It took a long time for Carol to recover
from the effect of Lark’s disloyalty, as she
persisted in calling it. For several weeks she
didn’t twinkle at all. But when at last
the smiles came easy again, she wrote to Mr. Duke,
her p’fessor no longer, but now a full-fledged
young minister. She apologized sweetly for her
long delay.
“But you will forgive me
when you have read this,” she wrote.
“Cupid is working havoc in our family.
Of course, no one outside the home circle
knows yet, but I insisted on telling you
because you have been such a grand good
friend to us for so long. We may seem
young to you, because you can’t forget
when we were freshmen, but we are really very
grown up. We act quite mature now, and never
think of playing jokes. But I didn’t
finish my news, did I?
“It is Jim Forrest he
was in high school when we were. Remember
him? Larkie and I were out to spend a
week, and but I needn’t go into particulars.
I knew you would be interested. The
whole family is very happy about it, he
is a great favorite with every one.
But how our family is going to pieces! Still,
since it is Jim ! He is nice, isn’t
he? But you wouldn’t dare say
no.”
Carol’s eyes glittered wickedly
as she sealed this letter, which she had penned with
greatest care. And a few days later, when the
answer came, she danced gleefully up the stairs, not
at all “mature” in manner, and locked
the door behind her while she read:
“Dear
Carol:
“Indeed I am very interested,
and I wish you all the joy in the world.
Tell Jim for me how very much I think he
is to be congratulated. He seems a fine
fellow, and I know you will be happy. It was
a surprise, I admit I knew he
was doing the very devoted but
you have seemed so young to me, always.
I can’t imagine you too grown up for jokes,
though you do sound more ‘mature’ in this
letter than you have before. Lark will
be lonely, I am afraid.
“I am very busy with my
work, so you will understand if my letters
come less frequently, won’t you?
And you will be too busy with your own happiness
to bother with an old professor any more anyhow.
I have enjoyed our friendship very much, more
than you will ever know, and I want once
more to hope you may be the happiest woman in the
world. You deserve to be.
“Very sincerely
your friend,
“DAVID
A. DUKE.”
Carol lay down on the bed and crushed
the letter ecstatically between her hands. Then
she burst out laughing. Then she cried a little,
nervously, and laughed again. Then she smoothed
the letter affectionately, and curled up on the bed
with a pad of paper and her father’s fountain-pen
to answer the letter.
“My dear Mr. Duke:
However in the world could you make such
a mistake. I’ve been laughing ever since
I got your letter, but I’m vexed too. He’s
nice, all right; he’s just fine, but
I don’t want him! And think how
annoyed Lark would be if she could see it.
I am not engaged to Jim Forrest, nor
to any one. It’s Lark. I certainly
didn’t say it was I, did I? We’re
all so fond of Jim that it really is a pleasure
to the whole family to count him one of
us, and Lark grows more deliriously joyful
all the time. But I! I know you’re
awfully busy, of course, and I hate to intrude,
but you must write one little postal card to
apologize for your error, and I’ll understand
how hard you are working when you do not
write again.
“Hastily,
but always sincerely,
“CAROL.”
Carol jumped up and caught up her
hat and rushed all the way down-town to the post-office
to get that letter started for Danville, Illinois,
where the Reverend Mr. Duke was located. Her face
was so radiant, and her eyes were so heavenly blue,
and so sparkling bright, that people on the street
turned to look after her admiringly.
She was feverishly impatient until
the answer arrived, and was not at all surprised that
it came under special delivery stamp, though Lark
lifted her eyebrows quizzically, and Aunt Grace smiled
suggestively, and her father looked up with sudden
questioning in his face. Carol made no comment,
only ran up to her room and locked the door once more.
“Carol, you awful little
scamp, you did that on purpose, and you
know it. You never mentioned Lark’s
name. Well, if you wanted to give me the scare
of my life, you certainly succeeded. I didn’t
want to lose my little chum, and I knew very
well that no man in his proper senses would allow
his sweetheart to be as good a comrade to another
man as I want you to be to me. Of course I was
disappointed. Of course I expected to be busy
for a while. Of course I failed to see
the sterling worth of Jim Forrest.
I see it now, though. I think he’s
a prince, and as near worth being in your
family as anybody could be. I’m sure we’ll
be great friends, and tell Lark for me that I
am waxing enthusiastic over his good qualities even
to the point of being inarticulate. Tell her
how happy I am over it, a good deal happier
than I’ve been for the past several
days, and I am wishing them both a world
of joy. I’m having one myself,
and I find it well worth having. I could shake
you, Carol, for playing such a trick on me. I
can just see you crouch down and giggle when you read
this. You wait, my lady. My turn is coming.
I think I’ll run down to Mount Mark
next week to see my uncle he’s
not very well. Don’t have any dates.
“Sincerely,
D. D.”
And Carol laughed again, and wiped her eyes.
The Reverend Mr. Duke’s devotion
to his elderly uncle in Mount Mark was a most beautiful
thing to see. Every few weeks he “ran down
for a few days,” and if he spent most of his
time recounting his uncle’s symptoms before
the sympathetic Starrs, no one could be surprised at
that. He and Mr. Starr naturally had much in
common, both ministers, and both at any
rate, he was very devoted to his uncle, and Carol grew
up very, very fast, and smiled a great deal, but laughed
much less frequently than in other days. There
was a shy sweetness about her that made her father
watch her anxiously.
“Is Carol sick, Grace?”
he asked one day, turning suddenly to his sister-in-law.
She smiled curiously. “N-no, I think not.
Why?”
“She seems very sweet.”
“Yes. She feels very sweet,”
was the enigmatical response. And Mr. Starr muttered
something about women and geometry and went away, shaking
his head. And Aunt Grace smiled again.
But the months passed away. Lark,
not too absorbed in her own happiness to find room
for her twin’s affairs, at last grew troubled.
She and Aunt Grace often held little conferences together
when Carol was safely out of the way.
“Whatever do you suppose is
the matter?” Lark would wonder anxiously.
To which her aunt always answered patiently, “Oh,
just wait. He isn’t sure she’s grown-up
enough yet.”
Then there came a quiet night when
Carol and Mr. Duke sat in the living-room, idly discussing
the weather, and looking at Connie who was deeply
immersed in a book on the other side of the big reading
lamp. Conversation between them lagged so noticeably
that they sighed with relief when she finally laid
down her book, and twisted around in her chair until
she had them both in full view.
“Books are funny,” she
began brightly. “I don’t believe half
the written stuff ever did happen I don’t
believe it could. Do girls ever propose, Mr.
Duke?”
“No one ever proposed to me,” he answered,
laughing.
“No?” she queried politely.
“Maybe no one wanted you badly enough. But
I wonder if they ever do? Writers say so.
I can’t believe it somehow. It seems so well unnecessary,
someway. Carol and I were talking about it this
afternoon.”
Carol looked up startled.
“What does Carol think about it?” he queried.
“Well, she said she thought
in ordinary cases girls were clever enough to get
what they wanted without asking for it.”
Carol moved restlessly in her chair,
her face drooping a little, and Mr. Duke laughed.
“Of course, I know none of our
girls would do such a thing,” said Connie, serene
in her family pride. “But Carol says she
must admit she’d like to find some way to make
a man say what anybody could see with half an eye
he wanted to say anyhow, only
Connie stopped abruptly. Mr.
Duke had turned to Carol, his keen eyes searching
her face, but Carol sank in the big chair and turned
her face away from him against the leather cushion.
“Connie,” she said, “of
course no girl would propose, no girl would want to I
was only joking
Mr. Duke laughed openly then.
“Let’s go and take a walk, shan’t
we, Carol? It’s a grand night.”
“You needn’t go to get
rid of me,” said Connie, rising. “I
was just going anyhow.”
“Oh, don’t go,” said Mr. Duke politely.
“Don’t go,” echoed Carol pleadingly.
Connie stepped to the doorway, then
paused and looked back at them. Sudden illumination
came to her as she scanned their faces, the man’s
clear-cut, determined, eager Carol’s
shy, and scared, and hopeful. She
turned quickly back toward her sister, pain darkening
her eyes. Carol was the last of all the girls, it
would leave her alone, and he was too old
for her. Her lips quivered a little, and her face
shadowed more darkly. But they did not see it.
The man’s eyes were intent on Carol’s
lovely features, and Carol was studying her slender
fingers. Connie drew a long breath, and looked
down upon her sister with a great protecting tenderness
in her heart. She wanted to catch her up in her
strong young arms and carry her wildly out of the
room away from the man who sat there waiting
for her.
Carol lifted her face at that moment, and turned slowly
toward Mr. Duke.
Connie saw her eyes. They were luminous.
Connie’s tense figure relaxed
then, and she turned at once toward the door.
“I am going,” she said in a low voice.
But she looked back again before she closed the door
after her. “Carol,” she said in a
whisper, “you you’re a darling.
I I’ve always thought so.”
Carol did not hear her, she
did not hear the door closing behind her she
had forgotten Connie was there.
Mr. Duke stood up and walked quickly
across the room and Carol rose to meet him. He
put his arms about her, strongly, without hesitating.
“Carol,” he said, “my
little song-bird,” and he laughed,
but very tenderly, “would you like to know how
to make me say what you know I want to say?”
“I I ”
she began tremulously, clasping her hands against his
breast, and looking intently, as if fascinated, at
his square firm chin so very near her eyes. She
had never observed it so near at hand before.
She thought it was a lovely chin, in another
man she would have called it distinctly “bossy.”
“You would try to make
me, when you know I’ve been gritting my teeth
for years, waiting for you to get grown up. You’ve
been awfully slow about it, Carol, and I’ve
been in such a hurry for you.”
She rested limply in his arms now,
breathing in little broken sighs, not trying to speak.
“You have known it a long time,
haven’t you? And I thought I was hiding
it so cleverly.” He drew her closer in his
arms. “You are too young for me, Carol,”
he said regretfully. “I am very old.”
“I I like ’em old,” she
whispered shyly.
With one hand he drew her head to
his shoulder, where he could feel the warm fragrant
breath against the “lovely chin.”
“You like ‘them’
old,” he repeated, smiling. “You are
very generous. One old one is all I want you
to like.” But when he leaned toward her
lips, Carol drew away swiftly. “Don’t
be afraid of me, Carol. You didn’t mind
once when I kissed you.” He laid his hand
softly on her round cheek. “I am too old,
dearest, but I’ve been loving you for years I
guess. I’ve been waiting for you since
you were a little freshman, only I didn’t know
it for a while. Say something, Carol I
don’t want you to feel timid with me. You
love me, don’t you? Tell me, if you do.”
“I I.”
She looked up at him desperately. “I well,
I made you say it, didn’t I?”
“Did you want me to say it,
dearest? Have you been waiting, too? How
long have you
“Oh, a long time; since that
night among the rose bushes at the parsonage.”
“Since then?”
“Yes; that was why it didn’t
break my pledge when you kissed me. Because I was
waiting then.”
“Do you love me?”
“Oh, P’fessor, don’t
make me say it right out in plain English not
to-night. I’m pretty nearly going to cry
now, and ” she twinkled a little
then, like herself, “you know what crying does
to my complexion.”
But he did not smile. “Don’t
cry,” he said. “We want to be happy
to-night. You will tell me to-morrow. To-night
“To-night,” she said sweetly,
turning in his arms so that her face was toward him
again, “to-night ” She lifted
her arms, and put them softly about his neck, the
laces falling back and showing her pink dimpled elbows.
“To-night, my dearest, ” She
lifted her lips to him, smiling.