For days the neighbors in and about
the village of Warehold had been looking forward to
Lucy’s home-coming as one of the important epochs
in the history of the Manor House, quite as they would
have done had Lucy been a boy and the expected function
one given in honor of the youthful heir’s majority.
Most of them had known the father and mother of these
girls, and all of them loved Jane, the gentle mistress
of the home a type of woman eminently qualified
to maintain its prestige.
It had been a great house in its day.
Built in early Revolutionary times by Archibald Cobden,
who had thrown up his office under the Crown and openly
espoused the cause of the colonists, it had often been
the scene of many of the festivities and social events
following the conclusion of peace and for many years
thereafter: the rooms were still pointed out
in which Washington and Lafayette had slept, as well
as the small alcove where the dashing Bart de Klyn
passed the night whenever he drove over in his coach
with outriders from Bow Hill to Barnegat and the sea.
With the death of Colonel Creighton
Cobden, who held a commission in the War of 1812,
all this magnificence of living had changed, and when
Morton Cobden, the father of Jane and Lucy, inherited
the estate, but little was left except the Manor House,
greatly out of repair, and some invested property
which brought in but a modest income. On his
death-bed Morton Cobden’s last words were a prayer
to Jane, then eighteen, that she would watch over
and protect her younger sister, a fair-haired child
of eight, taking his own and her dead mother’s
place, a trust which had so dominated Jane’s
life that it had become the greater part of her religion.
Since then she had been the one strong
hand in the home, looking after its affairs, managing
their income, and watching over every step of her
sister’s girlhood and womanhood. Two years
before she had placed Lucy in one of the fashionable
boarding-schools of Philadelphia, there to study “music
and French,” and to perfect herself in that “grace
of manner and charm of conversation,” which
the two maiden ladies who presided over its fortunes
claimed in their modest advertisements they were so
competent to teach. Part of the curriculum was
an enforced absence from home of two years, during
which time none of her own people were to visit her
except in case of emergency.
To-night, the once famous house shone
with something of its old-time color. The candles
were lighted in the big bronze candelabra the
ones which came from Paris; the best glass and china
and all the old plate were brought out and placed
on the sideboard and serving-tables; a wood fire was
started (the nights were yet cold), its cheery blaze
lighting up the brass fender and andirons before which
many of Colonel Cobden’s cronies had toasted
their shins as they sipped their toddies in the old
days; easy-chairs and hair-cloth sofas were drawn from
the walls; the big lamps lighted, and many minor details
perfected for the comfort of the expected guests.
Jane entered the drawing-room in advance
of Lucy and was busying herself putting the final
touches to the apartment, arranging the
sprays of blossoms over the clock and under the portrait
of Morton Cobden, which looked calmly down on the
room from its place on the walls, when the door opened
softly and Martha the old nurse had for
years been treated as a member of the family stepped
in, bowing and curtsying as would an old woman in
a play, the skirt of her new black silk gown that
Ann Gossaway had made for her held out between her
plump fingers, her mob-cap with its long lace strings
bobbing with every gesture. With her rosy cheeks,
silver-rimmed spectacles, self-satisfied smile, and
big puffy sleeves, she looked as if she might have
stepped out of one of the old frames lining the walls.
“What do ye think of me, Miss
Jane? I’m proud as a peacock that
I am!” she cried, twisting herself about.
“Do ye know, I never thought that skinny dressmaker
could do half as well. Is it long enough?”
and she craned her head in the attempt to see the
edge of the skirt.
“Fits you beautifully, Martha.
You look fine,” answered Jane in all sincerity,
as she made a survey of the costume. “How
does Lucy like it?”
“The darlin’ don’t
like it at all; she says I look like a pall-bearer,
and ye ought to hear her laughin’ at the cap.
Is there anything the matter with it? The pastor’s
wife’s got one, anyhow, and she’s a year
younger’n me.”
“Don’t mind her, Martha she
laughs at everything; and how good it is to hear her!
She never saw you look so well,” replied Jane,
as she moved a jar from a table and placed it on the
mantel to hold the blossoms she had picked in the
garden. “What’s she doing upstairs
so long?”
“Prinkin’ and
lookin’ that beautiful ye wouldn’t know
her. But the width and the thickness of her” here
the wrinkled fingers measured the increase with a
half circle in the air “and the way
she’s plumped out not in one place,
but all over well, I tell ye, ye’d
be astonished! She knows it, too, bless her heart!
I don’t blame her. Let her git all the
comfort she kin when she’s young that’s
the time for laughin’ the cryin’
always comes later.”
No part of Martha’s rhapsody
over Lucy described Jane. Not in her best moments
could she have been called beautiful not
even to-night when Lucy’s home-coming had given
a glow to her cheeks and a lustre to her eyes that
nothing else had done for months. Her slender
figure, almost angular in its contour with its closely
drawn lines about the hips and back; her spare throat
and neck, straight arms, thin wrists and hands transparent
hands, though exquisitely wrought, as were those of
all her race all so expressive of high breeding
and refinement, carried with them none of the illusions
of beauty. The mould of the head, moreover, even
when softened by her smooth chestnut hair, worn close
to her ears and caught up in a coil behind, was too
severe for accepted standards, while her features
wonderfully sympathetic as they were, lacked the finer
modeling demanded in perfect types of female loveliness,
the eyebrows being almost straight, the cheeks sunken,
with little shadows under the cheek-bones, and the
lips narrow and often drawn.
And yet with all these discrepancies
and, to some minds, blemishes there was a light in
her deep gray eyes, a melody in her voice, a charm
in her manner, a sureness of her being exactly the
sort of woman one hoped she would be, a quick responsiveness
to any confidence, all so captivating and so satisfying
that ’those who knew her forgot her slight physical
shortcomings and carried away only the remembrance
of one so much out of the common and of so distinguished
a personality that she became ever after the standard
by which they judged all good women.
There were times, too especially
whenever Lucy entered the room or her name was mentioned that
there shone through Jane’s eyes a certain instantaneous
kindling of the spirit which would irradiate her whole
being as a candle does a lantern a light
betokening not only uncontrollable tenderness but
unspeakable pride, dimmed now and then when some word
or act of her charge brought her face to face with
the weight of the responsibility resting upon her a
responsibility far outweighing that which most mothers
would have felt. This so dominated Jane’s
every motion that it often robbed her of the full enjoyment
of the companionship of a sister so young and so beautiful.
If Jane, to quote Doctor John, looked
like a lily swaying on a slender stem, Lucy, when
she bounded into the room to-night, was a full-blown
rose tossed by a summer breeze. She came in with
throat and neck bare; a woman all curves and dimples,
her skin as pink as a shell; plump as a baby, and
as fair, and yet with the form of a wood-nymph; dressed
in a clinging, soft gown, the sleeves caught up at
the shoulders revealing her beautiful arms, a spray
of blossoms on her bosom, her blue eyes dancing with
health, looking twenty rather than seventeen; glad
of her freedom, glad of her home and Jane and Martha,
and of the lights and blossoms and the glint on silver
and glass, and of all that made life breathable and
livable.
“Oh, but isn’t it just
too lovely to be at home!” she cried as she
skipped about. “No lights out at nine, no
prayers, no getting up at six o’clock and turning
your mattress and washing in a sloppy little washroom.
Oh, I’m so happy! I can’t realize
it’s all true.” As she spoke she
raised herself on her toes so that she could see her
face in the mirror over the mantel. “Why,
do you know, sister,” she rattled on, her eyes
studying her own face, “that Miss Sarah used
to make us learn a page of dictionary if we talked
after the silence bell!”
“You must know the whole book
by heart, then, dearie,” replied Jane with a
smile, as she bent over a table and pushed back some
books to make room for a bowl of arbutus she held
in her hand.
“Ah, but she didn’t catch
us very often. We used to stuff up the cracks
in the doors so she couldn’t hear us talk and
smother our heads in the pillows. Jonesy, the
English teacher, was the worst.” She was
still looking in the glass, her fingers busy with
the spray of blossoms on her bosom. “She
always wore felt slippers and crept around like a cat.
She’d tell on anybody. We had a play one
night in my room after lights were out, and Maria
Collins was Claude Melnotte and I was Pauline.
Maria had a mustache blackened on her lips with a piece
of burnt cork and I was all fixed up in a dressing-gown
and sash. We never heard Jonesy till she put
her hand on the knob; then we blew out the candle
and popped into bed. She smelled the candle-wick
and leaned over and kissed Maria good-night, and the
black all came off on her lips, and next day we got
three pages apiece the mean old thing!
How do I look, Martha? Is my hair all right?”
Here she turned her head for the old woman’s
inspection.
“Beautiful, darlin’.
There won’t one o’ them know ye; they’ll
think ye’re a real livin’ princess stepped
out of a picture-book.” Martha had not
taken her eyes from Lucy since she entered the room.
“See my little beau-catchers,”
she laughed, twisting her head so that Martha could
see the tiny Spanish curls she had flattened against
her temples. “They are for Bart Holt, and
I’m going to cut sister out. Do you think
he’ll remember me?” she prattled on, arching
her neck.
“It won’t make any difference
if he don’t,” Martha retorted in a positive
tone. “But Cap’n Nat will, and so
will the doctor and Uncle Ephraim and who’s
that comin’ this early?” and the old nurse
paused and listened to a heavy step on the porch.
“It must be the cap’n himself; there ain’t
nobody but him’s got a tread like that; ye’d
think he was trampin’ the deck o’ one
of his ships.”
The door of the drawing-room opened
and a bluff, hearty, round-faced man of fifty, his
iron-gray hair standing straight up on his head like
a shoe-brush, dressed in a short pea-jacket surmounted
by a low sailor collar and loose necktie, stepped
cheerily into the room.
“Ah, Miss Jane!” Somehow
all the neighbors, even the most intimate, remembered
to prefix “Miss” when speaking to Jane.
“So you’ve got this fly-away back again?
Where are ye? By jingo! let me look at you.
Why! why! why! Did you ever! What have you
been doing to yourself, lassie, that you should shed
your shell like a bug and come out with wings like
a butterfly? Why you’re the prettiest thing
I’ve seen since I got home from my last voyage.”
He had Lucy by both bands now, and
was turning her about as if she had been one of Ann
Gossaway’s models.
“Have I changed, Captain Holt?”
“No not a mite.
You’ve got a new suit of flesh and blood on your
bones, that’s all. And it’s the best
in the locker. Well! Well! Well!”
He was still twisting her around. “She does
ye proud, Martha,” he called to the old nurse,
who was just leaving the room to take charge of the
pantry, now that the guests had begun to arrive.
“And so ye’re home for good and all, lassie?”
“Yes isn’t it lovely?”
“Lovely? That’s no
name for it. You’ll be settin’ the
young fellers crazy ’bout here before they’re
a week older. Here come two of ’em now.”
Lucy turned her head quickly, just
as the doctor and Barton Holt reached the door of
the drawing-room. The elder of the two, Doctor
John, greeted Jane as if she had been a duchess, bowing
low as he approached her, his eyes drinking in her
every movement; then, after a few words, remembering
the occasion as being one in honor of Lucy, he walked
slowly toward the young girl.
“Why, Lucy, it’s so delightful
to get you back!” he cried, shaking her hand
warmly. “And you are looking so well.
Poor Martha has been on pins and needles waiting for
you. I told her just how it would be that
she’d lose her little girl and she
has,” and he glanced at her admiringly.
“What did she say when she saw you?”
“Oh, the silly old thing began
to cry, just as they all do. Have you seen her
dog?”
The answer jarred on the doctor, although
he excused her in his heart on the ground of her youth
and her desire to appear at ease in talking to him.
“Do you mean Meg?” he
asked, scanning her face the closer.
“I don’t know what she
calls him but he’s the ugliest little
beast I ever saw.”
“Yes but so amusing.
I never get tired of watching him. What is left
of him is the funniest thing alive. He’s
better than he looks, though. He and Rex have
great times together.”
“I wish you would take him,
then. I told Martha this morning that he mustn’t
poke his nose into my room, and he won’t.
He’s a perfect fright.”
“But the dear old woman loves
him,” he protested with a tender tone in his
voice, his eyes fixed on Lucy.
He had looked into the faces of too
many young girls in his professional career not to
know something of what lay at the bottom of their
natures. What he saw now came as a distinct surprise.
“I don’t care if she does,”
she retorted; “no, I don’t,” and
she knit her brow and shook her pretty head as she
laughed.
While they stood talking Bart Holt,
who had lingered at the threshold, his eyes searching
for the fair arrival, was advancing toward the centre
of the room. Suddenly he stood still, his gaze
fixed on the vision of the girl in the clinging dress,
with the blossoms resting on her breast. The
curve of her back, the round of the hip; the way her
moulded shoulders rose above the lace of her bodice;
the bare, full arms tapering to the wrists; the
color, the movement, the grace of it all had taken
away his breath. With only a side nod of recognition
toward Jane, he walked straight to Lucy and with an
“Excuse me,” elbowed the doctor out of
the way in his eagerness to reach the girl’s
side. The doctor smiled at the young man’s
impetuosity, bent his head to Lucy, and turned to
where Jane was standing awaiting the arrival of her
other guests.
The young man extended his hand.
“I’m Bart Holt,” he exclaimed; “you
haven’t forgotten me, Miss Lucy, have you?
We used to play together. Mighty glad to see
you been expecting you for a week.”
Lucy colored slightly and arched her
head in a coquettish way. His frankness pleased
her; so did the look of unfeigned admiration in his
eyes.
“Why, of course I haven’t
forgotten you, Mr. Holt. It was so nice of you
to come,” and she gave him the tips of her fingers her
own eyes meanwhile, in one comprehensive glance, taking
in his round head with its closely cropped curls,
searching brown eyes, wavering mouth, broad shoulders,
and shapely body, down to his small, well-turned feet.
The young fellow lacked the polish and well-bred grace
of the doctor, just as he lacked his well-cut clothes
and distinguished manners, but there was a sort of
easy effrontery and familiar air about him that some
of his women admirers encouraged and others shrank
from. Strange to say, this had appealed to Lucy
before he had spoken a word.
“And you’ve come home
for good now, haven’t you?” His eyes were
still drinking in the beauty of the girl, his mind
neither on his questions nor her answers.
“Yes, forever and ever,”
she replied, with a laugh that showed her white teeth.
“Did you like it at school?”
It was her lips now that held his attention and the
little curves under her dimpled chin. He thought
he had never seen so pretty a mouth and chin.
“Not always; but we used to
have lots of fun,” answered the girl, studying
him in return the way his cravat was tied
and the part of his hair. She thought he had
well-shaped ears and that his nose and eyebrows looked
like a picture she had in her room upstairs.
“Come and tell me about it.
Let’s sit down here,” he continued as he
drew her to a sofa and stood waiting until she took
her seat.
“Well, I will for a moment,
until they begin to come in,” she answered,
her face all smiles. She liked the way he behaved
towards her not asking her permission,
but taking the responsibility and by his manner compelling
a sort of obedience. “But I can’t
stay,” she added. “Sister won’t
like it if I’m not with her to shake hands with
everybody.”
“Oh, she won’t mind me;
I’m a great friend of Miss Jane’s.
Please go on; what kind of fun did you have?
I like to hear about girls’ scrapes. We
had plenty of them at college, but I couldn’t
tell you half of them.” He had settled
himself beside her now, his appropriating eyes still
taking in her beauty.
“Oh, all kinds,” she replied
as she bent her head and glanced at the blossoms on
her breast to be assured of their protective covering.
“But I shouldn’t think
you could have much fun with the teachers watching
you every minute,” said Bart, moving nearer to
her and turning his body so he could look squarely
into her eyes.
“Yes, but they didn’t
find out half that was going on.” Then she
added coyly, “I don’t know whether you
can keep a secret do you tell everything
you hear?”
“Never tell anything.”
“How do I know?”
“I’ll swear it.”
In proof he held up one hand and closed both eyes in
mock reverence as if he were taking an oath. He
was getting more interested now in her talk; up to
this time her beauty had dazzled him. “Never!
So help me ” he mumbled impressively.
“Well, one day we were walking
out to the park Now you’re sure you
won’t tell sister, she’s so easily shocked?”
The tone was the same, but the inflection was shaded
to closer intimacy.
Again Bart cast up his eyes.
“And all the girls were in a
string with Miss Griggs, the Latin teacher, in front,
and we all went in a cake shop and got a big piece
of gingerbread apiece. We were all eating away
hard as we could when we saw Miss Sarah coming.
Every girl let her cake go, and when Miss Sarah got
to us the whole ten pieces were scattered along the
sidewalk.”
Bart looked disappointed over the
mild character of the scrape. From what he had
seen of her he had supposed her adventures would be
seasoned with a certain spice of deviltry.
“I wouldn’t have done
that, I’d have hidden it in my pocket,”
he replied, sliding down on the sofa until his head
rested on the cushion next her own.
“We tried, but she was too close.
Poor old Griggsey got a dreadful scolding. She
wasn’t like Miss Jones she wouldn’t
tell on the girls.”
“And did they let any of the
fellows come to see you?” Bart asked.
“No; only brothers and cousins
once in a long while. Maria Collins tried to
pass one of her beaux, Max Feilding, off as a cousin,
but Miss Sarah went down to see him and poor Maria
had to stay upstairs.”
“I’d have got in,”
said Bart with some emphasis, rousing himself from
his position and twisting his body so he could again
look squarely in her face. This escapade was
more to his liking.
“How?” asked Lucy in a
tone that showed she not only quite believed it, but
rather liked him the better for saying so.
“Oh I don’t know.
I’d have cooked up some story.” He
was leaning over now, toying with the lace that clung
to Lucy’s arms. “Did you ever have
any one of your own friends treated in that way?”
Jane’s voice cut short her answer.
She had seen the two completely absorbed in each other,
to the exclusion of the other guests who were now
coming in, and wanted Lucy beside her.
The young girl waved her fan gayly
in answer, rose to her feet, turned her head close
to Bart’s, pointed to the incoming guests, whispered
something in his ear that made him laugh, listened
while he whispered to her in return, and in obedience
to the summons crossed the room to meet a group of
the neighbors, among them old Judge Woolworthy, in
a snuff-colored coat, high black stock, and bald head,
and his bustling little wife. Bart’s last
whisper to Lucy was in explanation of the little wife’s
manner who now, all bows and smiles, was
shaking hands with everybody about her.
Then came Uncle Ephraim Tipple, and
close beside him walked his spouse, Ann, in a camel’s-hair
shawl and poke-bonnet, the two preceded by Uncle Ephraim’s
stentorian laugh, which had been heard before their
feet had touched the porch outside. Mrs. Cromartin
now bustled in, accompanied by her two daughters slim,
awkward girls, both dressed alike in high waists and
short frocks; and after them the Bunsbys, father, mother,
and son all smiles, the last a painfully
thin young lawyer, in a low collar and a shock of
whitey-brown hair, “looking like a patent window-mop
resting against a wall,” so Lucy described him
afterward to Martha when she was putting her to bed;
and finally the Colfords and Bronsons, young and old,
together with Pastor Dellenbaugh, the white-haired
clergyman who preached in the only church in Warehold.
When Lucy had performed her duty and
the several greetings were over, and Uncle Ephraim
had shaken the hand of the young hostess in true pump-handle
fashion, the old man roaring with laughter all the
time, as if it were the funniest thing in the world
to find her alive; and the good clergyman in his mildest
and most impressive manner had said she grew more
and more like her mother every day which
was a flight of imagination on the part of the dear
man, for she didn’t resemble her in the least;
and the two thin girls had remarked that it must be
so “perfectly blissful” to get home; and
the young lawyer had complimented her on her wonderful,
almost life-like resemblance to her grand-father,
whose portrait hung in the court-house and
which was nearer the truth to all of which
the young girl replied in her most gracious tones,
thanking them for their kindness in coming to see her
and for welcoming her so cordially the
whole of Lucy’s mind once more reverted to Bart.
Indeed, the several lobes of her brain
had been working in opposition for the past hour.
While one-half of her mind was concocting polite speeches
for her guests the other was absorbed in the fear that
Bart would either get tired of waiting for her return
and leave the sofa, or that some other girl friend
of his would claim him and her delightful talk be
at an end.
To the young girl fresh from school
Bart represented the only thing in the room that was
entirely alive. The others talked platitudes and
themselves. He had encouraged her to talk of herself
and of the things she liked. He had, too, about
him an assurance and dominating personality which,
although it made her a little afraid of him, only
added to his attractiveness.
While she stood wondering how many
times the white-haired young lawyer would tell her
it was so nice to have her back, she felt a slight
pressure on her arm and turned to face Bart.
“You are wanted, please, Miss
Lucy; may I offer you my arm? Excuse me, Bunsby I’ll
give her to you again in a minute.”
Lucy slipped her arm into Bart’s,
and asked simply, “What for?”
“To finish our talk, of course.
Do you suppose I’m going to let that tow-head
monopolize you?” he answered, pressing her arm
closer to his side with his own.
Lucy laughed and tapped Bart with
her fan in rebuke, and then there followed a bit of
coquetry in which the young girl declared that he was
“too mean for anything, and that she’d
never seen anybody so conceited, and if he only knew,
she might really prefer the ‘tow head’
to his own;” to which Bart answered that his
only excuse was that he was so lonely he was nearly
dead, and that he had only come to save his life the
whole affair culminating in his conducting her back
to the sofa with a great flourish and again seating
himself beside her.
“I’ve been watching you,”
he began when he had made her comfortable with a small
cushion behind her shoulders and another for her pretty
feet. “You don’t act a bit like Miss
Jane.” As he spoke he leaned forward and
flicked an imaginary something from her bare wrist
with that air which always characterized his early
approaches to most women.
“Why?” Lucy asked, pleased
at his attentions and thanking him with a more direct
look.
“Oh, I don’t know.
You’re more jolly, I think. I don’t
like girls who turn out to be solemn after you know
them a while; I was afraid you might. You know
it’s a long time since I saw you.”
“Why, then, sister can’t
be solemn, for everybody says you and she are great
friends,” she replied with a light laugh, readjusting
the lace of her bodice.
“So we are; nobody about here
I think as much of as I do of your sister. She’s
been mighty good to me. But you know what I mean:
I mean those don’t-touch-me kind of girls who
are always thinking you mean a lot of things when
you’re only trying to be nice and friendly to
them. I like to be a brother to a girl and to
go sailing with her, and fishing, and not have her
bother me about her feet getting a little bit wet,
and not scream bloody murder when the boat gives a
lurch. That’s the kind of girl that’s
worth having.”
“And you don’t find them?”
laughed Lucy, looking at him out of the corners of
her eyes.
“Well, not many. Do you mind little things
like that?”
As he spoke his eyes wandered over
her bare shoulders until they rested on the blossoms,
the sort of roaming, critical eyes that often cause
a woman to wonder whether some part of her toilet
has not been carelessly put together. Then he
added, with a sudden lowering of his voice: “That’s
a nice posy you’ve got. Who sent it?”
and he bent his head as if to smell the cluster on
her bosom.
Lucy drew back and a slight flush
suffused her cheek; his audacity frightened her.
She was fond of admiration, but this way of expressing
it was new to her. The young man caught the movement
and recovered himself. He had ventured on a thin
spot, as was his custom, and the sound of the cracking
ice had warned him in time.
“Oh, I see, they’re apple
blossoms,” he added carelessly as he straightened
up. “We’ve got a lot in our orchard.
You like flowers, I see.” The even tone
and perfect self-possession of the young man reassured
her.
“Oh, I adore them; don’t
you?” Lucy answered in a relieved, almost apologetic
voice. She was sorry she had misjudged him.
She liked him rather the better now for her mistake.
“Well, that depends. Apple
blossoms never looked pretty to me before; but then
it makes a good deal of difference where they are,”
answered Bart with a low chuckle.
Jane had been watching the two and
had noticed. Bart’s position and manner.
His easy familiarity of pose offended her. Instinctively
she glanced about the room, wondering if any of her
guests had seen it. That Lucy did not resent
it surprised her. She supposed her sister’s
recent training would have made her a little more fastidious.
“Come, Lucy,” she called
gently, moving toward her, “bring Bart over
here and join the other girls.”
“All right, Miss Jane, we’ll
be there in a minute,” Bart answered in Lucy’s
stead. Then he bent his head and said in a low
voice:
“Won’t you give me half those blossoms?”
“No; it would spoil the bunch.”
“Please ”
“No, not a single one. You wouldn’t
care for them, anyway.”
“Yes, I would.” Here
he stretched out his hand and touched the blossoms
on her neck.
Lucy ducked her head in merry glee,
sprang up, and with a triumphant curtsy and a “No,
you don’t, sir not this time,”
joined her sister, followed by art.
The guests were now separated into
big and little groups. Uncle Ephraim and the
judge were hob-nobbing around the fireplace, listening
to Uncle Ephraim’s stories and joining in the
laughter which every now and then filled the room.
Captain Nat was deep in a discussion with Doctor John
over some seafaring matter, and Jane and Mrs. Benson
were discussing a local charity with Pastor Dellenbaugh.
The younger people being left to themselves
soon began to pair off, the white-haired young lawyer
disappearing with the older Miss Cromartin and Bart
soon following with Lucy: the outer porch
and the long walk down the garden path among the trees,
despite the chilliness of the night, seemed to be
the only place in which they could be comfortable.
During a lull in the discussion of
Captain Nat’s maritime news and while Mrs. Benson
was talking to the pastor, Doctor John seized the
opportunity to seat himself again by Jane.
“Don’t you think Lucy
improved?” she asked, motioning the doctor to
a place beside her.
“She’s much more beautiful
than I thought she would be,” he answered in
a hesitating way, looking toward Lucy, and seating
himself in his favorite attitude, hands in his lap,
one leg crossed over the other and hanging straight
beside its fellow; only a man like the doctor, of more
than usual repose and of a certain elegance of form,
Jane always said, could sit this way any length of
time and be comfortable and unconscious of his posture.
Then he added slowly, and as if he had given the subject
some consideration, “You won’t keep her
long, I’m afraid.”
“Oh, don’t say that,”
Jane cried with a nervous start. “I don’t
know what I would do if she should marry.”
“That don’t sound like
you, Miss Jane. You would be the first to deny
yourself. You are too good to do otherwise.”
He spoke with a slight quiver in his voice, and yet
with an emphasis that showed he believed it.
“No; it is you who are good
to think so,” she replied in a softer tone,
bending her head as she spoke, her eyes intent on her
fan. “And now tell me,” she added
quickly, raising her eyes to his as if to bar any
further tribute he might be on the point of paying
to her “I hear your mother takes
greatly to heart your having refused the hospital
appointment.”
“Yes, I’m afraid she does.
Mother has a good many new-fashioned notions nowadays.”
He laughed a mellow, genial laugh; more
in the spirit of apology than of criticism.
“And you don’t want to
go?” she asked, her eyes fixed on his.
“Want to go? No, why should
I? There would be nobody to look after the people
here if I went away. You don’t want me to
leave, do you?” he added suddenly in an anxious
tone.
“Nobody does, doctor,”
she replied, parrying the question, her face flushing
with pleasure.
Here Martha entered the room hurriedly
and bending over Jane’s shoulder, whispered
something in her ear. The doctor straightened
himself and leaned back out of hearing.
“Well, but I don’t think
she will take cold,” Jane whispered in return,
looking up into Martha’s face. “Has
she anything around her?”
“Yes, your big red cloak; but
the child’s head is bare and there’s mighty
little on her neck, and she ought to come in.
The wind’s begun to blow and it’s gettin’
cold.”
“Where is she?” Jane continued,
her face showing her surprise at Martha’s statement.
“Out by the gate with that dare-devil.
He don’t care who he gives cold. I told
her she’d get her death, but she won’t
mind me.”
“Why, Martha, how can you talk
so!” Jane retorted, with a disapproving frown.
Then raising her voice so that the doctor could be
brought into the conversation, she added in her natural
tone, “Whom did you say she was with?”
“Bart Holt,” cried Martha
aloud, nodding to the doctor as if to get his assistance
in saving her bairn from possible danger.
Jane colored slightly and turned to Doctor John.
“You go please, doctor, and
bring them all in, or you may have some new patients
on your hands.”
The doctor looked from one to the
other in doubt as to the cause of his selection, but
Jane’s face showed none of the anxiety in Martha’s.
“Yes, certainly,” he answered
simply; “but I’ll get myself into a hornet’s
nest. These young people don’t like to be
told what’s good for them,” he added with
a laugh, rising from his seat. “And after
that you’ll permit me to slip away without telling
anybody, won’t you? My last minute has
come,” and he glanced at his watch.
“Going so soon? Why, I
wanted you to stay for supper. It will be ready
in a few minutes.” Her voice had lost its
buoyancy now. She never wanted him to go.
She never let him know it, but it pained her all the
same.
“I would like to, but I cannot.”
All his heart was in his eyes as he spoke.
“Someone ill?” she asked.
“Yes, Fogarty’s child.
The little fellow may develop croup before morning.
I saw him to-day, and his pulse was not right, he’s
a sturdy little chap with a thick neck, and that kind
always suffers most. If he’s worse Fogarty
is to send word to my office,” he added, holding
out his hand in parting.
“Can I help?” Jane asked,
retaining the doctor’s hand in hers as if to
get the answer.
“No, I’ll watch him closely.
Good-night,” and with a smile he bent his head
and withdrew.
Martha followed the doctor to the
outer door, and then grumbling her satisfaction went
back to the pantry to direct the servants in arranging
upon the small table in the supper-room the simple
refreshments which always characterized the Cobdens’
entertainments.
Soon the girls and their beaux came
trooping in to join their elders on the way to the
supper-room. Lucy hung back until the last (she
had not liked the doctor’s interference), Jane’s
long red cloak draped from her shoulders, the hood
hanging down her back, her cheeks radiant, her beautiful
blond hair ruffled with the night wind, an aureole
of gold framing her face. Bart followed close
behind, a pleased, almost triumphant smile playing
about his lips.
He had carried his point. The
cluster of blossoms which had rested upon Lucy’s
bosom was pinned to the lapel of his coat.