Blue as sapphires were the eyes
of Elaine, and her fair cheek was like that of an
apple blossom. Set like a rose upon pearl was
the dewy, fragrant sweetness of her mouth, and her
breath was that of the rose itself. Her hands-but
how shall I write of the flower-like hands of Elaine?
They seemed all too frail to hold the reins of her
palfrey, much less to guide him along the rocky road
that lay before her.
Safely sheltered in a sunny valley
was the Castle of Content, wherein Elaine’s
father reigned as Lord. Upon the hills close at
hand were the orchards, which were now in bloom.
A faint, unearthly sweetness came with every passing
breeze, and was wafted through the open windows of
the Castle, where, upon the upper floor, Elaine was
wont to sit with her maids at the tapestry frames.
But, of late, a strange restlessness
was upon her, and the wander-lust surged through her
veins.
"My father,” she said, “I
am fain to leave the Castle of Content, and set out
upon the Heart’s Quest. Among the gallant
knights of thy retinue, there is none whom I would
wed, and it is seemly that I should set out to find
my lord and master, for behold, father, as thou knowest,
twenty years and more have passed over my head, and
my beauty hath begun to fade."
The Lord of the Castle of Content
smiled in amusement, that Elaine, the beautiful, should
fancy her charms were on the wane. But he was
ever eager to gratify the slightest wish of this only
child of his, and so he gave his ready consent.
"Indeed, Elaine,” he answered,
“and if thou choosest, thou shalt go, but these
despised knights shall attend thee, and also our new
fool, who hath come from afar to make merry in our
court. His motley is of an unfamiliar pattern,
his quips and jests savour not so much of antiquity,
and his songs are pleasing. He shall lighten
the rigours of thy journey and cheer thee when thou
art sad."
"But, father, I do not choose to have the fool."
"Say no more, Elaine, for if thou
goest, thou shall have the fool. It is most fitting
that in thy retinue there shouldst be more than one
to wear the cap and bells, and it is in my mind to
consider this quest of thine somewhat more than mildly
foolish. Unnumbered brave and faithful knights
are at thy feet and yet thou canst not choose, but
must needs fare onward in search of a stranger to
be thy lord and master."
Elaine raised her hand. “As
thou wilt, father,” she said, submissively.
“Thou canst not understand the way of a maid.
Bid thy fool to prepare himself quickly for a long
journey, since we start at sunset."
"But why at sunset, daughter?
The way is long. Mayst not thy mission wait until
sunrise?"
"Nay, father, for it is my desire
to sleep to-night upon the ground. The tapestried
walls of my chamber stifle me and I would fain lie
in the fresh air with only the green leaves for my
canopy and the stars for my taper lights."
"As thou wilt, Elaine, but my heart
is sad at the prospect of losing thee. Thou art
my only child, the image of thy dead mother, and my
old eyes shall be misty for the sight of thee long
before my gallant knights bring thee back again."
"So shall I gain some hours, father,”
she answered. “Perhaps my sunset journeying
shall bring my return a day nearer. Cross me not
in this wish, father, for it is my fancy to go."
So it was that the cavalcade was
made ready and Elaine and her company left the Castle
of Content at sunset. Two couriers rode at the
head, to see that the way was clear, and with a silver
bugle to warn travellers to stand aside until the
Lady Elaine and her attendants had passed.
Upon a donkey, caparisoned in a
most amusing manner, rode Le Jongleur, the new fool
of whom the Lord of the Castle of Content had spoken.
His motley, as has been said, was of an unfamiliar
pattern, but was none the less striking, being made
wholly of scarlet and gold. The Lady Elaine could
not have guessed that it was assumed as a tribute to
the trappings of her palfrey, for Le Jongleur’s
heart was most humble and loyal, though leaping now
with the joy of serving the fair Lady Elaine.
The Lord of Content stood at the
portal of the Castle to bid the retinue Godspeed,
and as the cymbals crashed out a sounding farewell,
he impatiently wiped away the mist, which already
had clouded his vision. Long he waited, straining
his eyes toward the distant cliffs, where, one by
one, the company rode upward. The valley was in
shadow, but the long light lay upon the hills, changing
the crags to a wonder of purple and gold. To
him, too, came the breath of apple bloom, but it brough
no joy to his troubled heart.
What dangers lay in wait for Elaine
as she fared forth upon her wild quest? What
monsters haunted the primeval forests through which
her path must lie? And where was the knight who
should claim her innocent and maidenly heart?
At this thought, the Lord of Content shuddered, then
was quickly ashamed.
"I am as foolish,” he muttered,
“as he in motley, who rides at the side of Elaine.
Surely my daughter, the child of a soldier, can make
no unworthy choice."
The cavalcade had reached the summit
of the cliff, now, and at the brink, turned back.
The cymbals and the bugles pealed forth another sounding
farewell to the Lord of the Castle of Content, whom
Elaine well knew was waiting in the shadow of the
portal till her company should be entirely lost to
sight.
The last light shone upon the wonderful
mass of gold which rippled to her waist, unbound,
from beneath her close-fitting scarlet cap, and gave
her an unearthly beauty. Le Jongleur held aloft
his bauble, making it to nod in merry fashion, but
the Lord of Content did not see, his eyes being fixed
upon Elaine. She waved her hand to him, but he
could not answer, for his shoulders were shaking with
grief, nor, indeed, across the merciless distance
that lay between, could he guess at Elaine’s
whispered prayer: “Dear Heavenly Father,
keep thou my earthly father safe and happy, till his
child comes back again."
Over the edge of the cliff and
out upon a wide plain they fared. Ribbons of
glorious colour streamed from the horizon to the zenith,
and touched to flame the cymbals and the bugles and
the trappings of the horses and the shields of the
knights. Piercingly sweet, across the fields of
blowing clover, came the even song of a feathered
chorister, and-what on earth was that
noise?
Harlan went to the window impatiently,
like one wakened from a dream by a blind impulse of
action.
The village stage, piled high with
trunks, was at his door, and from the cavernous depths
of the vehicle, shrieks of juvenile terror echoed and
re-echoed unceasingly. Mr. Blake, driving, merely
waited in supreme unconcern.
“What in the hereafter,”
muttered Harlan, savagely. “More old lovers
of Dorothy’s, I suppose, or else the-Good
Lord, it’s twins!”
A child of four or five fell out of
the stage, followed by another, who lit unerringly
on top of the prostrate one. In the meteoric moment
of the fall, Harlan had seen that the two must have
discovered America at about the same time, for they
were exactly alike, making due allowance for the slight
difference made by masculine and feminine attire.
An enormous doll, which to Harlan’s
troubled sight first appeared to be an infant in arms,
was violently ejected from the stage and added to the
human pile which was wriggling and weeping upon the
gravelled walk. A cub of seven next leaped out,
whistling shrilly, then came a querulous, wailing,
feminine voice from the interior.
“Willie,” it whined, “how
can you act so? Help your little brother and
sister up and get Rebbie’s doll.”
To this the lad paid no attention
whatever, and the mother herself assorted the weeping
pyramid on the walk. Harlan ran downstairs, feeling
that the hour had come to defend his hearthstone from
outsiders. Dick and Dorothy were already at the
door.
“Foundlings’ Home,”
explained Dick, briefly, with a wink at Harlan.
“They’re late this year.”
Dorothy was speechless with amazement
and despair. Before Harlan had begun to think
connectedly, one of the twins had darted into the house
and bumped its head on the library door, thereupon
making the Jack-o’-Lantern hideous with much
lamentation.
The mother, apparently tired out,
came in as though she had left something of great
value there and had come to get it, pausing only to
direct Harlan to pay the stage driver, and have her
trunks taken into the rooms opening off the dining-room
on the south side.
Willie took a mouth-organ out of his
pocket and rendered a hitherto unknown air upon it
with inimitable vigour. In the midst of the confusion,
Claudius Tiberius had the misfortune to appear, and,
immediately perceiving his mistake, whisked under
the sofa, from whence the other twin determinedly
haled him, using the handle which Nature had evidently
intended for that purpose.
“Will you kindly tell me,”
demanded Mrs. Carr, when she could make herself heard,
“what is the meaning of all this?”
“I do not understand you,”
said the mother of the twins, coldly. “Were
you addressing me?”
“I was,” returned Mrs.
Carr, to Dick’s manifest delight. “I
desire to know why you have come to my house, uninvited,
and made all this disturbance.”
“The idea!” exclaimed
the woman, trembling with anger. “Will you
please send for Mr. Judson?”
“Mr. Judson,” said Dorothy,
icily, “has been dead for some time. This
house is the property of my husband.”
“Indeed! And who may your
husband be?” The tone of the question did not
indicate even faint interest in the subject under discussion.
Dorothy turned, but Harlan had long
since beat an ignominious retreat, closely followed
by Dick, whose idea, as audibly expressed, was that
the women be allowed to “fight it out by themselves.”
“I can readily understand,”
went on Dorothy, with a supreme effort at self-control,
“that you have made a mistake for which you are
not in any sense to blame. You are tired from
your journey, and you are quite welcome to stay until
to-morrow.”
“To-morrow!” shrilled
the woman. “I guess you don’t know
who I am! I am Mrs. Holmes, Rebecca Judson’s
own cousin, and I have spent the Summer here ever
since Rebecca was married! I guess if Ebeneezer
knew you were practically ordering his wife’s
own cousin out of his house, he’d rise from
his grave to haunt you!”
Dorothy fancied that Uncle Ebeneezer’s
portrait moved slightly. Aunt Rebecca still surveyed
the room from the easel, gentle, sweet-faced, and
saintly. There was no resemblance whatever between
Aunt Rebecca and the sallow, hollow-cheeked, wide-eyed
termagant, with a markedly receding chin, who stood
before Mrs. Carr and defied her.
“This is my husband’s
house,” suggested Dorothy, pertinently.
“Then let your husband do the
talking,” rejoined Mrs. Holmes, sarcastically.
“If he was sure it was his, I guess he wouldn’t
have run away. I’ve always had my own rooms
here, and I intend to go and come as I please, as
I always have done. You can’t make me believe
that Ebeneezer gave my apartments to your husband,
nor him either, and I wouldn’t advise any of
you to try it.”
Sounds of fearful panic came from
the chicken yard, and Dorothy rushed out, swiftly
laying avenging hands on the disturber of the peace.
One of the twins was chasing Abdul Hamid around the
coop with a lath, as he explained between sobs, “to
make him lay.” Mrs. Holmes bore down upon
Dorothy before any permanent good had been done.
“How dare you!” she cried.
“How dare you lay hands on my child! Come,
Ebbie, come to mamma. Bless his little heart,
he shall chase the chickens if he wants to, so there,
there. Don’t cry, Ebbie. Mamma will
get you another lath and you shall play with the chickens
all the afternoon. There, there!”
Harlan appeared at this juncture,
and in a few quiet, well-chosen words told Mrs. Holmes
that the chicken coop was his property, and that neither
now nor at any other time should any one enter it without
his express permission.
“Upon my word,” remarked
Mrs. Holmes, still soothing the unhappy twin.
“How high and mighty we are when we’re
living off our poor dead uncle’s bounty!
Telling his wife’s own cousin what she’s
to do, and what she isn’t! Upon my word!”
So saying, Mrs. Holmes retired to
the house, her pace hastened by howls from the other
twin, who was in trouble with her older brother somewhere
in her “apartment.”
Dorothy looked at Harlan, undecided
whether to laugh or to cry. “Poor little
woman,” he said, softly; “don’t you
fret. We’ll have them out of the house
no later than to-morrow.”
“All of them?” asked Dorothy,
eagerly, as Miss St. Clair strolled into the front
yard.
Harlan’s brow clouded and he
shifted uneasily from one foot to the other.
“I don’t know,” he said, slowly,
“whether I’ve got nerve enough to order
a woman out of my house or not. Let’s wait
and see what happens.”
A sob choked Dorothy, and she ran
swiftly into the house, fortunately meeting no one
on her way to her room. Dick ventured out of the
barn and came up to Harlan, who was plainly perplexed.
“Very, very mild arrival,”
commented Mr. Chester, desiring to put his host at
his ease. “I’ve never known ’em
to come so peacefully as they have to-day. Usually
there’s more or less disturbance.”
“Disturbance,” repeated
Harlan. “Haven’t we had a disturbance
to-day?”
“We have not,” answered
Dick, placidly. “Wait till young Ebeneezer
and Rebecca get more accustomed to their surroundings,
and then you’ll have a Fourth of July every
day, with Christmas, Thanksgiving, and St. Patrick’s
Day thrown in. Willie is the worst little terror
that ever went unlicked, and the twins come next.”
“Perhaps you don’t understand
children,” remarked Harlan, with a patronising
air, and more from a desire to disagree with Dick than
from anything else. “I’ve always
liked them.”
“If you have,” commented
Dick, with a knowing chuckle, “you’re in
a fair way to get cured of it.”
“Tell me about these people,”
said Harlan, ignoring the speech, and dominated once
more by healthy human curiosity. “Who are
they and where do they come from?”
“They’re dwellers from
the infernal regions,” explained Dick, with an
air of truthfulness, “and they came from there
because the old Nick turned ’em out. They
were upsetting things and giving the place a bad name.
Mrs. Holmes says she’s Aunt Rebecca’s
cousin, but nobody knows whether she is or not.
She’s come here every Summer since Aunt Rebecca
died, and poor old uncle couldn’t help himself.
He hinted more than once that he’d enjoy her
absence if she could be moved to make herself scarce,
but it had no more effect than a snowflake would in
the place she came from. The most he could do
was to build a wing on the house with a separate kitchen
and dining-room in it, and take his own meals in the
library, with the door bolted.
“Willie is a Winter product
and Judson Centre isn’t a pleasant place in
the cold months, but the twins were born here, five
years ago this Summer. They came in the night,
but didn’t make any more trouble then than they
have every day since.”
“What would you do?” asked
Harlan, after a thoughtful silence, “if you
were in my place?”
“I’d be tickled to death
because a kind Providence had married me to Dorothy
instead of to Mrs. Holmes. Poor old Holmes is
in his well-earned grave.”
With great dignity, Harlan walked
into the house, but Dick, occupied with his own thoughts,
did not guess that his host was offended.
After the first excitement was over,
comparative peace settled down upon the Jack-o’-Lantern.
Mrs. Holmes decided the question of where she should
eat, by setting four more places at the table when
Mrs. Smithers’s back was turned. Dorothy
did not appear at luncheon, and Mrs. Smithers performed
her duties with such pronounced ungraciousness that
Elaine felt as though something was about to explode.
A long sleep, born of nervous exhaustion,
came at last to Dorothy’s relief. When
she awoke, it was night and the darkness dazed her
at first. She sat up and rubbed her eyes, wondering
whether she had been dead, or merely ill.
There was not a sound in the Jack-o’-Lantern,
and the events of the day seemed like some hideous
nightmare which waking had put to rout. She bathed
her face in cool water, then went to look out of the
window.
A lantern moved back and forth under
the trees in the orchard, and a tall, dark figure,
armed with a spade, accompanied it. “It’s
Harlan,” thought Dorothy. “I’ll
go down and see what he’s burying.”
But it was only Mrs. Smithers, who
appeared much startled when she saw her mistress at
her side.
“What are you doing?”
demanded Dorothy, seeing that Mrs. Smithers had dug
a hole at least a foot and a half each way.
“Just a-satisfyin’ myself,”
explained the handmaiden, with a note of triumph in
her voice, “about that there cat. ’Ere’s
where I buried ’im, and ’ere’s where
there ain’t no signs of ’is dead body.
’E’s come back to ’aunt us, that’s
wot ’e ’as, and your uncle’ll be
the next.”
“Don’t be so foolish,”
snapped Dorothy. “You’ve forgotten
the place, that’s all, and I don’t wish
to hear any more of this nonsense.”
“’Oo was it?” asked
Mrs. Smithers, “as come out of a warm bed at
midnight to see as if folks wot was diggin’
for cats found anythink? ’T warn’t
me, Miss, that’s wot it warn’t, and I
take it that them as follers is as nonsensical as
them wot digs. Anyhow, Miss, ’ere’s
where ’e was buried, and ’ere’s
where ’e ain’t now. You can think
wot you likes, that’s wot you can.”
Claudius Tiberius suddenly materialised
out of the surrounding darkness, and after sniffing
at the edge of the hole, jumped in to investigate.
“You see that, Miss?”
quavered Mrs. Smithers. “’E knows where
’e’s been, and ’e knows where ’e
ain’t now.”
“Mrs. Smithers,” said
Dorothy, sternly, “will you kindly fill up that
hole and come into the house and go to bed? I
don’t want to be kept awake all night.”
“You don’t need to be
kept awake, Miss,” said Mrs. Smithers, slowly
filling up the hole. “The worst is ‘ere
already and wot’s comin’ is comin’
anyway, and besides,” she added, as an afterthought,
“there ain’t a blessed one of ’em
come ’ere at night since your uncle fixed over
the house.”