The golf links were picturesque; spreading
along the shore or climbing through the heart of the
island set in the great river; here and there a vista
of the huge bulk of the arsenal-shops; walled over
the river by the hills behind opulent, bustling little
cities, the fair greens jeweled by the sun and dappled
with shadow from trees older than the Louisiana Purchase.
A breeze shifted the shadows. Willy Butler felt
its touch on his wet forehead.
He half turned to take out his handkerchief.
In the act he saw her. It was the same girl who
had followed the course yesterday. She was alone,
just as she had been alone yesterday.
The gallery was bobbing like the crest
of a wave over the brow of the hill; the carriages
and machines glittered in slow pomp after the rope,
while the favorites and their caddies marched over
the slope toward the bunkers. But Willy and Dickson
had only this one follower, a little lonely figure,
slim and straight and nimble, in white linen, whose
brown arms and brown face against her dazzling gown
made the effect of a Russian eikon minus the gold-incrusted
robe. She halted when Willy halted. With
impersonal interest she watched Dickson make a strike.
At the clean, beautiful drive she nodded approval.
Then her black brows met in a slightly worried frown.
Willy, club in hand, was aware of the frown.
He was aware in a sort of subconscious way that
she wanted him to play well; and he was acutely aware
that he had not played well this afternoon. Even
his direction, which had always been his best ally,
had not kept its form. Twice had he gone into
the rough, losing a shot each time, despite his really
hair-raising recoveries. Now the other man was
two up, with only four more holes to play. At
best Willy could but halve this hole, at best, with
a perfect approach and a long putt. “A duffer
at golf, like everything else!” ran his own bitter
comment to himself. He didn’t know why
he looked up; swinging his club for a trial stroke
on a leaf. Look he did, however, to catch the
dark eyes of the little lonely girl intently watching
him. If she had called to him aloud “Brace
up!” he couldn’t have heard the words more
distinctly. He almost thought he did hear them,
and gave the child an involuntary, half-starved smile.
With the same smile on his lips he
sent a faultless approach into easy putting distance,
and he felt absurdly pleased because she clapped her
hands. They halved the hole. Dickson, the
Harvard champion, looked bored as he sank on the bench
by the red water-cooler. He had been Willy’s
classmate a year ago at college, knowing him as the
man who makes all the best societies and “leads
the life” may know the recluse who makes none;
he was conscious of a certain irritation peppering
his cool superiority. To think of the millions
that shuffling, cowed-looking, insignificant chap
would have, while he, Dickson, had to slave on a salary.
A duffer who couldn’t even win a golf game that
belonged to him, because he was rattled! Dickson
felt that the ways of Fate were scandalous.
Willy had limped up. The day
before he had blistered his heel somehow, and every
step cost a pang. He eased the lame foot by resting
his weight on the other. His gray-blue eyes,
which only his dead mother had ever found handsome,
scanned with a certain wistfulness Dickson’s
graceful, athletic figure and clean, dark profile.
His own profile was irregular and his figure was awkward,
with arms too long and shoulders too square for harmony;
he stooped in an ungainly fashion, as if he had the
habit of musing as he walked; his plain face was deeply
freckled. Yet as there was a suggestion of strength
in the figure, so there was the same suggestion in
the young mouth and chin, and something clear and
strangely innocent, for a young man, looked out of
his eyes. As he stood, every muscle seemed to
sag; he appeared utterly spent; but the instant Dickson
had driven he stepped alertly into his place and sent
a drive like a bird sailing far beyond Dickson’s
dot of white on the green. Somehow a new uplift
of energy and hope had come to him; bless that kid,
he would show her that he could still do something
with the sticks! He heard her whispered, unconscious
“Beauty!” This time he kept his
head straight, but when the hole was won, he met her
smile frankly with another. The next hole was
easy. He had steadied; he had his nerve back;
every calculation worked; and when Dickson stymied,
it was a simple trick (the like of which he had practiced
often) to hop over the ball and roll into the hole,
to the artless joy of his caddy. “You’re
going to be the champeen,” this worthy told Willy
when they trudged on; “guess that young lady’s
a mascot.”
“I guess she is,” said
Willy. He was sure of it when at the home hole,
guarded by a high hedge, Dickson’s ball was sliced
into the stubborn net of osage-orange roots.
When his own ball sailed cleanly over the wall he
made an excuse of tying his shoe in order to get another
view of “that kid’s” brilliant smile.
The girl herself went on to the bench in sight of
the blackboard. Here she found herself beside
an elderly man with a great head of thick gray hair.
He was clapping so vigorously that she took him to
be Willy’s father, and sent him a glance of sympathy.
“You been all ’round with him?”
said he. “What sort of a game is he playing?”
“Pretty bad until the fifteenth,
and then a wonder,” she returned calmly.
“Rattled!” he snorted
in disgust, as he chewed his cigar out of shape.
“First match game. How are the others?
What’s his chance?”
“He can beat them all if he
will only think so,” she returned in the same
even tone. Her voice was fuller, with a different
and more melodious intonation than those about him;
he looked up at her quickly, as if from a passing
sense of the difference.
“Yes, he’s rattled!”
grunted the elderly gentleman. “Gone stale,
practicing every minute. Too anxious. Wants
to please his father by getting a little silverware.”
“Aren’t you his father?”
“Me? No. His father
could buy me up out of his pocket-money. His
father is Hiram G. Butler. I’m only his
boss. He’s learning the steel business
with me. I wish I was his father; he’s
a genius in his way.”
“I suppose his father is awfully proud of him.”
“Proud nothing!” exploded
the stout gentleman. “His father has bought
and sold and fought inventors so long that when he
discovered that his son was hatching formulas for
open-hearth steel he was disgusted. Then at college
Will took honors in chemistry and was a grind; and
when his father wanted to load him with money, and
told him to go ahead and make all the societies, he
sent the money back and said he didn’t know any
boys in societies; the boys who ran after him were
only after his money and the other boys didn’t
want him. The trouble simply is he is too all-fired
shy and modest. Takes his father’s word
he is a failure because he couldn’t make their
fool societies. How should a fellow who has spent
his life in English schools and traveling about with
a tutor, and then is dumped into Harvard, be expected
to make a splash among those snippy young swells?
Harvard’s no violet cold-frame! The other
boys did, but they were chips of the old block, hard
as nails and hustlers from ’way back. And
since his mother died this poor chap has had nobody
to chirk him up. Father didn’t mind until
the other boys died. All three in one year; pretty
tough on their father. Pretty tough. Ever
lose ur-r! any one in your family?
Then you know. Now Willy’s the only child,
and his father wants to make him over in his brothers’
image. Wants to give him a wife to help!
And Willy so scared of a petticoat he walked two hours
up and down before the Somerset Hotel at his first
college dance trying to screw up courage to go in and
couldn’t. Hiram never will get over that.
But Willy, though he won’t marry to please his
father, is fond of the old dictator just the same.
And mighty proud. That’s why he has worked
so at golf. Trying to show he can do some things
like other boys, you see. Well, I see that Harvard
dude has got his ball on the green at last. Now
it’s up to Willy Didn’t I tell
you? In all right! Shall Oh!”
It was a singularly small, soft “Oh!”
which the elderly man uttered, and it slipped out of
his rugged lips when he caught the shy flash from
Willy’s eyes at the girl. He studied her
an infinitesimal space before he spoke, and he turned
a chuckle into a cough as he said, “Aren’t
you Lady Jean Bruce-Hadden and aren’t you visiting
the Brookes?”
She said that she was, rather indifferently,
her gaze still following Willy, who was accepting
Dickson’s congratulations less awkwardly than
was his wont.
“I guess Major Brooke has told
you about me, Jabez Rivers ”
But ere he could finish the name,
she had held out her hand with a kindling face, crying,
“Oh, indeed, yes. I’m ever so glad
to meet you, Mr. Rivers.”
After this it was only natural to
present Willy; but it was a bit of a surprise to have
Willy, when presented, say, “This is my mascot,
sir. I lost the game and she made me win it.”
Willy was astonished at his own fluency;
but then he had thought Lady Jean a very young girl,
not quite the “kid” that he had styled
her, but still hardly a young lady. Then, anyhow,
she was different. Oh, very different!
His friend was eying him critically,
with queer little grunts, according to his fashion.
“You’re not fit to walk,” he grumbled.
“Why will young folks wear shoes that
don’t fit! Say, you take Lady Jean home
while I go over to the club-house with the major.
And keep the car if you don’t find me.
I’ll go back with Standish. And I
don’t know but you better take her ’round
the head of the island and show her that motor mowing-machine lawn-mower,
you know; I want her to see it.”
He grinned as the young people obeyed
him with grateful docility, speeding away in his electric
runabout; and bestowed a look of orphic sagacity upon
the officer in white undress uniform who had joined
him. The officer was younger than Rivers, although
not young.
“That is one of the very finest
little ladies in the world,” he remarked.
To which Rivers returned dryly, “So
you’ve told me. And that’s one of
the finest, decentest, cleanest fellows in the world
with her.”
“As you’ve told me.”
Rivers grunted. “Go over
that lingo you told me about the girl again or
I’ll repeat to see if I’ve got it straight.
She’s the fifth daughter of the Earl of Paisley,
Scotch earl, and poor as even a Scotch earl can be.
He has no sons. Distant cousin heir to title.
Countess dead. Oldest daughter married to Baron
Fairley; second, widow of a bishop; third, wife of
army officer. Bishopess manages family. She
has brought Lady Moira and the earl over here to give
American millionaires a chance with Lady Moira, who
is the family beauty; and little Jean, who is good
as gold, and has sense, but isn’t showy, was
just thrown in because an old-maid aunt offered to
pay her expenses. Your wife, who knew them in
Scotland, asked her to come here while the Bishopess,
in New York, picks out the most eligible of the millionaire
admirers. So?”
“Yes. Well?”
“Come on over to the club-house;
and while we rest a bit, you telephone over to Mrs.
Brooke, who only needs a tip to go straight, to make
Willy Butler stay to dinner ”
“Oh, I say ” began the major.
“No, you don’t say anything.
You don’t ask questions. You have confidence
in your Uncle Jabez and do what he asks. Not?”
“I will,” said the major, and he went
away smiling.
How astonishing to be taking a girl
about alone and not be in torments of embarrassment!
But this girl was so nice and simple and boyish; not
the least like those snippy Boston buds! And she
knew golf to the ground; it seemed the most natural
thing in the world to ask her if she was going to
watch Cleaves play to-morrow.
“I thought I’d follow
you,” she said quietly. “Do you want
to fire isn’t that what
you call it? your mascot?”
“Will you? Will you really?”
he stammered in his pleasure. “I had a
sneaking hope, but I didn’t d-dare I
feel if you d-do, I’ll beat my man; they say
he is easy, and then I’ll be Cleaves’ runner-up
and get a cup.”
“Why not beat Cleaves and get
the big cup?” said she in the same cool tone.
“You can if you will. You know perfectly
well you can. Promise me you will.”
“Here and now?” said Willy,
smiling faintly, but the light in her eyes struck
a glint in his own. “Done,” he added,
holding out his hand. Her clasp was cool and
soft, but as firm and frank as a boy’s.
“And now,” said she, “where’s
your lawn-mower?”
They had reached the head of the island,
where there was a beautifully shaven sweep of lawn,
but no vestige of mower; Willy’s pulses beat
a thought faster, and he felt himself a master of
stratagem when he suggested their searching for it
in an impossible locality at the farther end if the
island. He found that she could talk as well about
other things as golf. There was no froth in her
talk, but she was very witty; Willy, who passed for
an abnormally serious young fellow, laughed several
times. He confessed to her that it was more like
talking to a boy than to a girl to talk to her.
“I’ve always wanted to be a boy,”
she laughed. “You can play I am one, if
you like.”
“But I’m afraid you would
miss the pretty speeches, and all that.”
“I never had any,” she
answered, with her flashing smile. “Maybe
when I’m presented I shall have if we have enough
money next year to have me come out. But I don’t
believe I shall. If you had four sisters all
raving beauties and tremendously fetching, and you
couldn’t even sing a song, do nothing but ride
and play tennis well, you wouldn’t
expect pretty speeches!”
“Why not? You are pretty, too. You ”
She stopped him with a raised finger
and a shrug of her shoulders. He wondered why
he had never noticed before what lovely lines pertain
to girls’ shoulders and how daintily their little
heads are set on their smooth olive throats.
“Plain truth, you know,” said she; “we’re
playing being two boys.”
To save the situation he went on precipitately,
“I dare say I know, though. I never was
lucky enough to have a sister, but as I had three
brothers who did everything I can’t do, I know
how it feels to to be out of it.”
“But you understand my sisters
are splendid and no end nice to me.”
“So were my brothers,” said Willy loyally.
She looked at him with a quick sympathy.
“I know,” she murmured. “Mr.
Rivers told me. And all in one year. It must
have been dreadful.”
“Yes, it was. But it was worse when my
mother died.”
“Oh, yes. I was sixteen
when my mother died. And I miss her so now.
Don’t you?”
“Yes. I was fifteen.”
They were both silent. The weight
of their piteous memories was on both young hearts,
and yet in each was a sense of companionship, of the
sympathy of a common pain. The tears gathered
slowly in the girl’s eyes; she put her hand
up her sleeve, but withdrew it empty, and the young
man, taking out his own handkerchief, which had surely
seen hard usage, looked disconsolately on it before
tendering the freshest corner. “It’s
pretty mussy, but I lost the others,” he apologized.
“And you have pockets, too!
I lose handkerchiefs to an appalling extent.”
“So do I.” It was
wonderful how many things they had in common thoughts,
opinions, most delightfully human of all, faults.
He felt emboldened to say that it must be a great
comfort to have a sister; he had always wanted one.
“They’re a good deal of
a nuisance, most boys think,” said she, “but
I don’t know why. I know I shouldn’t
have been a nuisance to my brothers and I should rather
like to have had one. We might have been pals.”
His eyes sparkled; he felt that he
was about to make a proposal as daring as it was original;
but he made it, clutching the lever under his hand
more firmly in his agitation, yet not hesitating.
“If we are going to play things, why not play
you are my sister? It would be easier than being
two boys. You see I should all the time be afraid
of forgetting somehow and saying something unbecoming,
or too rough, if we played you were a boy.”
She had more sense of humor than he,
although she was scarcely less innocent; she laughed,
saying, “Most boys are rough enough to their
sisters. Besides, I don’t know you well
enough.”
“You know me better than any
one in the world does,” he answered gravely.
Their young eyes met and darted away. He thought
how lovely her eyes were. Not so much in color
or form, perhaps, but in expression. He wished
that he could see them that way again. But she
had turned away. He was worried lest he might
unwittingly have offended her. He knew (for his
French tutor had told him) how easy it is for a man
to blunder clumsily into a woman’s fine reserves
and sensitive modesty; it was a great relief to have
her turn swiftly toward him again and smile as she
said, “But you don’t know me!”
“Maybe not; I’m asking you to give me
the chance.”
“Oh! Is that why? Just to amuse you.”
“You know better,” said he, “for
at least you know me.”
“That was disagreeable of me,”
she admitted penitently. “I do know better.
Please forgive me!”
“Then you will play it?”
he said eagerly. “You know I did what you
wanted. I promised to win the cup.”
His first gleam of masterful daring
did not displease the girl; possibly, it obscurely
gratified her. “But you must be good and
win,” she said, conceding the point in the immemorial
feminine fashion which would always march out of a
surrendered keep with flags flying.
“I will be good and win,” repeated Willy
obediently.
There fell a little silence, during
which they had glimpses of soft green woods, of distant
harvest-fields and of the shimmer of sunlit waves.
Vagrant odors of new-mown hay were wafted to them when
the breeze stirred. An oriole’s note rose
out of the dim forest paths, poignantly sweet.
Presently the lad spoke, not so much frightened at
his own audacity as amazed at his lack of fear.
“Since you are playing my sister, do you mind
telling me your name? Did he say Buchanan?”
“No; Bruce-Hadden.”
His face lighted as he exclaimed boyishly,
“I knew I had known you! And I have at
least, I’ve seen your picture. You are Oswald
Graham’s cousin Jean.”
“Of course; and you you
are his Yankee friend at Eton, the one who fought
him because he said things about America!”
“And jolly well licked I was,
too,” said Willy gaily. “I didn’t
even know how to put up my hands; he made a gorgeous
mess of me. And then he hunted me up and took
it all back. Of course we were chums after that.
I was going to visit him in the holidays, but ”
“But he was drowned, trying to save a child.”
“He did save her. He always
did what he set out to do. And if I had only
been there ”
“I understand. He said you could swim like
a duck.”
“It’s the only sport I’m
not a muff at,” said Willy dismally. “It’s
just my long arms. But he, he could do
anything. I don’t suppose I’ll ever
stop missing him. He was the only boy friend I
ever had.”
“But you have men friends now,” she said
gently.
“Yes.” He sat up
more erect in his seat. “You saw Mr. Rivers.
He’s the best ever.”
“I’ve heard about how
good he is and how gruff. That’s the kind
I like; no nonsense about them. I hate sissy
men, don’t you?”
Willy assented, but without animation;
he was diffidently searching his inner consciousness
as to whether he himself had not been accused of being
a sissy. “Sometimes a fellow seems a sissy
when he isn’t,” he offered.
“Oh, often,” she
agreed heartily; “but the man they want Moira
to marry is a genuine muff, a horrid, languid-affected
New Yorker who talks like a guardsman and makes fun
of his own country. Moira can’t endure
him; but he offers to settle half a million on her,
and we let Effie marry a captain of the line who had
only a thousand a year ”
“That was you,”
interrupted Willy fervently. “You did that.
Oswald told me ”
“No, it was dad; he couldn’t
bear to have Effie so unhappy when I told him how
she might go into a decline, she felt so wretched.
But you see, having let Effie do that and helping
her out, we couldn’t afford any more detrimentals,
although Jimmy’s got his colonelcy and the cross
and they are ever so happy. But we can’t
afford another love match. The bishop is dead
and Ellen hasn’t very much; and Lord Fairley
has a big family; he was a widower with five when
Ellen married him, and they have two; and we
are so deadly poor. It is really necessary, but
it’s awful. And I am sure she cares a lot
for Reggy Sackville, a kind of cousin of ours who
is a barrister, and she is sure he will be a judge,
he is so clever; but he couldn’t support a wife
for years and years. Don’t you think it’s
really and truly awful to have to marry anybody?”
“Awful intolerable,” agreed
Willy. “I simply will not.”
“And your father wants
you ” She looked so sympathetic that
Willy broke right in:
“Yes. I never seem able
to do anything my father wants. I can’t
manage men and make friends and run the business as
my brothers did. Now he wants me to marry a girl
he has picked out for me; and I’ve got to disappoint
him again. I wrote him I’d try to meet his
wishes every other way I’d accept
dinner invitations; I’d learn the steel business;
I could ride and run an automobile, and I had been
up in an airship, and I’d try to win a golf
cup; and I’m taking bridge lessons, but the
hand of Douglas was his own, you know.”
“I think that’s splendid!”
cried the girl heartily. “I don’t
want to; but maybe I shall have to, to save Moira.”
“Don’t you do it!”
he exclaimed. “It makes me sick to think
of their trying to force you into such a thing.”
He did look moved.
“Don’t get into such a
wax. They can’t force me do I
look like a person to be forced? and poor
old daddy of all people in the world! If you
just knew him; we’re the greatest pals in the
world. But there’s Moira. If I were
to marry some one with a lot of money, she could marry
poor Reggy; and Moira couldn’t stand being unhappy
near so well as I can.”
“Who’s the man?”
growled Willy in a tone of mingled gloom and fury.
“I don’t know his name,”
replied the girl sadly. “It was like this:
Dad met his father, and they became very chummy, and
they got to talking. He talked about his son,
who is a ‘nice fellow’ with elegant tastes
and doesn’t like business. Oh, I know,
a perfectly odious person.”
“Odious,” Willy agreed
morosely; “a downright sissy! You’d
be watched!”
“Yes,” sighed Lady Jean;
“but Moira would be wretcheder because she would
always be thinking of Reggy. And besides” she
grew more cheerful “men never fancy
me; no doubt he’ll think I’m too ugly and
dowdy, and I’m so shy I shall be hideously awkward.”
“You’re nothing of the
kind!” Willy interrupted; “it it’s
the most abominable cold-blooded bargain-and-sale
business! And your father told you ”
“Oh, no, he didn’t tell
me. It was Ellen. She was so pleased; she
never had any hopes of me, don’t you
know; and now she says they won’t need to sacrifice
Moira. But if the young man doesn’t want
me, I shan’t be to blame. Now tell
me about your girl!”
“There’s nothing to tell.
I never saw her. I don’t know her name,
even. Only she’s got a title; and she is
very brilliant and charming and modest, and I’ll
be lucky. It’s another case of parents butting
in. All he wants, he says, is for me to see
her; I told him I should run away if I knew I were
in the same town! But never mind me. Don’t
worry, little girl. I’ll think up a way
to save you all right, all right.”
His face, as he spoke, was stern and
dark. She was sure that he must have great latent
strength of character.
Abruptly she changed the subject recalling
the elusive mowing-machine and the approach of the
Brookes’ dinner-hour. Willy was sure that
Mr. Rivers would want her to see the mower, it was was so
typically American; and if he would take her directly
and swiftly home, wouldn’t she go on another
search to-morrow?
“If you win,” said she;
she felt that she must hesitate at nothing which would
give him that cup. “Another thing, don’t
you give another thought to me; you think every minute
of your game. If you distract your mind it may
get onto your game.”
“I won’t let it hurt my
game, don’t you worry,” returned Willy
confidently.
Mrs. Brooke had none of the difficulty
which she had anticipated in persuading Willy to dine
with them; and she wondered what suffering friends
of hers who had had his reluctant presence at social
functions, meant by their stories. To be sure,
he didn’t talk much, but he was a most intelligent
listener; and he was visibly having a good time.
The next day it was bruited about
(no one but Jabez Rivers, who had walked the links
with a reporter, could have quite told how) that young
Butler was playing a wonderful game. A dozen of
the golf lovers deserted the great man and his only
less great opponent and saw Willy limp over eleven
links, as he beat his man with leisurely ease.
That afternoon, while again searching
for the mowing-machine which that unsuspected but
efficient emissary of the Blind God, Jabez Rivers,
had advised them to be sure to find after
with his own eyes he had seen it trundling into the
garage Willy submitted his plan of rescue.
They were rolling noislessly along a wide avenue,
above which the great elm boughs made a vaulted arch
like the groined vault of a cathedral. Through
the arches filtered the sunset rose. Willy suddenly
stopped the machine. He did not look at her.
He clutched the handle of the lever very hard; and
she was positive he was pale, a pallor which threw
his freckles into high relief. But she was thinking
of anything else than freckles.
“I’ve thought it all out,”
said Willy very firmly, “and I wouldn’t
bother you the least little bit, not the least.
And we think alike about so many things. I believe
I could make it all right with your people. I
can do anything, when you are backing me.
It would ease my mind awfully; I should be sure to
win the cup. I know that would please my father,
and he’d help us, maybe. Besides, I’ve
a fortune of my own; I’d settle it all on you ”
“What do you mean?” cried Lady
Jean.
“You wouldn’t need to
marry anybody else if you married me,”
said Willy.
“My word!” gasped
Lady Jean. “But you told me you didn’t
want to marry anybody.”
“I shouldn’t mind you so much,”
said he.
She was thoughtful, her own mind a
chaos to herself. She stole a furtive glance
at his miserable face; something tender and compassionate
and strange made her lips quiver, but she set them
closely.
“You would be making an awful sacrifice for
me?”
He did not deny it.
“It would be an awful sacrifice for me, too.”
“I know,” he acquiesced sadly.
“Still I suppose
you ought to have your mind settled before to-morrow
or it will get on your game.”
“Yes, that’s just it! I’d be
awfully grateful ”
Without any warning she began to laugh.
“I think you are the funniest boy in the world!
I don’t want to marry anybody. I want to
live with daddy and take care of him and be like Aunt
Jean, but if I have to marry anybody, I’d
rather marry you. Shall we let it go at that for
the present?”
“You are awfully good,”
cried the boy. He wondered at the extraordinary
calm, almost elation, of his mood. That he should
be engaged to be married and not be revolving suicide!
He had read of the exaltation of self-sacrifice maybe
this was it. But how hard it must be for her.
“I’ll make it just as
easy for you as I can dear.”
He added the last word very softly. Probably
she didn’t hear it, for she answered in her
ordinary tone, not in the least offended, that she
knew he would, then immediately demanded a sight of
the mowing-machine; since it wasn’t there, he
would better take her home.
“Don’t you begin to love
this island?” he said, as he obeyed her.
“It is lovely,” she said:
“I never thought I could really like any place
without mountains, but I do.”
“I love mountains,” said Willy.
“They were again surprised at
their similarity of taste. Motor-cars and carriages
passed them continually; luxurious open vehicles, victorias
and golf-carts and automobiles with their hoods lowered,
disclosing billows of diaphanous feminine finery and
pretty, uncovered girlish heads. Willy marveled
over his own ease as he returned greetings punctiliously.
A week ago he would have raced his horse into the darkest
woodland road to escape a passing salute, the hazard
of a little casual badinage.
“How pretty American girls are,”
said Lady Jean a little wistfully; “such lovely
wavy hair.”
Willy’s glance furtively took
note of her sleek brown head and the heavy braid between
her slim shoulders, which had caused him to think her
a child.
“I don’t much like this
corrugated hair,” said he carelessly; “it
looks so machine-made.”
Lady Jean declined all proffers of
seats, even Rivers’ invitation to a place by
him in his runabout. She was going to walk; one
could see better walking. Which was entirely
correct, but was not her most intimate reason; in
truth she could not endure to be sitting at her ease
while Willy, footsore and weary, would be doggedly
tramping after his ball. He presented rather
a grotesque figure, did Willy, that eventful morning,
being shod as to his sound foot with one of his own
neat golf shoes, but as to his left (thanks to the
ministrations of Rivers), with one of the latter’s
ample slippers over swathings of bandage soaked in
healing-lotion. Every caddy on the ground (except
Willy’s) was in secret ecstasies over his appearance.
“We ain’t out for a beauty prize, but
the champeen golf cup,” says the faithful Tommy
haughtily. “Yes, that’s a bottle
of liniment. I wet him up with it between whiles.
He’s in terrible agony. But he don’t
mind long’s he can keep limber. And say,
jest git onto our game, will you? Two up, and
first round over.”
Tommy and Jean were waiting when the
first round ended, Rivers having taken the Brookes
to the luncheon-tent to secure seats for them all.
The game that morning had surprised all but the newspaper
men and the few who had followed Willy the day before.
The only hope of the friends of the champion lay in
the possible exhaustion of the lame wonder whose unerring
approaches were even more dangerous than his drives
and his putts. “If his foot holds out,”
Rivers said to Brooke, “he’s got the cup.”
And at this very moment, as if fate
conspired against Willy’s chances, a frightful
commotion arose. Willy, talking to Jean a moment
about the game, could see the gay groups outside the
white tent scatter in violent agitation with waving
hands; could hear an uproar of shouts and screams.
There came a quick change in Lady Jean’s face,
in every face near the caddy’s, the
young red-jacketed officer’s at the blackboard,
the women’s faces in a passing carriage.
At first no intelligible sound penetrated the din;
but in a thought’s time a blood-curdling cry
tore out of a score of throats, “Mad dog!
Mad dog!” as men with golf-irons and pistols,
raced toward the little group on the links, after a
foam-flecked, glaring-eyed, panting little beast.
The creature made straight for Tommy, who fled like
a deer; but his foot hit the marker, and he stumbled
and fell. It seemed in the same eyeblink that
the dog was on the child and Willy Butler was on the
dog, his bare hands twisting its collar into a tourniquet.
With one impulse Lady Jean and the
young officer each snatched a golf-club and sprang
to help him. “Keep off!” he cried.
“I can hold him. Get a strap; we have to
keep him alive to find out Jean!
For God’s sake ”
His heart seemed to stand still.
Lady Jean had dropped on her knees by the dog, shielding
him from the young officer’s club. “Don’t,”
she said; “he’s not mad! It’s
Mrs. Brooke’s dog Why can’t
you see? The poor brute’s wagging
his tail!”
“He is,” said Willy; “hold
up, boys! A mad dog doesn’t wag his tail.”
He released the tourniquet sufficiently to free a
piteous whimper. A second later he lifted his
hand off the dog, which wriggled into Lady Jean’s
compassionate arms as a voice announced, “That’s
not the dog!”
The real mad dog if mad
he were had been despatched by a single
shot from a soldier’s gun, rods away; but a
panic-stricken crowd had used the customary judgment
of panic, and pursued the wrong dog.
“And now,” wrathfully
declared Jabez Rivers to his army cronies, “now
that poor boy has probably put his wrist out of whack;
and his father coming in on the two o’clock
train to see him fight for the cup! And this
old fool telegraphed for him to come.”
Nevertheless he kept a semblance of
confidence. And he has always liked Dickson because
he was so sure Willy would win. He offered to
caddy for Willy; but Willy gratefully declined, because
it would break Tommy’s heart; Tommy’s
mother was coming over to see the game. “He’s
a real dead-game sport,” Dickson ended, “and
a little thing like a spurious mad dog isn’t
going to put him out of the running.”
Nor did it; Cleaves made up one of
his missing holes, but he got no farther; and at the
sixteenth hole Rivers and a small, keen-eyed, quiet-looking
man stood up in a runabout and shouted while the great
Cleaves, bewildered but invincibly courteous, shook
hands with Willy Butler.
“You wait until he has cleaned
up a bit” advised Rivers; “give the boy’s
girl a chance first there they are; she’s
talking to him now.”
Mr. Butler knew who she was; she had
been pointed out to him before; possibly having watched
her carefully through the progress of the game, he
knew something else, being a man who came to conclusions
quickly, on occasion. He looked at her now; he
looked at Rivers; the only words that escaped his
lips in a very small, low voice were,
“Wouldn’t that make a man believe in answers
to prayers!”
“Willy’s been going some,”
said Rivers. “I don’t know who you’ve
up your sleeve for him, but we’ve picked out
a winner a sweet, brave, true-hearted little
lady. Don’t you butt in, Hiram.”
“Well, hardly,” said Hiram
Butler, “since her father and I picked her out
first. But, Jabez, blood will tell; I knew Willy
had the makings. Now suppose you and I put the
young folks into the machine. They can do their
courting on the way.”
It may be presumed that he knew, although
they took their own original way to Arcadia.
Fifteen minutes later, in the heart of the woods which
they had sought because, although much longer to the
club-house by that road, Willy needed its cool refreshment;
fifteen minutes later the boy was saying, “I
had to write the note because I didn’t have a
chance to see you. Have you read it?” He
looked up tremulously. “I write an awfully
blind handwriting always, and to-day, with playing
golf and all, it’s worse than ever.”
“You could read it out to me,
you know,” said the girl; she pulled the score-card,
on which Willy had scribbled, from her sleeve, and
both the young heads bent over it. “‘Dear
Jean,’” read Willy; then he added, “I
hope you don’t think that presumptuous, but being
engaged ”
“No, never mind that; you called
me that to-day, already, at the top of your voice,
too.”
“You scared me stiff Jean.”
“You scared me first before
I knew it was Flukes. You are an awfully reckless
boy.”
“I will go on,” said Willy; “it’s
short.” He read:
“’Dear Jean, I forgot
to say one thing yesterday when I asked you to marry
me; I love and adore you. Yours very sincerely,
William Godfrey Butler.’”
He said nothing more; neither did
she say anything for a space. The squirrels watched
them with their bright little eyes, and scampered
fearlessly up the very tree under which their car had
halted. All at once she began to laugh.
“My word! but you look miserable, William Butler.
I know it is a sacrifice; I made up my mind to release
you; I only consented yesterday to make you easy in
your mind for the game.”
Then he surprised her. “That
was yesterday,” said he. “To-day I
know why all the world has been different ever since
I saw you; I knew everything I felt when you ran to
that dog ”
“Then it will not be an awful sacrifice for
you?”
He took her little cold brown hand;
I had forgotten there was such a thing in the world
as fear. “It will be heaven for me,”
he said. “But for you?”
She looked away at the squirrels;
she tried in vain to speak in her gay, light tone.
“I I found out something this morning,
too.”
So Arcady lured two new explorers,
who, going through its subtly winding paths, naturally
took quite a little while to reach the club-house and
the ovation waiting the champion. Just outside
the portals Lady Jean uttered a little cry. “Why,
I do believe! Why, Willy! There’s
the motor mower!”
There in the body, resting amid long
lines of green stubble, there, indeed, stood the long-sought
mower.
“I’m obliged to it,”
said Willy, “but I don’t need it now.”