“Why, don’t you know nothing
in the world compliments a loaf of bread like the
asking for a fourth slice,” laughed Rose Mary
as she reached up on the stone shelf above her head
and took down a large crusty loaf and a long knife.
“Thick or thin?” she asked as she raised
her lashes from her blue eyes for a second of hospitable
inquiry.
“Thin,” answered Everett
promptly, “but two with the butter sticking
’em together. Please be careful with that
weapon! It’s as good as a juggler’s
show to watch you, but it makes me slightly solicitous.”
As he spoke he seated himself on the corner of the
wide stone table as near to Rose Mary and the long
knife as seemed advisable. A ray of sunlight
fell through the door of the milk-house and cut across
his red head to lose itself in Rose Mary’s close
black braids.
“Make it four,” he further demanded over
the table.
“Indeed and I will,” answered
Rose Mary delightedly. And as she spoke she held
the loaf against her breast and drew the knife through
the slices in a fascinatingly dangerous manner.
At the intentness of his regard the color rose up
under the lashes that veiled her eyes, and she hugged
the loaf closer with her left hand. “Would
you like six?” she asked innocently, as the
fourth stroke severed the last piece.
“Just go on and slice it all
up,” he answered with a laugh. “I’d
rather watch you than eat.”
“Wait till I butter these for
you and then you can eat and watch me me
finish working the butter. Won’t that do
as well? Think what an encouragement your interest
will be to me! Really, nothing in the world paces
a woman’s work like a man looking on, and if
he doesn’t stop her she’ll drop under
the line. Now, you have your bread and butter
and you can sit over there by the door and help me
turn off this ten pounds in no time.”
As she had been speaking, Rose Mary
had spread two of the slices with the yellow butter
from a huge bowl in front of her, clapped on the tops
of the sandwiches and then, with a smile, handed them
in a blue plate to the man who lounged across the
corner of her table. She made a very gracious
and lovely picture, did Rose Mary, in her light-blue
homespun gown against the cool gray depths of the milk-house,
which was fern-lined along the cracks of the old stones
and mysterious with the trickling gurgle of the spring
that flowed into the long stone troughs, around the
milk crocks and out under the stone door-sill.
From his post by the door Everett watched her as she
drove her paddle deep into the hard golden mound in
the blue bowl in front of her, and, with a quick turn
of her strong, slender wrist slapped and patted chunk
after chunk of the butter into a more compressed form.
The sleeves of her dress were rolled almost to her
shoulders and under the white, moist flesh of her
arms the fine muscles showed plainly. The strong
curves of her back and shoulders bent and sprung under
the graceful sweep of her arms and her round breasts
rose and fell with quickened breath from her energetic
movements.
“Now, you’re making me
work too hard,” she laughed; and she panted
as she rested her hand for a second against the edge
of the bowl and looked up at Everett from under a
black tendril curl that had fallen down across her
forehead.
“Miss Rose Mary Alloway, you
are one large, husky witch,” calmly
remarked the hungry man as he finished disposing of
the last half of one of the thin bread and butters.
“Here I sit enchanted by by a butter-paddle,
when you and I both know that not two miles across
the meadows there runs a train that ought to put me
into New York in a little over forty-eight hours.
Won’t you, won’t you let me go back
to my frantic and imploring employers?”
“Why no, I can’t,”
answered Rose Mary as she pressed a yellow cake of
butter on to a blue plate and deftly curled it up with
her paddle into a huge yellow sunflower. “Uncle
Tucker captured you roaming loose out in his fields
and he trusts you to me while he is at work and I must
keep you safe. He’s fond of you and so are
the Aunties and Stonewall Jackson and Shoofly and
Sniffer and ”
“And anybody else?” demanded
Everett, preparing to dispose of the last bite.
“Oh, everybody most along Providence
Road,” answered Rose Mary enthusiastically,
though not raising her eyes from the manipulation of
the third butter flower. “Can’t you
go out and dig up some more rocks and things?
I feel sure you haven’t got a sample of all of
them. And there may be gold and silver and precious
jewels just one inch deeper than you have dug.
Are you certain you can’t squeeze up some oil
somewhere in the meadow? You told a whole lot
of reasons to Uncle Tucker why you knew you would
find some, and now you’ll have to stay to prove
yourself.”
“No,” answered Mark Everett
quietly, and, as he spoke, he raised his eyes and
looked at Rose Mary keenly; “no, there is no
oil that I can discover, though the formation, as
I explained to your uncle, is just as I expected to
find it. I’ve spent three weeks going over
every inch of the Valley and I can’t find a
trace of grease. I’m sorry.”
“Well, I don’t know that
I care, except for your sake,” answered Rose
Mary unconcernedly, with her eyes still on her task.
“We don’t any of us like the smell of
coal-oil, and it gives Aunt Viney asthma. It
would be awfully disagreeable to have wells of it right
here on the place. They’d be so ugly and
smelly.”
“But oil-wells mean mean
a great deal of wealth,” ventured Everett.
“I know, but just think of the
money Uncle Tucker gets for this butter I make from
the cows that graze on the meadows. Wouldn’t
it be awful if they should happen to drink some of
the coal-oil and make the butter we send down to the
city taste wrong and spoil the Sweetbriar reputation?
I like money though, most awfully, and I want some
right now. I want to ”
“Mary of the Rose, stop right
there!” said Everett as he came over from his
post by the door and again seated himself on the corner
of the table. “I will not listen
to you give vent to the national craving. I will
hold on to the illusion of having found one unmercenary
human being, even if she had to be buried in the depths
of Harpeth Valley to keep her so.” There
was banter in Everett’s voice and a smile on
his lips, but a bitterness lay in the depths of his
keen dark eyes and an ugly trace of cynicism filtered
through the tones of his voice.
“And wasn’t it funny for
me to count the little well-chickens before they were
even hatched?” laughed Rose Mary. “That’s
the way of it, get together even a little flock of
dollars in prospect and they go right to work hatching
out a brood of wants and needs; but it’s not
wrong of me to want those false teeth so bad, because
it’s such a trial to have your mouth all sink
in and not be able to talk plain and ”
“Help, woman! What are
you talking about? I never saw such teeth as
you have in all my life. One flash of them would
put a beauty show out of business and ”
“Oh, no, not for myself!”
Rose Mary hastened to exclaim, and she turned the
whole artillery of the pearl treasures upon him in
mirth at his mistake. “It’s Aunt
Viney I want them for. She only has five left.
She says she didn’t mind so long as she had any
two that hit, but the hitters to all five are gone
now and she is so distressed. I’m saving
up to take her down to the city to get a brand new
set. I have eleven dollars now and two little
bull calves to sell, though it breaks my heart to
let them go, even if they are of the wrong persuasion.
I always love them better than I do the little heifers,
because I have to give them up. I don’t
like to have things I love go away. You see you
mustn’t think of going to New York until the
spring is all over and summer comes for good,”
she continued, with the most delightful ingenuousness,
as she shaped the last of the ten flowers and glanced
from her task at him with the most solicitous concern.
“Of course, you feel as if the smash your lung
got in that awful rock slide has healed all up, and
I know it has, but you’ll have to do as the doctor
tells you about not running any risks with New York
spring gales, won’t you?”
“Oh, yes, I suppose I will,”
answered Everett, with a trace of restlessness in
his voice. “I’m just as sound as a
dollar now and I’m wild to go with that gang
the firm is sending up into British Columbia to thrash
out that copper question. I know they counted
on me for the final tests. Some other fellow
will find it and get the fortune and the credit, while
I I ”
He stared moodily out the door of
the milk-house and down Providence Road that wound
its calm, even way from across the ridge down through
the green valley. Rose Mary’s milk-house
was nestled between the breasts of a low hill, upon
which was perched the wide-winged, old country house
which had brooded the fortunes of the Alloways since
the wilderness days. The spring which gushed
from the back wall of the milk-house poured itself
into a stone trough on the side of the Road, which
had been placed there generations agone for the refreshment
of beast, while man had been entertained within the
hospitable stone walls. And at the foot of the
Briars, as the Alloway home, hill, spring and meadows
had been called from time immemorial, clustered the
little village of Sweetbriar.
The store, which also sheltered the
post-office, was almost opposite the spring-house
door across the wide Road, the blacksmith shop farther
down and the farm-houses stretched fraternally along
either side in both directions. Far up the Road,
as it wound its way around Providence Nob, could be
seen the chimneys and the roofs of Providence, while
Springfield and Boliver also lay like smoke-wreathed
visions in the distance. Something of the peace
and plenty of it all had begun to smooth the irritated
wrinkle from between Mark Everett’s brows, when
Rose Mary’s hand rested for a second over his
on the table and her rich voice, with its softest
brooding note, came from across her bowl.
“Ah, I know it’s hard
for you, Mr. Mark,” she said, “and I wish I
wish The lilacs will be in bloom next week,
won’t that help some?” And the wooing
tone in her voice was exactly what she used in coaxing
young Stonewall Jackson to bed or Uncle Tucker to tie
up his throat in a flannel muffler.
“It’s not lilacs I’m
needing with a rose in bloom right ”
But Everett’s gallant response to the coaxing
was cut short by a sally from an unexpected quarter.
Down Providence Road at full tilt
came Stonewall Jackson, with the Swarm in a cloud
of dust at his heels. He jumped across the spring
branch and darted in under the milk-house eaves, while
the Swarm drew up on the other bank in evident impatience.
Swung bundle-wise under his arm he held a small, tow-headed
bunch, and as he landed on the stone door-sill he
hastily deposited it on the floor at Rose Mary’s
feet.
“Say, Rose Mamie,” he
panted, “you just keep Shoofly for us a little
while, won’t you? Mis’ Poteet have
done left her with Tobe to take care of and he put
her on a stump while he chased a polecat that he fell
on while it was going under a fence, and now Uncle
Tuck is a-burying of him up in the woods lot.
Jest joggle her with your foot this way if she goes
to cry.” And in demonstration of his directions
the General put one bare foot in the middle of the
mite’s back and administered a short series
of rotary motions, which immediately brought a response
of ecstatic gurgles. “We’ll come back
for her as soon as we dig him up,” he added,
as he prepared for another flying leap across the
spring stream.
“But, Stonie, wait and tell
me what you mean!” exclaimed Rose Mary, while
Everett regarded Stonewall Jackson and his cohorts
with delighted amusement.
“I told you once, Rose Mamie,
that Tobe fell on a polecat under a fence he was a-chasing,
and he smells so awful Uncle Tuck have burned his
britches and shirt on the end of a stick and have got
him buried in dirt up to jest his nose. Burying
in dirt is the onliest thing that’ll take off
the smell. We comed to ask you to watch Shoofly
while he’s buried, cause Mis’ Poteet will
be mad at him when she comes home if Shoofly smells.
We’re all a-going to stay right by him until
he’s dug up, ’cause we all sicked him
on that polecat and we ought in honor!”
Stonie looked at the Swarm for confirmation
of this worthy sentiment, and it arose in a murmur.
The Swarm was a choice congregation of small fry that
trailed perpetually at the heels of Stonewall Jackson,
and at the moment was in a state of seething excitement.
Jennie Rucker’s little freckled face was pale
under its usual sunburn, as a result of being too
near the disastrous encounter, and her little nose,
turned up by nature in the outset, looked as if it
were in danger of never again assuming its normal
tilt. She held small Pete by one chubby hand,
and with a wry face he was licking out an absurd little
red tongue at least twice each moment, as if uncertain
as to whether his olfactory or gustatory nerves had
been offended. Billy was standing with the nonchalant
unconcern of one strong of stomach, and the four other
little Poteets, ranging in size from Shoofly, on the
floor, to Tobe, the buried, were shuffling their bare
feet in the dust with evident impatience to be off
to gloat over the prostrated but important member
of the family. They rolled their wide eyes at
almost impossible angles, and small Peggy sniffed
audibly into a corner of her patched gingham apron.
“Yes, Stonie,” answered
Rose Mary judicially, while Everett’s shoulders
shook with mirth that he felt it best not to give way
to in the face of the sympathetic Swarm, “you
all must stay with Tobe, if he has to be buried, and
go right back as fast as you can. Troubles must
make us stay close by our friends.”
“If I get much closer to him
I’ll throw up,” sniffed Jennie, and her
protest was echoed by a groan from Peggy into the apron,
while the area which showed above its folds turned
white at the prospect of being obliged to draw near
to this brother in affliction.
“Yes, but you sicked Tobe, with
the rest of us, and in this girls don’t
count. You’ve got to go back, smell or no
smell, sick or no sick,” announced the General
firmly, in the decisive tones of one accustomed to
be obeyed.
“Yes, Stonie,” came in
a meek and muffled tone from the apron, “we’ll
go back with you.”
“Can’t we just set on
the fence of the lot it ain’t so far?”
pleaded Jennie in almost a wail. “I’m
afraid Pete will cry from the smell if we go any closter.
He’s most doing it now.”
“Yes, General, let the girls
sit on the fence,” pleaded Everett, with his
eyes dancing, but a bit of mockery in his voice, “after
all they are girls, you know.”
“Oh, well, yes, they can,”
answered Stonewall Jackson in a magnanimously disgusted
tone of voice. “They always get girls when
they don’t want to do anything. Come on,
Tobe’ll be crying if we don’t hurry.
Billy, you help Jennie drag Pete, so he can go fast!”
But during the conference the disgusted
toddler had been pondering the situation, and at this
mention of his being dragged back to the scene of
offense he had made a quick sally across the plank
that spanned the spring branch and with masculine
intuition as to the safe place in time of danger,
he had plunged head foremost into Rose Mary’s
skirts, so that only his small fat back showed to
the enemy.
“Please go on, Stonie, and leave
him with me he’s just a baby,”
pleaded Rose Mary.
“All right,” answered
the General, “Tobe don’t care about him;
he’d just make us go slow,” and thus dropping
young Peter into the category of impedimenta, the
General departed at top speed, surrounded, as he came,
by the loyal Swarm. On the day of his birth Aunt
Viney’s choice for a name for the General had
balanced for some hours between that of the redoubtable
Abner the Valiant, of old Testament fame, and her
favorite modern hero, Jackson of the stonewall nature.
And in her final choice she had seemed so to impress
the infant that he had developed more than a little
of the nature of his patron commander. At all
times Stonie commanded the Swarm, and also at all times
was strictly obeyed.
Then seeing herself thus deserted
by her companions, Shoofly began a low, musical hum
of a wail and walled large eyes up at Everett, at
whose feet she was seated. In instant sympathetic
response he applied the toe of his shoe to the small
of the whimpering tot’s back and proceeded awkwardly,
though with the best intentions in the world, to follow
the General’s directions as to pacification.
Rose Mary laughed as she took a tin-cup from a nail
in the wall, and filling it with milk from one of
the crocks, she knelt at the side of the deserted one
and held the brim to the red lips of Shoofly’s
generous mouth. With a series of gurgles and
laps the consoling draft was quickly consumed and
the whimperer left by this double ministration in a
state of placid contentment.
Peter the wise had stood viewing these
attentions to the other baby with stolid imperturbability,
but as Rose Mary turned away to her table he licked
out his pink tongue and bobbed his head toward the
milk crocks, while his solemn eyes conveyed his desire
without words. Peter’s vocabulary was both
new and limited, and he was at all times extremely
careful against any wastefulness of it. His lips
quivered as if in uncertainty as to whether he was
to be left out of this lactic deal, and his eyes grew
reproachful.
“Why, man alive, did you think
I had forgotten you!” exclaimed Rose Mary as
she turned with the cup to one of the crocks standing
in the water, at the sight of which motion relief
dawned in the serious eyes of the young petitioner.
Filling the cup swiftly, she lifted the youngster
in her arms and came over to sit in the door beside
Shoofly at Everett’s feet. With dignified
deliberation Peter began to consume his draft in slow
gulps, and after each one he lifted his eyes to Rose
Mary’s face as if rendering courteous appreciation
for the consumed portion. His chubby fingers
were clasped around her wrist as she held the cup
for him, and her other hand cuddled one of his bare,
briar-scratched knees. The picture had its instituted
effect on Everett, and he bent toward the little group
in the doorway and rested his elbows on his knees
as his world-restless eyes softened and the lines
around his mouth melted into a smile.
“Rose Mary,” he said with
an almost abashed note in his deep voice, “we’ll
dispense with the lilacs they’re not
needed as retainers, and I don’t deserve them.”
“But being good will bring you
the lilacs of life; whether you think you deserve
them or not, I’m afraid it’s inevitable,”
answered Rose Mary, as she smiled up at him with instant
appreciation of his change of mood.
“Well, I’ll try it this
once and see what happens,” answered Everett
with a laugh. “Indeed, I’m ashamed
of having shown you any impatience at all to
think of impatience in this heaven country of hospitality
amounts to positive sacrilege. Shrive me and
then bring on your lilacs!”
“Then you’ll stay with
us until it’s safe for you to go North and I
won’t have to worry about you any more?”
exclaimed Rose Mary, delighted, as she beamed up over
Pete’s tow-head that had dropped with repletion
on her breast. Shoofly, who, true to her appellation,
had been making funny little dabs of delight at a
fly or two which had buzzed in her direction, had
crawled nearer and burrowed her head under Rose Mary’s
knee, rolled over on her little stomach and gone instantaneously
and exhaustedly to sleep. Rose Mary adjusted a
smothering fold of her dress and continued in her rejoicing
over Everett’s surrender to circumstance inevitable.
“And do you think you can dig
some more in the fields? Don’t happiness
and hoe mean the same thing to most men?” she
questioned with a laugh.
“Yes, hoe to the death and the
devil take the last man at the end of the row, fortune
to the first!” answered Everett with a return
of his cynical look and tone.
“Oh, but in the world some men
just go along and chop down ugly weeds, stir up the
good, smelly earth for things to grow in, reach over
to help the man in the next furrow if he needs it,
and all come home at sundown together and
the women have the supper ready. That’s
the kind of hoeing I want you to do please
dig me up those teeth for Aunt Viney and I’ll
have johnny-cake and fried chicken waiting for you
every night. Please, sir, promise!” And
Rose Mary’s voice sounded its coaxing, comforting
note, while her deep eyes brooded over him.
“I promise,” answered
Everett with a laugh. “I tell you what I
think I will do. As I understand it, the Briars
has about three hundred acres, all told. I have
been all over it for the oil and there is none in any
paying quantities. But in this kind of formation
any number of other things may crop up or out.
I am going to go over every acre of it carefully and
find exactly what can be expected of it. There
may be nothing of any value in a mineral way, but
as I go I am going to make soil tests, and then put
it all down on a complete map and figure out just
what your Uncle Tucker ought to plant in each place
for years to come. It will kill a lot of time,
and then it might be doing something for you dear
people, who have taken a miserable, cross invalid of
a stranger man in out of the wet and made a well chap
of him again.
“Do you know what you have done
for me? That day when I had tramped over from
Boliver just to get away from the Citizens’ Hotel
and myself and perched upon Mr. Alloway’s north
lot fence like a miserable funeral crow, I had reached
my limit, and my spirit had turned its face to the
wall. I had been down South six weeks and couldn’t
see that I felt one bit stronger. I had just
heard of this copper expedition from one of the chaps,
who had written me a heedlessly exultant letter about
it, and I was down and out and no strength left to
fight. I was too weak to take it like a man, and
couldn’t make up my mind to cry like a woman,
though I wanted to. Just as it was at its worst
your Uncle Tucker appeared on the other side of the
fence, and when he looked at me with those great,
heaven-big eyes of his I fell over into his arms with
a funny, help-has-come dying gasp. As you know,
when I woke I was anchored in the middle of that puffy
old four-poster in my room under the blessed roof
of the Briars and you were pouring something glorious
and hot down my throat, while the wonderful old angel-man
in the big gray hat, who had got me out in the field,
was flapping his wings around on the other side of
the pillows. I went to sleep under your very
hands and I haven’t waked up yet except
in ugly, impatient ways. I never want to.”
“I wonder what you would be
like awake?” said Rose Mary softly,
as she gently lowered the head of young Peter down
into the hollow of her arm, where, in close proximity
to Shoofly’s, he nodded off into the depths.
“I think I’m afraid to try waking you.
I’m always so happy when Aunt Viney has snuffed
away her asthma with jimson weed and got down on her
pillow, and I have rubbed all her joints; when the
General has said his prayers without stopping to argue
in the middle, and Uncle Tucker has finished his chapter
and pipe in bed without setting us all on fire, that
I regard people asleep as in a most blessed condition.
Won’t you please try and stay happy, tucked away
fast here at the Briars, without wanting to wake up
and go all over New York, when I won’t know
whether you are getting cold or hungry or wet or a
pain in your lungs?”
“Again I promise! Just
wake me enough to go out and hoe for you is all I
ask your row and your kind of hoeing.”
“Maybe hoeing in my row will
make you finish your own in fine style,” laughed
Rose Mary. “And I think it’s wonderful
of you to study up our land so Uncle Tucker can do
better with it. We never seem to be able to make
any more than just the mortgage interest, and what
we’ll wear when the trunks in the garret are
empty I don’t see. We’ll have to
grow feathers. Things like false teeth just seem
to be impossible.”
“Do you mean to tell me that
the Briars is seriously encumbered?” demanded
Everett, with a quick frown showing between his brows
and a business-keen look coming into his eyes.
“The mortgage on the Briars
covers it as completely as the vines on the wall,”
answered Rose Mary quickly, with a humorous quirk at
her mouth that relieved the note of pain in her voice.
“I know we can never pay it, but if something
could be done to keep it for the old folks always,
I think Stonie and I could stand it. They were
born here and their roots strike deep and twine with
the roots of every tree and bush at the Briars.
Their graves are over there behind the stone wall,
and all their joys and sorrows have come to them along
Providence Road. I am not unhappy over it, because
I know that their Master isn’t going to let
anything happen to take them away. Every night
before I go to sleep I just leave them to Him until
I can wake up in the morning to begin to keep care
of them for Him again. It was all about ”
“Wait a minute, let me ask you
some questions before you tell me any more,”
said Everett, quickly covering the sympathy that showed
in his eyes with his business tone of voice.
“Is it Gideon Newsome who holds this mortgage?”
“Why, yes, how did you know?”
asked Rose Mary with a mild surprise in her eyes as
she raised them to his, bent intently on her.
“Uncle Tucker had to get the money from him
six years ago. It it was a debt of
honor he we had to pay.”
A rich crimson spread itself over Rose Mary’s
brow and cheeks and flooded down her white neck under
the folds of her blue dress across her breast.
Tears rose to her eyes, but she lifted her head proudly
and looked him straight in the face. “There
is a reason why I would give my life why
I do and must give my life to protecting them from
the consequences of the disaster. No sacrifice
is too great for me to make to save their home for
them.”
“Do you mind telling me how
much the mortgage is for?” asked Everett, still
in his cool, thoughtful voice.
“For ten thousand dollars,”
answered Rose Mary. “The land is worth
really less than fifteen. Nobody but such a such
a friend as Mr. Newsome would have loaned Uncle Tucker
so much. He he has been very kind
to us. I I am very grateful to him
and I ” Rose Mary faltered and dropped
her eyes. A tear trembled on the edge of her black
lashes and then splashed on to the chubby cheek of
Peter the reposer.
“I see,” said Everett
coolly, and a flint tone made his usually rich voice
harsh and tight. For a few minutes he sat quietly
looking Rose Mary over with an inscrutable look in
his eyes that finally faded again into the utter world
weariness. “I see and so the
bargain and sale goes on even on Providence Road under
Old Harpeth. But the old people will never have
to give up the Briars while you are here to pay the
price of their protection, Rose Mary. Never!”
“I don’t believe they
will my faith in Him makes me sure,”
answered Rose Mary with lovely unconsciousness as
she raised large, comforted eyes to Everett’s.
“I don’t know how I’m going to manage,
but somehow my cup of faith seems to get filled each
day with the wine of courage and the result is mighty
apt to be a song.” And Rose Mary’s
face blushed out again into a flowering of smiles.
“A sort of cup of heavenly nectar,”
answered Everett with an answering smile, but the
keen look still in his eyes. “See here,
I want you to promise me something don’t
ever, under any circumstances, tell anybody that I
know about this mortgage. Will you?”
“Of course, I won’t if
you tell me not to,” answered Rose Mary immediately.
“I don’t like to think or talk about it.
I only told you because you wanted to help us.
Help offers are the silver linings to trouble clouds,
and you brought this one down on yourself, didn’t
you? Of course, it’s selfish and wrong
to tell people about your anxieties, but there is
just no other way to get so close to a friend.
Don’t you think perhaps sometimes the Lord doesn’t
bother to ‘temper the winds,’ but just
leads you up on the sheltered side of somebody who
is stronger than you are and leaves you there until
your storm is over?”