As the twilight of a perfect September
day deepened into purple night, a little company of
persons crossed the threshold of the quaint Little
Church Around the Corner. Though few in number
it was a gathering strongly fortified by warm affection.
The several passers-by who chanced to see this small
procession enter the unpretentious sanctuary had no
difficulty in divining their purpose or singling out
the chief participants in the affair. The face
of the beautiful, dark-eyed girl, gowned in a smart
tailored coat suit of brown, wore the shy radiance
of a bride. The tall, distinguished-looking man
who accompanied her was easily identified as the happy
party of the second part.
Though destiny had taken an unexpected
hand in Miriam Nesbit’s wedding plans, she was
perhaps better satisfied to make her vows of life-long
devotion in the presence of only those she had known
best. Miss Southard, Mrs. Nesbit, David, Anne,
Grace, Hippy, Nora and Mrs. Gray were present, as
Miriam’s nearest, and undoubtedly her dearest.
Second in her regard were J. Elfreda Briggs, Arline
Thayer, Kathleen West and Mabel Ashe, whose residence
in or near New York made their attendance possible.
Greatly to the regret of all concerned, Jessica and
Reddy had been unable to come to the wedding.
Though a decided air of informality permeated the
little assemblage, the always impressive ceremony of
marriage had never seemed more sacred to the chosen
few. At Miriam’s earnest request they grouped
themselves about her, a fond guard, while the minister,
Everett Southard’s comrade of long standing,
spoke the simple, beautiful words that linked two
lives together, “for better or for worse, through
good and evil report.”
From the moment she entered the Little
Church until, the ceremony over, she found herself
being helped into the Nesbits’ automobile, Grace
was as one in a dream. She had noted in absent
wonder the play of more than one handkerchief as her
friends wiped away the furtive tears that are always
as sure to fall in the presence of a great happiness,
as when the occasion is one of grief. But she
had no tears to shed. Weeks of silent suffering
had bereft her of that relief. Her sensitive face
grew a trifle more wistful as she listened to the
sonorous voice intoning the sacred words, but her
brooding gray eyes remained dry. She alone knew
the agony of dull pain which clutched persistently
at her heart.
During the ceremony more than one
pair of sympathetic eyes strayed from Miriam and Everett
Southard to the slender, white-clad girly whose grave,
sweet mouth and unfaltering glance told of a strength
that came from within. In the thick of the congratulations
which followed, there was not one of those who adored
Grace who did not yearn to turn to her and comfort
her. Yet her very composure made consolation impossible.
They realized that she was sufficient unto herself.
On the way to the station, where the
Southards were to entrain almost immediately for the
West, she talked in her usual cheerful strain to Mrs.
Nesbit, Mrs. Gray and Elfreda Briggs, who shared an
automobile with her. David and Anne were in the
Southards’ limousine with Miss Southard and
the newly wedded pair, while the other members of the
party had followed in a larger automobile. Secretly,
Grace and Mrs. Gray were longing to talk with David
Nesbit. He had arrived from the north only an
hour before the wedding, thus giving them no chance
for an interview. Both were imbued with but one
thought and that thought centered on Tom Gray.
When the last hearty words of good
will and farewell had been said and the train bearing
the Southards westward had chugged out of the station,
Grace was still obliged to possess her soul in patience
while the remainder of the wedding party, minus the
chief participants, repaired to the Nesbits’
home for an informal supper in honor of the occasion.
During its progress, however, she and David managed
to exchange a few words regarding Tom. David
had canvassed the region of the camp as thoroughly
as was possible during the time he had been North,
but thus far he had met with no clue to Tom’s
whereabouts.
It was after eleven o’clock
when Hippy, Nora, Anne, David, Mrs. Gray, Mrs. Nesbit,
Grace and Elfreda Briggs, whom Grace had begged to
remain with her, settled themselves in the library
to hear David’s account of his northern explorations.
“I am all broken up because
I have no news for you,” he began. “Good
old Tom’s disappearance is the most baffling
problem I’ve ever dealt with. Blaisdell
is completely discouraged. He and I have tramped
through those woods for days from daylight until dark.
So far as we know, no one saw Tom after he left the
village. I found one little boy who insists that
he saw Tom that day, but he saw him just before he
entered the woods, so that doesn’t help much.
But I won’t give up. I shall have to remain
in New York for a day, then I am going back to stay
until I find him.”
“Mr. Blaisdell has written me
that he must go to Cincinnati for a week or two,”
sighed Mrs. Gray. “A case he was working
on, before he took up mine, needs his immediate attention.”
“Yes; he told me,” nodded
David. “He is a splendid man, but he’s
handicapped in Tom’s case by not being a thorough-going
woodsman. His work has lain a great deal in large
cities. If one of us had disappeared in such
a wild region, instead of Tom, I’d say the very
man to do the trailing would be Tom Gray himself.
What I can’t understand is how an expert woodsman
like Tom could come to grief in the wilds.”
“Tom was always venturesome
and reckless of danger,” replied Mrs. Gray with
an ominous shake of her head. “I wish he
had gone into some commercial enterprise rather than
to have become interested in forestry. You know
that the station master told him a storm was brewing,
but he paid no attention to the warning.”
“That storm was the cause of
Tom’s vanishing,” broke in Grace almost
dramatically. “I’ve always felt it.
It made him lose his way, then Who
knows what happened then?”
“I wish I could go with you,
David,” declared Hippy earnestly. “I
would, too, if I weren’t tied up with a law
suit which an irate traction company is waging against
the city of Oakdale. Although I am not a woodsman,
still I know the difference between a tree and a stump,
and during my long and useful career I have killed
numbers of slimy, slithery snakes.”
“At least, that’s something
to be proud of,” lauded Elfreda Briggs, favoring
Hippy with an amused smile. The stout young man’s
remarks were quite in accord with her own distinct
sense of humor. Hitherto she had listened without
comment, absorbing all she heard and mentally appraising
it in her shrewd fashion. She had chosen to break
into the conversation at that moment because of an
idea that was slowly taking shape in her fertile brain.
“I suppose,” she continued
nonchalantly, “that as David has just said,
it takes a woodsman to trail a woodsman.”
Her round eyes fastened themselves on Grace.
Knowing Elfreda as she did, Grace flashed the speaker
a curiously startled glance. Something of signal
import to her was about to fall from Elfreda’s
lips.
“I was just thinking of the
story of Ruth Denton’s father and old Jean,
the hunter, who used to live in Upton Wood. Don’t
you remember, you told me about how he was hurt and
Mr. Denton nursed him back to health! You told
me, too, that this same Jean had hunted all over the
United States and Canada. There’s a woodsman
for you! If he’s still in Oakdale, why
don’t you ask him to go and look for Tom?”
Elfreda leaned back in her chair, well pleased with
herself. The expressions mirrored on her friends’
faces told her that she had scored.
“Why did we never think of Jean
before?” wondered Grace in a hushed voice.
“Good old Jean!” Hippy
sprang to his feet and performed a joyful dance about
the room. “Why, of course he’s the
very man!”
“It was unforgivably stupid
in me never to have thought of Jean,” admitted
David, looking deep disgust at his own defection.
“The reason none of us thought
of Jean was because I made such a point of keeping
Tom’s disappearance a secret,” acknowledged
Mrs. Gray ruefully. “Did Grace tell you
that a New York newspaper had published an account
of it?”
“Miriam sent me a copy of the
newspaper,” returned David. “Who gave
out the news?”
Mrs. Gray cast an interrogatory glance
toward Grace, who met it with an assuring smile.
“It’s all right, Aunt Rose,” she
nodded. “I have Arline’s permission
to answer. She wishes me to tell anyone whom I
think ought to know it. She said so to-day.”
With this explanation Grace continued: “I
wrote Arline about the postponement of my marriage
to Tom. She answered, but confused her letter
with another which she had written to someone else.
That person proved unfriendly to both of us, and so
the mystery of poor Tom came into print.”
“So that’s the way it
happened,” mused David. Delicacy forbade
him to ask further questions. He understood,
as did the others, that Grace’s explanation
had been purposely sketchy. “Personally,
I’m not sorry it’s now generally known.
It may be the means of bringing Tom into the land
of the living again. I don’t mean that I
think he’s dead. I can’t and won’t
think that.”
“Nor I,” Grace cried out
sharply. “I’ve never let myself believe
that for an instant. We ought to give Elfreda
special vote of grateful thanks for suggesting Jean.
That was a master stroke.”
Grace’s suggestion brought out
a volley of acclamation in Elfreda’s direction.
“Oh, forget it,” she muttered,
unconsciously relapsing into her old-time use of slang.
“Old Jean just happened to pop into my head.
That’s all.”
“Just the same, it takes an
outsider to show the Oakdalites a few things,”
warmly accorded Hippy. “I am proud to claim
you as a colleague, Elfreda. Some day we may
yet grapple together with the intricacies of the law.
’Wingate and Briggs, Lawyer and Lawyeress.
Daring Deeds Perpetrated While You Wait,’ would
look nice on a sign.”
“I can see that you are making
fun of a poor defenseless lawyeress,” retorted
Elfreda good-humoredly. “Don’t you
think so, Mrs. Nesbit? You’ve been listening
to all of us without saying a word. Now we’d
like to hear your views on whether or not Wingate
and Briggs, etc., would set the world on fire
as a law firm.”
“I have little doubt of the
glorious future of such a combination,” agreed
Mrs. Nesbit, smiling. There was an absent look
in her eyes, however. Her thoughts had been traveling
persistently into the past as she sat listening to
the interesting discussion over the missing Tom.
Was it possible that Miriam, her little girl of yesterday,
had actually stepped out on the highway of married
life? And Grace Harlowe, the care-free torn-boy
who had run races and flown kites with David, was now
a tragic-eyed young woman from whose hand fate had
roughly snatched the cup of happiness. There
were Nora and Hippy, too, a veritable Darby and Joan,
despite their love for playful squabbling. Could
it be that these alert, self-reliant young men and
women were once the children who had romped and frisked
about on her lawn, or played house under the tall
hollyhocks in the garden?
“You are tired out, Mrs. Nesbit,”
suggested Grace with concern. She had noted the
brooding light in the older woman’s gentle face
and quickly attributed the cause. “I think
it is time to sound taps. We can continue our
session in the morning, can’t we, Fairy Godmother?”
“Yes. I am not nearly as
young as I wish I were. This trouble about Tom
has made me realize it,” returned Mrs. Gray somberly.
“But Elfreda has given us a valuable piece of
advice. I am inclined to hope with Grace that
we have reached the beginning of the end of our weary
waiting.”
“I’ve a favor to ask of
you,” stated Elfreda mysteriously, when, a little
later, she and Grace entered the sleeping room which
they were to occupy together.
“It is granted.”
Grace passed an affectionate arm about Elfreda’s
plump shoulders.
“All right. I don’t
need to ask, then. I’ll just remark that
I’m going home with you to Oakdale.”
“Elfreda!” Grace brought
both arms into play in an energetic hug of the stout
girl. “Will you truly come home with me!”
“I will,” asserted Elfreda.
“But what about your work?”
“Let the law take its course without
me,” was the unconcerned response. “I
wouldn’t miss seeing old Jean for anything.
But that’s not my reason for inviting myself
to go home with you. I can see that you need a
comforter. Do I get the job?”
“You do,” laughed Grace,
but the laugh ended in a sob against Elfreda’s
shoulder. It had been a trying day for poor Loyalheart
and the inevitable reaction had set in. “You understand don’t you?”
she murmured brokenly.
“Yes; I know how brave you’ve
been to-day.” Elfreda’s soothing tones
were a trifle unsteady, as she added in tender whimsicality,
“I could see.”