The most careless eye would have seen
instantly that the newcomer was not a native of that
backwoods district. She was not a large woman,
but there was, nevertheless, a full, rounded strength,
which saved her trim and rather slender body from
appearing small. Neither would a discriminating
observer describe her by that too-common term “pretty.”
She was more than that. In her large, gray eyes,
there was a look of frank, straightforward interest
that suggested an almost boyish good-fellowship, while
at the same time there was about her a general air
of good breeding; with a calm, self-possessed and businesslike
alertness which, combined with a wholesome dignity,
commanded a feeling of respect and confidence.
Her voice was clear and musical, with an undertone
of sympathetic humor. One felt when she spoke
that while she lacked nothing of intelligent understanding
and sympathetic interest, she was quite ready to laugh
at you just the same.
When the two stood speechless, she
said, looking straight at Brian: “It seems
to me, sir, that the young lady has all the best of
the argument. But I really think she should have
some dry clothes as well.”
She turned to the dripping and dishevelled
Judy: “You poor child. Aren’t
you cold! It is rather early in the season for
a dip in the river, I should think. Let me take
whatever you have there, and you make for the house
as fast as you can go, the run will warm
you.”
As she spoke, she went to the mountain
girl, holding out her hand to take the manuscript,
and smiling encouragingly.
But Judy backed away, her stealthy,
oblique gaze fixed with watchful surprise on the fair
stranger.
“This here ain’t none
of your put-in,” and her shrill drawling monotone
contrasted strangely with the other’s pleasing
voice. “Where’d you-all happen from,
anyhow? How’d you-all git here?”
“I came over the bluff by the
path,” answered the other. “You see,
I left the train from the south at White’s Crossing
because I knew I could drive up from there by the
river road quicker than I could go by rail away around
through the hills to Thompsonville, and then make the
drive down the river from there. When I reached
Elbow Rock, I was in such a hurry, I took the short
cut, while the man with my trunk and things went by
the road over Schoolhouse Hill, you know. I arrived
here just as this gentleman was pulling you from the
water.”
Before Brian could speak, Judy returned
with excitement: “I know who you-all be
now. I ought ter knowed the minute I set eyes
on you. You-all are the gal with that there no-’count
name, an’ you’ve come ter work for him,
there,” she pointed to Brian, “a-helpin’
him ter write his book, what ain’t his’n
no more, nohow, ’cause he done throwed hit away, plumb
inter the river.”
“I am Miss Williams,”
returned the other. “My ‘no-’count
name,’ I suppose, is Betty Jo.” She
laughed kindly. “Perhaps it won’t
seem so ‘no’count’ when we are better
acquainted, Judy. Won’t you run along to
the house, and change to some dry clothes? You
will catch your death of cold if you stand here like
this.”
“How’d you-all know I was Judy?”
“Why, Auntie Sue wrote me about you, of course.”
“An’ you knowed me ‘cause
I’m so all crooked an’ ugly, I reckon,”
came the uncompromising return.
Betty Jo turned to Brian: “You
are Mr. Burns, are you not, for whom I am to work?”
Brian made no reply, he
really could not speak. “And this,” Betty
Jo included Judy, the manuscript, and the river in
a graceful gesture, “this, I suppose,
is the result of what is called ’the artistic
temperament’?”
Still the man could find no words.
The young woman’s presence and her reference
to his work brought to him, with overwhelming vividness,
the memory of all to which he had so short a time
before looked forward, and which was now so hopelessly
lost to him. He felt, too, a sense of rebellion
that she should have come at such a moment, that
she could stand there with such calm self-possession
and with such an air of competency. Her confidence
and poise in such contrast to the chaotic turmoil
of his own thoughts, and his utter helplessness in
the situation which had so suddenly burst upon him,
filled him with unreasoning resentment.
Betty Jo must have read in Brian Kent’s
face something of the suffering that held him there
dumb and motionless before her, and so sensed a deeper
tragedy than appeared on the surface of the incident;
and her own face and voice revealed her understanding
as she said, with quiet, but decisive, force:
“Mr. Burns, Judy must go to the house. Won’t
you persuade her?”
Brian started as one aroused from
deep abstraction, and went to Judy; while Betty Jo
drew a little way apart, and stood looking out over
the river.
“Give me the manuscript, Judy,”
said Brian gently, “and go on to the house.”
“You-all ain’t a-goin’
ter sling hit inter the river again?” The words
were half-question and half-assertion.
“No,” said Brian.
“I promise not to throw it into the river again.”
As Judy gave him the manuscript, she
turned her beady eyes in a stealthy, oblique look
toward Betty Jo, and whispered: “You-all
best tell her ’bout hit. I sure hate her
poison-bad; but hit’s easy ter see she’d
sure know what ter do.”
“Be careful that Auntie Sue
doesn’t see you like this, Judy,” was
Brian’s only answer; and Judy started off for
her much-needed change to dry clothing.
When the mountain girl was gone, Brian
stood looking at the water-stained volume of manuscript
in his hand. He had no feeling, now, of more
than a curious idle interest in this work to which,
during the months just past, he had given so without
reserve the best of himself. It was, he thought,
strange how he could regard with such indifference
a thing for which a few hours before he would have
given his life. Dumbly, he was conscious of the
truth of Judy’s words, that the book
was no longer his. Judy was right this
book which he had called his had always been, in reality,
Auntie Sue’s. So the matter of his work,
at least so far as he had to do with it, was settled definitely
and finally settled.
But what of himself? What was
to become of him? Of one thing only he was certain
about himself; he never could face Auntie
Sue again. Knowing, now, what he had done, and
knowing that she knew; that all the time
she was nursing him back to health, all the time she
had been giving him the inspiration and strength and
peace of her gentle, loving companionship, in the
safe and quiet harbor of her little house by the river,
she had known that it was he who had A
clear, matter-of-fact, but gentle, voice interrupted
his bitter thoughts: “Is it so very badly
damaged, Mr. Burns?”
He had forgotten Betty Jo, who now
stood close beside him.
“Let me see?” She held
out her hand as he turned slowly to face her.
Without a word, he gave her the manuscript.
Very businesslike and practical, but
with an underlying feeling of tenderness that was
her most compelling charm, Betty Jo examined the water-stained
volume.
“Why, no,” she announced
cheerfully; “it isn’t really hurt much.
You see, the sheets being tied together so tightly,
the water didn’t get all the way through.
The covers and the first and last pages are pretty
wet, and the edges of the rest are rather damp.
It’ll be smudged somewhat, but I don’t
believe there is a single word that can’t be
made out. It is lucky it didn’t prolong
its bath, though, isn’t it? All we need
to do, now, is to put it in the sun to dry for a few
minutes.”
Selecting a sunny spot near by, she
arranged the volume against a stone and deftly separated
the pages so that the air could circulate more freely
between them; and one would have said, from her manner
of ready assurance, that she had learned from long
experience exactly how to dry a manuscript that had
been thrown in the river and rescued just in the nick
of time. That was Betty Jo’s way. She
always did everything without hesitation, just
as though she had spent the twenty-three years of her
life doing exactly that particular thing.
Kneeling over the manuscript, and
gently moving the wet sheets, she said, without looking
up: “Do you always bath your manuscripts
like this before you turn them over to your stenographer
to type, Mr. Burns?”
In spite of his troubled state of mind, Brian smiled.
The clear, matter-of-fact voice went
on, while the competent hands moved the drying pages.
“You see, I never worked for an author before.
I suspect I have a lot to learn.”
She looked up at him with a Betty
Jo smile that went straight to his heart, as Betty
Jo’s smiles had a curious way of doing.
“I hope you will be very patient
with me, Mr. Burns. You will, won’t you?
There is no real danger of your throwing me in
the river when the ‘artistic temperament’
possesses you, is there?”
It was no use. When Betty Jo
set out to make a man talk, that man talked.
Brian yielded not ungracefully: “I owe you
an apology, Miss Williams,” he said.
“Indeed, no,” Betty Jo
returned, giving her attention to the manuscript again.
“It is easy to see that you are terribly upset
about something; and everybody is so accustomed to
being upset in one way or another that apologies for
upsetments are quite an unnecessary bother, aren’t
they?”
That was another interestingly curious
thing about Betty Jo, the way she could
finish off a characteristic, matter-of-fact statement
with a question which had the effect of making one
agree instantly whether one agreed or not.
Brian felt himself quite unexpectedly
feeling that “upsetments” were quite common,
ordinary, and to be expected events in one’s
life. “But I am really in very serious
trouble, Miss Williams,” he said in a way that
sounded oddly to Brian himself, as though he were trying
to convince himself that his trouble really was serious.
Betty Jo rose to her feet, and looked
straight at him, and there was no mistaking the genuineness
of the interest expressed in those big gray eyes.
“Oh, are you? Is it really
so serious? I am so sorry. But don’t
you think you better tell me about it, Mr. Burns?
If I am to work for you, I may just as well begin
right here, don’t you think?”
There it was again, that
trick-question. Brian felt himself agreeing in
spite of himself, though how he was to explain his
painful situation to this young woman whom, until
a few minutes before, he had never even seen, he did
not know. He answered cautiously, speaking half
to himself: “That is what Judy said.”
Betty Jo did not understand, and made
no pretense, she never made a pretense
of anything. “What did Judy say?”
she asked.
“That I had better tell you about it,”
he answered.
And the matter-of-fact Betty Jo returned:
“Judy seems to be a very particular and common-sensing
sort of Judy, doesn’t she?”
And Brian realized all at once that
Judy was exactly what Betty Jo said.
“But, I I don’t
see how I can tell you, Miss Williams.”
“Why?” laughed Betty Jo.
“It is perfectly simple, Mr. Burns, here, now,
I’ll show you: You are to sit down there
on that nice comfortable rock, that is
your big office-chair, you know, and I’ll
sit right here on this rock, which is my
little stenography-chair, and you will just
explain the serious business proposition to me with
careful attention to details. I must tell you
that ‘detailing’ is one of my strong points,
so don’t spare me. I really should have
my notebook, shouldn’t I?”
Again, in spite of himself, Brian
smiled; also, before he was aware, they were both
seated as Betty Jo had directed.
“But this is not a business
matter, Miss Williams,” he managed to protest
half-heartedly.
Betty Jo was looking at her watch
in a most matter-of-fact manner, and she answered
in a most matter-of-fact voice: “Everything
is more or less a business matter, isn’t it,
Mr. Burns?”
And Brian, if he had answered, would have agreed.
Betty Jo slipped her watch back into
her pocket, and continued: “You will have
plenty of time before that man with my trunk and things
can get away ’round over Schoolhouse Hill and
down again to Auntie Sue’s. He will be
obliged to stop at neighbor Tom’s, and tell them
all about me, of course. We mustn’t let
him beat us to the house, though; so, perhaps, you
better begin, don’t you think?”
That “don’t-you-think?”
so characteristic of Betty Jo, did its work, as usual;
and so, almost before Brian Kent realized what he was
doing, it had been decided for him that to follow
Judy’s advice was the best possible thing he
could do, and he was relating his whole wretched experience
to this young woman, about whom he knew nothing except
that she was a niece of an old pupil of Auntie Sue’s,
and that she had just finished a course in a business
college in Cincinnati.
At several points in his story Betty
Jo asked straightforward questions, or made short,
matter-of-fact comments; but, always with her businesslike
air of competent interest. Indeed, she managed
to treat the situation as being wholly impersonal;
while at the same time the man was never for a moment
made to feel that she was lacking in sincere and genuine
sympathy. Only when he told her that his name
was Brian Kent, and mentioned the Empire Consolidated
Savings Bank, did she for the moment betray excited
surprise. When she saw that he had noticed, she
said quickly: “I read of the affair in the
papers, of course.”
Auntie Sue had indeed taken a big
chance when she decided for Betty Jo to come to help
Brian with his book. But Auntie Sue had taken
no chance on Betty Jo herself. Perhaps it was,
in fact, the dear old teacher’s certainty about
Betty Jo herself that had led her to accept the risk
of sending for the niece of her friend and pupil under
such a peculiar combination of circumstances.
When Brian had finished his story
with the account of his discovery of the distressing
fact that he had robbed Auntie Sue and that she knew
he had robbed her, Betty Jo said: “It is
really a sad story, isn’t it, Mr. Burns?
But, oh, isn’t Auntie Sue wonderful! Was
there ever such another woman in the world! Don’t
you love her? And couldn’t you do anything anything
that would make her happy? After all, when you
think of Auntie Sue, and how wonderful she has been,
this whole thing isn’t so bad, is it?”
“Why, I I don’t
think I see what you mean,” Brian replied, puzzled
by the unexpected turn she had given to the situation,
yet convinced by that little question with which she
finished that she was somehow right.
“Well, I mean wouldn’t
you love to do for some one what Auntie Sue has
done for you? I should if I were only big enough
and good enough. It seems to me it would make
one the happiest and contentedest and peacefulest
person in the world, wouldn’t it?”
Brian did not answer. While he
felt himself agreeing with Betty Jo’s view,
he was wondering at himself that he could discuss the
matter so calmly. It was not that he no longer
felt deeply the shame of this terrible thing that
he had done; it was not that he had ceased to suffer
the torment that had caused his emotional madness,
which had found expression in his attempt to destroy
his manuscript; it was only that this young woman
somehow made it possible for him to retain his self-control,
and instead of venting his emotions in violent and
wholly useless expressions of regret, and self-condemnation,
and in irrational, temperamental action, to consider
coolly and sanely what he must do. He was strangely
possessed, too, of an instinctive certainty that Betty
Jo knew exactly how he felt and exactly what she was
doing.
While he was thinking these things,
or, rather, feeling them, Betty Jo went to see how
the manuscript was drying. She returned to her
seat on the rock presently, saying: “It
is doing very nicely, almost dry. I
think it will be done pretty soon. In the meantime,
what are we going to do about everything? You
have thought of something for you to do, of course!”
“I fear I have felt rather more
than I have thought,” returned Brian.
She nodded. “Yes, I know;
but feeling alone never arrives anywhere. An
excess of thoughtless feeling is sheer emotional extravagance.
I sound like a book, don’t I?” she laughed.
“It is so just the same, Mr. Burns. And
now that you have ah been properly not
to say gloriously extravagant at poor Judy’s
expense, we had better do a little thinking, don’t
you think?”
The man’s cheeks reddened at
her words; but the straightforward, downright sincerity
of those gray eyes, that looked so frankly into his,
held him steady; while the interrogation at the end
of her remark carried its usual conviction.
“There is only one possible
thing left for me to do, Miss Williams,” he
said earnestly.
“And what is that?” A
smile that sent a glow of courage to Brian Kent’s
troubled heart accompanied the flat question.
“I can’t face Auntie Sue
again, knowing what I know now.” He spoke
with passion.
“Of course you would expect
to feel that way, wouldn’t you?” came the
matter-of-fact answer.
“The only thing I can do,”
he continued, “is to give myself up, and go
to the penitentiary; arranging, somehow, to do it in
such a way that the reward will go to Auntie Sue.
God knows she deserves it! Sheriff Knox would
help me fix that part, I am sure.”
For a moment there was a suspicious
moisture in Betty Jo’s gray eyes. Then
she said, “And you would really go to prison
for Auntie Sue?”
“It is the least I can do for her now,”
he returned.
And Betty Jo must have felt the sincerity
of his purpose, for she said, softly: “I
am sure that it would make Auntie Sue very happy to
know that you would do that; and” she
added “I know that you could not possibly
make her more unhappy and miserable than by doing it,
could you?”
Again she had given an unexpected
turn to the subject with the usual convincing question-mark.
“But what can I do?” he
demanded, letting himself go a little.
Betty Jo steadied him with: “Well,
suppose you listen while I consider? Did I tell
you that ‘considering’ was another of my
strong points, Mr. Burns? Well, it is. You
may consider me while I consider, if you please.
“The first thing is, that you
must make Auntie Sue happy, as happy as
you possibly can do at any cost. The second thing
is, that you must pay her back that money, every penny
of it. Now, it wouldn’t make her happy
for you to go to prison, and the reward wouldn’t
pay back all the money; and if you were in prison,
you never could pay the rest; besides, if you were
wasting your time in prison, she would just die of
miserableness, and she wouldn’t touch a penny
of that reward-money not if she was to
die for want of it. So that settles that, doesn’t
it?”
And Brian was forced to admit that,
as Betty Jo put it, it did.
“Very well, let us consider
some more: Dear Auntie Sue has been wonderfully,
gloriously happy in doing what she has for you this
past winter, meaning your book and all.
I can see that she must have been. No one could
help being happy doing such a thing as that. So
you just simply can’t spoil it all, now, by
letting her know that you know what you know.”
Brian started to speak, but she checked
him with: “Please, Mr. Burns, I must not
be interrupted when I am considering. Next to
the prison, which we have agreed won’t
do at all, you could do nothing that would
make Auntie Sue more unhappy than to spoil the happiness
she has in your not knowing what you have done to
her. That is very clear, isn’t it?
And think of her miserableness if, after all these
weeks of happy anticipation, your book should never
be published. No, no, no; you can’t rob
Auntie Sue of her happiness in you just because you
stole her money, can you?”
And Brian knew in his heart that she was right.
“So, you see,” Betty Jo
continued, “the only possible way to do is to
go right along just as if nothing had happened.
And there is this final consideration, which
must be a dark secret between you and me, when
the book is finished, you must see to it that every
penny that comes from it goes to Auntie Sue until
she is paid back all that she lost through you.
Now, isn’t that pretty fine ‘considering,’
Mr. Burns?”
And Brian was convinced that it was.
“But,” he suggested, “the book may
not earn anything. Nothing that I ever wrote before
did.”
“You never wrote one before
just like this, did you?” came the very matter-of-fact
answer. “And, besides, if your book never
earns a cent, it will do Auntie Sue a world more good
than your going to prison for her. That would
be rather silly, now that you think of it, wouldn’t
it? And now that we have our conspiracy all nicely
conspired, we must hurry to the house before that
man arrives with my things.”
She went for the manuscript as she
spoke. “See,” she cried, “it
is quite dry, and not a bit the worse for its temperamental
experience!” She laughed gleefully.
“But, Miss Williams,”
exclaimed Brian, “I I can’t
understand you! You don’t seem to mind.
What I have told you about myself doesn’t seem
to to make any difference to
you I mean in your attitude toward me.”
“Oh, yes, it does,” she
returned. “It makes me very interested in
you, Mr. Burns.”
“But, how can you have any confidence How
can you help me with my book now that you know what
I am?” he persisted, for he was sincerely puzzled
by her apparent indifference to the revelation he had
made of his character.
“Auntie Sue,” she
answered, “just Auntie Sue. Come, we
must go.”
“How in the world can I ever face her!”
groaned Brian.
“You won’t get the chance
at her, for awhile, with me around; she
will be so busy with me that she won’t notice
anything wrong with you. So you will get accustomed
to the conspiracy feeling before you are even suspected
of conspiring. You know, when one has once arrived
at the state of not feeling like a liar, one can lie
with astonishing success. Haven’t you found
it so?”
They laughed together over this as
they went toward the house.
As they reached the porch, Betty Jo
whispered a last word of instruction: “You
better find Judy, and fix her the first thing; fix
her good and hard. Here is Auntie Sue now.
Don’t worry about her noticing anything strange
about you. I’ll attend to her.”
And the next minute, Betty Jo had
the dear old lady in her arms.