So Brian wrote his book that winter.
When the days were fair, he worked
with his ax on the mountain-side. But his notebook
was ever at hand, and many a thought that went down
on the pages of his manuscript was born while he wrought
with his hands in the wholesome labor which gave strength
to his body and clearness to his brain. In the
evenings, he wrote in the little log house by the river,
with Auntie Sue sitting in her chair beside the table, the
lamp-light on her silvery hair, and her sewing-basket
within reach of her hand, engaged with
some bit of needlework, a book, or perhaps with one
of her famous letters to some other pupil, far away.
The stormy days gave him many hours with his pen,
and so the book grew.
And always as the man endeavored to
shape his thoughts for the printed pages that would
carry his message to the doubting, disconsolate, and
fearful world that he knew so well, he heard in his
heart the voices of the river. From the hillside
where he worked in the timber he could see the stream
winding through the snowy hills like a dark line carelessly
drawn with many a crook and curve and break on the
sheet of white. From the porch he saw the quiet
Bend a belt of shining ice and snow, save for a narrow
line in the centre, which marked the course of the
strongest currents; while the waters of the rapids
crashed black and dreadful against the Elbow Rock
cliff, which stood gaunt and grim amid the surrounding
whiteness; and in the deathlike hush of the winter
twilight, the roar of the turmoil sounded with persistent
menace. And all that the river said to him he
put down, so far as it was given him to
do.
And that which Brian Kent wrote was
good. He knew it in his deepest, truest
self he knew. And Auntie Sue knew it; for, of
course, he read to her from his manuscript as the
book grew under his hand. Even Judy caught much
of his story’s meaning, and marvelled at herself
because she, too, could understand.
So the spring came, and the first
writing of the book was nearly finished.
And now the question arose: What
would they do about the final preparation of the manuscript
for the printers? Brian explained that he should
have a typewritten copy of his script, which he would
work over, correct, and revise, and from which perfected
copy the final manuscript would be typewritten.
But neither Auntie Sue nor Brian would consider his
finishing the book anywhere but in the little log house
by the river; even if there had been no other reason
why Brian should not go to the city, if it could be
avoided.
“There is only one thing to
do,” said Auntie Sue, at last, when
the matter had been discussed several times, “we
must send for Betty Jo. She has been studying
stenography in a business college in Cincinnati, and,
in her latest letter to me, she wrote that she would
finish in April. I’ll just write her to
come right here, and bring her typewriter along.
She will need a vacation, and she can have it and do
your work at the same time. Besides, I need to
see Betty Jo. She hasn’t been to visit
me since before Judy came.”
Brian thought that Auntie Sue seemed
a little nervous and excited as she spoke, but he
attributed it to her combined interest in the book
and in the proposed typist. The man could not
know the real cause of his gentle old companion’s
agitation, nor with what anxiety she had considered
the matter for many days before she announced her
plan. The fact was that Auntie Sue was taking
a big chance, and she realized it fully. But
she could find no other way to secure the services
of a competent stenographer for Brian, and, as Brian
must have a competent stenographer in order to finish
his book properly, she had decided to accept the risk.
“That sounds all right, Auntie
Sue,” returned Brian. “But who, pray
tell, is Betty Jo?”
“Betty Jo is,” Auntie
Sue paused and laughed with a suggestion of embarrassed
confusion, “Betty Jo is just
Betty Jo, Brian,” she finished.
Brian laughed now. “Fine,
Auntie Sue! That describes her exactly, tells
me her life’s history and gives me a detailed
account of her family, ancestors and all.”
“It describes her with more
accuracy than you think,” retorted Auntie Sue,
smiling in return at his teasing manner.
“I reckon as how she’s
got more of er name than that, ain’t she?”
said Judy, who was a silent, but intensely interested,
listener. “I’ve allus took notice
that folks with funny names’ll stand a right
smart of watchin’.”
Brian and Auntie Sue laughed together
at this, but the old lady said, with a show of spirit:
“Judy! You know nothing about it! You
never even saw Betty Jo! You shouldn’t
say such things, child.”
“Might as well say ’em
as ter think ’em, I reckon,” Judy returned,
her beady-black eyes stealthily watching Brian.
“What is your Betty Jo’s
real name, Auntie Sue?” asked Brian, curiously.
Again Auntie Sue seemed to hesitate;
then “Her name is Miss Betty Jo Williams,”
and as she spoke the old teacher looked straight at
Brian.
“A perfectly good name,”
Brian returned; “but I never heard of her before.”
Judy’s black eyes, with their
stealthy, oblique look, were now watchfully fixed
on Auntie Sue.
“She is the orphan-niece of
one of my old pupils,” Auntie Sue continued.
“I have known her since she was a baby.
When she finished her education in the seminary, and
had travelled abroad for a few months, she decided
all at once that she wanted a course in a business
college, which was just what any one knowing her would
expect her to do.”
“Sounds steady and reliable,”
commented Brian. “But will she come?”
“Yes, indeed, she will, and
be tickled to death over the job,” returned
Auntie Sue. “I’ll write her at once.”
While Auntie Sue was preparing to
write her letter, Judy muttered, in a tone which only
Brian heard: “Just the same, ’tain’t
no name for a common gal ter have; hit sure ain’t.
There’s somethin’ dad burned queer ’bout
hit somewhere.”
“Nonsense! Judy,”
said Brian in a low voice; “don’t worry
Auntie Sue.”
“I ain’t aimin’
ter worry her none,” returned the mountain girl;
“but I’ll bet you-all a pretty that this
here gal’ll worry both of youuns ’fore
you are through with her; me, too, I reckon.”
For some reason, Auntie Sue’s
letter to Betty Jo seemed to be rather long.
In fact, she spent the entire evening at it; which
led Judy to remark that “hit sure looked like
Auntie Sue was aimin’ ter write a book herself.”
A neighbor who went to Thompsonville
the following day with a load of hogs for shipment,
posted the letter. And, in due time, another neighbor
brought the answer. Betty Jo would come.
It was the day following the evening
when Brian wrote the last page of his book that another
letter came to Auntie Sue, a letter which,
for the second time, very nearly wrecked Brian Kent’s
world.