“And that is all the information
that we can give you about Tom, Jean.”
Grace sighed as she ended the recital of barren facts
relating to the vanishing of the man she loved.
“It is very scant information
on which to proceed,” deplored Mrs. Gray.
“I confess that I made a mistake in keeping our
trouble a secret. Since that newspaper spread
the news abroad I have done my best to amend the error.
I have seen to it that the sheriff of the county in
which the camp is located took up the matter.
I have also offered a large reward for the finding
of Tom, or the positive proof that he is dead.”
Her voice dropped despairingly on the last word.
“Be of the brav’
heart,” responded Jean confidently. “I
hav’ the feeling that it is for me to find the
los’ M’sieu’ Tom. I hav’
travel many times over the country w’ere he
get los’ an’ I know it, every tree an’
stone. It is a wil’ place, an’ the
men up there know not’ing but cut down trees.
Very t’ick in the ’aid.” Jean
tapped his gray head significantly, better to demonstrate
the vast stupidity of lumbermen in general.
“M’sieu’ David is
one fine young man, but he not know the big woods lak’
ol’ Jean. The ot’er man, he also not
know.” Jean shrugged his broad shoulders.
“If all Jean’s life he stay in cities,
it would be so wit’ him.”
“But Jean, have you any idea
of what might have happened to Tom?” entreated
Mrs. Gray.
Again Jean shrugged. “Many
t’ings might ’appen. P’r’aps
he lose the way in storm an’ get hurt; mebbe
he die. P’r’aps timber t’ieves
get him an’ shut him up somew’ere way
off hid. Of a truth, Jean cannot tell. But
I go hunt for M’sieu’ Tom an’ fin’
out. Then I tell.” Jean seemed determined
to impress upon his hearers that he would “fin’”
Tom Gray.
“When can you start north, Jean?”
Grace waited breathlessly for the answer.
“Soon; to-morrow,” came
the quick assurance. “First I go to my cabin
to mak’ ready. In the morning I come here
early an’ say the au revoir. Then
I go an’ fin’ M’sieu’ Tom.
You are satisfy?” His shrewd black eyes sought
the approval of the trio of tense faces bent earnestly
upon him.
“We are more than satisfied.”
Impulsively Mrs. Gray stretched forth a little blue-veined
hand. Somewhat to that estimable woman’s
astonishment old Jean bent and with true Gallic chivalry
raised it lightly to his lips. “I am honor
that you trust,” he said simply.
Looking on, Grace was immeasurably
touched by the woodsman’s quaintly respectful
act of deference toward her Fairy Godmother. Her
romantic fancy transformed rugged old Jean into a
gallant knight about to fare forth on a dangerous
errand.
“You are a true Frenchman, Jean,”
smiled the pleased old lady. “A lifetime
spent in roughing it hasn’t robbed you of inherent
chivalry. Did you know that Miss Briggs remembered
you from hearsay and was the first one to suggest
that you would be the very person to hunt for Tom?”
“Mam’selle Grace
has said,” affirmed Jean. Turning to Elfreda
he continued almost humbly, “Mam’selle,
I hav’ only to be grateful to you that you hav’
remember me. Of a certainty, I shall not forget.”
Jean lingered for a little further
talk, then departed for his cabin, with many quaint
bobbing bows. But he left behind him an atmosphere
of revivified hope.
“We must go, too, J. Elfreda,”
reminded Grace, a distinct ring of cheerfulness in
her accents. “This is Bridget’s afternoon
out and I promised Mother that I’d see that
neither you or I starved. Father won’t
be home for dinner to-night, either, so we shall dine
in lonely state. Mother went to spend the day
with friends in Carrollton, and Father is to go to
their house to dinner to-night and bring Mother home,”
Grace explained to Mrs. Gray.
“Then you had better stay with
me,” advised Mrs. Gray. “Left to
yourselves I haven’t the slightest doubt that
you will talk much and eat little. Besides, I
know that the mere mention of hot waffles and honey
will make Elfreda linger. Stay, and we’ll
have an old-fashioned supper.”
“I couldn’t be so cruel
as to tear Elfreda away from such bliss,” laughed
Grace. The stout girl’s predeliction for
waffles was known to all her intimate friends.
“How did you know my pet weakness?”
Elfreda’s round eyes grew rounder with well-simulated
surprise. “Did Grace tell you? Grace,
I’m amazed to think you would thus betray my
fatal waffle hunger, even to Mrs. Gray.”
Noting the old lady’s increasing rise of good
spirits, Elfreda purposely pretended ignorance with
a view of keeping up the sudden access of cheer which
Jean’s visit had diffused.
“Don’t you remember that
morning you came to Wayne Hall for breakfast and asked
anxiously if there would be waffles?” teased
Mrs. Gray. “It was at the time Grace and
I went to Overton to set Harlowe House to rights.”
“Oh, yes! So it was.”
Elfreda looked owlishly innocent. “That
was the time you got my waffle number. It seems
a long while since then, doesn’t it, Grace?”
“Yes.” An absent
gleam flickered in Grace’s eyes, causing Elfreda
to wish she had not asked the question. It was
replaced almost instantly by a glint of pure amusement.
Memories of Overton invariably brought back Emma Dean.
Merely to think of Emma meant to smile. “I
wonder what Emma’s doing to-night,” she
said irrelevantly. “She must be back at
Overton by this time, wrestling with the management
of Harlowe House.”
“We ought to make her a flying
visit,” proposed Elfreda, well pleased with
this sudden turn in the conversation.
“I’d love to see her,”
agreed Grace, “but ”
She hesitated. “I shouldn’t care
to go away from home now. After Jean goes north
we are likely to hear news almost any day. You
see, I have pinned my faith on his ability to accomplish
miracles.”
“Well, we can wait a week or
so and see,” declared Elfreda. “If
things stay just the same and we hear nothing of interest
from him, we can leave Overton on Saturday, spend
Sunday with Emma and come back to Oakdale on Monday.”
“I think it would do you good
to see Emma, Grace,” approved Mrs. Gray with
a touch of her old decision. “We can do
nothing but hope, pray and wait. Your trip to
New York to see Miriam married was on the whole depressing.
Emma will put new life into you. She’s such
a comical, delightful girl. Now that our case
is at last in competent hands, we must make a special
effort to be cheerful. I’ve failed sadly
this summer in practicing what I am preaching.
Now I intend to try to make up for it. But if
I am to make good my promise to Elfreda to feed her
on waffles, I must tell Margaret to make them.”
Left to themselves, the two girls
conversed softly together regarding the change the
advent of old Jean had wrought in their hostess.
When an hour later the trio gathered in the morning
room, unanimously chosen as a supper room by reason
of its cosiness, the sense of oppression which had
formerly held them captive had been marvelously lightened
by hope. Later the three spent a quiet evening
together in the library, and it was eleven o’clock
when Grace and Elfreda turned their steps homeward.
To her father and mother, who had
reached home ahead of her, Grace recounted the details
of Jean’s visit. They received the glad
tidings with a joy second only to her own.
Another hour slipped swiftly by before
the household retired, and it was half-past twelve
o’clock before Grace bade Elfreda good-night
and softly closed the door of her room. Alone
with her own thoughts, she curled up on a cushioned
window seat and gazed meditatively out upon the still
autumn night. Through the open window a soft wind
caressingly touched her rapt face. It sighed
through the trees, sending an occasional leaf to earth
with a faint protesting rustle. Overhead the stars
twinkled serenely down upon her, as though in tantalizing
possession of the answer to the question that lay
behind her musing eyes.
In close communion with the night,
Grace lived over again those first rare days of her
Golden Summer. The present swept aside, the past
confronted her in sharpest outline. Her mind dwelt
on the evening when the Eight Originals had strolled
to the old Omnibus House and Nora had sung the song
of Golden Summer. She could almost hear Tom say,
“I’d like our lives, from this moment
on, always to be one long, continued Golden Summer.”
She wondered if the very utterance of the wish had
broken the spell. Then came the remembrance of
those dear hours of preparation at Haven Home.
Again she could fancy herself coming down the stairs
in her wedding gown and pausing to listen as Nora
sang “La Lettre.”
Here her musings broke off abruptly.
With the memory of “The Letter,” a sudden
tender resolve took possession of her. To-morrow
Jean would start on his search. Very well, he
should not go empty-handed. She would write a
letter to Tom. When Jean found him, her letter
should bridge the gap of distance between them.
Rising from the window seat she sought
her desk. Seated before it, she took up her pen
and laid a sheet of paper in place. Once she had
begun to write it was as though an unseen power guided
her to inspiration. She wondered if somewhere
under the stars Tom Gray was seeking, at the same
time, to send her a message. Never before had
she been so thoroughly imbued with the mystical impression
of his nearness to her. It was not a long letter,
yet somehow she had managed exactly to convey the meaning
she had intended. As she was finishing it, she
heard the distant chime of the grandfather’s
clock downstairs, striking the half hour, and she
smiled tenderly as the words of Nora’s song returned
to her. “I wonder: ‘Is it I
who write to thee, or thou to me?’”