Despite her midnight vigil, Grace
rose before seven o’clock the next morning.
On the previous afternoon Jean had stated that he would
come early to Mrs. Gray’s the following morning
to bid them farewell before starting on his search
for Tom. Eight o’clock found herself and
Elfreda Briggs walking rapidly up Chapel Hill.
They found the old hunter had stolen a march on them,
however. When they entered the library he was
already there, in earnest conversation with Mrs. Gray.
“I hav’ wait for you,”
he said, after bidding them a quaint bon jour.
“But now the time grow short. The train,
she run at nine o’clock. It is now that
we must say the au revoir. Not long an’
I see the camp and M’sieu’ David.
It is good that you hav’ telegraph the young
man. Öl’ Jean will do his best. Le
bon Dieu will do the rest.” The hunter
reverently crossed himself.
“I have a letter for you, Jean,
to give to Tom.” Grace was wearing her
most hopeful face as she gave the cherished letter
into the old man’s keeping. “When
you have found Tom, and I know that you will, tell
him that I am waiting for him and give him this letter.”
“It shall be of a sacred trust,”
Jean assured, crossing himself again. “Be
of the brav’ heart, Mam’selle.
For you and M’sieu’ Tom the ’appiness
is near. Now it is time to go.”
Warmly shaking hands with the two
for whom he was about to “do his best,”
Jean turned to Elfreda and offered his hand with:
“I am the lucky man to hav’ meet such
good frien’ to Mam’selle Grace.”
“Thank you, Jean.”
Elfreda colored with pleasure at the sincere tribute.
“Some day, when Tom Gray has been found and you
are back again in Oakdale, we’ll pay a visit
to your cabin. Then I’ll tell you what a
splendid friend Grace Harlowe has been to me.”
“It shall be as Mam’selle
says,” responded Jean gallantly. Accompanied
as far as the veranda by the three women, Jean made
his final adieus and strode down the pebbled drive
to the gate, a sturdy, purposeful figure, despite
his years. To the three who watched him almost
out of sight, the determined set of his broad shoulders
in itself seemed to presage the success of his mission.
“It was certainly nice in Jean
to say what he did to me about my being your friend,”
was Elfreda’s abrupt comment when, after saying
good-bye to Mrs. Gray, the two young women started
down Chapel Hill toward home. “It was the
highest compliment that he could pay me. If there
had been time I’d have liked to tell him a few
of the reasons for it. I guess he would have
understood then that I had special cause to be loyal
to you. I don’t mean by that that anybody
would have to have special cause to be your
friend. One would only have to meet you once,
Grace Harlowe, to know that your friendship would
be the kind worth having. That is, if one had
any sense. That time I plumped myself down in
your seat when we were bound for Overton College to
begin our freshman year, I was too much wrapped up
in myself to know how lucky I was. Isn’t
it queer, though, how things like that are often the
means by which we begin the staunchest friendships?”
“Yes, it is strange.
If we hadn’t met on the train that day in that
way, you might have decided to go to another boarding
place instead of taking up with Mrs. Elwood’s
offer to you to share Miriam’s room. Then,
very likely, we might never have become well acquainted.
There were ever so many girls at Overton College during
the six years that I spent there, whom I never came
to know really well.” Grace looked regretful.
“But they all knew you,”
was the staunch retort. “You are as much
of an institution there now as Harlowe House is.
Your name has become a household word at Overton College.
Emma and I were speaking of that very thing at the
reunion. She said that if she were manager of
Harlowe House for the next twenty years she’d
never come to be known as well there as you were in
the time you spent at Overton.”
“Emma is a wily old flatterer
and so are you,” laughed Grace. “Just
because you girls like me you think the whole world
ought to fall in line and worship me.”
Her bantering tone changing to seriousness she continued,
“Not that I don’t appreciate your affection,
and love you with all my heart for it. Neither
of you ever stops to think how much credit you both
deserve. Sometimes I wonder what I ever did to
bring me so many true friends. I never properly
realized their worth until this summer. Living
in the shadow has taught me a great deal.
“The very fact that all my friends
have stood by me so firmly has made me see that I
owe it to them to be strong and steadfast through all.
It has taught me, too, that I can’t afford to
be selfish. When Tom first went away I used to
think that, if he never came back, there wouldn’t
be anything worth living for, ever again. But
it came to me by degrees that such a viewpoint was
utterly selfish; that I had a great deal to live for.
Father and Mother, first of all; then Mrs. Gray and
my friends. So I made up my mind that if worse
came to worst, I would devote myself to them more
than ever and thus try to make up for my own loss.”
“Of course you would,”
agreed Elfreda, with a ready tenderness that arose
from the emotion that had welled up within her at Grace’s
unconscious revelation of unselfishness. “No
one knows that better than I know it.”
“I wonder what the postman has
brought us this morning?” Grace had decided
that it was high time to lead the talk away from herself.
She had spoken to Elfreda with utter frankness of
her inner resolve, yet she could not bear to continue
longer on the subject. It presented too vividly
the possibility of Tom’s non-return, and she
had schooled herself not to dwell upon such a contingency.
“We’ll soon know.”
They were now within a short distance of the Harlowe’s
home. “I hope Ma hasn’t decided that
I ought to go back to law school and written me to
that effect,” grumbled Elfreda. “Now
I am here, I’d like to keep on being here until ”
She paused.
“Until we hear good news,”
finished Grace softly. “I wish you would
stay with me as long as you can, Elfreda. When
the good news comes, I’d like you to be here
to share it.”
“Oh, I’ll stay,”
assured Elfreda, “provided I can win Ma over
to my views. It will be the same as using my
powers of eloquence to convince a doubtful jury that
the prisoner is innocent. There is nothing like
practice,” she reminded, her wide, boyish grin
in mischievous evidence.
“Have we a heavy mail this morning,
Mother?” was Grace’s eager inquiry as
she and Elfreda came up the front steps to the veranda.
Established in a wide-armed rocking chair, her eyes
busy with the reading of her own mail, Mrs. Harlowe
looked up smilingly as she said, “Heavy enough
to keep you both busy for a while. I didn’t
count your letters. They are on the library table
in the living-room. I sorted them into two piles.
Elfreda’s was the highest.”
“Thank you, dear.”
Blowing a gay little kiss to her mother, Grace made
for the living-room, with Elfreda close behind her.
“I ought to receive a few dozen
letters,” commented Elfreda. “Nearly
every one of my correspondents have been lagging and
languishing.” Running hastily over the
stack of letters bearing her name, she separated one
of them from the rest. “Here’s the
letter from Ma. Now we’ll see whether its
back to law school for J. Elfreda.”
“Oh, here’s one from Miriam.”
Having been equally busy with her own mail, Grace
drew up a chair before the table. Slipping into
it she soon became absorbed in what Miriam had written
her.
Seated opposite her, Elfreda perused
the letter from her mother with the anxious eye of
one about to receive sentence. In the middle of
it she uttered a cluck of satisfaction. “Excuse
me for interrupting you, but I just wanted to tell
you that Ma is a wingless angel. I don’t
have to do the convincing act at all. She says
I may stay with you until I either wear out my welcome
or get ready to come home. Isn’t that a
glorious message? Hooray!” Elfreda waved
her maternal parent’s unexpected missive of
leniency on high.
“Glorious indeed.”
Finishing the short but interesting letter from Miriam,
Grace shoved it across the table to Elfreda. “Read
it,” she commanded. “I know Miriam
would be willing that you should. As her roommate
of long standing you are entitled to special privileges.”
“Thank you.” Elfreda
pounced upon the proffered letter with avidity, while
Grace continued with her own correspondence. Counting
her letters over, she found she had received nine.
As was her usual custom, she had begun with the top
one, which was from Miriam, and read them in the order
in which they were stacked. Elfreda on the contrary,
scattered broadcast on the table the whole ten letters
she had received. She picked and chose with the
air of a connoisseur, keeping up a running fire of
ridiculous remarks between letters, that moved Grace
to frequent laughter, but did not distract her attention
to any degree from her own affairs. She had become
too familiar with Elfreda’s always entertaining
methods of doing things to be other than amused by
them.
The contents of her own mail filled
her with a quiet joy. One and all, so far as
she had read, her friends breathed undying friendship
and deep devotion to herself. There was a long
letter from Eleanor Savelli, who was summering in
Colorado with her father and aunt. It held the
glad tidings that Miss Nevin and herself intended
to come to Oakdale for the winter. Her father’s
concert tour would soon begin. She did not expect
to travel with him that winter. She was anxious
to come back to “Heartsease” for a long
rest. Much in the letter was of a deeply sympathetic
nature, relating to Grace’s misfortune.
She begged Grace to inform her at once should matters
take a happier turn and hoped before long to be with
her.
There was also a letter from Mabel
Allison confiding the news of her engagement to Arnold
Evans. She was very happy, she declared.
Formal announcement of her betrothal to Arnold had
not yet been made, but Grace would soon receive a
card to that effect. Mabel Ashe wrote much sympathy,
her letter fairly bristling with her lovable, vivid
personality. She ended with the jubilant news
that she had sold the novel on which she had worked
so long and patiently to complete, to a well-known
book publishing firm. She had named it, “the
Guardian of the Flame.” She styled it as
“the story of a woman’s heart,” and
her publishers believed it would be very successful.
The Emerson twins sent her a funny
little epistle, in which they had taken turns in the
writing of its many paragraphs. It had evidently
been gotten up with a view to cheering her and she
read between the lines the kindliness which had prompted
the joint authors to the deed. Jessica and Anne
came next with loving letters that proved how completely
one they were with her in spirit. A colorful
account of the doings of the Harlowe House girls at
Overton College as set down by Evelyn Ward brought
a smile of pleasure to Grace’s face.
One of the two remaining envelopes
bore Arline’s mark. Grace’s smile
deepened as she opened it and saw:
“DEAREST LOYALHEART:
“You owe me a letter, but never
mind. I am of a patient and forgiving disposition,
so I’ll overlook it. I have a very funny
bit of news to write. Stanley Forde, the
hateful old tyrant, has gone and engaged himself
to be married again. Just like that! Don’t
think this is a case of sour grapes. I am
de-lighted. I am sorry for the poor party
of the second part, though. I know her well.
She is a pretty but foolish young person who
was in love with Stanley ages before he became
betrothed to me. Of course he did it to spite
Daffydowndilly, but I’m not a bit ‘spited.’
I feel as though I ought to go to the girl in
the case and tell her what I know about him.
But it’s useless to think of doing so.”
Arline devoted further space to affectionate
inquiry regarding Grace’s troubles and ended
with the naïve announcement:
“The other day I met a perfectly
delightful young man at a dinner dance.
He is as much interested in settlement work as I am,
and is as nice as Stanley Forde is horrid.
To-morrow he and Father and I are going to motor
out to the fresh air home Father founded. He is
anxious to see what we have done. Isn’t
that sweet in him? I do hope appearances
aren’t deceitful. I’ll tell you more
about him after I have met him a few more times.
It’s not wise, you know, to rush into friendships.
“With much love.
You owe me two letters.
“Cautiously,
“DAFFYDOWNDILLY.”
The last letter on the pile was from
Emma Dean. Hastily running over the first page,
Grace laughed outright. “Listen to this,
Elfreda,” she commanded, her eyes dancing.
“DEAREST AND BEST-LOVED
GRACIOUS:
“Hark to the lamentations of
a Dean from darkest Deanery, now transported
to the Grace-haunted region of Overton! When first
I set foot in this desolate waste, my primary
impulse was to lift my venerable voice in a piercing
wail of anguish. Only my overwhelming respect
for the powers which sit sternly in Overton Hall, and
a well-founded fear that I might be bundled off
the campus to some fell institution for the demented,
prompted me to refrain from howling. But
the desire to howl still lingers, and some fine day
I shall meander moodily to Hunter’s Rock
and there, upon its lonely height, startle the
murmuring river below with my frantic cries. I
shall stand well back from the edge of that perilous
platform, however, as I have no malicious desire
to deprive Overton of the best teacher in English
Overton ever had, known to the English-speaking
world as Emily Elizabeth Dean, who has now become
a manageress (see Dean Vocabulary).
“Confidentially speaking, I should
not have minded so much leaving darkest Deanery
for this Grace-less wilderness if it had not been
for the thought that your dear face would be missing
in the picture. Do not rashly misjudge me
by jumping to the conclusion that I parted with
joy from the estimable Deans of whom I am which.
Bitterly did I regret leaving my sorrowing parents.
It was not lack of filial devotion to them that
made me yearn for Overton. A terrible shadow,
or rather several shadows, had hovered over hapless
Deanery for a week before I packed my belongings and
fled. Our humble home had been turned over
to an aggregation of ruthless individuals who
paint houses for a living. Darkest Deanery was
once a timid shade of brown that grew even more
retiring with years. Now it is a dazzling
white, with still more dazzling gray trimmings.
I can never forget that harmonious combination
of gray and white, as I have annexed copious
samples of it to most of my meager wardrobe.
“If only I had had the forethought
to design a simple burlap costume with bag-like
lines, and putting away false pride, worn it on
all occasions during that last sad week at home, I
should not now be spending my leisure hours experimenting
to discover the most efficacious paint eradicator
on the market. Every time I hopefully remove
a prized garment from my trunk, I am confronted by
the unhappy recollection that darkest Deanery
has been freshly painted. It’s positively
maddening!
“Knowing my fatal leaning toward
the absent-minded, you can put two and two together.
They don’t make four. They make ‘paint.’
Oh, the supreme tragedy of that week! How
well I remember the afternoon when I sat down
confidingly on the freshly-furbished porch rail in
my best pongee dress. I was about to go to
a luncheon. I went, but was late. There
was a reason. By the time the front porch became
a sticky, glistening wonder, I thoughtfully dropped
my nice seal handbag in the middle of it.
The irate painter remonstrated. Not because
I had ruined my cherished possession, but because of
the horrifying blank left where paint had lately
flaunted itself. By the time it had dawned
upon me that the back entrance to the house was
the entrance for me, it had also become a trap for
the unwary. There were frequent other accidental
collisions with the aforesaid paint, all equally
disastrous to poor me. Some of them were known
to me at the time; some were among the things
that were revealed thereafter. I began to
feel that the whole vast universe was chiefly
composed of paint. So I fled to the greater ill
of an Overton without Grace Harlowe.
“As I have suffered deeply and
shall continue to suffer until I can look my
modest wardrobe in the face and say, ‘presentable
at last,’ I am certain that I deserve a
special boon of consolation. In plain English,
to which I still cling, despite the fact that I dream
of some day establishing a marvelous vocabulary
of my own, won’t you and Elfreda come to
Overton to see me, if only for a day? I have
thought things over carefully before asking you.
It is not entirely selfishness that prompts the
request. I think it would cheer you to come
again for a visit to Harlowe House. Though I have
replaced you as manager, I can never replace
you in the hearts of the girls here. I understand
why you may not wish to come. As always, my heart
goes out to you. If you write ‘no’
as an answer, I shall accept it in the best possible
spirit. But if you feel that you can drop
in on me, even for a day, then I shall surely shriek
with joy, right here at Harlowe House, and abide
by the consequences. I have written Elfreda,
too. If both letters reach you at the same time,
and I shall mail them together, then you can shake
hands and congratulate yourselves that you have
both been invited.
“Yours hopefully,
“EMMA.”
“I’d love to go.”
Grace hesitated. “Do you think it would
be disloyal in me to leave Oakdale now, even for a
day? I thought it over seriously before I went
to Miriam’s wedding. That was really a duty,
you know. But since Jean has taken up Tom’s
case, it seems as though I am likely to hear something
important within a few days.”
“You mustn’t be too sure,”
counseled Elfreda wisely. “You might be
disappointed. It may take even Jean a long time
to find out anything. I’m not saying that
to be cruel.”
“You don’t need to tell
me that. I know I mustn’t expect too much,
even of Jean. Yet I can’t help thinking
that if he doesn’t find Tom, no one else
ever will.”