something about her.” Whitman’s
+manner, in spite of himself, was indifferent; for his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>thoughts were far from the good captain that afternoon,
+circling instead about a leafy nook and a dark
+haired girl, with a tempting mouth and a piquant
+chin, whom with stern self denial he had not sought
+for three interminable days.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” the Captain began again, “I don’t want
+to tell tales, but I suspect I’m responsible for one
+girl’s tears.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really!” There was something so absurd in
+the prospect of sentimental confidences from the
+gruff old captain, that Whitman found it hard not
+to smile. And yet one look into the weather-beaten
+face and honest eyes opposite, sobered him. There
+was a natural dignity in the ferryman’s manner that
+made mockery impossible.</p>
+
+<p>“You see,” the Captain continued, “I’m one of
+this girl’s few friends, having knowed her since she
+was about so high.” (At this point, the Captain
+measured off about six inches.) “Well, some time
+back, I seed she was low in her mind, and well she
+might be, for this town ain’t what it should be for
+young folks these days. So one day when she come
+to me and asked if she could borrow my name, receiving
+a few letters addressed to Luffkin—”</p>
+
+<p>There was no question of the passenger’s interest
+now. “Yes,” he prompted eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“I was willing enough,” the Captain went on,
+“for I knowed how strict she was held down and
+hedged in, and how curious the postmaster was.
+So, sez I, ‘Sure, get all the mail you want’; and I
+give her a key to my box, No. 37.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>“Yes; and then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, her spirits come up, and nobody could be
+gladder than I was. I saw she had something to interest
+her, and, sez I, ‘That’s good.’ But suddenly
+the wind shifted and another spell of bad weather
+set in.”</p>
+
+<p>“Since when?” The young man’s hand trembled
+as he rolled one of the cigarettes the Captain
+scorned.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I can’t say just when the trouble set in,
+because I ain’t seen her until to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“To-day?”</p>
+
+<p>“She crossed with me last trip. I presume she’s
+waiting on the other side now to be fetched back.
+She never lifted her pretty head from her arm all
+the way over.”</p>
+
+<p>“Didn’t she!” The sole passenger’s voice was
+husky with emotion. He looked straight out to sea,
+wondering if Nancy’s fall in spirits could possibly
+be coincident with the neglect his conscience had
+dictated.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” asked the Captain, loosening the main
+sheet from the cleat, preparatory to going about, “to
+come back to where we started, what makes her
+cry?”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s your theory?” Whitman forced himself
+to say, overcoming the temptation to tell the Captain
+what he knew of Nancy.</p>
+
+<p>“I suspect a man,” said the Captain with energy.</p>
+
+<p>“A man?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; you know we’ve an army post some ten
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>miles from here, and I’ve been wondering if my little
+girl hadn’t gotten in with one of them yellow
+jackets. I’ve had several things to make me think
+that might be so, and that he ain’t treating her right.
+Why else would she want to get letters unbeknownst
+to those that has her in charge?”</p>
+
+<p>“She might be attempting some business venture,”
+Whitman suggested, “writing for a magazine, selling
+drawings, something of that kind. Has she literary
+ambitions?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not that I ever heard of. It strikes me natur’
+made her too pretty to be a lady writer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does she lack for money?”</p>
+
+<p>The Captain considered the possibilities suggested
+by this question. “It don’t seem likely,” he said.
+“Old Miss Lowell is reputed well to do.”</p>
+
+<p>He brought the ferry about and made a neat landing
+at the port called Fair View, where a group of
+country folk waited. A quick glance showed Whitman
+that Nancy was not among them; but just as
+the Captain cast off for the return voyage, she ran
+breathlessly down the pier.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the Captain, sighting her at the same
+moment that Whitman did. “Here’s my girl. I
+was afraid she wasn’t coming.” And he held the
+bobbing cat boat to the pier with one hairy hand
+while Nancy clambered aboard.</p>
+
+<p>“I was delayed,” she explained confusedly, seating
+herself between two substantial village women.</p>
+
+<p>If she saw Caleb Whitman, she made no sign of
+recognition, unless a shy flutter of her eyelids in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>his direction, and a cheek that grew a little rosier
+could be called an acknowledgment of their former
+meetings.</p>
+
+<p>The man who had denied himself a sight of her
+for three long days let his eyes rest hungrily on the
+little figure squeezed between the village women.
+The Captain was right. She had been crying.
+Could it be, Whitman wondered, that his avoidance
+accounted for the change. The thought was so disturbing,
+so deliciously disturbing, that he refrained
+with difficulty from forcibly removing the stout protectors
+on either side of Nancy and taking his place
+beside her.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, as if he read Whitman’s thoughts, the
+good old Captain spoke. “Nancy,” he said,
+“would you mind setting on this side? The boat
+don’t ride right.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked at him demurely, as the cat boat
+stole steadily across the bay in the light summer
+wind. “Wouldn’t you rather have somebody a little
+heavier, Captain?” she teased; and her glance
+suggested a fat woman with a basket.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re just the right weight,” the Captain affirmed
+shamelessly; and he made room for her between
+Whitman and himself. “Miss Rose,” he
+said formally, when the change had been made, “let
+me make you acquainted with Mr. Whitman. He’s
+summering with me. Mr. Whitman, let me make
+you acquainted with Miss Rose. She lives down
+the road about a mile from the village, in a house
+you may have noticed, built before the war. A
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>British ball took off part of the roof, didn’t it,
+Nancy?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” the girl nodded listlessly.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve seen the house,” Whitman managed to say.
+“I don’t wonder the British singled it out. I’ve
+done the same thing myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you like it?” Nancy asked.</p>
+
+<p>Whitman’s answer was prompt. “So much that
+I haven’t been able to forget it for the past three
+days.”</p>
+
+<p>Nancy did not answer but leaned over the gunwale,
+letting one small hand drag in the water.
+Whitman leaned towards her. “Nancy,” he whispered
+under his breath, “is something wrong?
+What’s the matter? Won’t you tell me? Don’t
+you know I want to help you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you?” The luminous eyes that had been
+fixed on the dancing water searched his face.</p>
+
+<p>“I do, indeed. You must know that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then where have you been?”</p>
+
+<p>The words so innocently uttered, accompanied by
+a glance from soft gray eyes where tears still lurked,
+gave Whitman a thrill of joy. “Why, Nancy,” he
+whispered ardently, “you yourself told me I was
+not to come.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hadn’t finished telling you so,” said Nancy
+tremulously.</p>
+
+<p>“Hadn’t you?” The man’s voice was very tender.
+“I’ve only stayed away from a sense of duty.
+I thought about you every hour of the day. I’ve
+been trying to find some excuse to appear openly.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>Isn’t there some way I can meet you with your aunt’s
+consent?”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. “Not yet. Not unless I
+can bring the Great Happiness to pass.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Great Happiness?” he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.” She sighed. “It seems a long way off
+to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t you tell me what you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I can tell no one. It’s a secret. But once
+it comes, everything will change.” She lifted her
+eyes to the sky line, like a prophet who sees a vision.</p>
+
+<p>“Is the Great Happiness so much to you,
+Nancy?” Whitman murmured, struck by the solemnity
+of her manner.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s everything,” she said unsmilingly, turning
+her earnest eyes to his. “It’s what I live for.
+When I think it will never come, my heart is like
+a stone. When I think it <i>will</i> come—and it must,
+oh, it must—then my heart is like thistledown.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nancy,” Whitman said, “surely you will let
+me help you to bring your joy to pass. Have you
+any other friend to whom to turn?”</p>
+
+<p>“One other,” was the unexpected answer.</p>
+
+<p>“The Captain?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not the Captain.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me who it is.” He did not know that the
+emotion that welled in his breast was jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it a man?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, it’s a man. The best man in the world, I
+fancy.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>“Nancy, are you joking?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, just telling the truth.”</p>
+
+<p>Captain Luffkin’s supposition of a soldier at the
+post, flashed across Whitman’s mind. “Does he
+live near here?” he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Would you call New York near?”</p>
+
+<p>“He lives in New York, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“A man who lives in New York, who would do
+more for you than I would.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t say that.”</p>
+
+<p>“It amounted to the same thing.” Whitman
+stared gloomily across the boat, scowling unconsciously
+at the row of passengers opposite. “What’s
+his name?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t tell you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean you don’t choose to tell me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean what I say.” Nancy was dimpling.
+“I <i>can’t</i> tell you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” he began after a moment’s stormy
+thought, “it’s not my affair, but I have your welfare
+at heart, Miss Rose” (Nancy started in surprise at
+the formality of his address), “and so I can’t help
+warning you against confiding in strange men. I
+hope you understand the spirit in which I say
+this.”</p>
+
+<p>“What spirit is it?” Nancy asked innocently.</p>
+
+<p>Caleb Whitman hesitated, checked for a moment
+in his moralizing. Then he said with conviction,
+“It’s the spirit of a big brother.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” said Nancy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>“You’re an inexperienced girl,” Whitman went
+on.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I am.”</p>
+
+<p>“And so I’m going to be very bold indeed, and
+ask you a few questions, which of course you need
+not answer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course not,” Nancy disconcertingly agreed.</p>
+
+<p>“And yet—I hope you will answer.”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the first question?”</p>
+
+<p>“Where did you meet this man from New
+York?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve never really met him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Never really met him?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then how can you say that you know him?”</p>
+
+<p>“I know him from his letters—and his presents.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nancy!” Caleb Whitman cried aghast; and
+then he added with conviction, “He’s a scoundrel.
+New York is full of them. Did he see you somewhere
+and force a correspondence upon you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Nancy weighed the question. “I suppose
+you would say I forced it on him,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“For heaven’s sake, Nancy, tell me what you
+mean. Speak low, one of those women opposite
+is trying to hear what we are saying.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wrote to him first. He answered—very
+kindly. I sent him a present. He sent me two.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nancy Rose, are you teasing me?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m answering your question.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman was silent a moment, racked by a
+thousand fears. He forced his lips to ask one
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>more question. “What kind of a man is your
+friend?”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s very old,” said Nancy, turning her candid
+eyes to his; “that’s the only thing I’d like to change
+about him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Old!” The young man by her side gave a
+start of joyful recognition. He had forgotten the
+past shadowy acquaintance with Nancy in the intoxication
+of actual meeting. “Old, Nancy?” his
+voice shook with eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, old and fat, with chin whiskers, a white
+waistcoat and a thick watch chain. Old and kind.
+Don’t you think it’s safe to trust him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Whitman softly. “Yes, trust him,
+Nancy. But promise me one thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well?”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t make any other friend by correspondence.”</p>
+
+<p>“I won’t,” she promised sweetly. And the cat
+boat having crept to the pier at Deep Harbor, she
+followed in the wake of the other passengers, clambered
+out the boat and disappeared down the street.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the Captain as he and Whitman
+were left alone, “wasn’t I right? Hadn’t she
+been crying?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” the young man admitted.</p>
+
+<p>“What I want to know,” the Captain continued,
+“is who’s making her cry.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think it’s a person?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sure it is. Moreover, I think I’ve spotted
+him.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>For a moment Whitman feared the Captain’s
+glance, bent upon himself, was accusing. Then the
+ferryman asked: “See any one loitering on the
+bank across the water?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I did. And he was one of them yellow
+jackets. As soon as he sighted the ferry he disappeared
+into the trees. Notice the little girl was late
+in getting aboard?”</p>
+
+<p>Unwillingly Whitman was forced to admit that
+Nancy had been late, and flustered in her manner.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” the Captain finished grimly, “I’ll bet you
+dollars to doughnuts that the yellow jacket has
+coaxed her over there to meet him, and what’s more
+that it’s not the first time he’s done it.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">“WELL,” said the Captain with heavy jocularity,
+extending half a dozen letters to his
+boarder, “when you get done reading that batch of
+mail, you might give it to me for ballast.”</p>
+
+<p>From his seat on the Captain’s lawn Whitman
+smiled, and taking out his knife he slit open the envelopes
+one by one. The editor-in-chief assured
+him everything was going well at the office. Radding
+chid him for his silence and pretended to find
+it ominous. A real estate broker wanted to sell
+him some land. A man who owed him money asked
+for more. An acquaintance announced his marriage.</p>
+
+<p>To Whitman mail had never been very interesting.
+He had wondered sometimes at other men’s
+eagerness for letters. With a yawn he opened the
+last envelope. Then he started, and by the northern
+twilight he read twice over the words that were
+written in a familiar hand on cross-barred stationery.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Editor of <i>Better Every Week</i>:</p>
+
+<p>“In one of your kind and beautiful letters, you
+told me that if you ever could be of service, I
+was to call upon you. I am sure that you meant
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>what you said, and so I am turning to you for help
+once more. Do you think there is any one in
+New York who would be willing to give money
+for the following articles (they are my very
+own. I have the right to sell them):</p>
+
+<p>“One bridal veil of real lace, one hundred
+years old.</p>
+
+<p>“One cameo pin; head of cherub.</p>
+
+<p>“One bracelet; chased gold. (Clasp broken.)</p>
+
+<p>“One man’s watch; hunting case; gold face;
+won’t go any more, but might be repaired.</p>
+
+<p>“One pink coral necklace. (I hate to sell this;
+it’s perfectly beautiful.)</p>
+
+<p>“If you think there is a chance of getting
+money for any of these things, I will send them
+to you at once. I must have fifty dollars, and I
+must have it soon.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Very truly yours,</span><br>
+“<span class="smcap">Henry B. Luffkin</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As usual, the writer had not dated the letter, but
+Whitman made out from the postmark that it had
+reached New York some days ago. On the margin
+his stenographer, Smith, had written: “This letter
+has been to every one on the staff but you. No
+one seems to know anything about the writer.”
+Whitman winced. He did not fancy Nancy’s letters
+making the rounds of the office. A moment
+after, he left the Captain beneath the trees, engaged
+in mending a net, and began to tramp up and down
+the bluff, looking out over the waters as if the evening
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>breeze that rippled their wide expanse might
+waft an idea to him for helping Nancy.</p>
+
+<p>At last he went into the cottage, and seating himself
+beneath the oil lamp, he drew out paper and ink
+and wrote his friend.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y., &#160; &#160;<br>
+“Aug. 21, 191—</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Rad:</p>
+
+<p>“I have become interested in helping Henry
+Luffkin dispose of some heirlooms. I can’t buy
+them myself very well, and I want you to pretend
+to be a dealer in antiques and buy them for me.
+Write this letter for me, Rad, and write it at
+once, enclosing fifty dollars in currency. Here’s
+my check for the amount. ‘Henry Luffkin.
+Dear Sir: The Editor of <i>Better Every Week</i>
+has told me that you want to dispose of some old
+lace and pieces of jewelry, of which he has given
+me a description. I am a collector of antiques
+and I am willing to pay fifty dollars for the lace,
+the bracelet, the watch and the cameo. I am not
+interested in coral. You may send your goods to
+the following address.’ Then sign your own
+name, Rad, and give your address.</p>
+
+<p>“I find this is an ideal spot for my vacation.
+You will be glad to know that I am making good
+progress with my novel, although it has taken a
+more romantic turn that I had planned.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Yours,</span><br>
+“<span class="smcap">Caley</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>The letter finished, Whitman turned to the Captain,
+who was seated on the other side of the table,
+lost in his weekly paper.</p>
+
+<p>“Captain,” he began, “I have been thinking about
+what you told me concerning Miss Rose and her
+mail.”</p>
+
+<p>The Captain looked furtively toward the kitchen,
+where Sister Abby washed the evening dishes, and
+Whitman lowered his voice.</p>
+
+<p>“If you get the mail and give her the letters,” he
+continued, “you can surely tell the nature of her
+correspondence.”</p>
+
+<p>The Captain shook his head. “No, I can’t,” he
+said. “I give her an extra key to the box. She
+gets there first and takes what’s coming to her and
+leaves me the rest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you ever seen anything that made you suspicious?”
+Whitman inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the Captain, “a check come once I
+didn’t like the looks of; but she said it was prize
+money she’d got in some kind of a contest, so I endorsed
+it and said nothing.”</p>
+
+<p>“She’s an interesting girl. I wish I might get
+better acquainted with her.” Whitman hoped his
+manner was casual.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish you might,” said the Captain. “I’ve
+kind of had it in mind from the first. I done what
+I could for you the other day in the boat. Don’t
+know as you seen through it or not.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman repressed a smile. “How can I see
+more of her?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>“That’s hard to say. She don’t cross with me
+more than once or twice a month. She goes to
+church Sundays, but her aunt’s always with her.
+Sometimes she sets in the graveyard with her sewing.”</p>
+
+<p>“The graveyard?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Haven’t you passed it out on the wagon
+road near her place? It’s pleasant there; quiet and
+shady, and makes a change from the garden. You
+ought to go out and see the monuments. Lots of
+soldiers buried there, that fell in 1812. Summer
+folks are always interested in the old stones, though
+the new ones are a sight handsomer.”</p>
+
+<p>“A graveyard seems a strange place for a young
+girl to sit,” Whitman mused.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it’s one of the few places her aunt approves,”
+the Captain chuckled, one eye on the paper;
+“and when you come to think of it, a pretty girl is
+mighty safe in the company of dead generals and
+admirals who, even if they come to life, would be
+kin to her.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman smiled absently at the Captain’s jocularity.
+“I’ll go to town and post this letter,” he
+said. “I want to get it off to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>On his walk to the village, Caleb Whitman turned
+Nancy’s latest letter over and over in his mind, trying
+to reconcile his conception of her character with
+her eager, insatiable desire for money. Sometimes
+he told himself that the desire sprang merely from
+the wish to gratify some girlish fancy. Again he
+was half convinced that she was planning to run
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>away, to escape forever the tedium of life in the
+garden; but her own words echoed in his heart, overturning
+his fears. “I don’t want to escape,” she
+had said. “I want to open the gate and let the
+world in.” Was she in debt? The thought was
+absurd. With her comfortable home, her guarded,
+restricted circuit, she had small temptation and little
+opportunity to incur obligations.</p>
+
+<p>“I give it up,” said Whitman to himself, at last.
+“All I know is that I want for you what you want
+for yourself, Nancy Rose, and that I’ll give it to
+you, if it lies in my power to do so.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Want a lift?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman started, and looked up through the dusk
+to see the covered van of the army post which he
+had learned to call a “daugherty.” A young man
+in olive drab uniform on the front seat had drawn
+four mules to a standstill and was good-naturedly
+offering the pedestrian a seat.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” Whitman answered, “but I’m only
+going to the village to post this letter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Want me to take it to Jackson?” the soldier
+asked obligingly. “It will make better time.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman handed the letter over the high wheel.
+“That’s awfully good of you.” Then he asked,
+before the soldier had started the mules on their
+way: “Haven’t we met before, somewhere?”</p>
+
+<p>The man in uniform, who was a dashing, well-built
+fellow, looked uneasily at Caleb Whitman’s
+upturned face, and muttered, “I think not.” Then,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>without another word, he put the letter in his pocket,
+cut the mules lightly with his whip and drove on his
+way.</p>
+
+<p>Lost in thought, Caleb Whitman looked after the
+van for a long moment. “I have seen you,” he said
+to himself, “though I can’t tell where, for the life
+of me.” And he recalled again the ruddy face, the
+gay, dark eyes, the splendid shoulders of the man in
+the daugherty. “I don’t know so many army people
+that I ought to confuse them,” he said to himself,
+“and that particular chap is too good looking
+to be easily forgotten. He didn’t fancy my claiming
+acquaintance, however. High spirited chap,”
+Whitman concluded. “I don’t wonder the ‘yellow
+jackets,’ as the Captain calls them, play havoc with
+the girls, if they’re all as good looking as he.”</p>
+
+<p>His excuse for the trip to the village gone, he retraced
+his way back to the cottage, trying idly to
+recall the identity of the man who drove the daugherty.
+“I have it,” he said aloud, just as he reached
+the cottage door. “You’re Sergeant Wilson, the
+chap I ate supper with the night I got to Jackson.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">“CAN I sell you a ticket for the box sociable,
+Mr. Whitman?” Sister Abby’s lack lustre
+eyes shone with something akin to excitement as she
+reached into the pocket of her apron and extended
+a bit of cardboard.</p>
+
+<p>“A box sociable, Miss Abby? I don’t believe I
+know what you mean; but you can sell me a ticket
+to anything you’ll recommend.”</p>
+
+<p>The afternoon was fair, the sun shone on the
+sparkling expanse of the lake below the bluffs, the
+summer wind was fresh and sweet, the morning’s
+work on the novel had gone well: Caleb Whitman,
+on his way out of the Captain’s gate, listened to Miss
+Abby’s plea with good-humored tolerance.</p>
+
+<p>“The money’s for a new carpet for the minister’s
+study,” Abby explained further. “The tickets are
+ten cents each. If you draw a good box, you’ll not
+think they’re dear.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman produced a dime with cheerful alacrity.
+“But, Miss Abby,” he asked, “I don’t know yet
+what I’m in for. Why do I draw a box and what
+do I do with it when I get it?”</p>
+
+<p>Sister Abby stared at him. “Don’t you know
+what a box sociable is, and you living in New York
+City?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” the young man confessed with becoming
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>humility, “they have almost everything in New
+York, to be sure, but I don’t believe I ever went to
+a box sociable.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, they’re grand,” Sister Abby sighed in
+pleasant retrospection. “We give one every year
+on somebody’s lawn. There’s long tables under the
+trees, and lanterns strung everywhere. I can’t tell
+you how pretty it looks. Then every girl and
+woman in the village brings a box with supper put
+up for two.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sam Tupman gets the boxes all together and
+auctions them off. Some boxes fetches as much as
+a dollar.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it possible?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the boys gets excited and bids kind of
+reckless. When everybody has got a box, they open
+them up and find the cards of the ladies who have
+put up the lunches. Then each man finds his partner,
+and her and him eats supper together.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that’s very interesting. I should think,
+however, the custom of bidding in the dark, as one
+might say, would bring all sorts of queer people together.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you might say it does,” admitted Sister
+Abby; “but when a body is eating, he don’t care
+much who his company happens to be. Then there’s
+ways of getting around it, too. Nearly every girl
+ties up her box in some special way and gives the
+secret to somebody particular.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, I see, that makes a difference.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>“The girls ties their boxes with ribbons, and we
+old folks mostly ties ours with twine. One year I
+got kind of tired of string, and I tied up my box
+with blue ribbon. Well, young Sammy Brown bid
+for it and run the price up to seventy-five cents.
+When he opened the box and found my name, he
+looked real disappointed; but he got over it when he
+tasted my crullers. You think you’d like to come,
+don’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wouldn’t miss it for a good deal.” Whitman’s
+hand stole to the latch of the gate. The day
+was fair and time was fleeting.</p>
+
+<p>“Going anywhere particular?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” Whitman hesitated, “I had thought of
+going out to the old burying ground—to see the
+head stones. The Captain said some of them were
+quite historic.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, summer folks seem to care for them.”
+Sister Abby’s manner had changed from expectancy
+to mild disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>“Can I do anything for you, Miss Abby?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, nothing particular. I kind of hoped that
+you’d stop at the post office and see if the lanterns
+had come.”</p>
+
+<p>“Surely, I will.”</p>
+
+<p>“If they have, you might just drop in at the minister’s—the
+sociable is to be there—and offer to
+help him string them up. He’s kind of sawed off,
+the minister is, and he can’t reach anything but the
+low boughs on the trees.”</p>
+
+<p>“Surely, I’ll offer to string them up for him,”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>Whitman promised. Then in order to keep the
+afternoon free for possible adventure, he added:
+“Late in the afternoon will do, I presume?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, if you’ve your mind set on seeing the
+monuments.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should like to see them,” Whitman stoutly
+averred. “You see my vacation is drawing to an
+end, and every moment of it seems precious.” He
+smiled back at the drab figure of Sister Abby. “I
+won’t forget the lanterns,” he promised, and he
+started down the road, his mind drifting from Sister
+Abby and her affairs to the possibility of meeting
+Nancy on the road.</p>
+
+<p>If Radding had followed instructions, the letter
+for Nancy, alias Henry Luffkin (the pseudonym always
+made Whitman smile) must lie in the post office
+box by this time. He was determined not to
+lose the pleasure of seeing Nancy’s joy.</p>
+
+<p>He did not know why he found all that concerned
+Nancy Rose so engrossing. He only knew that her
+first letter had diverted and amused him; that each
+letter that followed had quickened his interest; and
+that since he had met her face to face, his interest
+had deepened into absorption.</p>
+
+<p>He had made up his mind to find her before the
+close of this long bright day; and he recalled, one by
+one, the clues to her possible haunts which the Captain
+had let fall. It was not patriotic interest, but
+the Captain’s hint that Nancy was often to be found
+there, that led him to the ancient burying ground.</p>
+
+<p>It lay close to the Lowell place, on the other side
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>of the wagon road that ran from Deep Harbor past
+the rear of the mansion. The young man could
+already discern the arch of the wooden gate which
+shut the sleeping soldiers from the world. And
+then he saw what made his pulses leap. A woman
+turned the Lowell stile, crossed the road and disappeared
+among the trees in the graveyard. It was
+Nancy, he concluded; and quickening his steps, he
+entered the silent acres and looked about him. At
+the far end of the quiet spot, he could see a woman’s
+form bending over some flower beds.</p>
+
+<p>He strolled cautiously in that direction, saying to
+himself that he must not startle Nancy. In the
+hope that she would turn and see him before he was
+forced to break in upon her solitude, he paused before
+an old wooden monument, swaying uncertainly
+on its base, and tried to decipher the inscription.
+Suddenly, when he had gotten no further than,
+“Killed in battle on these shores in 1813,” a voice
+behind him asked: “Are you interested in the historic
+past of our little town?”</p>
+
+<p>With a start, Caleb Whitman turned from the
+battered inscription and faced—Aunt Roxana.
+He knew her instantly by her erect carriage, her wide
+skirt of stiff silk, her white stockings—she carried
+her dress high to avoid the grass stains.</p>
+
+<p>Caleb Whitman raised his hat and smiled down
+into Aunt Roxana’s face as fearlessly as he smiled
+at Sister Abby and all the village world. “I am indeed,”
+he said. “I was only wishing that I might
+find some one to give me accurate information.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>The lady hesitated. Whitman had rightly
+guessed that her vulnerable point was Deep Harbor’s
+past. She unbent enough to say: “This
+monument was erected over the graves of gallant
+men who died in defense of these shores,” and she
+repeated the inscription, even supplying the obliterated
+words of the scriptural line.</p>
+
+<p>“My own people were all soldiers,” she vouchsafed,
+“and did their part by giving their life blood
+to save this nation.”</p>
+
+<p>The summer visitor had an inspiration. “Then
+you must be one of the Lowell family,” he said.
+“I’ve promised myself to see your stones. But of
+course if I am intruding—”</p>
+
+<p>A flush of pleasure mingled with pride swept over
+the good lady’s austere countenance.</p>
+
+<p>“You are quite welcome to view them,” she said.
+“I am glad that I happen to be here to assist you in
+your studies. The contemplation of the last resting
+places of patriots must ever be an inspiration to
+youth.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, indeed,” the pilgrim murmured, as the lady
+led the way through the long grass to a line of time-worn
+head stones, with inscriptions faint and illegible.</p>
+
+<p>“This,” she said, “was my great uncle, who died
+in service. This, my grandfather. This a more
+distant kinsman, who died of wounds,” and so on
+and on she read the names, giving the man by her
+side, in many a touching anecdote, the history of the
+past, when Deep Harbor had been glowing with life
+and high enterprise.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>“You have had many soldiers in your family,”
+Whitman said, his eyes searching the road for some
+glimpse of Nancy.</p>
+
+<p>The lady’s head tossed high. “Yes,” she said
+proudly, “we have done our part.” She sighed.
+“As a child I could not forgive myself for being
+born a girl.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see.” Whitman was quick to catch her meaning.
+“You would have liked to have been a general.”</p>
+
+<p>“Or an admiral,” she said gravely. “Our men
+fought by sea as well as by land.”</p>
+
+<p>She led the way toward the gate, and Whitman
+followed meekly in her train. There was something
+in the stately lady’s devotion to the past that touched
+his imagination. For her sake, he could almost have
+wished that Nancy might have been of the sex out
+of which generals and admirals are made.</p>
+
+<p>And then, at that very moment, Nancy tripped
+across the road and entered the gate, a little poke
+bonnet shading her eyes, a funny pair of old fashioned
+mits, that displayed her pink finger tips, drawn
+over her hands and arms.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt,” she called; and then, seeing Whitman,
+she stopped short, the color sweeping her face to the
+rim of the poke hat.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Roxana ignored the girl’s surprise. As if
+it had been an every-day occurrence for her to stroll
+through the graveyard with a good-looking young
+man in flannels, she said with her unbroken dignity:
+“This young man is interested in Deep Harbor’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>past. I have been reading and explaining the inscriptions.”</p>
+
+<p>Her manner said as plainly as words, “The interview
+is over.” And Whitman, surmising that there
+was nothing to be gained by lingering, lifted his hat
+and wandered a step or two in another direction,
+making a feint of further study of the old head
+stones.</p>
+
+<p>“You are going to the village?” he heard Aunt
+Roxana question Nancy.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you the list of commodities to be purchased?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think so.”</p>
+
+<p>“Read it.” Aunt Roxana might have been one of
+the sleeping generals of her line, issuing military
+commands.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Three pounds of sugar,’” Nancy obediently
+began; “‘pound of coffee, pound of tea—’”</p>
+
+<p>“Half a pound,” corrected Aunt Roxana.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Go to library. Get copy of Bunyan’s “Holy
+War.”’” Nancy looked up. “That’s all.”</p>
+
+<p>“The ribbon,” Aunt Roxana prompted.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, the ribbon. What color did you tell
+the minister it would be this year?” The girl’s tone
+was listless.</p>
+
+<p>“Seal brown. I thought it a decorous shade,
+that would not attract unseemly attention.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hate seal brown,” said Nancy wilfully. “Why
+can’t I have a bright color, cherry red?”</p>
+
+<p>“Seal brown,” repeated Aunt Roxana, unmoved.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>“A yard and a half ought to be a great sufficiency.”</p>
+
+<p>At this point Whitman gave up the hope that
+Aunt Roxana would go her way. With a slight
+bow, therefore, he passed the two ladies, and slowly
+returned to the village, hoping that Nancy would
+soon overtake him.</p>
+
+<p>“A passing traveller,” he heard Aunt Roxana explain
+to her niece, as he made his retreat, “commendably
+interested in his country’s history.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">STROLL as slowly as he would, stop as often as
+he dared, Caleb Whitman reached the village
+streets without being overtaken by Nancy. Aunt
+Roxana had decided to keep her at home, he concluded
+rebelliously, and he remembered with concern
+how soon he was due in New York.</p>
+
+<p>As he passed the post office, he remembered his
+promise to Sister Abby to ask for the package of
+Chinese lanterns. Upon entering the building, he
+found that the distribution of a late mail was in
+progress, so that he was obliged to await the completion
+of that work before he could hope for attention.
+With interest that bordered on excitement, he
+watched the Captain’s box, and drew a breath of
+relief when a letter on the granite gray paper Radding
+affected was thrust into the pigeon hole.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later the postmaster appeared at the
+delivery window and Whitman remembered to ask
+for his own mail as well as for the lanterns. The
+single letter the postmaster produced was enclosed in
+a granite gray envelope like the one that awaited
+Nancy.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“New York, Sept. 1, 191—</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Caley:” (Rad had written in his small, crabbed hand)</p>
+
+<p>“I have sent the fifty per instructions. I hate
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>to take the Captain’s bracelet and cameo pin from
+him. I am sure they were becoming or you
+wouldn’t be so philanthropic.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Yours,</span><br>
+
+“<span class="smcap">Rad</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The note made the reader laugh in spite of himself.
+“That letter is like Rad,” he said to himself.
+“I’d give a good deal to know if he followed my
+instructions about writing to Nancy.”</p>
+
+<p>“Here are the lanterns you were asking for,” the
+postmaster reminded him, and pushed a clumsy
+bundle out the little window.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take them to the minister’s and be rid of
+them,” Whitman concluded; and, leaving the post
+office, he went slowly down the one business street,
+peering into the grocer’s, the milliner’s, the store of
+small wares, in search of a shopper in a poke bonnet.
+So far she was still nowhere in sight.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until after he had left the bundle at
+the minister’s that he remembered that Nancy had
+been bidden to go to the library. Where was it?
+He looked in vain down the long shady street, sloping
+to the wharfs. He searched his memory.
+“Where’s the library?” he finally asked a solitary
+passer-by.</p>
+
+<p>The woman pointed to the church. “There,” she
+said, and plodded on her way. “The church?”
+Whitman called after her. “The tower,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>The church did indeed boast a tower, and upon
+approach Whitman saw that a sign on the door announced
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>that the library was open Tuesday and
+Thursday afternoons. He determined to wait here
+for Nancy. From the windows in the church’s
+square tower he could sweep half the countryside.
+He entered eagerly, and following the directions of
+a painted arrow, ran up a winding stair. At the
+top of the first flight he paused at the door of a
+small room stacked with books. An attendant rose
+as he entered.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m a stranger in Deep Harbor—” he began.</p>
+
+<p>“Boarding with the Captain,” she supplied glibly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Whitman admitted, wondering if anything
+above the earth or under the waters of the earth was
+hidden from the inhabitants of a small village.</p>
+
+<p>“Look around and make yourself at home,” the
+attendant looked up from her crocheting to say.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to the visitor that this would not take
+long to do, as the tower room was only some ten feet
+square.</p>
+
+<p>“Any book you want particular?” the attendant
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I just came to make a general survey.”</p>
+
+<p>“Like to go upstairs?”</p>
+
+<p>“Upstairs?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the library goes on up the tower; next floor
+is Religion and Non-Fiction; top floor Juvenile.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d like to look over the religious books,” said
+Whitman.</p>
+
+<p>This pious desire sprang from a sudden recollection
+of the book Aunt Roxana had put on Nancy’s
+list.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>“Shall I go with you?” the attendant asked, as
+the visitor started up the second flight.</p>
+
+<p>“No, indeed, I just want to look about a bit. I
+fancy there’s a fine view up higher?”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose there is,” the girl conceded indifferently.
+“You can see out as far as the cemetery,
+and all over the town.”</p>
+
+<p>As these were the points of interest to Whitman,
+he quickly ascended another flight of stairs and stationed
+himself in the window. As the girl had
+promised, his view commanded the country side.
+He looked down on the beautiful little village, with
+its white spires and gray roofs peeping through the
+trees. He identified the Captain’s cottage on its
+lonely bluff. He found the chimney of the mansion
+where Nancy lived. Dear old town, steeped in memories!
+He had grown to love it. There was a
+charm in the sagging wharfs, in the sleepy street
+bordered with little stores with diamond paned shop
+windows.</p>
+
+<p>Abruptly his revery ended. A little figure in a
+poke bonnet, whose presence lent enchantment to
+every corner of the town, had just come out of the
+post office. She was hastening down the street, a
+basket on her arm, walking rapidly in the direction
+of the tower. A few minutes later Whitman
+heard her step on the stair. Evidently she knew the
+library sufficiently well to come directly to the shelves
+where the religious books were stacked, for she did
+not pause on the floor below.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” she said, breathlessly, appearing in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>doorway and discovering the young man, “I thought
+there was no one here.”</p>
+
+<p>The man in the window seat arose. “I’ll go,
+Nancy, if you want to be alone.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said, after a momentary pause, “I
+don’t mind; but go on reading, please. I want to
+look over a letter.”</p>
+
+<p>She took a hat pin from her bonnet and slit open
+a gray envelope as she spoke. Caleb Whitman did
+not raise his eyes from his book.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” cried Nancy, after a long moment, as if
+she were smothering, “oh!” and again, “oh!”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman sprang from his seat and hurried to her
+side. The face she lifted to his was bathed in tears.
+She let them fall quite openly as she pressed the
+letter to her breast.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter, dearest?” Whitman cried,
+unconscious of using the endearing term. “Tell me
+Nancy, has something hurt you?”</p>
+
+<p>His hands clenched. If Radding had played false,
+he would not be forgiven in a hurry.</p>
+
+<p>“Matter!” she sobbed. “I’m just smothering
+with joy, that’s all.”</p>
+
+<p>She let him seize her hand, without protest, her
+pink fingers curling around his, her overflowing eyes
+on his eager face.</p>
+
+<p>“If you are happy, Nancy,” he pleaded, “why do
+you cry?”</p>
+
+<p>He stooped over her trembling little form, and
+taking out a generous sized handkerchief, he wiped
+her eyes as if she had been a child.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>“I don’t know,” she sobbed on a long, uneven
+breath. “Don’t you ever cry when you are
+happy?” An uncertain smile broke through her
+tears. “April is the happiest month of all, and she
+cries all the time.”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed his delight in her fancy. “Is it the
+Great Happiness, Nancy?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s the key to it,” she said. “Everything is
+going to begin now, for me and for those I love.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m so glad, so glad,” he glowed, his warm hand
+enclosing hers. “Will it mean anything for me,
+Nancy, or am I quite on the outside?”</p>
+
+<p>Two eyes like stars were raised to his. “The
+gate of the garden will open,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“When it does, Nancy, may I be the first to enter?”</p>
+
+<p>“I want you to be,” she murmured....</p>
+
+<p>“Get what you wanted, Miss Rose?” The voice
+was that of the attendant at the bottom of the stairs.
+Nancy dried her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“I forget what I came for,” she whispered to
+Whitman in consternation.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Bunyan’s Holy War,’” he prompted, and he
+found the volume on the shelf and gave it into
+Nancy’s keeping before the head of the attendant
+had more than appeared at the top step of the
+stairs.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Nancy, handing over the heavy
+volume for registration, “I’ve found it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Going to the box social?” the girl asked, stamping
+Nancy’s card.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>“Yes.” Nancy stole a glance at the summer
+visitor, fumbling among the book shelves.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s good,” said the attendant. “I hope for
+your sake the minister doesn’t draw your box again.
+It’s awful dull for you to eat with him every year.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll always draw my box,” said Nancy in a
+clear, sweet voice.</p>
+
+<p>“How’s that?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because Aunt ties it up herself, and tells him the
+color of the ribbon. It’s the only way she’ll let me
+go. She says she couldn’t consider leaving it to
+chance.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see,” said the girl.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-bye,” said Nancy, with a glance so tender,
+a face so suffused with joy that it was like an April
+sun.</p>
+
+<p>“Going straight home?” the attendant called
+after her.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Nancy; and her voice rang clear.
+“I’ve another errand to do first. I have to get some
+seal brown ribbon at the store.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">“HOW much for this box, gentlemen?” Sam
+Tupman begged, from his stand on a packing
+case. “Ten cents!” the auctioneer reproached.
+“I’m ashamed of you, Jim Lyman. There’s more
+than ten cents’ worth of butter on the bread.
+Twenty-five? That’s better. Don’t insult the
+young lady who put up this box. Thirty-five?
+Come, thirty-five. That’s right, Henshaw. A fellow
+with a mouth as large as yours ought to pay
+thirty-five cents for looking at a box like this.”</p>
+
+<p>The laughter that rolled up from the village people
+who had gathered on the minister’s lawn added
+to the fun at the grinning country boy’s expense.
+The bidding mounted. It soared. A box, tied with
+flaming orange, was knocked down to the boy with
+the large mouth for <i>sixty cents</i>! The minister’s carpet
+began to assume reality.</p>
+
+<p>From his seat under the trees, Caleb Whitman
+laughed and enjoyed the fun with the others. It
+seemed to him that nothing the city offered could
+compare with this little village fête for pure and
+innocent enjoyment. The spirit of neighborliness
+everywhere manifested, the tingling excitement of
+the young people in the auction, the hearty enjoyment
+the country found in Sam Tupman’s humor,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>all gave to the simple entertainment an air, or so the
+man from the city thought, as wholesome as the
+breeze that came in exhilarating puffs from the blue
+waters of Ontario. He thought of New York, with
+its chill indifference and hard worldliness with profound
+distaste.</p>
+
+<p>And then from his seat under the bobbing lanterns
+which he had helped to suspend from the splendid
+old maple trees, he turned his eyes again to Nancy,
+who sat with the neighbors to whom Aunt Roxana
+had entrusted her, persons whose dress and manner
+proclaimed for them special distinction in the community.
+At each successive meeting he had told
+himself that Nancy’s beauty and charm had reached
+their height. But never before had he seen her with
+her eyes shining with ecstasy, her cheeks flying banners
+of joy, her girlish throat encircled by a coral
+necklace, her happy face peeping from beneath a
+white lace hat, with a rose tucked beneath the brim.
+It was plainly Nancy’s gala hat, and Nancy’s gala
+day.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain, looking very spruce in his black Sunday
+suit, his white collar, dazzlingly polished, scraping
+his ears, leaned toward his summer boarder.
+“The boxes are going fast; you’d better begin bidding
+unless you want to go hungry,” he warned.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve got my eye on one.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman’s assurance made the Captain chuckle.
+“Don’t need no looking after by me,” he said; and
+he settled back to enjoy the fun of Sam Tupman’s
+antics.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>The auction was coming to a close. Most of the
+men present were balancing generous boxes on their
+knees, awaiting the signal to open them, to search
+for the packers’ names.</p>
+
+<p>Sam Tupman looked at the minister, a fat, short,
+benevolent little man of sixty years, in a rusty coat.
+Then he picked up a box from among the few left
+on the table, a box that looked as if it had once contained
+five pounds of candy, wrapped neatly in white
+tissue paper, bound sedately with seal brown ribbon;
+but, alas for Aunt Roxana’s decorum, with a big
+moss rose thrust coquettishly through the bow.</p>
+
+<p>“How much?” said Sam Tupman, omitting his
+usual raillery.</p>
+
+<p>The minister murmured: “Twenty-five cents.”</p>
+
+<p>“Fifty,” said Whitman promptly.</p>
+
+<p>The auctioneer hesitated. The minister put on his
+glasses and looked his flock over to see whence the
+voice of the interloper came. “Fifty-five,” he said
+at last, with careful deliberation. The Captain
+shook with inward laughter. “Go it,” he challenged
+Whitman admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>“Seventy-five,” said the stranger within the gates.</p>
+
+<p>“Eighty,” said the minister.</p>
+
+<p>“One dollar!” Whitman’s voice rang out.</p>
+
+<p>The auctioneer paused. “Parson,” he cried
+above the laughter, “if you’d auctioned as long as I
+have, you’d know when to quit by the ring in the
+other fellow’s voice. That boy ain’t got onto his
+real wind yet.”</p>
+
+<p>“A dollar ten,” said the minister firmly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>“Two dollars,” from Whitman.</p>
+
+<p>The minister wiped his forehead. “You’re right,
+Sam,” he called good-naturedly. “I can’t tire him
+out; but I gave him a run for his money.”</p>
+
+<p>The worldly phrase from the guileless little minister
+caused a rumble of laughter from his flock, that
+died only to rise again.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” sighed Miss Abby, leaning toward Whitman,
+“there ain’t been such excitement in Deep
+Harbor in many a day. I hope you got a good box.
+I meant to give you a hint about mine.”</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later the tables were spread. The
+young people as well as the elderly folk (age far outnumbered
+youth in the old town) opened the boxes
+and found their partners’ names.</p>
+
+<p>Caleb Whitman left his seat with the Luffkins and
+crossed the lawn. “Come, Nancy,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The friends to whom she had been entrusted had
+wandered away, leaving her for the moment alone.
+With an adorable readiness, quite unlike the giggling
+reluctance the village girls were feigning, Nancy
+arose.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” she reproached the young man, her lips
+parting in a smile. “How did you dare?”</p>
+
+<p>“They told me to bid on a box.” Whitman
+laughed down into her upturned face. “If it happened
+to be yours—” His gesture implied that
+such being the case, he was not to blame.</p>
+
+<p>“I did not tell you the color of the ribbon, did
+I?” She waited anxiously for his answer, as if to
+gather assurance for future defense.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>“Certainly not,” he affirmed unblushingly, leading
+her to a seat between two maple trees.</p>
+
+<p>“But,” Nancy persisted, “how did you know that
+it was my box, if you didn’t know the color of my
+ribbon? You haven’t opened it to find my name.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman’s answer was ready. “I knew it by the
+sign of the rose,” he said, taking the flower from
+the box, to pin it on his coat. “It’s your symbol,
+Nancy—a moss rose in an old fashioned garden.”</p>
+
+<p>When they were seated on the board seat Nancy
+opened her box revealing a loaf of almond cake
+(made with orange flower wine) and piles of little
+sandwiches, tied bewitchingly with cherry colored
+ribbons.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry for the minister,” the man beside her
+said, making one mouthful of a little square of bread
+and butter, “he’ll miss the cherry ribbons.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s never had them,” Nancy replied quickly;
+and then she blushed.</p>
+
+<p>“Were they—for me, Nancy?”</p>
+
+<p>“For the highest bidder,” said Nancy. Aunt
+Roxana’s lessons in discretion had not been in vain.
+Then she added, anxiously: “Those sandwiches
+look very small, some way, for your mouth.”</p>
+
+<p>“They were measured for a rose bud,” he replied,
+looking straight at two red lips.</p>
+
+<p>“The minister never said things like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps he did not dare.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Nancy decided judicially. “I think it was
+because he was too busy eating bread and butter.
+On the way home, though, he sometimes paid me the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>compliment of telling me I was a good girl, and a
+comfort to my Aunt.”</p>
+
+<p>“On the way home? Has it been his custom to
+take you home?”</p>
+
+<p>She sighed and nodded.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s not going to do it, to-night. You’re going
+with me.”</p>
+
+<p>She looked her longing. Then she sighed again.
+“No, it would never do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated, catching her breath. “Then we
+must start early—before nine,” she decided.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” he conceded, wondering if the earlier
+hour would appease Aunt Roxana’s disapproval.</p>
+
+<p>“What are you going to say to the minister?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll trust to inspiration. It’s never hard to persuade
+a fat man to sit still. I’ll tell him that the
+privilege of taking you home goes with the box.”</p>
+
+<p>He picked up the cover, which had served him for
+a plate. “Hello,” he said, “a New York candy
+box.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Nancy. “The old man with gray
+whiskers, of whom I told you, sent me the candy.
+It was a wonderful box. A revelation in candy,
+after peppermint sticks in paper bags. I have
+thought of New York ever since as a splendid box
+of bon bons, each layer more wonderful than the
+last. Is it like that?”</p>
+
+<p>The city which had seemed so distasteful a moment
+before, assumed brighter form with Nancy’s
+words. He thought suddenly of all the treasures
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>of art gathered there, of the shops and the play
+houses, the ships on the river, the gayety of the
+avenue; and he began to tell Nancy of the side of
+New York that was indeed like a candy box, lined
+with paper lace, all ready, should she come there, for
+the pinch of her golden tongs.</p>
+
+<p>“And you will come, Nancy?” he pleaded as the
+shadows lengthened.</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe,” she promised. “Anything seems possible—now.”
+And then she asked, quite suddenly,
+“Didn’t you once mention a man named Radding to
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps,” he said, startled.</p>
+
+<p>“Who is he?”</p>
+
+<p>“There are dozens of people of that name in New
+York. The one I know is a scholar and a gentleman.”</p>
+
+<p>“What does he do for his living?”</p>
+
+<p>“He writes a little and lives on his income.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah!” Her sigh was one of relief.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you write, Nancy? I should think you
+might, with that pretty fancy of yours.” He waited
+expectantly, hoping for her confession of the authorship
+of the poem.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. “No. I feel things, but
+I don’t draw them, or sing them, or write them.”</p>
+
+<p>The long northern twilight grew dimmer. Black
+night set in. Some one lighted the lanterns, which
+bobbed from the high branches where Whitman had
+strung them, like huge fire flies among the trees. A
+vast content with the present, an eager expectancy of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>the future, flooded his being. Life was a spring of
+living water, to which he pressed his lips.</p>
+
+<p>“Come,” said Nancy suddenly. “We must start.
+I did not know it was so late. Time had wings, to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>When Whitman begged for the privilege of taking
+Nancy home the minister demurred. “You are
+a stranger to Miss Roxana,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I spent all yesterday afternoon with her,” Whitman
+argued.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” the minister gave in, “if she says
+anything, send her to me. If she never finds it out,
+let it be on my conscience.” He patted Nancy on
+the shoulder and gave his fat little hand to Whitman
+in farewell. “It was good of you,” he said, his eyes
+twinkling, “to bid so generously this evening in
+order to help the church.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">THE walk home, down the long country road,
+under the summer stars, was at an end.
+Nancy paused decisively at the stile. “Good night,”
+she said. “I can find my way in alone.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like to leave you, Nancy, for that great
+black, shuttered house to swallow up.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m used to it, Mr. Whitman.”</p>
+
+<p>“What will you tell Aunt Roxana about to-night?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll tell her—” the Cupid’s bow arched over the
+white, even teeth.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” eagerly, his hand retaining hers.</p>
+
+<p>“That miles aren’t always the same length; that
+the walk to the village to buy brown ribbon is much
+longer than the walk back in the evening after the
+ribbon has been untied.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, Nancy.”</p>
+
+<p>But she had darted from him, to run fleetly toward
+the house, like a Cinderella who hears the strike of
+the clock. He watched the shadowy form disappear
+into the deep blackness of the tunneled arbor,
+hoping to learn through the sound of her great door
+key in the lock or the flicker of her candle at some
+window, that she was safe within the lonely dwelling.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>No such signal came to him, but still he lingered
+at the gate, his thoughts tumultuous.</p>
+
+<p>To return to the village fête without Nancy, after
+those wonderful moments together, beneath the old
+trees, seemed impossible—an anti-climax to an
+evening that had mounted steadily in significance and
+enjoyment. How much they had found to say to
+one another. How much they had left unsaid. He
+was haunted by the thought that in spite of the long,
+uninterrupted tête-à-tête, he had let Nancy go without
+telling her something of the utmost importance.
+What was it? He searched his memory. Ah, at
+last he knew. Sweet and disturbing, for the first
+time the truth swept over him. He wanted to tell
+Nancy that—he loved her.</p>
+
+<p>His mind leaped to their next meeting, only to be
+stunned by the thought that his last days in the old
+town might yield him no opportunity to pour out to
+Nancy the new and amazing discovery. Against
+such a possibility his will beat with stubborn resistance,
+as he pondered the question of how to bring
+about a tryst. A penciled note, written by the light
+of a match, and left in the bower, might catch her
+eye, with slight risk of being found by any one
+else. He would take that chance; and, having so
+decided, he strolled down the road until he came to
+the corner of the hedge that surrounded the estate
+where the latticed summer house rose black among
+the shrubbery. In order to leave no betraying footsteps
+in Aunt Roxana’s realm, he planned to enter
+by the break in the thicket.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>The trees sighed and creaked as he bent his head
+to creep under their branches. The woodbine that
+draped Nancy’s bower rustled ominously. The
+night, under the overhanging boughs of the trees,
+among the tangle of syringa and lilacs, was an unbroken
+sheet of black. Suddenly Whitman paused,
+and looked again. From within the summer house’s
+inky interior a tiny spark of fire pricked the darkness
+with an intermittent glow. No man could mistake
+that light. Whitman stopped short. “A man
+in the bower,” he said to himself, even before the
+odor of tobacco mingled with the garden scents. A
+moment after, a burnt out cigarette was flung carelessly
+through the brush. A man came to the door
+and whistled a faint bugle call, softly, persistently.
+Even in the dim light of stars his service hat, his
+tight blouse and his high leggins gave to his silhouette
+a distinctive outline not to be mistaken for that of a
+civilian.</p>
+
+<p>Caleb Whitman could not have taken a step without
+betraying his presence. Uncertain what course
+to pursue, torn with vague fears, he waited. The
+stone nymph with the broken arm was not more
+silent than he.</p>
+
+<p>Again the guarded whistle fluted through the
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m coming,” cried a sweet voice, down the
+gravel path. And now Whitman could not have
+moved had he wished. His feet, his hands, his very
+tongue in his parched mouth, seemed paralyzed with
+foreboding.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>The boughs overhanging the path parted wide and
+Nancy’s white form flashed into the grassy plot
+before the bower.</p>
+
+<p>“Is that you, Bob?” The voice was gay with
+expectation.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. A pretty time you’ve kept me waiting. I
+was just about to give you up.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman’s hands clenched at the easy nonchalance
+of that reply, and then his fingers loosened lifelessly;
+for the girl he loved had tripped toward the waiting
+soldier and flung her arms about his neck.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Bob, Bob, precious,” her voice came to the
+man who watched. “I’m so happy. Did you get
+my note?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I got it, Nance; that’s why I’m here.
+Don’t break my ribs even if you are glad to see
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>A primitive instinct to grapple with a man who
+treated Nancy’s love with that easy tolerance swept
+over Whitman.</p>
+
+<p>“What kept you so late?” The soldier lighted
+another cigarette. By the glow of the match Whitman
+recognized the handsome face of Sergeant Wilson
+with sickening certainty.</p>
+
+<p>“I came home promptly, Bob,” Nancy explained;
+“but some one who came with me lingered at the
+gate. I did not dare come out to you until I was
+sure he had gone.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, now I’m here, what do you want? I gave
+up a jolly good game of pool to come.”</p>
+
+<p>The tone was one of affectionate indulgence, with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>no hint of a lover’s rapture. Its assurance struck a
+chill to Whitman’s heart.</p>
+
+<p>“I wanted to tell you, Bob, that we can send
+old Goldstein about his business. Your trouble is
+over. I have the money.”</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t!” The soldier seized something
+which Nancy took from her bosom, felt it, then drew
+her to him with one strong arm, kissed her soundly,
+and said: “All I can say is that you’re a brick.
+How did you do it? Appeal to the Czarina?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, that would have spoiled everything. I did
+it in my own way. I’ll tell you how some day.
+Now go, or you’ll be late.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let me go then.” The tone was bantering, but
+Whitman winced. “I’ll not forget what you’ve
+done, Nance. I’ll make you proud of me yet.
+That’s the only way I can repay you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve always known you would, Bob,” she said,
+sealing the promise with a kiss.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-bye, kid. I’ll be late for ‘check’ if I
+don’t skip.”</p>
+
+<p>He strode toward the path that led to the stile,
+with Nancy in his wake. Whitman waited until he
+heard the sergeant’s gay whistle well down the road
+before he moved. Then he staggered into the
+bower, and bowed his head on his arms over the
+rustic table, his brain whirling with agonizing, discordant
+thoughts. How long he sat there he could
+not remember; nor how long it took him to stumble
+blindly back to the village, silent and sleeping, and
+out the country road to the Captain’s cottage.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>At his step in the house, Miss Abby appeared at
+her door. “Well,” she said, “Henry and I thought
+you must have got drowned. I couldn’t sleep for
+thinking of you.” She held a candle aloft and
+peered from her room at Whitman, whose step was
+already on the stair.</p>
+
+<p>“What time does the first train leave for New
+York to-morrow, Miss Abby?” he asked heavily.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s none until night, unless you want to go
+over to Fairview with Brother Henry on his first
+trip and catch the interurban to Adams.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I’ll do that. Something has come up to
+shorten my vacation. I’m going back to work as
+quick as I can.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Abby stared. “Well, for pity’s sakes,” she
+said.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">THE fourteenth of February had come. The
+windows of candy shops were stacked high
+with heart shaped boxes. The girls behind the
+counters of sweets took orders with lightning rapidity.
+The florists were hurrying off bouquets of violets
+and roses which must be delivered before the day
+died, without fail. Little boys tip-toed up steps,
+rang bells and ran away, leaving embossed envelopes
+on the stoops. From the news stands <i>Better Every
+Week</i>, in its new dress, cried to the world in bold,
+black letters that the Valentine Special was on the
+market. From its cover, Cupid in a biplane winged
+a world with his arrows.</p>
+
+<p>“Looks pretty good, doesn’t it?” Radding suggested
+to the young editor, as they paused for a
+fleeting moment in the subway to ask the girl behind
+the news stand how the edition was going.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Rad, it does. I worked hard on it.
+Funny, isn’t it, that I should have edited a valentine
+number, when I have neither sent nor received a
+valentine in my life?”</p>
+
+<p>“How did that happen?” asked Radding, as they
+found seats in the train.</p>
+
+<p>“You know my boyhood. An orphan on my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>uncle’s farm, small chance I had of receiving or
+sending sentimental offerings.”</p>
+
+<p>“Caley,” said Radding whimsically, “say the
+word and I’ll send you a tribute to-day. Which
+shall it be,—violets or mixed chocolates?”</p>
+
+<p>Radding’s foolery made Whitman smile at his
+own expense. “The new magazine is valentine
+enough for me, Rad,” he said; “I’m feeling pretty
+good over it.”</p>
+
+<p>He suddenly noticed that a man beside him was
+lost in the pages of the number. “Funny, isn’t it,
+Rad,” he whispered, indicating the reader, “that
+a bullet headed chap like that likes sentiment as well
+as a girl? I never get over it.”</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, the man took out his knife and
+cut something from a column of the magazine, which
+he folded into his bill case before he flung the
+“Special” down and left the car. Whitman
+reached for the paper.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m curious to see what caught his fancy,” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Rad drawled, “when a writer’s stuff gets
+into vest pockets and shopping bags, an editor had
+better hold onto him.”</p>
+
+<p>He watched with interest as Whitman turned the
+pages to see what was missing.</p>
+
+<p>“What was it?” he asked, as Whitman gazed at
+the hole the knife had made.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing.” The words came stiffly. “Just”—Whitman
+turned his eyes heavily toward his friend.
+“Just Nancy’s poem. You know,—Lady Valentine.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>He looked steadily in front of him for a long moment,
+without a word.</p>
+
+<p>Radding watched him narrowly. It was the first
+time either of them had mentioned the girl in Deep
+Harbor since that day last September when Whitman
+had come back, looking worn and haggard. “Don’t
+chaff me, Rad, please. I can’t stand it,” was all he
+had said in response to his friend’s badinage over
+his unexpected return. And Radding had respected
+that request. The subject had been dropped. Now,
+however, Radding seized the chance to say something
+that had long been in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>“Caley,” he began gently, “I haven’t had a
+chance to tell you that I felt pretty bad over the outcome
+of our fun. I’ve never ceased to blame myself
+for fanning your interest in that girl; for teasing you
+to go up there.”</p>
+
+<p>“You didn’t know—You thought it was the
+Captain who wrote the letters.”</p>
+
+<p>Radding shook his head. “No, I didn’t. I can’t
+excuse myself that way.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then why—”</p>
+
+<p>“I wanted to get you out of the bachelor’s rut you
+were falling into from my bad example.”</p>
+
+<p>“It wouldn’t have made any difference, Rad. I’d
+have gone anyway. I was taken with her from the
+first.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you sure,” Radding began carefully, “that
+there was no mistake? Are you sure that she didn’t
+feel the same way about you?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman’s laugh was bitter. “I’m certain,” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>“Did she tell you so? Forgive my persistence.”</p>
+
+<p>“She didn’t have to. There was—another
+man.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know?”</p>
+
+<p>“I learned it accidentally.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you ever heard from her since?”</p>
+
+<p>“Early in the year I had a letter from Luffkin—the
+real Luffkin—corroborating all my fears. A
+week ago, I had one from her, asking me not to publish
+her poem, written as usual under the Captain’s
+name. The poem was already in press and had to
+go through, of course. I wrote a line telling her so,
+and that’s the end of it all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let me see the Captain’s letter some time, if you
+haven’t destroyed it,” Radding suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Whitman promptly produced it from his pocket.
+“I saved it,” he said, “to keep me from indulging in
+any more foolish hopes.”</p>
+
+<p>Rad pinched on his glasses and read:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">“Deep Harbor, N. Y. &#160; &#160;<br>
+ “Jan. 3, 191—</p>
+
+<p>“Friend Whitman:</p>
+
+<p>“Concerning suspicions I had last summer of
+a certain party, would say all come out well long
+since, as you have probably heard. My girl kept
+her secret well, and Aunt was about struck dead
+when the sergeant walked in on her and told her
+that he’d got a commission. Aunt’s head was
+pretty high before. Now, I’m thinking, it won’t
+never come down no more. With a lieutenant in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>the family, things are settling back like they used
+to be.</p>
+
+<p>“Hoping this finds you in health.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“Respectfully,</span><br>
+“<span class="smcap">Henry B. Luffkin</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Was the sergeant the fellow?” asked Radding,
+when he had come to the Captain’s carefully lettered
+signature.</p>
+
+<p>Whitman nodded, his face set.</p>
+
+<p>Further comment was impossible, for at this moment
+the train pulled into Radding’s station.</p>
+
+<p>“Wait for me at your office,” he said, as he rose.
+“I’ll be there about five.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a half holiday,” Whitman reminded him.</p>
+
+<p>“Better yet. Make it two, then. We’ll do something
+together.” And Radding was gone.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It was a quarter after two by the office clock.
+Whitman was about to close his desk and give Radding
+up, when the janitor, a draggled individual with
+the discouraged slant of a worn out broom, appeared
+in the door and croaked: “Party outside asking for
+a Mr. Radding. There’s no such person here, is
+there?”</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll be here any minute,” Whitman replied.
+“Show the visitor in. I’ll talk to him.”</p>
+
+<p>The janitor ambled down the long hall in the direction
+of the waiting room. Whitman once more took
+up the proofs of his novel, which he had laid aside
+preparatory to leaving. The visitor’s coming gave
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>him fresh hope that Radding would finally appear.
+Engrossed in his work, Whitman had forgotten the
+invitation he had sent by the janitor, when he was
+aroused by a timid knock on the door. It was followed,
+upon his giving permission to enter, by the
+turning of the knob, the soft rustle of a woman’s
+garments, and an exclamation that was stifled almost
+before it escaped.</p>
+
+<p>The young man raised his eyes. In the doorway
+stood a girl, in a fur hat and sable furs upon which
+the snow had frozen in glistening crystals. At the
+sight of Whitman, her face blanched beneath her
+veil.</p>
+
+<p>“Nancy!” Whitman breathed, doubting the evidence
+of his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>It was some moments before she attempted to
+speak. Then her lips moved stiffly:</p>
+
+<p>“Who are you?” she said. “Why are you
+here?”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman got to his feet. He did not move
+toward her, but steadying himself by a hand that
+found his desk, he spoke, the length of the room
+between them:</p>
+
+<p>“I’m the Editor of <i>Better Every Week</i>, Nancy.”</p>
+
+<p>“You deceived me, then. If I’d known—”</p>
+
+<p>The young man finished the sentence for her, bitterly:</p>
+
+<p>“You mean if you’d known that, you wouldn’t
+have come?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I would not have come.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you sorry, Nancy, to find me here?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>“I’m sorry that the old man in whom you let me
+believe is not a reality. I liked to think that I had
+a friend.”</p>
+
+<p>“You surely know that I am your friend, Nancy;
+a thousand fold more sincerely your friend than he
+could ever have been—had he existed. I was your
+friend from the beginning. I am your friend now.”</p>
+
+<p>To these protestations she made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>“If Mr. Radding is not here,” she said at last,
+with an effort to control her voice, “I think that I
+must go.”</p>
+
+<p>The dignity inherited from a long line of gentlewomen
+showed in the slight inclination of her head
+in his direction.</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll be here,” Whitman promised, recklessly,
+feeling anything was more bearable than her going.
+“What did you want of him, Nancy?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wanted to buy back some heirlooms I sold
+him when I was in trouble. Bob won’t hear of
+anything else, now that our necessity is over.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is Bob—Sergeant Wilson?”</p>
+
+<p>“He was; but the War Department has allowed
+him to change his name.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is he with you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. He came to get measured for some new
+uniforms, and I came with him. He’s to call here
+for me and take me back to the hotel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nancy,” Whitman pleaded, looking down at her
+averted eyes, “tell me, are you happy? I can bear
+anything if you are.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have everything to make me happy,” Nancy
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>evaded him. “Aunt Roxana is radiant.” She
+smiled faintly. “She is going to give a ball to the
+whole regiment. She is so happy she has even forgiven
+me about the poem.”</p>
+
+<p>“The poem?”</p>
+
+<p>“The one you bought.”</p>
+
+<p>“What was there to forgive?”</p>
+
+<p>“It was her heart’s secret. She had written it
+when she was a girl like me. I did not know that,
+of course, when I sent it to you. I found it in a
+secret drawer. I thought some one long dead had
+written it.”</p>
+
+<p>It was Whitman’s turn to be silent. When he
+spoke his voice trembled. “You can’t realize,
+Nancy, what it means to me to learn that those
+verses were not yours. I seem to have lost my last
+illusion.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean it was wicked to sell them? That’s
+what Aunt said until she learned what I wanted to
+do with the money.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I don’t mean any such thing,” Whitman
+protested, indignantly. “I mean that I loved
+to think that it was your heart that waited there
+‘Like violets under snow.’”</p>
+
+<p>Nancy shook her head. “I didn’t write them,
+but I loved them. They taught me something that
+has helped me to go on.”</p>
+
+<p>“What did they teach you, Nancy?”</p>
+
+<p>“They taught me that love is always answered
+by love, at last. Aunt Roxana never had a lover,
+but Bob came, and filled her heart. Perhaps,” the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>sweet voice quavered, “it will be Bob’s son who will
+fill mine.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman’s voice was so tense it sounded hard.</p>
+
+<p>“Nancy,” he said sternly, “did you marry without
+loving?”</p>
+
+<p>“Marry!” A deep flush swept the pale cheeks,
+to the brim of the little fur hat. “I am not married.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly not.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you have a lover?”</p>
+
+<p>The ghost of the old Nancy flickered in her uncertain
+smile. “I’m not sure,” she breathed.</p>
+
+<p>“Please don’t tease me, Nancy.” A hot hand
+locked over hers. “Once for all, tell me who it was
+that came to you in the bower, that you kissed, that
+you let clasp you in his arms.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Mr. Whitman,” she laughed on a long
+sobbing breath, while one little hand stole contritely
+into his. “Didn’t you know? That was Bob, my
+brother.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your brother!”</p>
+
+<p>Without waiting for another word; without asking
+where he stood in her affections, Whitman gathered
+the slight figure, muffled in furs, tight within his
+arms. He kissed the beautiful eyes until they
+laughed up at him once more. He kissed the cheeks
+until they bloomed. He kissed the mouth until the
+Cupid’s bow arched in its old, playful smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Caleb,” she gasped between his kisses,
+“didn’t you really know?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>“Know! Did you suppose if I had known I
+should have left Deep Harbor without one word,
+after that last night together? What did you think
+of me, Nancy? What could you have thought of
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>The dark head drooped against his shoulder, as if
+glad to be at rest. “At first I thought all that Aunt
+had said of men was true. Then I found the moss
+rose I had given you, in the bower. I knew you
+must have seen me meet Bob, and I thought you
+could not have understood. And so, the moment the
+secret was out and Bob had his commission, I asked
+Captain Luffkin to write you—and still you did not
+come. Didn’t you get the letter?”</p>
+
+<p>“Get the letter!” roared Whitman. “Of course
+I got the letter. It destroyed the last spark of hope
+within me. The blundering old walrus! He never
+once mentioned your relationship to the sergeant.
+If he steered a boat with no more skill than he
+writes letters, he’d be aground in five minutes.”</p>
+
+<p>Nancy laughed softly. “It’s all over now,” she
+sighed contentedly. “My troubles and yours have
+vanished, as well as Bob’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did Bob have such heavy troubles, dear?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; I forgot you didn’t know. They explain
+everything. You see, Bob had been in the Academy—West
+Point, you know—but something happened,
+and they—dismissed him.”</p>
+
+<p>“That was hard, wasn’t it, Sweetheart?”</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Roxana wrote him a terrible letter, and
+told him that he had disgraced his forefathers; that
+he must never enter our gate again.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>“Poor chap! Pretty rough on him, wasn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I used to think so, but it made a man of him.
+He enlisted in the ranks under the name of Wilson,
+and won his commission the very year his class graduated.
+In all that time Aunt Roxana had not heard
+one word of his whereabouts. I alone knew the
+secret. Oh! If you had seen her the day when
+Bob threw open the garden gate and strode up the
+walk with his head as high as hers, the straps on his
+shoulders.”</p>
+
+<p>“She was pleased, was she, darling?”</p>
+
+<p>“Pleased!” Nancy ejaculated, smiling. “She’s
+never talked of anything else since. She’s never
+looked at another person. And to think,” she sighed
+reminiscently, “how near he came to failing. If it
+hadn’t been for your buying my poem and your telling
+Mr. Radding, the collector, about my things,
+Bob might never have got his commission.”</p>
+
+<p>“What had that to do with it, my own?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, you don’t know. There was an old debt
+from Academy days that had to be paid. A cruel
+creature named Goldstein found out that Bob was
+in the ranks, and he threatened to tell the commanding
+officer the whole story, unless he was paid. It
+was life or death with us at that crucial time, to get
+the money. Bob raised all that he could—”</p>
+
+<p>“Then my little general took a hand.”</p>
+
+<p>“What sweet things you always say.” Her cheek
+caressed his sleeve. “I missed you so when you
+went away. It was winter in the garden and winter
+in my heart.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>“It’s spring now, beloved, forever and forever.”</p>
+
+<p>A discreet knock on the wall of the corridor, well
+outside the open door, caused Nancy to retreat from
+Whitman’s arms and hurriedly put her hat to rights.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” shouted Whitman fiercely, peering out
+to find the intruder.</p>
+
+<p>The janitor coughed and smiled apologetically,
+“Sorry to interrupt you, Mr. Whitman, but this
+note just came for you.”</p>
+
+<p>Whitman opened it, while his arm again drew
+Nancy close.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>“Dear Caley:” (He read)</p>
+
+<p>“I hope the ‘Valentine’ I ventured to send
+met with your approval. I’m afraid the dinner
+is on me, after all. I have ordered covers laid for
+four at Delmonico’s at eight. I insist that the
+sergeant come, to keep me company.</p>
+
+<p>“‘If her name is Mary, call her Mary; if she
+was christened Susan, call her Susan.’</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="indentright">“As ever,</span><br>
+
+“<span class="smcap">Rad</span>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“What does he mean?” asked Nancy, reading the
+note from the shelter of her lover’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll tell you at dinner, Rose of the World, in
+his own whimsical way.”</p>
+
+<p class="center">THE END</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="transnote">
+<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
+
+<p>Perceived typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
+</div></div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78169 ***</div>
+</body>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #78169
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78169)