Father Time has an unfortunate habit
of scudding along at a tremendously rapid pace over
the delightful roads of life. It is only when
the ways are rough and stony that he is prone to lag
and linger. To the reunionists the prospect of
a week spent together had offered limitless possibilities.
Once that coveted period of time had become theirs,
it proceeded to vanish in an alarming fashion.
On Monday they had congratulated themselves and one
another that six glorious days were still theirs.
By Wednesday they had begun to mourn that only four
were left them.
Life at the Briggs’ cottage
offered a ceaseless succession of wholesome pleasures.
Early morning invariably found the reunionists strengthening
their acquaintance with the ocean. Breakfast over,
a bathing suit procession to the nearby beach became
the usual order of things. They spent long sunny
hours playing about in the surf, or stretched at ease
on the white sand, exchanging an apparently exhaustless
flow of light-hearted conversation relating to almost
everything under the sun. Imbued with tireless
energy, their afternoons brought them fresh entertainment
in the way of long automobile rides to various points
of interest, followed by jolly little teas or dinners
along the way. The annual excursion to Picnic
Hollow, which claimed the greater part of a whole
day, was also a memorable occasion. Evening, however,
usually overtook them at the cottage. By common
consent they tabooed the more formal social entertainment
which the various hostelries at Wildwood offered.
Only on one occasion did they diverge from their clannish
programme in order to attend an informal hop given
by Elfreda’s friend, Madge Morton, at her father’s
cottage.
During their stay at the Briggs’
cottage the previous summer, they had been given the
opportunity of meeting this charming young girl.
Shortly after their arrival she had come over from
the Morton cottage to pay them a friendly call.
Greatly attracted to her, on first meeting they had
greeted her warmly and invited her to share their good
times.
Madge and Grace had a bond in common
in that while Grace was preparing to be married to
Tom Gray, Madge was trying to decide whether or not
she should pledge herself to marry Tom Curtis.
Before the week ended she had confided her problem
to Grace and the two girls discussed the subject long
and earnestly. Yet despite such friendly counsel
as Grace felt privileged to give, Madge could come
to no definite decision.
Though five days of smiling sunshine
had added immeasurably to the welfare of the devoted
company, Saturday morning dawned gray and threatening.
Before breakfast was over the ominous prediction of
storm was fulfilled. Amid reverberating peals
of thunder, heavy raindrops began to fall. They
were merely the prelude to a furious downpour which
descended in silvery sheets, and fairly overflowed
the discouraged landscape. A strong wind rose,
lashing the leaden expanse of sea into a white-capped
fury quite foreign to its hitherto deceitfully dimpled
aspect.
“It’s a horrible day,”
conceded Elfreda Briggs gloomily. “We can’t
do any of the things we’ve planned. No
bathing, no motor trip, either, unless this deluge
stops, which doesn’t seem likely.”
“Oh, it may clear up,”
comforted Emma Dean. “I’ve seen worse
days than this suddenly brace up and smile. Let’s
possess our souls in patience. Incidental to
the process we might restore the shattered faith of
some of our deluded correspondents. During the
past six days it has pained me to observe the postman
arrive, full-handed, to turn away, alas, empty-handed.
I ask you as man to man why this thusness?
Now that we are about to depart, it might be well
to apprise our neglected families of the fact.”
“Emma, you are a noble woman,”
declared Miriam with deep conviction. “I
may not have noticed it before, but better late than
never. I move that we organize a writing school
in the living-room for the purpose of squaring ourselves
with our too-trusting families and friends.”
“What’s the use in writing
home now?” demanded Julia Emerson. “Sara
and I would get there almost as soon as our letters.
We have to go to-morrow, you know.”
“I know.” Emma held
her handkerchief ostentatiously to her eyes. “Never
mind. You may write to me. You know
I have always admired your nice vertical handwriting.
It takes me back to my first-reader days.”
“Sorry I can’t oblige
you,” giggled Julia, “but I’m not
in the mood for letter writing. I’m going
to pack my trunk and send it to the station before
Sara has a chance to stuff half of her belongings into
it.”
“Such sisterly devotion,” murmured Emma.
“Oh, I don’t mind,”
was Sara’s cheerful comment. “I’ve
already packed my sweater and two dresses in Julia’s
trunk. You’d better leave them there, Julia,
I haven’t an inch of room left in my trunk to
squeeze them into. It is already jammed so full
that you’ll have to sit on the lid when I get
ready to lock it.”
“Stung!” was Julia’s
inelegant comment. “This is what comes of
being a twin. I think I’d better hurry
and gobble up the small trunk space that is left me;
otherwise I may have to carry a large part of my wardrobe
home in a bundle.” Dread of such a contingency
sent her fleeing up the stairs in hot pursuit of her
own welfare, oblivious to the pleasantries which Emma
and Sara called after her as she ran.
Seated around the long library table
in the living-room, the correspondence party made
an attractive picture as, with earnest faces, they
bent themselves to the arduous task of letter-writing.
With the exception of Grace, all present were soon
hard at work. One hand resting lightly on a sheet
of the monogrammed paper which Elfreda had provided
in profusion, with her other hand Grace nervously gripped
her fountain pen. Should she or should she not
write to Tom? Although she owed the usual amount
of letters to various correspondents, she now thought
only of writing to the man for whose strange silence
she could not account. It was Tom’s place
to write her. She had answered his first letter.
Yet she could not believe that carelessness was responsible
for his silence. Something must have happened
to him. But what? She knitted her brows in
an agony of indecision, then giving her pen an energetic
shake that betokened definite purpose, she began:
“DEAR TOM:
“It is now over
a week since last I heard from you. What ”
The loud ring of the doorbell caused
her to break off abruptly the sentence she had begun.
With that curious intuition which sometimes manifests
itself unbidden, she was seized with the startled conviction
that the bell had conveyed the news of an arrival important
to herself. Listening with an anxiety she could
not yet understand, she heard a man’s deep tones
raised in inquiry. Then came the lighter voice
of the maid who had answered the door. Then
“Miss Harlowe,” the maid
had entered the living-room and addressed her, “there’s
a special delivery letter come for you. Will you
please sign for it?”
“Thank you, Alice.”
Grace sprang to her feet and hurried into the hall.
The messenger handed her a letter and shoved his book
toward her, indicating the place for her signature.
Hastily signing and returning the book, Grace dismissed
the man, and sank to the oak settee in the hall, her
heart thumping wildly. She had already recognized
the handwriting on the envelope, not as Tom’s
familiar flowing hand, but as the spidery, wavering
script of Mrs. Gray. With trembling fingers she
tore open the envelope and read:
“DEAR GRACE:
“Have you heard from Tom?
I am dreadfully worried. I have only received
the one letter from him of which you already know.
It is not in the least like him to thus put off
writing me. He knew before he went that
I should be uneasy about him, and promised faithfully
to write me every other day. For the sake of your
anxious and bewildered Fairy Godmother, will you
come to me as soon as possible, if you have not
heard from him? If so, then telegraph me
to that effect and I shall rest easier. I have
put off writing you from day to day, in the hope
that I might receive news of my boy, and also
because I could not bear to spoil your pleasure.
But as it is now Friday and you will receive
this on Saturday, I know that if you have received
no word from him, you will not mind coming home
a day earlier than you had planned. Once we are
together again, we can decide on some method of
action. Thus far I have done nothing.
Believe me, my dear, only my great anxiety compels
me to ask you to make this sacrifice.
“Yours lovingly,
“ROSE GRAY.”
The letter sliding from her nerveless
fingers, Grace saw her surroundings through a swirling
mist. For a moment or two she yielded to the
terror that clutched at her heart. Her sturdy
nature reasserting itself, she rose, recovered the
letter and walked slowly into the living-room.
“Girls,” she said, her
voice a trifle unsteady, “I must leave you at
once. I Mrs. Gray needs me and has
sent for me. I am sorry I can’t tell you
the reason. I am sure you will understand that
I am giving you as much of my confidence as I can.”
She paused, her gray eyes looking utter affection
on the startled group about the table. “I
want you to promise to finish the reunion just as
happily as though I were with you. Later, perhaps
I can tell you what I mayn’t tell you now.
It is not yet eleven o’clock, so I am sure I
can catch the noon express.”
Grace’s remarkable announcement
drove the business of letter-writing to the winds.
A bevy of sympathetic girls gathered about her, sending
up a concerted lament. Yet none ventured to inquire
into the cause of her departure, or to ask her to
reconsider her decision to depart at once. Loyal
to the core, her wish was their law. Each eagerly
offered her services in behalf of the love they bore
her. Torn though she was by the shock of this
new sorrow, Grace could not help thinking as she stood
there, how gloriously worthy were these staunch comrades
to bear the name Semper Fidelis.