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  THE WHITE SHIELD

  STORIES BY
  MYRTLE REED

  Author of
  Lavender and Old Lace
  The Master's Violin
  Old Rose and Silver
  A Weaver of Dreams
  Flower of the Dusk
  At the Sign of the Jack O'Lantern
  The Shadow of Victory
  Threads of Grey and Gold
  Etc.

  ILLUSTRATED BY
  DALTON STEVENS

  [Illustration]

  New York
  GROSSET & DUNLAP
  Publishers

  Made in the United States of America




COPYRIGHT, 1902
BY
MYRTLE REED


BY MYRTLE REED:

  A Weaver of Dreams
  Old Rose and Silver
  Lavender and Old Lace
  The Master's Violin
  Love Letters of a Musician
  The Spinster Book
  The Shadow of Victory
  Sonnets to a Lover
  Master of the Vineyard
  Flower of the Dusk
  At the Sign of the Jack-o'-Lantern
  A Spinner in the Sun
  Later Love Letters of a Musician
  Love Affairs of Literary Men
  Myrtle Reed Year Book


_This edition is issued under arrangement with the publishers_

G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, NEW YORK AND LONDON




[Illustration: "Do you remember that awful quarrel we had about
annexing Canada to the United States?" asked Robert.
_From the Drawing by Dalton Stevens._]




Contents


                                 PAGE
    PREFACE                           v
    MORNING                         vii
    THE WHITE SHIELD                  3
    AN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIR          21
    A CHILD OF SILENCE               47
    THE DWELLER IN BOHEMIA           63
    A MINOR CHORD                    79
    THE MADONNA OF THE TAMBOURINE    87
    A MISTRESS OF ART               103
    A ROSARY OF TEARS               119
    THE ROSES AND THE SONG          141
    A LAGGARD IN LOVE               151
    TRÄUMEREI                       169
    "SWING LOW, SWEET CHARIOT"      175
    THE FACE OF THE MASTER          189
    A REASONABLE COURTSHIP          209
    ELMIRY ANN'S VALENTINE          227
    THE KNIGHTHOOD OF TONY          247
    HER VOLUNTEER                   269
    IN REFLECTED GLORY              283
    THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL             299
    FROM A HUMAN STANDPOINT         319


    The Editor desires to make acknowledgment to the publishers of the
    following magazines for their courtesy in permitting the use of
    certain stories in this collection: _Munsey's Magazine_, _The New
    England Magazine_, _The Pilgrim_, _The Smart Set_, _The Woman's
    Magazine_, _The National Magazine_, _Outing_.




Preface


The editor takes great pleasure in being able to give to the public
another volume from the pen of the lamented author--Myrtle Reed. These
fascinating bits of fiction reflect the characteristics of the writer;
the same vivid imagination, the quick transition from pathos to humour,
the facility of utterance, the wholesome sentiment, the purity of
thought, the delicacy of touch, the spontaneous wit which endeared her
to friends and to thousands of readers, not only in Europe and America,
but also in Australia and South Africa, are here fully represented.

Her mission was largely one of comfort to the suffering and the
sorrowing; letters of good cheer went to far-away countries where her
personal ministry could reach in no other way, and her writings are
rich with sympathy and hope which have poured the oil of gladness into
many a wounded spirit.

Pathos is not sadness, but it is rather the sunshine gleaming through
a passing cloud, and hence the writings of Myrtle Reed are illumined
with the gladsome light of unfailing love. Not only in her books and in
letters to troubled souls, but also in her personal records, we find
the unfading lines of a deeply devotional nature which was sacredly
guarded from the careless observer and seldom discussed even with
friends. But in this abiding faith was rooted the brave loyalty and
high purpose which not only characterised herself, but also all of her
productions.

The beautiful stories here presented have given pleasure to thousands
of readers in the magazines in which they first came into print, and it
is to the unvarying courtesy of the publishers that we are indebted for
the privilege of thus binding the scattered grain into a single golden
sheaf.

For the many letters of sincere sympathy which, in response to a
formal request, have come from these stranger-friends, the editor is
especially grateful.

  ELIZABETH A. REED.
  CHICAGO, February, 1912.




Morning
BY MYRTLE REED


  The magic East lies in enchanted shadow--
  A Titan dreaming fitfully of day,
  The ghostly mists are deep upon the meadow
  Outlined against the hillside faintly grey;
  The portent of the dawn has strangely swayed
  The silver birches, trembling and afraid.
  Too long the hosts of Dark have held the plain,
  The King of Night at last must end his reign;
  With rapturous accord doth earth acclaim
  The tidings of new life for heart and brain,
  Behold the night hath passed away in flame!

  Sea-born and strong, the winds begin to blow
  Against the cliffs, the billows break in spray;
  Returning waters meet and overflow--
  White-plumed battalions marshalled for the fray;
  Upon the beach the foaming cavalcade
  Beats yet once more with rhythmic cannonade.
  Afar the boundless reaches of the main
  Show lines of white that fall and rise again,
  A morning song the sea's lips soon shall frame,
  Insistent and with passionate refrain,
  Behold the night hath passed away in flame!
  Athwart the sombre East there comes a glow--
  A thrill, a tremble, then a slender ray,
  A single arrow from the sun-god's bow
  Strikes on the zenith like a star astray;
  Swiftly does the light of Venus fade,
  Her gentle radiance for the night was made.
  The distant hills take on a crimson stain
  From fire-poppies set in golden grain
  That wrought of light puts harvest fields to shame;
  Through feathery clouds there creeps a scarlet vein,
  Behold the night hath passed away in flame!

  The ramparts of the sunrise glorious grow,
  Of what lost rubies builded, none may say,
  What diamonds snatched from sunbeams or from snow--
  What emeralds and violets lost by May
  In those far off celestial walls are laid!
  Imperial columns of jacinth and of jade,
  Like dreamer's castles built in sunny Spain,
  Before these jewelled entrances are lain;
  Forgotten springs may summer now reclaim
  And visions of the autumn yet remain,
  Behold the night hath passed away in flame!
  Reflected splendour on the sea below
  Hath blazoned through the waves a royal way--
  A path of glory such as angels know,
  That leads the wondering soul to kneel and pray.
  Stray threads of sun are shining in the glade,
  Where dews of morning sparkle in the shade
  The pearly webs an alien beauty gain;
  High in the maple, down the leafy lane,
  A robin's song with neither words nor name
  Falls in a cadence like a silver rain,
  Behold the night hath passed away in flame!


L'Envoi

  "Let there be light!" the angels now ordain,
  For links of morning, distant seas enchain,
  Into the waiting heart new courage came,
  And from the deep there rose a siren strain--
  Behold the night hath passed away in flame!




The White Shield




The White Shield


People said that Joe Hayward's pictures "lacked something." Even
the critics, who know everything, were at a loss to find where the
deficiency might be. Hayward, himself, worked hard studying the
masters, patiently correcting faults in colour and perspective, and
succeeding after a fashion. But he felt that art, in its highest and
best sense, was utterly beyond him; there was a haunting elusive
something which was continually beyond his reach.

Occasionally, when he sold a picture, he would give "a time" to a
dozen artist chums from studios near by, as they did, whenever fortune
favoured them; after this he would paint again, on and on, with a
really tremendous perseverance.

At length, he obtained permission to make an exhibition of his work
in a single room at the Art Gallery. The pictures were only ten in
number, and some of them were small, but they represented a year's
hard work. When he superintended the hanging, on Saturday morning, he
was more nearly happy than he had ever been in his life. The placard on
the door, "The Hayward Exhibition will open Monday," filled him with
pleasure. It was not a conceited feeling of importance, but rather a
happy consciousness that he had done his best.

At last he was suited with the arrangement. The men went out with the
ladder and wire, and he stood in the centre of the room, contemplating
the result. The landscape in the corner might be a little out of
drawing, he thought, but the general public would not notice that.
And the woman in white, beside it, which he had christened _Purity_
certainly showed to good advantage. He remembered very well the day
he had put the finishing touches upon it after the night of revelry
in which he had helped Jennings and a dozen other fellows from
neighbouring studios to celebrate the sale of Jennings' _Study of a
Head_, and how he had thought, at the time, that he, who spent such
nights, had no business to paint a figure like this of _Purity_.

As he turned to leave the room, he saw a grey gowned young woman, who
evidently did not know that the pictures were not as yet upon public
view. She passed him as she came in, with a rustle of silken skirts and
a cooling odour of violets. Seeing the key of the room in his hand, she
turned to him and said: "Pardon me, but can you tell me whose pictures
these are?"

"These are Hayward's," he replied.

"Hayward," she repeated after him, as if the name were wholly new to
her.

"Hayward is a young artist and of purely local reputation," he
explained. "This is his first public exhibition."

She surveyed the collection without any very strong show of pleasure,
until he remarked, "You don't seem to think much of his beginning."

She was prompt in her answer: "No, I do not, they seem to lack
something."

He sighed inwardly. That old, old, "something." Hayward's pictures all
lacked "something" as everybody said of them; but what that something
was, his intimates, his fellow artists, were not the kind to know.

"What is it, do you think?" he asked.

"I don't know," she replied slowly. "If one knew the man, one might be
able to tell."

For the first time she looked him full in the face. He saw nothing but
her eyes, clear and honest, reading him through and through.

"Yes," he answered, "if you knew the man, I think you could tell."

"I'm not at all sure," she laughed, "It's only a fancy of mine."

Drawing a watch from her belt, she looked surprised and turned away. He
listened until the silken rustle had completely ceased. Then he, too,
went out and on the stair he found a fine handkerchief edged with lace,
delicately scented with violet, and minutely marked in the corner:
"Constance Grey."

On Sunday night, the studio building where Hayward and others painted
glowed with light. The morrow's opening of "The Hayward Exhibition" was
being celebrated with "a time" at the expense of the artist. Glasses
clinked, and the air was heavy with smoke, two women from a vaudeville
theatre, near by made merry upon an impromptu stage.

Everybody seemed to be happy except Hayward. The owner of the
handkerchief was in his mind. He felt that those eyes of hers grey,
deep, and tender, though they were, might blaze with anger at a scene
like this. The handkerchief had no place in such an atmosphere. He went
over to his book case, and put it between the leaves of his Tennyson,
smiling as he caught the words on the opposite page:

  "A man had given all other bliss
  And all his worldly worth for this,
  To waste his whole heart in one kiss
      Upon her perfect lips."

Her handkerchief would feel more at home there, he thought, though as
he closed the book, he could not help wondering what she would say if
she looked into the room.

A quick eye had followed his movement, and soon afterward its
owner, Jennings, took occasion to examine the volume. He waved the
handkerchief aloft triumphantly. "Heigho, fellows! Hayward's got a
new mark for his clothes! Look here--'Constance Grey'!" Hayward was
shaken with mingled shame and anger that he could not explain, even
to himself. The words and tone with which he commanded his friend to
put the little thing back where he had found it were as hot as they
were foolish. For a moment the two men faced each other; then Jennings
apologised, and afterward Hayward murmured a sort of apology also.
In sparkling champagne they drank to good fellowship again. But the
incident was not without a certain subtle effect upon the celebration,
and at one o'clock Hayward sat alone with his face buried in his hands,
a dainty handkerchief spread out before him, and beside it was the
rapidly sketched outline of a face which he had just completed.

He knew now why the action of Jennings had made him so furious. The
shaft of light from a woman's eyes, which once strikes deep into the
soul of every man, had at last come home to him.

The "opening" was auspicious. Wealth and art alike were well
represented. One of his most important pictures was marked "sold"
before the evening was over, and everybody congratulated the artist
upon his good fortune. In praise of his art, however, very little
was said that did not somehow carry in it, perhaps silently, the old
drawback--the implication that something was lacking; still exultation
ran rife in his veins. There were throngs of beautiful women there and
he was the centre of it all.

Toward the end of the evening, a lady who had once sat for a portrait
came up to him. She was one of a little group who came in late after a
theatre party, but she approached with the air of an old friend.

"Mr. Hayward," she said, "I want you to know my niece."

He followed her into the next room where a young lady sat upon a divan.
Her grey eyes were lifted to his face, and then suddenly lowered in
confusion.

"Mr. Hayward," she said, "I am so ashamed!" And when he tried to
reassure her, she answered: "Let's not talk about it--it's too
humiliating!"

So they spoke of other things. He learned that she had come from a
distant city to visit relatives, and the aunt invited him to call upon
them. Friday afternoon came at last, when Miss Grey and her aunt were
at home. Other Fridays followed, and other days which served as well as
Fridays. It was seldom that the girl looked him in the face; but when
she did so, he felt himself confessed before her--a man with no right
to touch even the hem of her garment, yet honouring her with every
fibre of his being.

They were much together and Constance took a frank enjoyment in his
friendship. He made every effort to please her, and one day they went
into the country.

Constance was almost childishly happy, but the seeming perfection of
her happiness distressed him when he learned that in a very few days
she was to sail for Europe, pass the summer and autumn in travel, and
spend the winter in Paris.

At length they sat down under a gnarled oak tree and watched the light
upon the river and in the sky. After an embarrassing silence Hayward
spoke:

"I think you know the man now,--will you tell me what you think of his
pictures?"

She hesitated. "I do not know the man well enough to say, but I will
give you my art creed, and let you judge for yourself. I believe that
a man's art is neither more nor less than the expression of himself,
and that, in order to obtain an exalted expression, his first business
is with himself. Wrong living blunts, and eventually destroys, the
fundamental sense of right and wrong without which a noble art is
impossible. When a man's art is true, it is because he himself is true.
The true artist must be a man first, and an artist afterward."

Hayward took her admonition with the meekness becoming his position
as her worshipper. The conversation ended with his declaration that
he would not paint again until he had something in himself which was
worthy of being put into his picture.

"You'll help me, won't you?" he asked.

Her eyes filled. "Indeed I will, if I only can."

He went home with love's fever in his veins. She had promised to help
him, and surely there was only one way. He wrote her an ardent note,
and an hour later his messenger brought her reply.

  "Believe me, I never dreamed of this, and you know what my answer must
  be; but I do not need to tell you that whatever sincere and honest
  friendship can offer is already yours.

  "With deep regret, I am as ever,
  "CONSTANCE GREY."

The grim humour of the thing stunned him momentarily and he laughed
harshly. Then he flung himself down in a passion of grief. In the
morning he took pen and paper again, after a night of sleepless
distress.

  "You cannot mean what you say. That white womanly soul of yours
  must wake to love me some day. You have stood between me and the
  depths, and there has been no shame in the life that I offer you,
  since you came into it.

  "Oh, you perfect thing, you perfect thing, you don't know what you
  are to me! Constance, let me come!"

The answer was promptly forthcoming:

  "I cannot promise what you ask, but you may come and see me if you
  wish."

Pale with expectancy, Hayward was only the ghost of himself when the
servant admitted him. He had waited but a moment when Constance entered
the room wearing the gown in which he had first seen her. He rose to
meet her, but she came and sat down by his side.

"Listen," she said, "and I will tell you how I feel. I am twenty-five
and I have never 'cared.' I do not believe that I ever shall care, for
the love that we read of is almost incomprehensible to me. You cannot
marry such a woman."

His answer was fervent, his words crowded one upon another in a
vehement flood, and his voice was low and hoarse with pent-up
emotion, as he implored her to believe in him, trust him, and be his
wife,--kneeling at her feet and kissing her hands in abject humility.

It was very hard for her to say what she must, but with an effort she
rose and drew away from him.

"I must be true to myself and to you," she said, "and I can say nothing
but the old bitter No."

White and wretched, he went away, leaving her white and wretched behind
him.

For days and weeks thereafter, Hayward painted busily. Jennings went to
see him one afternoon.

"Look here, old fellow," he said, "what's the matter? I know I was
ungentlemanly about the handkerchief, but that's no reason why you
should cut us all this way. Can't you forget about it?"

"Why, Jennings, old boy, I haven't cut anybody."

"No, but you've tired of us, and you can't hide it. Come down the river
with us to-night. The fellows have got a yacht, and we'll have supper
on board with plenty of champagne. Won't you come?"

Hayward was seriously tempted. He knew what "the time" would mean--the
ecstasy of it and the dull penalties which would follow. But that day
by the river came into his memory: a sweet sunlit face, and a woman's
voice saying to him: "When a man's art is true, it is because he
himself is true."

"Jennings," he said, "do I look like a man who would make good company
at a champagne supper? You know what's the matter with me. Why don't
you just sensibly drop me?"

Jennings begged, and mocked, and bullied, all in a good-natured way,
but his friend was firm. When he went out, Hayward locked the studio
door and drew his half finished picture from behind a screen.

"She was right," he said to himself.

Constance sailed. He dreamed of his picture as being hung in the Salon,
and of her seeing it there. By and by it was finished, but the artist's
strength was gone, and his physician ordered him away from his work.

When he returned, restored to health, the picture was placed on
exhibition. Crowds thronged the gallery, columns and pages were written
in its praise, and astonishing prices were offered for it, but the
picture was not for sale. It, too, crossed the water, and the dream
which had comforted him for many months at last came true.

When Constance looked upon Hayward's painting, her heart leaped as
if it would leave her breast. White, radiant, and glorified, it was
she herself who stood in the centre of the canvas. That self-reliant,
fearless pose seemed to radiate infinite calm. Behind her raged the
powers of darkness, utterly helpless to pass the line on which she
stood. Her face seemed to illumine the shadows around her; her figure
was instinct with grace and strength. Below the picture was the name:
_The White Shield_.

The beauty of the conception dawned upon her slowly. Pale and
trembling, she stood there, forgetful of the place, and the throng
around her. At length she knew what she meant to him; that his art at
last rang true because he had loved her enough to be a man for her sake.

She dared not linger before it then, but she came again when the place
was empty, and stood before her lover's work, like one in a dream. The
fiends in the shadow showed her the might of the temptations he had
fought down. She gazed at her own glorified face until her eyes filled
with tears. With a great throb which was almost pain, Constance woke to
the knowledge that she loved him, even as he loved her--well enough to
stand between him and danger till she herself should fall.

The old grey guard, passing through the room, saw her upturned face in
that moment of exaltation. It was the same that he saw in the picture
above, and he quietly went away to wait until Constance came out, her
face flushed and her eyes shining like stars, before he locked the door.

That night the cable trembled with a message to America. It reached
Hayward the next morning as he sat reading the daily paper. The
envelope fluttered unheeding to the floor, and his face grew tender
then radiant as he read the few words which told him that his picture
had rewarded his love.

"Wait," he said to the messenger boy. Hurriedly he wrote the answer:
"Sailing next steamer"--then, utterly oblivious of the additional
expense, he added another word, which must have been very expressive,
for Constance turned crimson when it reached her--perhaps because the
discerning genius who copies cablegrams in typewriting had put the last
word in capitals, thinking that the message came from a Mr. Darling.




An International Affair




An International Affair


The Committee of Literary Extension was holding its first meeting.
Five girls sat around a glowing gas log and nibbled daintily at some
chocolates which had been sent to the hostess.

"Come, Margaret, you're the chairman of this committee; please tell us
what it is all for," suggested Grace Hayes.

"Well, girls, I hardly know how to begin. Most of us in travelling
have seen those little huts along the railroad with a little bit of
cultivated ground around each one. They are the very embodiment of
desolation. I have seen whole families come out to stare at the train
as it whirled by, and I have often wondered what place there could be
for such people in this beautiful, happy world--why I should have my
books and friends and the thousand other things that have been given
to me, while other people, and worst of all, other women, have to live
lives like that.

"There are boys upon farms, in reform schools, and in little towns who
scarcely ever see even a newspaper, and who do not know what a magazine
is.

"It is to reach this class of people that this work has been
undertaken, and for this purpose our committee has been appointed.
Fifteen or twenty magazines and illustrated papers come to us every
month--even to the few who are here to-day: perhaps some of you see
even more than this. After we have read them, we might send them
to these people instead of burning them, and who can tell how many
starving minds we may make better, and happier, in this simple way, and
with very little effort on our part?"

"Can they read?" It was Grace, an always practical individual, who
spoke.

"If they can't, they can learn," responded Miss Stone. "It will be an
incentive to their best efforts in every way."

Katherine Bryant leaned forward, her face flushed, and her eyes
shining. "Girls," she said, "it's perfectly beautiful. We'll send all
of our own magazines and illustrated papers, all we can collect from
other sources, and we'll raise money to buy new ones. I don't know of
any other way in which we can do so much good."

Plan after plan was suggested, and at last it was decided that the
committee should write to a society in Boston which did similar work,
and ask for the names and addresses of twenty-five persons who were in
need of reading matter. These could be removed from the lists of the
Boston society, as the Committee on Literary Extension of the Detroit
Young Woman's Club would attend to their needs in future.

In due time the list arrived, with a few particulars opposite each
name. The committee was again called together, and the chairman gave
each girl five names.

"Katherine dear," she said, "there are some more names in the little
note-book that is up-stairs in my desk. They are all boys who have left
the reform school. A friend of mine, who is one of the directors, gave
them to me, and there are only four or five. Would you mind taking
those in addition to your own?"

"Not at all," and Katherine ran up to Margaret's desk.

"Wonder where she keeps her note-book! Oh, here it is, and here is the
list." She copied busily. "One, two, three, four; that's all. No,
here's another on the next page," and at the end of her slip she wrote:
"Robert Ross, Athol, Spink Co., South Dakota." The work was taken up
in earnest and many magazines were collected within the next few days.
A strict account was kept of everything sent out, and occasionally the
girls met to compare notes.

Margaret came home one day and found Mrs. Boyce waiting for her. "My
dear," said the lady, "I've lost an address that troubles me, and I
think it may have been on the card that I gave you the other day."

"I'll see," replied Margaret, "I copied them all that very afternoon."
She took her note-book out of her chatelaine bag and handed it to Mrs.
Boyce. "Which one is it?"

The elder lady laughed in a relieved way. "This last one," she
answered. "Robert Ross. He's my favourite nephew, off on a shooting
trip, and he wants me to write to him. He'd never forgive me, if I
didn't. Just give me a card, and I will try not to be so careless
again."

Meanwhile Katherine was absorbed in addressing magazines with great
vigour. She had found a pile of back numbers in the attic and was
trying to divide them properly. The household journals went to a
woman in Kansas, fifty miles from a city, others she mailed to a boy
of sixteen who was on a farm in Minnesota, and a copy of a popular
magazine was addressed to Mr. Robert Ross. At the top of each one she
had written, "From Miss Katherine Bryant, Jefferson Ave., Detroit."

A short time afterward, she received a pathetic letter from the woman
to whom she had sent the household magazines. "I married for love,"
she wrote, "and have never been sorry, but I miss many of the things
to which I was accustomed in my eastern home. A magazine is an unusual
thing upon a Kansas farm, and with all my heart I thank you for the
great pleasure you have given a lonely woman."

Mindful of the fact that one of the objects of the committee was to
get into correspondence with its beneficiaries, Katherine sat down to
write an encouraging note to her and also to others, but before she had
finished the postman brought another letter.

It had been mailed in South Dakota. The paper was the white ruled
variety, to be found in country stores, but the penmanship was clear
and business-like.

  "My dear Miss Bryant," the letter began, "I am sure I don't know what
  good angel possessed you to send me a copy of my favourite magazine,
  but I am none the less grateful and only too happy to acknowledge it. I
  am hurt, but the doctor thinks not seriously, and that I shall be all
  right in a few weeks. The magazine which you so kindly sent has given
  me the first pleasant day I have had for some time.

  "I should be most happy to receive a letter from you, but of course
  that is too much for a stranger to ask, even though he be ill and alone.

  "Sincerely and gratefully yours,
  "ROBERT ROSS."

Katherine knit her pretty brows, and read it over again. "It's no
queerer than the one I got from the Kansas woman," she decided. "At any
rate, they both seem glad to get them and they shall have some more."

She wrote very kindly to Robert Ross, inquiring into the particulars
of his injury, and whether or not he lived on a farm. She said he was
very fortunate, if he did indeed live in the country, because so many
people were pining away and dying in the great cities. The magazine
she had sent was one of her own favourites also, and she would send
the next number as soon as it came out. In the meantime, she hoped
the package of papers she was sending in the same mail would prove
acceptable.

Out on the porch of the Athol House, Mr. Ross sat in the sun and
reviled creation in general. It was a palatial hotel--for that
region--but he seemed unmindful of his advantages.

"Oh, confound it," he groaned, "why couldn't I have shot some other
idiot instead of myself? I ought not to be trusted with a gun! Right in
the height of the prairie chicken season too, and those other fellows,
three of them, off bagging every bit of the game! I hope they won't
forget to come back this way, and take me home with them! Emperor, old
fellow, it's hard luck. Isn't it?"

The Irish setter, who had been addressed, came and put his cold nose
into Mr. Ross's hand. The well-bred dog had refused to desert his
wounded master, even for the charms of prairie chickens, and touched by
his dumb devotion Ross permitted him to stay. Long conversations were
held every day, and Emperor told Ross as plainly as a dog could, that
if it hadn't been for that dreadful flesh wound they would be having a
fine time in the fields, capturing more game than any other dog and man
in the party.

When the landlord returned from the post-office he brought a letter
which Emperor carried in triumph to his master. Ross read it in
surprise. Who Miss Bryant might be, he did not know, but she wrote a
pleasant letter, and it was certainly kind of her to notice him.

He decided that the letter he wrote in acknowledgment of the magazine
must have been extremely well done. He thought of the unknown fair one
for some time, and then concluded to write again. He was non-committal
about himself, fearing to spoil any delusion she might have been
labouring under when she sent the magazine.

When Katherine received the second letter, she felt several pricks of
conscience. It wasn't a nice thing she was doing, and she knew it. But
a person shouldn't let squeamishness interfere with philanthropic work,
so she answered promptly.

She drew him into a discussion of an article on "The Desirability of
Annexing Canada to the United States," and he criticised it harshly. He
forgot to tell her that he was a Canadian by birth and a loyal subject
of the King. His point of view was naturally distorted, and she replied
with some spirit, dealing very patiently, however, with the frail
arguments which he had submitted.

Katherine thought the discussion was a good thing. Anything that
would make him think was an unmixed blessing. She fairly glowed as
she thought of the mental stimulus she might give to this poor Dakota
farmer, who had been hurt in some mysterious way, and her letters grew
longer even as they increased in frequency, for Mr. Ross wrote very
promptly indeed. She could well understand that, when a cripple had so
little to occupy his time in that far away wilderness.

Ross was highly amused. He admired Miss Bryant's letters and wished he
might see Miss Bryant herself. A bright idea (as he thought) occurred
to him--why not?

With very red cheeks, Miss Katherine read the latest news from Spink
County. Her own beautiful Irish setter put his head into her lap, and
begged to be petted.

"Go away, Rex, I want to think. The wretch! To ask for my photograph!
He evidently doesn't know his place! I'll teach him where it is and
then take the name of the impertinent creature off my list!"

She sat down to compose a letter which should make Mr. Robert Ross,
alias wretch, squirm in agony. Rex was persistent and put his paw up to
shake hands. Katherine turned and looked at him.

"You're a dreadfully nice doggie, but I wish you'd go away and not
bother me."

Then an idea came to her which startled her at first, but grew more
attractive as she became better acquainted with it. She bent down and
whispered to Rex, and he wagged his tail as if he fully understood.

"Yes, Rex, it's got to be done. I'm sorry to sacrifice any of your
beauty, but you've got to get your mistress out of a scrape. Come on!"
And the willing Rex was escorted into the back yard.

Sooner than he expected, Mr. Ross found a letter at his plate when he
limped in to the customary breakfast of black coffee and fried eggs. On
this occasion, he omitted the eggs and hastily swallowed the coffee,
for the envelope was addressed in familiar style.

It was a very pleasant letter. The writer seemed to meet his advances
in a proper spirit, but there was no photograph. "I don't give my
pictures to young men, nor old ones either, but I enclose a lock of
hair which I have cut off on purpose for you, and I hope you will be
pleased with it."

He looked at the enclosure again and again. It was a single silky
curl, of a beautiful reddish gold, tied daintily with blue ribbon. He
certainly was pleased with it, as she had hoped. "Hair like this and
violet eyes," soliloquised Ross. "I must write again without delay." So
when the landlord went to the post-office he mailed another letter to
Miss Bryant. The first page consisted wholly of raptures.

He began to think that Athol was not so dull a place as he had at first
imagined. Those fellows off in the fields shooting prairie chickens
were not having any better time than he and Emperor in this thriving
town. It was true that Emperor slept most of the time, but magazines,
and papers, and letters not only made the time less tedious, but there
seemed to be opening up a vista of romance which made the tramping in
the stubbly fields look very much less attractive.

While he thought of it, he would read Miss Bryant's letter again. He
took it out of the envelope, and the curl fell unnoticed to the floor
of what the landlord was pleased to term "the front stoop." Emperor
walked over, and seemed interested. His master did not notice him,
being absorbed in the letter; at last the dog sniffed uneasily, and
then growled, so Ross looked up and was surprised to find him pawing
something vigorously. Still Ross did not see what the dog had. "What's
the matter with you, old fellow?" Emperor growled again, and bit
fiercely at the curl. Its owner rescued it at once, but the dog would
not be appeased. He made such a fuss that his master put the letter
away. Then Emperor made another attack on the curl, and Ross took it
away from him again and examined it closely. A queer look came into
his face and a queerer note into his voice. "Emperor, come here. Keep
still."

The long golden fringe that made Emperor's tail the thing of beauty
that it was, was drawn up on his knee and the curl was laid beside
it. There was no doubt at all. It matched exactly. Ross leaned back
in his chair with a low whistle. "Well--by--Jove! I wonder if she'll
tell me when she writes," he said to himself. With a despairing grin,
he remembered his raptures on the subject and decided that Miss Bryant
would be very certain to tell him where that "sweet curl" came from!

When the missive from Spink County reached Detroit, Miss Katherine
Bryant was a very happy girl. As a rule, it takes very little to
make girls happy. For the first time in her life, she longed for a
confidant, and unlike most girls, she had none. She took Rex for a long
walk and told him all about it. The poor dismantled tail wagged in
ecstasy, but his mistress was not sure that he understood the joke in
its entirety.

At last she would have her revenge and she took keen delight in
answering that letter. "I quite agree with you concerning the beauty of
the hair," she wrote. "It came from my beautiful Irish setter, and I am
very glad you are pleased with it, though to tell the truth, I should
think you utterly heartless if you were not."

Ross sent an elaborate apology for his impertinence, and confessed that
he admired her all the more for outwitting him. Inwardly, he wished
that Emperor had made his discovery before he had mailed that idiotic
letter. His manliness, however, appealed to Katherine and she did not
take his name off the list.

In the meantime, the three other men returned to their wounded comrade.
They had been very successful and were profuse in their expressions of
regret. Ross said nothing of his unknown friend. He felt that it would
not be fair to her, and anyhow, when a girl has sent you dog-hair, and
you have raved over it, it isn't best to tell of it. He was sure that
all the circumstances were in favour of his keeping still about it.

The ugly wound had quite healed when the four men started East
together. At St. Paul they separated, Ross and Emperor taking the night
train for Detroit and the promised visit to Mrs. Boyce.

She was delighted to see her nephew, and Emperor soon found his way
into her good graces. His master took him out for a stroll the same
day he arrived, the dog having been long confined in a box-car, and
the released captive found his excursion especially refreshing. At a
corner, however, he met another Irish setter, also out for a stroll,
and the two speedily entered into a violent discussion.

A snarling, rolling, mahogany-coloured ball rolled toward Ross, and a
young lady followed, crying at the top of her voice, "Rex! Rex! Come
here."

The owner of Emperor rushed into the disturbance with his cane, and
succeeded in resolving the ball into its component parts.

Rex, panting and injured, was restored to his agitated mistress, while
Emperor chafed at his master's restraining hand.

Apologies were profuse on both sides. "I'm stronger than you," Ross
said, "and if you can hold your dog until I get mine out of sight, we
shall have no more trouble."

Miss Bryant scolded Rex until his head and tail drooped with shame, and
relentlessly kept him at heel all the way home.

At her own gate, she met Margaret Stone, to whom she told the story
of her adventure with the handsome stranger, and the other dog, who
"looked so much like Rex that his own mother could not have told them
apart!"

Margaret's errand was a brief one. Mrs. Boyce was coming over to the
Stone mansion with her nephew and she wanted Katherine to come to
dinner and stay all night. So Katherine put on her prettiest gown and
went over, little thinking what fate had in store for her.

She instantly recognised in Ross the man she had met a few hours before
under very different circumstances. He was too much of a gentleman to
allude to the occurrence, but she flushed uncomfortably.

Both girls found him an exceedingly pleasant fellow. Katherine had
recovered from her embarrassment, and was laughing happily, when Mrs.
Boyce began to speak of the Committee on Literary Extension and the
good work the girls were doing.

"Do you know, Bob," she went on, "that I nearly lost your address in
that way? I gave it to Margaret with the names of some boys from the
Reform School. It's a blessed wonder you didn't get magazines and
tracts!"

If Robert had been an angel he would not have looked at Katherine, but
being merely human he did. Miss Bryant rose in a dignified manner.
"Margaret," she said unsteadily, "I must go home."

"Why, Katherine, you were going to stay all night!"

"My--head--aches," she answered.

"Bob," commanded Mrs. Boyce, "you must take Katherine home."

"It's not at all necessary," pleaded Katherine piteously.

"But I insist," repeated Mrs. Boyce with the utmost good will.

Mr. Ross rose. "If Miss Bryant will permit me, I shall be only too glad
to accompany her home," he said courteously.

There was nothing to do but submit with the best grace she could
assume. Once out of doors, she was the first to break the silence:

"I'm afraid to be out alone--in the city."

"Yes," replied her escort cheerily, "it's a pity you didn't bring
your dog!" He could have bitten his tongue out for making such an
unlucky speech, but to his surprise Katherine broke down and sobbed
hysterically.

Mr. Ross took both her hands in his own. "You are tired and nervous,
Miss Bryant, and I beg you to think no more about what has happened.
You have no idea how much good you did me out in that miserable little
place, and I shall be only too glad to be your friend, if you will let
me."

Katherine wiped her eyes: "If you can be my friend, I ought to be very
willing to be yours," and just outside of her door Canada and the
United States clasped hands in a solemn treaty of peace.

Safely in her own room, the mistress of Rex sat down before the mirror
and studied her face attentively. "Katherine Bryant," she said to
herself, "you are an idiot! Not foolish, nor silly, nor half witted,
nor anything like that--just a plain idiot! He has graduated from the
University with high honours, and you, with your miserable little
boarding-school education, have instructed him on many subjects. I am
thoroughly ashamed of you."

When she finally slept, her dreams were a medley of handsome strangers,
mixed with dogs, and reddish-yellow curls tied up with blue ribbons.

Leaning up against the corner lamp-post, Mr. Robert Ross indulged in a
spasm of irreverent mirth, but with a great effort he preserved a calm
exterior when he again entered the drawing-room of his hostess.

On their way home Mrs. Boyce said: "Bob, why don't you go into business
with your uncle and become a good American citizen? We'd love to have
you with us, and there is surely a good opening here."

"I'll think about it," he answered, and he did, with the usual result,
for it is proverbial that he who hesitates is lost.

Mr. Boyce was quite willing to shift a part of his responsibility to
the broad shoulders of his nephew, and an agreement was easily reached.
Emperor was quartered in the back yard, where he fretted for a few days
and then wreaked his vengeance on sundry grocery boys and milkmen.

When his master went out, the dog usually went along except when Miss
Bryant and Rex were to be favoured with a call. If the two dogs met,
the customary disturbance ensued. Rex included Ross in his hatred of
Emperor, and Emperor was equally hostile toward Miss Bryant.

"Rex," said Katherine, one day, "you are a very nice doggie, but I
won't have you treat Mr. Ross with such disrespect. The other night,
when we were going out, you had no business to growl when he buttoned
my gloves, nor to sniff in that disgusted way at the roses he brought.
If you ever do that again, I shall let the dogcatcher take you to the
pound!"

The imaginary spectacle of Rex en route to the pound nearly unnerved
Katherine, but she felt that she must be severe. Ross punished Emperor
with a chain, or with confinement in the back yard, which the dog
hated, but where it was necessary to keep him a part of the time, and
for a while all went well.

But Ross went away one evening without explaining matters to the
sensitive being in the back yard.

Emperor knew well enough where he had gone--knew he was visiting that
disagreeable girl who owned that other Irish setter--a very impertinent
dog whose manners were so bad that he was a disgrace to the whole
setter tribe!

He sulked over his wrongs for an hour or so, and then crawled out
through a friendly hole in the fence which he had for some time past
been spending his hours of imprisonment in making.

The dining-room of the house on the avenue was lighted by a single gas
jet, and the shades were lowered. Miss Bryant and the chafing dish
together had evolved a rarebit which made the inner man glow with
pleasure.

"Do you remember that awful quarrel we had about annexing Canada to the
United States?" asked Robert.

Katherine remembered distinctly.

He went over to her side of the table. "What do you think about it now?"

It was a very ordinary question, but Miss Bryant turned scarlet.

"I--I don't know," she faltered.

He put his arm around her. "I give in," he said; "annexation is the
most desirable thing in the world--when shall it take place?"

Katherine raised her head timidly. "Say it, sweetheart," he whispered
tenderly.

It happened at this moment that Emperor arrived in search of his
master. Rex was sitting on the front steps and declined to take in
his card. Then the shrieking, howling barking ball rolled into the
vestibule, and Ross made a dash for the door. With considerable effort
he got Rex into the back yard, and locked Emperor into the vestibule.
Then he went back to Katherine.

He tried to speak lightly, but his voice trembled with earnestness:
"Dearest, this entire affair has been coloured, and suggested by, and
mixed up with dogs. I think now there will be an interval of peace for
at least ten minutes, and I am asking you to marry me."

Rex raised his voice in awful protest, and Emperor replied angrily to
the challenge, as he raged back and forth in the vestibule, but Robert
heard Katherine's tremulous "Yes" with a throb of joy which even the
consciousness of warring elements outside could not lessen. The little
figure against his breast shook with something very like a giggle, and
Katherine's eyes shining with merriment met his with the question:
"What on earth shall we do with the dogs?"

Robert laughed and drew her closer: "It's strictly international, isn't
it? Canada and the United States quarrel----"

"And Ireland arbitrates!" said Katherine.

Three months later, in the drawing-room on Jefferson Avenue, to the
accompaniment of flowers, lights, and soft music, the treaty was
declared permanent. There was a tiny dark coloured footprint on the
end of Katherine's train, which no one appeared to notice, and a white
silk handkerchief carefully arranged hid from public view a slightly
larger spot on the shining linen of the bridegroom, where Emperor had
registered his enthusiastic approval of his master's apparel.

But the rest of the committee, in pale green gowns, were bridesmaids,
while Emperor and Rex, resplendent in new collars, and having
temporarily adjusted their difference as long as they were under guard,
had seats of honour among the guests.




A Child of Silence




A Child of Silence


At the end of the street stood the little white house which Jack Ward
was pleased to call his own. Five years he had lived there, he and
Dorothy. How happy they had been! But things seemed to have gone wrong
some way, since--since the baby died in the spring. A sob came into
Jack's throat, for the little face had haunted him all day.

Never a sound had the baby lips uttered, and the loudest noises had not
disturbed his rest. It had seemed almost too much to bear, but they
had loved him more, if that were possible, because he was not as other
children were. Jack had never been reconciled but Dorothy found a world
of consolation in the closing paragraph of a magazine article on the
subject:

"And yet we cannot believe these Children of Silence to be unhappy.
Mrs. Browning says that 'closed eyes see more truly than ever open
do,' and may there not be another world of music for those to whom our
own is soundless? In a certain sense they are utterly beyond the pain
that life always brings, for never can they hear the cruel words beside
which physical hurts sink into utter insignificance. So pity them not,
but believe that He knoweth best, and that what seems wrong and bitter
is often His truest kindness to His children."

Dorothy read it over and over until she knew it by heart. There was
a certain comfort in the thought that he need not suffer--that he
need never find what a world of bitterness lies in that one little
word--life. And when the hard day came she tried to be thankful, for
she knew that he was safer still--tried to see the kindness that had
taken him back into the Unknown Silence of which he was the Child.

Jack went up the steps this mild winter evening, whistling softly to
himself, and opened the door with his latch-key.

"Where are you, girlie?"

"Up stairs, dear. I'll be down in a minute," and even as she spoke
Dorothy came into the room.

In spite of her black gown and the hollows under her eyes, she was a
pretty woman. She knew it, and Jack did too. That is he had known, but
he had forgotten.

"Here's the evening paper." He tossed it into her lap as she sat down
by the window.

"Thank you." She wondered vaguely why Jack did not kiss her as he used
to, and then dismissed the thought. She was growing accustomed to that
sort of thing.

"How nice of you to come by the early train! I didn't expect you until
later."

"There wasn't much going on in town, so I left the office early. Any
mail? No? Guess I'll take Jip out for a stroll." The fox-terrier at his
feet wagged his tail approvingly. "Want to go, Jip?"

Jip answered decidedly in the affirmative.

"All right, come on," and Dorothy watched the two go down the street
with an undefined feeling of pain.

She lit the prettily shaded lamp and tried to read the paper, but the
political news, elopements, murders, and suicides lacked interest. She
wondered what had come between her and Jack. Something had, there was
no question about that; but--well, it would come straight sometime.
Perhaps she was morbid and unjust. She couldn't ask him what was the
matter without making him angry and she had tried so hard to make him
happy.

Jip announced his arrival at the front door with a series of sharp
barks and an unmistakable scratch. She opened it as Jack sauntered
slowly up the walk and passed her with the remark:

"Dinner ready? I'm as hungry as a bear."

Into the cozy dining-room they went, Jip first, then Jack, then
Dorothy. The daintily served meal satisfied the inner man, and he
did not notice that she ate but little. She honestly tried to be
entertaining, and thought she succeeded fairly well. After dinner he
retired into the depths of the evening paper, and Dorothy stitched away
at her embroidery.

Suddenly Jack looked at his watch. "Well, it's half past seven, and
I've got to go over to Mrs. Brown's and practise a duet with her for
to-morrow."

Dorothy trembled, but only said: "Oh, yes, the duet. What is it this
time?"

"'Calvary,' I guess, that seems to take the multitude better than
anything we sing. No, Jip, not this time. Good-bye, I won't be gone
long."

The door slammed, and Dorothy was alone. She put away her embroidery
and walked the floor restlessly. Mrs. Brown was a pretty widow, always
well dressed, and she sang divinely. Dorothy could not sing a note
though she played fairly well, and Jack got into a habit of taking
Mrs. Brown new music and going over to sing it with her. An obliging
neighbour had called that afternoon and remarked maliciously that Mr.
Ward and Mrs. Brown seemed to be very good friends. Dorothy smiled
with white lips, and tried to say pleasantly, "Yes, Mrs. Brown is very
charming, don't you think so? I am sure that if I were a man I should
fall in love with her."

The neighbour rose to go and by way of a parting shot replied: "That
seems to be Mr. Ward's idea. Lovely day, isn't it? Come over when you
can."

Dorothy was too stunned to reply. She thought seriously of telling
Jack, but wisely decided not to. These suburban towns were always
gossipy. Jack would think she did not trust him. And now he was at Mrs.
Brown's again!

The pain was almost blinding. She went to the window and looked out.
The rising moon shone fitfully upon the white signs of sorrow in the
little churchyard far to the left.

She threw a shawl over her head and went out. In feverish haste she
walked over to the little "God's Acre" where the Child of Silence was
buried.

She found the spot and sat down. A thought of Mrs. Browning's ran
through her mind:

  "Thank God, bless God, all ye who suffer not
  More grief than ye can weep for----"

Then someway the tears came, a blessed rush of relief.

"Oh, baby dear," she sobbed, pressing her lips to the cold turf above
him, "I wish I were down there beside you, as still and as dreamless
as you. You don't know what it means--you never would have known. I'd
rather be a stone than a woman with a heart. Do you think that if I
could buy death I wouldn't take it and come down there beside you? It
hurt me to lose you, but it wasn't the worst. You would have loved me.
Oh, my Child of Silence! Come back, come back!"

How long she stayed there she never knew, but the heart pain grew
easier after a while. She pressed her lips to the turf again. "Good
night, baby dear, good night. I'll come again. You haven't lost your
mother even if she has lost you!"

Fred Bennett passed by the unfrequented spot, returning from an errand
to that part of town, and he heard the last words. He drew back into
the shadow. The slight black figure appeared on the sidewalk a few feet
ahead of him and puzzled him not a little. He followed cautiously and
finally decided to overtake her. As she heard his step behind her she
looked around timidly.

"Mrs. Ward!"

His tone betrayed surprise, and he saw that her eyes were wet and her
white, drawn face was tear-stained. She shuddered. A new trouble faced
her. How long had he been following her?

He saw her distress and told his lie bravely. "I just came around the
corner here."

Her relieved look was worth the sacrifice of his conscientious
scruples, he said to himself afterward.

"I may walk home with you, may I not?"

"Certainly."

She took his offered arm and tried to chat pleasantly with her old
friend. Soon they reached the gate. She dropped his arm and said good
night unsteadily. Bennett could bear it no longer and he took both of
her hands in his own.

"Mrs. Ward, you are in trouble. Tell me, perhaps I can help you." She
was silent. "Dorothy, you will let me call you so, will you not? You
know how much I cared for you in a boy's impulsive fashion, in the old
days when we were at school; you know that I am your friend now--as
true a friend as a man can be to a woman. Tell me, Dorothy, and let me
help you."

There was a rustle of silk on the pavement and her caller of the
afternoon swept by without speaking. Already Dorothy knew the story
which would be put in circulation on the morrow. Bennett's clasp
tightened on her cold fingers. "Tell me, Dorothy, and let me help you!"
he said again.

The impulse to tell him grew stronger, and she controlled it with
difficulty. "It is nothing, Mr. Bennett, I--I have a headache."

"I see, and you came out for a breath of fresh air. Pardon me. I am
sure you will be better in the morning. These cool nights are so
bracing. Good night, and God bless you--Dorothy."

Meanwhile Bennett was on his way to Mrs. Brown's cottage. His mind
was made up, and he would speak to Jack. He had heard a great deal of
idle gossip, and it would probably cost him Jack's friendship, but he
would at least have the satisfaction of knowing that he had tried to do
something for Dorothy. He rang the bell and Mrs. Brown herself answered
it.

"Good evening, Mrs. Brown. No, thank you, I won't come in. Just ask
Jack if I may see him a minute on a matter of business."

Ward, hearing his friend's voice, was already at the door.

"I'll be with you in a minute, Fred," he said. "Good night, Mrs. Brown;
I am sure we shall get on famously with the duet." And the two men went
slowly down the street.

They walked on in silence until Jack said: "Well, Bennett, what is it?
You don't call a fellow out like this unless it is something serious."

"It is serious, Jack; it's Dor--it's Mrs. Ward."

"Dorothy? I confess I am as much in the dark as ever."

"It's this way, Jack, she is in trouble."

Ward was silent.

"Jack, you know I'm a friend of yours; I have been ever since I've
known you. If you don't take what I am going to say as I mean, you are
not the man I think you are."

"Go on, Fred, I understand you. I was only thinking."

"Perhaps you don't know it, but the town is agog with what it is
pleased to term your infatuation for Mrs. Brown." Jack smothered a
profane exclamation, and Bennett continued. "Dorothy is eating her
heart out over the baby. She was in the cemetery to-night sobbing over
his grave and talking to him like a mad woman. I came up the back
street, and after a little I overtook her and walked home with her.
That's how I happen to know. And don't think for a moment that she
hasn't heard the gossip. She has, only she is too proud to speak of it.
And Jack, old man, I don't believe you've neglected her intentionally,
but begin again and show her how much you care for her. Good night."

Bennett left him abruptly, for the old love for Dorothy was strong
to-night; not the fitful flaming passion of boyhood, but the deeper,
tenderer love of his whole life.

Jack was strangely affected. Dear little Dorothy! He had neglected her.
"I don't deserve her," he said to himself, "but I will."

He passed a florist's shop, and a tender thought struck him. He would
buy Dorothy some roses. He went in and ordered a box of American
Beauties. A stiff silk rustled beside him and he lifted his hat
courteously.

"Going home, Mr. Ward? It's early, isn't it?" "But," with scarcely
perceptible emphasis, "it's--none--too soon!" Then as her eager eye
caught a glimpse of the roses, "Ah, but you men are sly! For Mrs.
Brown?"

Jack took his package and responded icily, "No, for Mrs. Ward!" "Cat!"
he muttered under his breath as he went out. And that little word in
the mouth of a man means a great deal.

He entered the house, and was not surprised to find that Dorothy had
retired. She never waited for him now. He took the roses from the box
and went up-stairs.

"Hello, Dorothy," as the pale face rose from the pillow in surprise.
"I've brought you some roses!" Dorothy actually blushed. Jack hadn't
brought her a rose for three years; not since the day the baby was
born. He put them in water and came and sat down beside her.

"Dear little girl, your head aches, doesn't it?" He drew her up beside
him and put his cool fingers on the throbbing temples. Her heart beat
wildly and happy tears filled her eyes as Jack bent down and kissed her
tenderly. "My sweetheart! I'm so sorry for the pain."

It was the old lover-like tone and Dorothy looked up.

"Jack," she said, "you do love me, don't you?"

His arms tightened about her. "My darling, I love you better than
anything in the world. You are the dearest little woman I ever saw. It
isn't much of a heart, dear, but you've got it all. Crying? Why, what
is it, sweetheart?"

"The baby," she answered brokenly, and his eyes overflowed too.

"Dorothy, dearest, you know that was best. He wasn't like--" Jack
couldn't say the hard words, but Dorothy understood and drew his face
down to hers again.

Then she closed her eyes, and Jack held her until she slept. The dawn
found his arms around her again, and when the early church bells awoke
her from a happy dream she found the reality sweet and beautiful, and
the heartache a thing of the past.




The Dweller in Bohemia




The Dweller in Bohemia


The single lamp in "the den" shone in a distant corner with a subdued
rosy glow; but there was no need of light other than that which came
from the pine knots blazing in the generous fireplace.

On the rug, crouched before the cheerful flame, was a woman, with her
elbow on her knee and her chin in the palm of her hand.

There were puzzled little lines in her forehead, and the corners of her
mouth drooped a little. Miss Archer was tired, and the firelight, ever
kind to those who least need its grace, softened her face into that of
a wistful child.

A tap at the door intruded itself into her reverie. "Come," she called.
There was a brief silence, then an apologetic masculine cough.

Helen turned suddenly. "Oh, it's you," she cried. "I thought it was the
janitor!"

"Sorry you're disappointed," returned Hilliard jovially. "Sit down on
the rug again, please,--you've no idea how comfortable you looked,--and
I'll join you presently." He was drawing numerous small parcels from
the capacious pockets of his coat and placing them upon a convenient
chair.

"If one might enquire--" began Helen.

"Certainly, ma'am. There's oysters and crackers and parsley and
roquefort, and a few other things I thought we might need. I know
you've got curry-powder and celery-salt, and if her gracious ladyship
will give me a pitcher, I'll go on a still hunt for cream."

"You've come to supper, then, I take it," said Helen.

"Yes'm. Once in a while, in a newspaper office, some fellow is allowed
a few minutes off the paper. Don't know why, I'm sure, but it has now
happened to me. I naturally thought of you, and the chafing dish, and
the curried oysters you have been known to cook, and----"

Helen laughed merrily. "Your heart's in the old place, isn't it--at the
end of your esophagus?"

"That's what it is. My heart moves up into my throat at the mere sight
of you." The colour flamed into her cheeks. "Now will you be good?" he
continued enquiringly. "Kindly procure for me that pitcher I spoke of."

He whistled happily as he clattered down the uncarpeted stairs, and
Helen smiled to herself. "Bohemia has its consolations as well as its
trials," she thought. "This would be impossible anywhere else."

After the last scrap of the feast had been finished and the dishes
cleared away, Frank glanced at his watch. "I have just an hour and a
half," he said, "and I have a great deal to say in it." He placed her
in an easy chair before the fire and settled himself on a cushion at
her feet, where he could look up into her face.

"'The time has come, the walrus said, to talk of many things,'" quoted
Helen lightly.

"Don't be flippant, please."

"Very well, then," she replied, readily adjusting herself to his mood,
"what's the trouble?"

"You know," he said in a different tone, "the same old one. Have you
nothing to say to me, Helen?"

Her face hardened, ever so slightly, but he saw it and it pained him.
"There's no use going over it again," she returned, "but if you
insist, I will make my position clear once for all."

"Go on," he answered grimly.

"I'm not a child any longer," Helen began, "I'm a woman, and I want to
make the most of my life--to develop every nerve and faculty to its
highest and best use. I have no illusions but I have my ideals, and I
want to keep them. I want to write--you never can understand how much
I want to do it--and I have had a tiny bit of success already. I want
to work out my own problems and live my own life, and you want me to
marry you and help you live yours. It's no use, Frank," she ended, not
unkindly, "I can't do it."

"See here, my little comrade," he returned, "you must think I'm a
selfish beast. I'm not asking you to give up your work nor your highest
and best development. Isn't there room in your life for love and work
too?"

"Love and I parted company long ago," she answered.

"Don't you ever feel the need of it?"

She threw up her head proudly. "No, my work is all-sufficient. There is
no joy like creation; no intoxication like success."

"But if you should fail?"

"I shall not fail," she replied confidently. "When you dedicate your
whole life to a thing, you simply must have it. The only reason for a
failure is that the desire to succeed is not strong enough. I ask no
favours--nothing but a fair field. I'm willing to work, and work hard
for everything I get, as long as I have the health and courage to work
at all."

He looked at her a long time before he spoke again. The firelight
lingered upon the soft curves of her throat with a caressing
tenderness. Her eyes, deep, dark, and splendid, were shining with
unwonted resolution, and her mouth, though set in determined lines, had
a womanly sweetness of its own. Around her face, like a halo, gleamed
the burnished glory of her hair.

For three long years he had loved her. Helen, with her eyes on things
higher than love and happiness, had persistently eluded his wooing. His
earnest devotion touched her not a little, but she felt her instinctive
sympathy for him to be womanish weakness.

"This is final?" he asked, rising and standing before her.

She rose also. "Yes, please believe me--it _must_ be final; there is
no other way. I don't want lovers--I want friends."

"You want me, then, to change my love to friendship?"

"Yes."

"Never to tell you again that I love you?"

"No, never again."

"Very well, we are to be comrades, then?"

She gave him her hand. "Yes, working as best we may, each with the
understanding and approval of the other; comrades in Bohemia."

Some trick of her voice, some movement of her hand--those trifles
so potent with a man in love--beat down his contending reason. With
a catch in his breath, he crushed her roughly to him, kissed her
passionately on the mouth, then suddenly released her.

"Women like you don't know what you do," he said harshly. "You hold
a man captive with your charm, become so vitally necessary to him
that you are nothing less than life, enmesh, ensnare him at every
opportunity, then offer him the cold comfort of your friendship!"

He was silent for a breathless instant; then in some measure, his
self-control came back. "Pardon me," he said gently, bending over her
hand. "I have startled you. It shall not occur again. Good night and
good luck--my comrade in Bohemia!"

Helen stood where he had left her until the street door closed and the
echo of his footsteps died away. The fire was a smouldering heap of
ashes, and the room seemed deathly still. Her cheeks were hot as with
a fever, and she trembled like one afraid. It was the first time he
had crossed the conventional boundary, and he had said it would be the
last, but Love's steel had struck flame from the flint of her maiden
soul.

"I wish," she said to herself as she put the room in order, "that I
lived on some planet where life wasn't quite so serious."

For his part he was pacing moodily down the street, with his hands
in his pockets. Several times he swallowed a persistent lump in his
throat. He could understand Helen's ambition, and her revolt against
the conventions, but he could not understand her point of view. Even
now, he would not admit that she was wholly lost to him. What she had
said came back to him with convincing force: "When you dedicate your
whole life to a thing, you simply must have it."

"We'll see," he said to himself grimly, "just how true her theory is."

Months passed, and Helen worked hard. She was busy as many trusting
souls have been before with "The Great American Novel." She was putting
into it all of her brief experience and all of her untried philosophy
of life. She was writing of suffering she had never felt, and of love
she could not understand.

She saw Frank now and then, at studio teas and semi-Bohemian
gatherings, at which the newspaper men were always a welcome feature.
There was no trace of the lover in his manner, and she began to doubt
his sincerity, as is the way with women.

"So this is Bohemia?" he asked one evening when they met in a studio in
the same building as Helen's den.

"Yes,--why not?"

"I was thinking it must be a pretty poor place if this is a fair sample
of the inhabitants," he returned easily.

She flushed angrily. "I do not see why you should think so. Here are
authors, musicians, poets, painters and playwrights--could one be in
better company?"

[Illustration: "So this is Bohemia?" he asked one evening when they met
in a studio in the same building as Helen's den.
_From the Drawing by Dalton Stevens_]

He paid no attention to her ironical question. "Yes," he continued, "I
see the authors. One is a woman--pardon me, a female--who has written
a vulgar novel, and gained a little sensational notoriety. The other
is a man who paid a fifth-rate publishing house a goodly sum to issue
what he calls 'a romance.' The musicians are composers of 'coon songs'
even though the African Renaissance has long since waned, and members
of theatrical orchestras. The poets have their verses printed in
periodicals which 'do not pay for poetry.' The only playwright present
has written a vaudeville sketch--and I don't see the painters. Are they
painting billboards?"

"Perhaps," said Helen, with exquisite iciness, "since you find us all
so far beneath your level, you will have the goodness to withdraw. Your
superiority may make us uncomfortable."

Half in amusement, and half in surprise, he left her in a manner which
was meant to be coldly formal, and succeeded in being ridiculous.

After a while, Helen went home, dissatisfied with herself, and for the
first time dissatisfied with the Bohemia over the threshold of which
she had stepped. Always honest, she could not but admit the truth of
his criticism. Yet she was wont to judge people by their aspirations
rather than by their achievements. "We are all workers," she said
to herself, as she brushed her hair. "Every one of those people is
aspiring to what is best and highest in art. What if they have failed?
Not fame, nor money, but art for art's dear sake. I am proud to be one
of them."

       *       *       *       *       *

In the course of a few weeks the novel was finished, and she subjected
it to careful, painstaking revision. She studied each chapter singly,
to see if it could not be improved, even in the smallest detail. When
the last revision had been made, with infinite patience, she was
satisfied. She wanted Frank to read it, but was too proud to make the
first overtures towards reconciliation.

The first three publishers returned the manuscript with discouraging
promptness. Rejected short stories and verse began to accumulate on her
desk. Sunday newspaper specials came home with "return" written in
blue pencil across the neatly typed page. Courteous refusal blanks came
in almost every mail, and still Helen did not utterly despair. She had
put into her work all that was best of her life and strength, and it
was inconceivable that she should fail.

Two more publishing houses returned her novel without comment, and with
a sort of blind faith, she sent it out again. This time, too, it came
back, but with a kindly comment by the reader. "You cannot write until
you have lived," was his concluding sentence. Helen sat stiff and still
with the letter crumpled in her cold fingers.

Slowly the bitter truth forced itself upon her consciousness. "I
have failed," she said aloud, "I have failed--failed--failed." A dry
tearless sob almost choked her, and with sudden passionate hatred of
herself and her work, she threw her manuscript into the fire. The
flames seized it hungrily. Then, someway, the tears came--a blessed
rush of relief.

Hilliard found her there when he came at dusk, with a bunch of roses
by way of a peace offering. The crumpled letter on the floor and the
shrivelled leaves of burned paper in the fireplace afforded him all
the explanation he needed. He sat down on the couch beside her and took
her trembling hands in his.

The coolness of his touch roused her, and she sighed, burying her
tear-stained face in the roses. "I have failed," she said miserably, "I
have failed."

He listened without comment to the pitiful little story of hard work
and bitter disappointments. "I've given up everything for my art," she
said, with a little quiver of the lips, "why shouldn't I succeed in it?"

The temptation to take her in his arms temporarily unmanned him. He
left her abruptly and stood upon the hearth rug.

"You are trying to force the issue," he said quietly. "You ar'n't
content to be a happy, normal woman, and let art take care of itself.
You should touch life at first hand, and you are not living. You
are simply associating with a lot of hysterical failures who call
themselves 'Bohemians.' Art, if it is art, will develop in whatever
circumstances it is placed. Why shouldn't you just be happy and let the
work take care of itself? Write the little things that come to you from
day to day, and if a great utterance is reserved for you, you cannot
but speak it, when the time comes for it to be given to the world."

Helen stared at him for a moment, and then the inner tension snapped.
"You are right," she said, sadly, instinctively drawing toward him. "I
am forcing the issue."

They stood looking into each other's eyes. Helen saw the strong,
self-reliant man who seemed to have fully learned the finest art of
all--that of life. She felt that it might be possible to love him, if
she could bring herself to yield the dazzling vista of her career. All
unknowingly, he had been the dearest thing in the world to her for some
little time. Bohemia's glittering gold suddenly became tinsel. There
came a great longing to "touch life at first hand."

He saw only the woman he loved, grieved, pained, and troubled;
tortured by aspirations she could not as yet attain, and stung by a
self-knowledge that came too late. A softer glow came into Helen's face
and the lover's blind instinct impelled him toward her with all his
soul in his eyes.

"Sweetheart," he said huskily.

Helen stopped him. "No," she said humbly, "I must say it all myself.
You are right, and I am wrong. I must live before I am a woman and I
must be a woman before I can be an artist. I have cared for you for a
long time, but I have been continually fighting against it--I see it
all now. I will be content to be a happy woman and let the work take
care of itself. Faulty, erring and selfish, I see myself, now, but will
you take me just as I am?"

The last smouldering spark of fire had died out and left the room in
darkness. Helen's face showing whitely in the shadow was half pleading,
and wholly sweet.

Speechless with happiness, he could not move. A thousand things
struggled for utterance, but the words would not come. She waited a
moment, and then spoke again.

"Have I not humbled myself enough? Is there anything more I can say? I
should not blame you if you went away, I know I deserve it all." The
old tide of longing surged into the man's pulses again, and broke the
spell which lay upon him. With a little cry, he caught her in his arms.
She gave her lips to his in that kiss of full surrender which a woman
gives but once in her life, then, swinging on silent hinges, the doors
of her Bohemia closed forever.




A Minor Chord




A Minor Chord


One afternoon before Christmas, a man with bowed head and aimless step
walked the crowded streets of a city. The air was clear and cold, the
blue sky was dazzlingly beautiful, the sun shone brightly upon his way,
yet in his face was unspeakable pain.

His thoughts were with the baby daughter whom he had seen lowered into
the snow, only a few hours before. He saw it all,--the folds of the
pretty gown, the pink rose in the tiny hands, and the happy smile which
the Angel of the Shadow had been powerless to take away.

"You will forget," a friend had said to him.

"Forget," he said to himself again and again. "You can't forget your
heart," he had answered, "and mine is out there under the snow."

Through force of habit, he turned down the street on which stood
the great church where he played the organ on Sundays and festival
days. He hesitated a moment before the massive doorway, then felt in
his pocket for the key, unlocked the door and went in. The sun shone
through the stained glass windows and filled the old church with glory,
but his troubled eyes saw not. He sat down before the instrument he
loved so well and touched the keys with trembling fingers. At once, the
music came, and to the great heart of the organ which swelled with pity
and tenderness, he told his story. Wild and stormy with resentment at
first, anger, love, passion, and pain blended together in the outburst
which shook the very walls of the church.

"God gives us hearts--and breaks them," he thought and his face grew
white with bitterness.

Beside himself with passion, he played on, and on, till the sun sank
behind the trees and the afternoon shaded into twilight.

As the shadows filled the church, he accidentally struck a minor chord,
plaintive, sweet, almost sad.

He stopped. With that sound a flood of memories came over him--an
autumn day in the woods, the trees dropping leaves of crimson and
gold, the river flowing at his feet, with the purple asters and
goldenrod on its banks, and beside him the fair sweet girl who had
made his life a happy one;--and insensibly he drifted into the melody,
dreaming, on the saddest day of his life, of the day which had been his
happiest.

He remembered the look in her eyes when he had first kissed her.
Beautiful eyes they were, brown, soft, and tender, with that inward
radiance which comes to a woman only when she looks into the face of
the man she loves.

"I will go to her," he whispered, "but not yet, not yet!" And still
he played on in that vein of sadness, the sweet influence stealing
into his heart till the pain was hushed in peace. Conscious only of a
strange sense of uplifting, the music grew stronger as the thought of
the future was before him. He was young, talented, he had a wife to
live for, and a child--no, not a child--and the tears stole over his
cheeks as he again touched the minor chord.

The crescendo came again. The child was safe in the white arms of the
snow, and she was hidden away from the sorrows of the earth in the only
place where we are ever safe from these--in its heart.

The moon had risen over the hill-tops, and the church was as light as
if touched on every side with silver. The organ sounded a strain of
exultation in which the minor chord was in some way mingled with the
theme. He could face the world now. Any one can die but it takes a
hero to live. Something he had read came back to him: "Once to every
human being, God gives suffering--the anguish that cuts, burns and
stings. The terrible 'one day' always comes and after it our hearts are
sometimes cruel and selfish--or sometimes tender as He wishes them to
be."

And the strong soul rose above its bitterness, for his "one day" was
over, and it could never come again. His strength asserted itself
anew as he came down from the organ loft and went toward the door.
A little bundle in one of the pews attracted his attention, and he
stooped to see what it was. A pale, pinched baby face looked up at
him wonderingly, the golden hair shining with celestial glory in the
moonlight. The hair, the eyes, the position of the head were much like
those of the child he had lost.

Back came the rush of infinite pain--he was not so strong as he had
thought--but only for an instant. Hark! was it an echo or his own soul
playing upon his quivering heartstrings the minor chord? Again the new
strength reasserted itself and into his consciousness rose the higher
duty to the living over the love and faith for the lost.

"Was it you played the music?" said the sweet child voice. "I heard it
and I comed in!"

"Dear," he said, "where is your home? Are you all alone?"

"Home," she said wonderingly. "Home?"

Without another word, he took the child in his arms and hurried out of
the doorway. Along the brilliantly lighted avenue he hastened, till he
reached the little cottage in a side street. It was dark within except
for the fitful glancings of the moonlight, and he deposited his burden
in a big arm-chair while he went in search of his wife.

"Sweetheart," he called, "where are you?"

The sweet face came into the shadow before him, and she laid her hand
upon his arm without speaking. He led her to the little waif saying
simply: "I have brought you a Christmas gift, dear."

She put out her empty arms and gathered the desolate baby to her
breast. The eternal instinct of motherhood swelled up again and for a
moment, in the touch of the soft flesh against her own, the tiny grave
in the snow seemed only a dream.

"Theodora--Gift of God," he said reverently. Then as the clouds parted,
and the moonlight filled every nook and corner of the little room:
"Dearest, we cannot forget, but we can be brave, and our Gift of God,
shall keep us; shall it be so?"




The Madonna of the Tambourine




The Madonna of the Tambourine


With a discordant rumble of drums, and the metallic clang of a dozen
tambourines, the Salvation Army procession passed down the street.
When the leader paused at a busy corner and began to sing, a little
knot of people quickly gathered to listen. Some quavering uncertain
voices joined in the hymn as the audience increased, then mindful of
his opportunity, a tall young man in red and blue uniform began an
impassioned exhortation.

George Arnold and his friend Clayton lingered with half humorous
tolerance upon the outskirts of the crowd. They were about to turn away
when Arnold spoke in a low tone:

"Look at that girl over there."

The sudden flare of the torch-light revealed the only face in the group
which could have attracted Arnold's attention. It was that of a girl
but little past twenty, who stood by the leader holding a tambourine.
She was not beautiful in the accepted sense of the word, but her eyes
were deep and lustrous, her mouth sensitive and womanly, and the ugly
bonnet could not wholly conceal a wealth of raven hair. Her skin had a
delicate pearly clearness, and upon her face was a look of exaltation
and purity as though she stood on some distant elevation, far above the
pain and tumult of the world.

After a little, the Salvationists made ready to depart, and Arnold and
Clayton turned away.

"I suppose," said Clayton, speaking tentatively, and gazing at the
girl, "that we have no right to criticise any belief which puts a look
like that upon a woman's face."

"We have no right to say a word," returned Arnold, "until we have the
grace to do some of the things which they do."

Clayton soon forgot, but the glorified, childish face haunted Arnold.
In the hope of seeing her again, he frequented the curbstones where the
meetings were held. Often, he wondered at the holy peace in the eyes of
so young a woman. He had seen the same expression before, but the face
it illumined had always been battle-scarred and weary.

"She hasn't suffered yet," he said grimly, "and that is the thing that
tells."

Months passed and summer shaded imperceptibly into autumn. Then, with
little sharp flurries of cold, winter took its place. Arnold was hard
at work in that merciless slavery which is found only at the newspaper
desk.

"You're just a cog in the machine," he said to Clayton one day. "Some
day the thing goes wrong, and they find out it's your particular cog,
and they get a new one. That's all there is to it."

Clayton laughed at his friend's cynicism, as he could well afford to
do, for he had just been called to a distant city to fill an important
position upon the staff of a larger and more influential journal.

For some time, Arnold's particular cog did yeoman service. He ground
out more "copy" than any man on the staff. He had the keenest nose for
news--the most delicate way of handling a good story.

Sometimes as he wrote at his desk, the face of the young Salvationist
intruded itself between him and his work. He smiled at his foolish
fancy, but dramatic incidents began to take shape about the image
of that girl. He planned "The Great American Novel"--there is no
newspaper man who could not write it, if he only had the time--and she
was to be the central figure.

All the possibilities of womanhood lay in that sweet Madonna-like
face. Thinking along the lines of art the new century seemed to have
laid down, he struck the key-note of his theme--the development of the
individual. His Madonna might suffer or not, but she must grow into her
highest and best. He turned the story over in his mind, studying it
from every standpoint. It was not yet ready for paper and pen.

A year went by, and various kinds of trouble came to Arnold. Something
eventually became wrong with the newspaper machine, for he worked only
by fits and starts, and at last he was asked for his resignation. His
face was white and determined when he handed it in, but he felt that he
was facing failure.

He had a little money laid by for an emergency; at all events, it was
enough to supply his wants until he could write his book. He went at
it feverishly, but the work soon began to drag. The far-off, elusive
phantom of his ideal mocked at him behind its expression. Then he
went more slowly still, and, by almost imperceptible degrees, he
went steadily down the pitiful ladder which leads from bad to worse.
Ambition faded, hope died, and at last he found himself on a level with
humanity at its worst--an outcast of the slums. Strong drink had done
its work.

He never knew how he happened to lose the remnant of his self-respect
and get into a quarrel with a man distinctly his inferior, nor how
he managed to slip on the icy sidewalk and fall heavily against the
curbstone. Merciful unconsciousness blinded him for a time, and when
he came to his senses he was in a tiny room, scantily furnished,
but exquisitely neat and clean. He was staring at the unfamiliar
surroundings when a soft foot-fall sounded beside the bed. He looked
up--to meet the clear eyes of the Madonna.

He was about to speak, but she stopped him by a gesture. "Hush," she
said, in a voice of mellow sweetness which soothed him inexpressibly,
"you must not talk now."

The touch of her cool fingers on his throbbing temples seemed to ease
the pain. He was quite willing to obey her and keep quiet. It was
not until the day following that he knew how badly he had been hurt,
and that it would be at least two months before he could walk again.
"Compound fracture," the doctor said, and Arnold shuddered, for he had
heard of such things before.

As the days went by, the gentle ministry of the Madonna did not for a
moment fail. "I say," he said huskily, one morning, "what makes you so
good to me?"

The high color mounted to her temples. "I want you to get well, that's
all."

She had a library card and brought books which he suggested. Her room
was near his and often in the night when he was restless with pain, she
came in silently, and, holding his hot hand in her cool fingers, read
until he went to sleep. He remembered her afterwards as she sat in the
lamplight, her hair falling around her shoulders and over the loose
black gown which she wore about the house.

Her voice soothed and charmed him. It was full of lights and, little
caressing notes and a haunting sweetness which, someway, he could not
forget. There had been but one woman in his life, and he knew there
would be no other.

The broken bones knit slowly, but the doctor was encouraging, and he
tried hard to be patient. He was ashamed to give way to petulance in
the presence of this gentle, sweet-voiced woman, whose name he knew,
but whom he preferred to call "Madonna."

"It means 'my lady'," he said to her one day, "and that is what you are
to me."

Through the whole of one painful night she read to him from Mrs.
Browning, only resting at short intervals when from very weariness he
fell into a short and troubled slumber.

Her education had been sadly neglected, he discovered, but her eager
facile mind was quick to comprehend. She had too, that inner sense of
beauty which makes all art its own.

Her voice suited itself to the exquisite melody of the words as she
read "A Denial." When it was finished she sat quite still, with a
dreamy, far-away look in her eyes.

"Of what are you thinking, Madonna?" he asked tenderly.

"Of this--of what it must be for a man and woman who love each
other to go away like this--because it isn't right for them to be
together--never to see each other again." Then she read once more those
four lines which have in them all the strength of loving and all the
pain of parting.

  "So farewell, thou whom I have met too late
    To let thee come so near;
  Be happy while men call thee great
    And one beloved woman feels thee dear--"

Something tightened around his heart and he took her cold fingers
into his own. "There's nothing in all the world that hurts like that,
Madonna. God keep you from knowing about it, little girl."

An older woman would have taken warning from his words, but she did
not. The caressing way in which he said "little girl" filled her soul
with strange joy. She had a childish, unquestioning faith in him.
Some day when he was better--but further than this her maiden thought
refused to go. She simply waited, as a queen might wait for her
coronation day.

He was planning to repay her kindness if it were in any way possible.
He knew she would not take money from him, but there were other ways.
Flowers--for he knew she loved them--the books that she liked best,
and perhaps something for the unfortunates to whom she gave herself so
unreservedly.

The winter was over, and April, warm with May's promise, came in
through the open window. Even the sullen roar of the city streets could
not drown the cheering song of two or three stray birds.

The week before Easter she brought home a tall slender lily in a pot,
with a single bud showing at the top of the green shaft. "They told me
it would blossom for Easter," she said happily, but she did not tell
him she had saved her carfare for days in order to buy it for him.

He was able to sit up now, but she would not let him go until it was
quite safe for him to walk. She seemed to cling, hungrily, to her last
days with him. "After Easter," she said bravely, "I won't keep you."

He was watching the lily with impatience almost equal to her own, and
tiny lines of white appeared on the green sheath. One day, it seemed as
if it would blossom too soon, and again, they feared that it would be
after Easter when the perfect flower opened.

"It had to climb up through a pretty dark place to find the light,
didn't it, Madonna?" he asked. "I suppose that's the way people do, and
God knows I've had my share of the dark."

Her eyes filled with tender pity and he went on. "You know, Madonna,
there's a pretty theory to the effect that you must suffer before you
amount to anything. A man can't write nor paint, and a woman can't sing
nor play before a cruel hurt. I don't mean the kind that makes a few
tears and is followed by forgetfulness--It's the kind that goes right
down where you live and cuts and stings and burns. You never think of
it without a shudder, even when the place heals up, if it ever does.
If it's lost friendship, you never have such a friend again--if it's a
lost love, you never can care again. Suffering would make a saint of
you, but I don't want you hurt like that--dear little girl."

He spoke no more, but the questioning maiden eyes sought his. It was
the day before Easter, and on the day following it he was to leave her.

For almost two months, she had been unfailingly kind to him; reading
to him night and day, caring for him as though he were a child, and
soothing him with her unspoken sympathy. Memory brought it all to him
with peculiar distinctness, and a new impulse came to him--an impulse
to lay bare his heart before the deep peaceful eyes of this child.

"Dear little Madonna of the Tambourine," he began, "there's a lot of
things I want to tell you before we say good-bye.

"I saw your sweet face at a curbstone meeting once, in the days when
I wasn't an outcast, and it's haunted me ever since. I wanted to find
the peace which made you so secure and happy--to get at your secret of
life. I wanted to be more worthy of--" He stopped and looked at her.
Her eyes were shining like stars and with a little catch in his voice,
he went on.

"There's a woman, Madonna, and worthless as I am she loved me, and
married me. We were happy for a little while, but I couldn't keep away
from the cursed drink. That's what put me into the slums. At last her
patience and her love gave out, and she sent me away from her. She told
me to come back to her, either with my shield, or on it, and thanks to
you, I'm going back to her to-morrow--with my shield."

No sound escaped her, but her hand grew cold as ice. Turning, he
looked for those starry eyes once more and, in a sudden flash of
understanding, he read her secret.

He started to his feet. "Can it be possible that you--that you--I never
dreamed--Oh, Madonna! Forgive me--if you can."

There was a long silence, then she said trying to speak steadily, "You
are not in the least to blame. I have had no thought of you she could
not know."

For a moment they looked into each other's eyes. "I am not worthy of
it, Madonna," he said huskily, "I do not deserve the love of any good
sweet woman."

"Would--would you go away to-day?" she asked almost in a whisper; then
with a brave little smile that went straight to his heart, she added:
"It's better, I think, to be quite alone."

He made his simple preparations, and she helped him as best she could
with trembling hands, but it was dark when he was ready to go. Neither
could frame the words they were wont to speak at parting, so they stood
in silence, hand clasping hand.

With only pity and understanding in his heart, he wanted to take her
into his arms for a moment, but she moved away from him. "No," she said
brokenly, "it must be like this. Be what she would have you be--she and
I."

She stood as he had left her until the street door closed below. She
watched him on the sidewalk, walking with slow uncertain steps, until
he was lost in the crowd. Then, stretching out in the dark, her empty
hands, she dropped on her knees beside the window. Her shoulders shook
with sobs, but there are no tears for such as she. She was far beyond
the blessed flow which blinds some eyes to the reality of pain. The
inner depths, bare and quivering, are healed by no such balm as this.

She voiced only the simple question which women of all ages have asked
in the midst of a cruel hurt--"Why? Dear God, why must it be?"

Some of the last lines of "A Denial" came to her, seemingly in pitiful
comment--

  "So farewell, thou whom I have met too late
    To let thee come so near;
  Be counted happy--"

"If only she can care again," she said to herself, "it will not be so
hard for me--if 'one beloved woman feels thee dear!'"

The grey dawn broke at last and found her still upon her knees.

With the brightening east the signs of life began again in the street
below. After a little she stood up and looked far across the irregular
lines of roofs and chimney tops to the glowing tapestry of the morning
spread like a promise in the dull grey of the sky.

"He didn't want me hurt like this," she said aloud. "He told me he
didn't want me hurt like this."

The first rays of the sun shot into the little room and rested with
loving touch upon her face. The old childish look was gone, but in the
eyes of the woman who had wrought and suffered, something of the old
peace still lay. She turned back to her bare cheerless room, ready
to face the world again, and then a little cry escaped her. White,
radiant, glorified, her Easter lily had bloomed.




A Mistress of Art




A Mistress of Art


"You're not going out again this evening, are you, George?" Pretty
Mrs. Carson seemed on the point of dissolving in tears, but her liege
lord buttoned his coat indifferently, and began the usual search for
his hat. Having found it, he hesitated for a moment, then came and
stood before her. "See here, Kitty," he began, not unkindly; "we might
just as well understand this thing first as last. There's no use in
your speaking to me in that tone just because I choose to go out in
the evening. When I married you, I didn't expect to be tied to your
apron string, and I don't intend to be. I consider myself as free as
I was before I was married, and I am perfectly willing to accord the
same freedom to you. When you go out, I never ask you where you've
been, nor what time you came home, and I'd be glad to have you equally
considerate of me. Let's be sensible, Kitty. I hate tears and heroics.
See?" He stooped to kiss her, and then went off, whistling a jaunty air
meant to indicate extreme cheerfulness.

For three evenings of that week Mr. George Carson had sought relaxation
and entertainment away from his own fireside. This made the fourth, and
the wife of only six months' standing, had a heavy and joyless heart.

Twice before she had spoken of it,--the first time to be answered by a
laugh, the second time by very visible irritation, and to-night by the
very cool "understanding" chronicled above.

Kitty had made a marriage vow which was not in the ceremony, but which
was none the less sincerely meant. "Whatever happens," she said to
herself, "I simply will not nag."

She had read the journals for women, written and edited by men, and
this seemed to be the corner-stone of every piece of advice; moreover,
she believed in pretty gowns, good dinners, and bright conversation
with sentiment omitted.

"I can't think what it is," she meditated, during the long cheerless
evening. Mr. Carson's appetite had proved beyond question that the
dinner was good, and her pretty house gown was certainly becoming--and
then Kitty broke down and wept, for the gown was a new one and George
had not noticed it. On such trifles does the happiness of women depend!

In the journals for women, written and edited by men, great stress was
laid on the fact that after a woman was married, she must keep her
troubles to herself. She believed this, too, but the next day, her old
school friend, Helen Everett, happened in, and she sobbed out her woes
in the customary place--on the shoulder of a spinster--forgetting the
deterrent effect on the marriage license business.

"My dear," said that wise young person, "men simply will go out nights.
I shouldn't care myself--it leaves a nice long evening to read or
study, or embroider, or practice, and if Mr. Helen Everett didn't want
to stay with me, I'd be the last one to hint that I wanted him to."

"You're a man-hater, Helen," said Mrs. Carson, trying to smile,
"but I'm not. I want George to stay at home a part of the time.
Of course I'm willing for him to go out occasionally, for of all
things, I despise a 'sissy-man', but four or five evenings a
week--is--too--much!"

The dainty handkerchief came into use again.

"Philosophy teaches us," said Helen, reminiscently, "that people,
especially men, always want what they can't get." Kitty was reminded
of the scholarly tone in which Helen had delivered her thesis at
commencement. "To quote a contemporary essayist, 'If a mortal knows
that his mate cannot get away, he is often severe and unreasonable.'
There is also a good old doctrine to the effect that 'like cures like.'"

"Well?" said Kitty, enquiringly.

"I never put my fingers into anybody's matrimonial pie," resumed Helen,
"so I'll let you think out your own schemes to keep the charming Mr.
Carson under his own vine and fig tree, but you know I live only three
blocks away, and there are no followers in my camp. My brother would
take you home, any time you might care to come."

Kitty was silent.

"Think it over, dear," said Helen as she rose to go.

After several minutes of hard thought, Kitty arrived at Helen's
meaning. "This evening shall decide it," she said to herself. "If he
stays at home, I shall think that he cares just a little bit; but if he
doesn't, I'll make him care." There was a smouldering fire in Kitty's
brown eyes, that might at any time leap into a flame.

The pretty house gown appeared at dinner again, but George, seemingly,
took no notice of it. Moreover, immediately after the meal he found his
hat, and merely saying: "Bye-bye, Kitty," began the jaunty whistle. She
heard it as it grew fainter, and at last, only lost it in the distant
sound of a street car.

The emancipated husband had no particular place to go, and his present
nocturnal pilgrimage was undertaken purely in the interest of wifely
discipline. He dropped into his club, but found it dull; and perhaps
the thought of Kitty's sad little face tugged remorsefully at his
heartstrings, for he went home early.

The lights were low in the drawing-room, she always left them so for
him. "Must have gone to bed about nine," he mused. He went up-stairs,
expecting to hear her say: "Is that you, dear?" But no sound of any
sort greeted him. The house was as silent as a tomb. After a few
minutes, it became evident that she was not at home, and he sat down
with a book to await her arrival.

It seemed strange, someway, without her,--perhaps because her
gown hung from the back of a chair. It was a soft pretty thing of
pinky-yellow--he mentally decided that must be the colour--trimmed with
creamy lace and black velvet ribbon. It was a very pretty gown--a most
adorable gown.

It was half-past eleven, when Kitty came home humming the chorus of a
popular song. She started in apparent surprise when she saw him. "Oh,
it's you, is it?" she said indifferently.

"Certainly it's me," he responded irritably. "Whom did you expect to
see here?"

Kitty laughed pleasantly, and drew off her gloves. Her tailor-made gown
fitted her to perfection, it was his favorite colour, too, and her
collar and cuffs were irreproachable.

"Where have you been, Kitty?" he asked in a different tone.

"Oh, just out," she responded with a yawn. "Where have you been?"

"Humph," responded Mr. Carson.

The following evening, she appeared at dinner in the same severe gown.
She was very pleasant and chatted on topics of current interest quite
as if he were a casual acquaintance. She watched him with evident
uneasiness afterward, and he was certain that he detected a faint shade
of relief on her face when he commenced hunting for his hat.

Before ten he came home, and as he half suspected, Kitty was out. His
irritation grew until he was afraid to trust himself to speak, so he
pretended to be asleep, when she came home.

The cloud on the matrimonial horizon grew larger. Outwardly Kitty
was kind and considerate, and her vigilant care for his comfort was
in no way lessened. His things were kept in order and something he
particularly liked was always on the table, but the old confidence was
gone and in its place was something that he hesitated to analyse.

She went out every night, now. More than once she had left him with
a laconic "Bye-bye," and he had spent a miserable evening before an
unsympathetic fire. He learned to detest the severely correct gowns
that she always wore now.

"I say, Kit," he said as he rose from the table, "don't you want to go
to the theatre to-night?"

"Can't," she returned shortly, "much obliged for the 'bid' though."

George Carson's hair rose "like quills upon the fretful porcupine."
He had a horror of slang from feminine lips, and he had been drawn to
Kitty in the first place, because she never used it. "Bid!" Oh, Heavens!

He paid no attention to her cheerful farewell when she left him. He
poked the fire morosely, smoked without enjoying it, and at last cast
about for something to read. One of the Journals for women, written and
edited by men, lay on the table, and he grasped it as the proverbial
drowning man is wont to clutch the proverbial straw.

He consulted the pages of the oracle anxiously, and he learned that it
was not wise to marry a man who had served a term in the penitentiary,
that it was harmless enough for either man or woman to kiss a lady
cousin, but that a man cousin must be kept at a fixed and rigid
distance--that it was wrong for cousins to marry, and that it was not
only immoral, but very dangerous to bleach or dye the hair.

No rule of conduct was specified for the man whose wife went out
nights, and he wandered aimlessly into the street. The light and cheer
of the club house seemed inopportune, like mirth at a funeral, and
he retired into a distant corner to think. His intimates hailed him
joyously, but were met with marked coldness. One of them, more daring
than the rest, laid a sympathetic hand upon his shoulder.

"What's the matter, old man?"

"Oh, the deuce," growled George, "can't you let a fellow alone?"

He was glad that he got home before Kitty did, for he could pretend to
be asleep when she came in. He knew it would be only a pretence, and
until midnight he listened for her latch-key in the door. It was long
after twelve, when a carriage stopped at the door, and then he heard a
manly voice say: "Good night, Mrs. Carson."

"Good night, Johnnie," she returned, "and thank you for a pleasant
evening."

"Johnnie!" Who in creation was "Johnnie?"

But there was no time to wonder, for Kitty's foot was on the stair,
and in a frame of mind not usually favourable to repose, he simulated
sleep.

There was a beautiful bracelet at her plate the following evening.

"Oh, how sweet!" she said, with evident pleasure in her eyes.

"Aren't you going to put it on?" he asked, when she laid it aside.

"Oh, yes," she answered brightly, "only I can't wear it with this gown.
Bracelets don't go well with linen cuffs."

She didn't even take it from the table after dinner, as he noted with
a pang. Almost immediately she came in with her hat on and stood
leisurely drawing on her gloves.

"You're not going out again to-night, are you Kitty?" he asked.

"See here, George," she returned, "we might just as well understand
this thing, first as last. There's no use in you speaking to me in that
tone, just because I choose to go out in the evening. When I married
you, I didn't intend to be tied to your apron string--I suppose, I
should say, suspender, and I don't intend to be. I consider myself
as free as I was before I was married, and I am perfectly willing to
accord the same freedom to you. When you go out I never ask you where
you have been, or what time you came home, and I'd be glad to have you
equally considerate of me. See?"

Without other farewell, she slammed the outer door. He was petrified
with astonishment. Were such words ever before addressed by a
tyrannical wife to a devoted husband? In the midst of his trouble, the
door-bell rang. Friends of his and of Kitty's had come to call.

"Where's Kit?" asked Mrs. Clay, after they had chatted a moment.

"She's gone out a minute--yes--no--that is--I don't know," returned
George incoherently.

Mr. Clay's ready tact came to the rescue and he picked up a program
which lay on the table, half hidden by a magazine.

"Tannhauser," he said cheerfully, "with Gadski as Elizabeth! So you
went Tuesday night? We wanted to go, but there were no seats left. How
early did you get yours?"

"I--ah--yes--Gadski as Elizabeth--that is--rather early. Yes, she was
very fine," said George miserably. The stunning revelation had come
to him that on Tuesday night--the evening in which he had heard the
carriage and the voices, Kitty had been to the opera with another man!
And it seemed to fairly paralyse his powers of speech. After a little
while the guests politely departed, wondering what in the world was the
matter with the Carsons.

"Is he crazy?" asked Mrs. Clay.

"Looks like it," answered her husband concisely.

Carson went up-stairs and searched the closet until he found the
pinky-yellow gown with the black velvet bows. He sat down with the
pretty fluffy thing in his hands. A delicate odour of violets clung
to it--Kitty always had violets around her--and the scent seemed like
a haunting memory of a happy past, when he had a wife who wore soft
womanly things--who loved to have him kiss her, and never went out
nights.

With a sudden rush of tenderness he held the little gown close, but
it yielded him no caress in return, and he flung it bitterly aside,
feeling as he did so, that he sat among the ashes of a desolate and
forsaken home.

He grew white and worn in the days that followed. He knew dimly what a
grave might mean, since he felt the hurt of a living loss.

He wandered through the lonely rooms evening after evening. The sight
of her dainty fluffy things made him suffer keenly, and a tiny jewelled
slipper he found on the floor almost unmanned him.

He no longer went to the club, but sat at home among Kitty's things
while she went out as usual. One evening, after saying "good-bye" she
caught her gown on a rocker, and turned back to free herself.

He was sitting before the fire, his elbow resting on his knee, and
his chin in the palm of his hand. It was a saddened face that Kitty
saw, with all the joy and youth gone out of it. The flickering light
made the lines of pain very distinct, and her heart smote her at the
realisation of what she had done. Quickly she ran up-stairs and took
off her tailor-made costume. When she came down, he was sitting as she
had left him, unhearing, unseeing and unheeding.

As she came toward him, he looked up. At the first sight of her in the
pinky-yellow gown, he rubbed his eyes as if he had seen wrongly. She
came nearer to him, smiling, her hands outstretched, and he sprang to
his feet. "Kitty," he cried, "are you going to stay at home to-night?"

"To-night, and always, dear, if you want me," she replied.

"Want you--Oh, my little wife!" he said brokenly, and gathered her into
his arms.

They had a long talk after that, and Kitty explained that she had been
spending her evenings with Helen Everett, who was writing a book, and
reading it to her, chapter by chapter as it was finished.

"Who is Johnnie?" demanded George abruptly.

"Helen's brother. He's only a boy, but he's a very nice one, and he
takes us to all sorts of lovely places."

After a moment she continued wistfully: "Helen's awfully clever--books,
colleges, degrees, and everything."

"And you have only me," said George, laughing, and drawing her closer.

"You're enough, if I can only keep you," she returned mischievously.

His face grew very grave. "I have been a thoughtless brute, sweetheart.
Forgive me," he said kissing her fondly. "And know all men by these
presents, I hereby confer upon you the degree of Mistress of Arts."




A Rosary of Tears




A Rosary of Tears


The orchestra had paused, either through simple human pity, or, as
seemed more likely, to rest. Even a good orchestra must have time for
physical and mental refreshment, and the guests at the St. James would
gladly have accorded eternity to this one, had the management been
kindly disposed and permitted it.

A faint breath of the tropical night stirred the foliage in the
palm-room, where there was light and laughter and the crystalline
tinkle of glasses. The predatory lady from Memphis, clad resplendently
in white lace, and paste jewels, moved restlessly about the room. Her
blue eyes were cat-like in their quick intense scrutiny. They said, at
the St. James, that nothing under the roof escaped her knowledge.

Designedly she passed the two who sat at a glass-covered table in a
secluded corner, affecting not to notice them. When the rustle of her
garments and the clatter of her high heels died away, the man spoke.

"She must have spilled the peroxide," he said with a grating laugh. Her
hair was indeed more brilliant than usual.

The woman laughed too--a little hysterical laugh which sounded more
like a sob. She took her watch from the silver bag that hung at her
belt, opened it, and laid it before them.

"An hour more," she answered irrelevantly. "Like Cinderella, I must go
at twelve."

"Are you afraid your auto will turn into a pumpkin drawn by white rats
and your chauffeur into--let's see, who was Cinderella's footman?"

She shook her head. "I used to know, but it was long ago when I was a
child."

"You're only a child now," he returned quickly.

"No, I'm a woman, and I must meet whatever comes to me as a brave woman
should." She fixed her clear eyes on his and spoke steadily. "I mustn't
be a coward, I mustn't refuse to do anything just because it is hard.
I've got to be true to my best self, and you've got to help me."

The war correspondent's face whitened for an instant, then the colour
surged back in waves. "Come out on the balcony," he whispered, "it's
insufferable in here."

She followed him through the French window. Their two chairs were in
their own particular corner still, placed as they had been every night
for a week. He arranged the rose and green velvet cushion at her back
precisely as she liked it, and drew his own chair near hers--just close
enough not to touch.

A white-coated waiter whisked out of sight tactfully. He was needed
within where the lady from Memphis had cornered a hardware drummer
from Pittsburg and was coyly inquiring whether or not champagne was
intoxicating.

"A week ago to-night," said the war correspondent abruptly. "I believe
now that the world was made in seven days. Mine has been made and
shattered into atoms in an equal space of time."

"Don't say that! There's good in it--there's got to be good in it
somewhere! We'll have to find it together, past all the pain."

The late moon rose slowly above the grove of palms beyond them; the
Southern night breathed orange blossoms and roses. A tiny ray of blue
light shot from the solitaire on the third finger of her left hand. It
was the only ring she wore.

"I can't believe it's true," he said, somewhat roughly. "If you cared
as you say you do, you'd"--he choked on the word, and stopped abruptly,
but his eyes made his meaning clear.

They were unusual eyes--for a man. So she had thought a week ago, when
she went down the corridor to her room at midnight, humming gaily to
herself a little fragment of a love song. They were big and brown and
boyish, with laughter lurking in their depths--they met her own clearly
and honestly, always, and in their look there had never been that which
makes a woman ashamed. Yes, they were unusual eyes--for a man.

"Honour is an elastic word," she replied. "For most women, it means
only one thing. A woman may lie and steal and nag and break up homes,
and steam open other people's letters, and betray her friends, and yet,
if she is chaste, she is called honourable. I made up my mind early in
life, that I'd make my own personal honour include not only that, but
the things men are judged by, too. If a man broke his solemn pledge,
you'd call him a coward and a cur. So," she concluded with a pitiful
pride, "I'll not break mine."

Her voice was uneven and he felt, rather than saw, the suffering
plainly written on her face. "Tell me," he began gently, "of him. What
does he look like? What sort of man is he?"

"I came away in such a rush that I forgot his picture, else I'd show it
to you. I would have sent back for it, only I didn't want my people to
think I was silly, and besides, there is no need, I could remember how
he looked, and every tone of his voice until a week ago to-night."

"Is he tall?" The war correspondent himself was a trifle over six feet.

"No, not very,--only a little taller than I."

"Smooth-shaven?"

"Yes."

"Dark?"

"Very."

"What does he do?"

"Business in a stuffy office, from nine to six. He spends his evenings
with me."

"Every evening?"

"Yes, and all day Sunday. There are just two things in his life--the
office and me."

"Go on," he reminded her, after a pause.

"It's simple, and, in a way, commonplace. We met, and he
cared--terribly--from the first. I didn't, because it was difficult for
me to trust any man. I told him so, and he said he'd make me trust him.
He did, but it took him a long time. It's pathetically easy for a woman
to love a man she can trust. And so I wear his ring and have for two
years. When I go back, we're to be married."

"Do you call it honourable to marry one man while you love another?"

"He's been everything in the world to me," she continued, ignoring the
thrust. "I've never had a doubt nor a difficulty of any kind, since
I've known him, that he hasn't helped me through. Every thought that
came into my mind, I have felt perfectly free to tell him. We've never
quarrelled. On my side, the feeling has been of long slow growth, but
there are no hard words lying between us. It's all been sweet until
now. He's clean-minded and clean-hearted and true-souled. If he has
ever lied to me, I've never found it out. He has been absolutely
and unswervingly loyal in thought, word, and deed, and as for
jealousy--why, I don't believe he knows what the word means.

"You know there are two kinds of love. One is an infinite peace that
illumines all your life, so surely and so certainly that it's not to be
taken away. It's like daily bread to you. The other is like wine--swift
and terrible and full of fatal fascination. The one has come to me from
him--the other from you."

"Honey!" It was the shrill, high, bird-like voice of the lady from
Memphis swiftly rounding the corner of the balcony. "Is this your
watch? I've found it on the table and I've been looking all over for
you!"

"Thank you." Miss Ward took the trinket coldly and never turned her
head. The man, having small respect for the lady from Memphis, never
rose from his chair.

After a little hesitation she retreated, pausing in the background,
among the palms, to shake a warning finger with assumed coquetry.

"Naughty," she shrilled. "You mustn't flirt! If you do, I'll write to
your honey and tell him what you are doing. You see if I don't. And
then he'll come and catch you at it, and where will you be then?" With
a mirthless cackle, she vanished into the palm-room, where there was
light and the tinkle of glasses and the bubbling of champagne.

"Half-past eleven," said Miss Ward dully. "Thirty minutes more."

The war correspondent caught his breath as if he had been suddenly
hurt. "One little hour," he answered, his voice low and tense with
suppressed feeling. "Only one little hour to last us for all eternity,
and we're wasting it like this. I love you, I love you, I love you! I
love you with all my heart, with all my soul, with all my strength, and
with all my will. I love you so much that heaven would be hell without
you, and hell itself would be heaven if you were there. I love you with
a love that will not die, when I do. I love you, do you understand? God
knows I love you!"

She turned her face towards him thrilled to the depths of her soul.
"And I," she breathed, caught in the whirlwind of his emotion, "love
you--in just that way!"

His hands closed quickly over hers. "Then," he pleaded, "come. There
are no barriers between us--they are nothing but cobwebs. Sweep them
aside with one stroke of magnificent daring and come. We'll be married
in the morning and sail for New York immediately, then go abroad for a
year. Two telegrams will set you free, and explain everything! Come,"
he whispered, "only come! Youth and love, and the wide world before us!
We'll be together till death divides us! Come--promise me you'll come!"

In thought she surrendered for an instant, then broke away from him,
shuddering. "Don't," she gasped. "Don't make it so hard for me to do
what is right. I won't be dishonourable, I won't be disloyal, I won't
be untrue. Happiness that comes from wrong doing is always brief, but,
oh, dear lad, I love you with a love nobody ever had before, or ever
will have again. I'm not taking anything away from anybody else to give
to you, so it isn't dishonourable--it can't be. Tell me it isn't!" she
cried. "Oh, tell me."

"It isn't," he assured her. "You couldn't be dishonourable if you
tried. You're the bravest, finest woman I've ever known."

From within came the notes of a violin muted. The piano, mercifully
softened, followed the melody with the full rich accompaniment which
even miserable playing can never wholly spoil.

  "The hours I spent with thee, dear heart,
    Are as a string of pearls to me;
  I count them o'er, every one apart--
      My rosary! My rosary!"

"The pearls mean tears," she whispered brokenly. "Our rosary is made of
tears!"

The lady from Memphis clattered past them on the balcony, singing the
words apparently to herself, but really with an eye to dramatic--and
impertinent--effect.

       *       *       *       *       *

For a week they had been together, the gayest of the gay crowd. That
day all plans had mysteriously fallen through. Miss Ward's chaperon had
been called home by a telegram. A letter had caused another unexpected
departure, a forgotten engagement loomed up before another, a sick
headache laid low a fourth, and only they two were left--the "tattered
remnant of the old guard," she laughingly said that morning when they
met in the palm-room after breakfast, as usual, to discuss the program
of the day.

"Then," he retorted, "the old guard will make the best of it!"

So they had spent the day together in public places, mindful of the
proprieties. A long talk in the afternoon, full of intimate and
searching details, had paved the way for the dazzling revelation made
by an accidental touching of hands. In an instant, the world was
changed.

"Suppose," she said, "that you had been obliged to go away this
afternoon, before everything was fully acknowledged between us? Oh,
don't you see what we have? We've got one whole day--a little laughter,
and a great deal of love and pain, crystallised by parting and denial,
into something sweet to keep in our hearts for always. Nothing can take
to-day away from us--it's ours beyond the reach of estrangement or
change. To-night we'll shut the door upon it and steal away, as from a
casket enshrining the dead."

"Not dead," he flashed bitterly, "but buried alive!"

  "Oh, memories that bless and burn,
    Oh, barren gain and bitter loss,
  I kiss each bead and strive at last to learn
    To kiss the cross, sweetheart! To kiss the cross."

The last echo died away, the violin rattled into its case, the piano
was closed. The musicians went home, and there was a general movement
toward the doors. A far clock chimed twelve and she rose wearily from
her chair. "Good night," she faltered, her hand fluttering toward his;
"I cannot say good-bye, but we must never see each other again."

How it happened they never knew, but he took her into his arms,
unresisting, and kissed her fully, passionately, upon the lips.

All the joy and pain of the world seemed crowded into the instant they
stood there, locked in each other's arms. Then the high, bird-like
voice of the lady from Memphis broke on their ears in a grating
staccato.

"She was out here, when I saw her last, flirting dreadfully with the
war correspondent. I guess she didn't know you were coming on that late
train."

Eagerly, happily, the Other Man rushed out on the balcony, crying
boyishly, "Mabel! Are you here?"

The words died on his lips. The man who held her in his arms kissed her
again, slowly, hungrily; then reluctantly released her. She steadied
herself against the railing of the balcony. In the moonlight her face
was ghastly. The scent of the orange blossoms seemed overpowering her
with deadly fragrance.

"Didn't I tell you?" asked the lady from Memphis gleefully. From the
open window she was enjoying the situation to the full.

The Other Man was bewildered.

"Mabel," he said enquiringly, "I don't quite understand. Didn't you get
my wire?"

The war correspondent stepped forward. He had faced the guns of the
enemy before and was not afraid now. A single commanding glance,
mingled with scorn, sent the lady from Memphis scurrying back into the
palm-room.

"I know who you are," he said to the Other Man, "and I owe you an
explanation. I love Miss Ward and I have been trying all day to induce
her to break her engagement with you and marry me instead."

The Other Man laughed. He went to the balcony rail, where the girl
stood, half fainting, and put his arm around her. "I don't doubt it,"
he said. "Isn't she the finest, sweetest, truest woman the Lord ever
made? Any man who doesn't love her is a chump. You and I will be good
friends--we have a great deal in common."

He offered his hand but the war correspondent bowed and swerved aside.
"Good night," he said thickly. "I have played and lost. I lay down my
hand." He went through the window hastily, leaving the two alone.

"Mabel, dear Mabel!" said the Other Man softly. "You've been through
something that is almost too much for you. Sit down and rest--you're
tired!"

The words, calm and tender, brought back to her tortured soul a hint of
the old peace. In a pitiless flash of insight she saw before her two
women, either of which she might become. One was serene and content,
deeply and faithfully loved, sheltered from everything love could
shield her from, watched, taken care of in all the countless little
ways that mean so much. The other was to know Life to its uttermost,
all its rage, jealousy and despair, to be shaken in body and soul by
fierce elemental passions, to face eclipsing miseries alone, and drain
the cup to the lees. The difference was precisely that between a
pleasure craft, anchored in a sunny harbour, and the toiling ship that
breasts the tempestuous seas.

She sat down and suffered him to take her hand. He stroked her wrist
silently, in the old comforting way he had when she was nervous or
tired. His face was troubled--hers was working piteously. The lights
had died down in the palm-room and the last of the revellers went away.
The house detective paced through the long rooms twice and made a
careful survey of the balcony.

"Darling," said the Other Man, "you don't have to tell me anything you
don't want to--you know that; but wouldn't it make you feel better?
You've always told me things, and I'm the best friend you've got.
Surely you're not afraid now?"

His voice failed at the end, and the girl drew a quick shuddering
breath but she did not answer.

"He was kissing you, wasn't he?" asked the Other Man, "when I came?"

"Yes," she said dully, "he was kissing me, but it was for good-bye.
He told me he loved me, and I had told him I loved him. I've known
him only a week. He never so much as touched my hand until to-day,
but it was only my own personal honour that kept me from marrying him
to-morrow, as he begged me to do. I've told you the worst now. Believe
what you like--do what you will."

The Other Man sighed. His mouth was boyish and for the moment
unsteady, but his eyes sought hers as honestly and clearly as the war
correspondent's, who had unusual eyes--for a man.

"I think I understand," he said brokenly. "I don't blame any man for
loving you, dear--I'm prepared for that--and we've been separated
so long, and the moonlight and the palms and the roses and all, and
you were used to being loved--I think that's why. You were lonesome,
wer'n't you, sweetheart? Didn't you want me?"

Infinite love and infinite pain surged together in her heart, blending
into unspeakable tenderness. "Yes, I wanted you," she whispered--"I
always want you. I'm--I'm a bit upset just now, but I haven't
taken anything away from you to give to anybody else. It's only an
undiscovered country--a big one, that he found to-day. I haven't been
intentionally dishonourable. I fought but it was no use--he simply
swept me off my feet. Forgive me if you can!"

[Illustration: "Good night," he said thickly. "I have played and lost.
I lay down my hand."
_From the Drawing by Dalton Stevens._]

"Hush! There'll never be any need of that word between you and me. I've
forgiven you long ago, for everything you've ever done or ever can do.
It's an unlimited fund to draw upon--that and my love. You know," he
went on in another tone, "that if it were for your happiness, I could
give you up, but I'm pretty sure it isn't. You'd never be as happy
with anybody you'd only known a week, as you would with me, because
I've loved you for years. You have my whole heart, Mabel,--there's
never been another woman with even a hint of a claim. I know all your
little moods and tenses and you don't have to explain things to me. I
know you can't ride backward and you don't like to walk when you have
high-heeled shoes on, and a thousand other things that are infinitely
dear just because they are you. I was thinking of them all the way down
here, and loving them--every one."

"I don't deserve it," she answered, and then broke into a wild sobbing.

The Other Man moved his chair closer and drew her head to his shoulder.
"There," he said, slipping a handkerchief into the hand that covered
her eyes; "cry if you want to. You're tired--my little girl is tired."

He held her so until the storm had spent itself. He kept his face
against her hair, soft and silky, and fragrant with orris--forgetting
himself utterly in his loving pity for her. At last she moved away from
him. Her tear-stained face in the moonlight, filled him with tenderness
so great that his love was pain.

"It's late," she said, "it must be after one o'clock. I must go
up-stairs." She started toward the open window, but still he held her
back gently. "Dear," he said softly, "we've been away from each other
four weeks and three days, and I've come two thousand miles to see you.
You haven't kissed me yet. Don't you want to? You don't need to if
you'd rather not, but if you could----"

His voice vibrated with passionate appeal. She lifted her white face to
his and kissed him mechanically. "To-morrow," she breathed, "I'll be
more like myself; I'll try to make up for to-night, but if you love
me, let me go now!"

He went with her to the elevator, and watched until she was lifted out
of his sight, smiling at her until the last--the old loving smile.
He went out to the balcony again, and sat down with his arms thrown
over the back of the chair that had so recently held her. His brow was
wrinkled with deep thought, but his boyish mouth still smiled.

Presently there was a step behind him and he turned--to look into the
face of the war correspondent who spoke first.

"I've come back," he said, "to shake hands with you, if you don't mind."

The Other Man's hand met his, more than half-way.

"And," continued the war correspondent, "I want to apologise. I've been
all kinds of a brute, but what I said was the truth. I love her as no
man ever before loved a woman. That's my only excuse."

"You're not to blame for loving her," returned the Other Man
generously; "nobody is. And as for her loving you, that's all right
too. She's got a lot of temperament and she's used to being loved, and
you're not a bad sort, you know--not at all." And he concluded fondly,
"my little girl was lonesome without me."

The war correspondent went away quietly. In the moonlight he could
see the boyish face of the Other Man, radiant with an all-believing,
all-forgiving love.

"Yes," said the Other Man again, after an interval, and not realising
that he was alone, "that was it. My little girl was lonesome without
me."




The Roses and the Song




The Roses and the Song


There had been a lover's quarrel and she had given him back his ring.
He thrust it into his pocket and said, unconcernedly, that there were
other girls who would be glad to wear it.

Her face flushed, whether in anger or pain he did not know, but she
made no reply. And he left her exulting in the thought that the old
love was dead.

As the days went by, he began to miss her. First, when his chum died
in a far-off country, with no friend near. He remembered with a pang
how sweetly comforting she had always been, never asking questions, but
soothing his irritation and trouble with her gentle womanly sympathy.

He knew just what she would do if he could tell her that Tom was dead.
She would put her soft cheek against his own rough one, and say: "I am
so sorry dear. I'm not much, I know, but you've got me, and nothing,
not even death can change that."

"Not even death"--yes, it was quite true. Death changes nothing.--It is
only life that separates utterly.

He began to miss the afternoon walks, the lingering in book store and
art galleries, and the quiet evenings at home over the blazing fire,
when he sat with his arm around her and told her how he had spent the
time since they last met. Every thought was in some way of her, and the
emptiness of his heart without her seemed strange in connection with
the fact that the old love was dead.

He saw by a morning paper that there was to be a concert for the
benefit of some charitable institution, and on the program, printed
beneath the announcement, was her name. He smiled grimly. How often he
had gone with her when she sang in public! He remembered every little
detail of every evening. He always waited behind the scenes, because
she said she could sing better when he was near her. And whatever the
critics might say, she was sure of his praise.

It was on the way home from one of these affairs that he had first told
her that he loved her. Through the rose-leaf rain that fell from her
hair and bosom at his touch he had kissed her for the first time, and
the thrill of her sweet lips was with him still. How short the ride had
been that night and why was the coachman in such an unreasonable hurry
to get home?

He made up his mind that he would not go to the concert that night, but
somehow, he bought a ticket and was there before the doors opened. So
he went out to walk around a little. People who went to concerts early
were his especial detestation.

In a florist's window he saw some unusually beautiful roses. He had
always sent her roses before, to match her gown, and it seemed queer
not to buy them for her now.

Perhaps he really ought to send her some to show her that he cherished
no resentment. Anyone could send her flowers over the footlights. The
other men that she knew would undoubtedly remember her, and he didn't
want to seem unfriendly.

So he went in. "Four dozen La France roses," he said, and the clerk
speedily made the selection. He took a card out of his pocket, and
chewed the end of his pencil meditatively.

It was strange that he should have selected that particular kind,
he thought. That other night, after he had gone home, he had found
a solitary pink petal clinging to his scarf-pin. He remembered with
a flush of tenderness that it had come from one of the roses--his
roses--on her breast. He had kissed it passionately and hidden it in a
book--a little book which she had given him.

With memory came heartache, his empty life and her wounded love. The
words shaped themselves under his pencil:

"You know what the roses mean. Will you wear one when you sing the
second time? Forgive me and love me again--my sweetheart."

He tied the card himself into the centre of the bunch, so it was half
hidden by the flowers. He gave them to the usher with a queer tremolo
note in his voice. "After her first number, understand?"

There was a piano solo, and then she appeared. What she sang he did not
know, but her deep contralto, holding heaven in its tones, he both knew
and understood. She did not sing as well as usual. Her voice lacked
warmth and sincerity and her intonation was faulty. The applause was
loud but not spontaneous although many of her friends were there. His
were the only flowers she received.

When she came out the second time, he looked at her anxiously, but
there was never a sign of a rose. He sank down in his chair with a sigh
and covered his face with his hand.

This time she sang as only _she_ could sing. Oh, that glorious
contralto! Suggestions of twilight and dawn, of suffering and joy, of
love and its renunciation.

There was no mistaking her success and the great house rang with
plaudits from basement to roof. He, only, was silent; praying in mute
agony for a sign.

She willingly responded to the encore and a hush fell upon the audience
with the first notes of Tosti's "Good-Bye."

  "_Falling leaf, and fading tree._"

Oh, why should she sing that? He writhed as if in bodily pain, but the
beautiful voice went on and on.

  "_Good-bye, summer, good-bye, good-bye!_"

How cruel she seemed! Stately, imperious, yet womanly, she held her
listeners spellbound, but every word cut into his heart like a knife.

  "_All the to-morrows shall be as to-day._"

The tears came and his lips grew white. Then some way into the cruel
magnificence of her voice came a hint of pity as she sang:

  "_Good-bye to hope, good-bye, good-bye!_"

There was a hush, then she began again:

  "_What are we waiting for, Oh, my heart?
  Kiss me straight on the brows, and part!_"

All the love in her soul surged into her song; the joy of happy love;
the agony of despairing love; the pleading cry of doubting love; the
dull suffering of hopeless love; and then her whole strength was merged
into a passionate prayer for the lost love, as she sang the last words:

  "_Good-bye forever, good-bye forever!
  Good-bye, good-bye, good--bye--!_"

She bowed her acknowledgments again and again, and when the clamour was
over, he hastened into the little room behind the stage where she was
putting on her wraps. She was alone but her carriage was waiting.

As he entered, she started in surprise, then held out her hand.

"Dear," he said, "if this is the end, won't you let me kiss you _once_
for the sake of our old happiness? We were so much to each other--you
and I. Even if you wouldn't wear the rose, won't you let me hold you
just a minute as I used to do?"

"Wear the rose," she repeated, "what do you mean?"

"Didn't you see my card?"

"No," she answered, "I couldn't look at them--they are--La--France--you
know--and----"

She reached out trembling fingers and found the card. She read the
tender message twice--the little message which meant so much, then
looked up into his face.

"If I could," she whispered, "I'd pin them all on."

Someway she slipped into her rightful place again, and very little
was said as they rolled home. But when he lit the gas in his own room
he saw something queer in the mirror, and found, clinging to his
scarf-pin, the petal of a La France rose.




A Laggard in Love




A Laggard in Love


"My dear," said Edith judiciously, "I think you're doing wrong."

Marian dabbed her eyes with a very wet handkerchief and said nothing.
Edith adjusted the folds of her morning gown and assumed a more
comfortable position on the couch.

"They all have to be managed," she went on, "and you'll find that Mr.
Thomas Drayton is no exception. I'll venture that when he makes his
visits, which are like those of angels, 'few and far between' you tell
him how lonesome you've been without him, and how you've thought of him
every minute since the last time, and perhaps even cry a little bit! Am
I right?"

Marian nodded. "If it wasn't for that hateful Perkins girl, I wouldn't
care so much. She's neither bright nor pretty, and I'm sure I don't see
what Tom sees in her. I think it's more her fault than his."

"The Perkins girl is entirely blameless, Miss Reynolds, though she
certainly is unpleasant. It is Tom's fault."

The afflicted Miss Reynolds wiped her eyes again. "Perhaps it's mine.
If I were quite what I ought to be, Tom wouldn't seek other society,
I'm sure."

Mrs. Bently sat up straight. "Marian Reynolds," she demanded, "have you
ever said anything like that to Tom?"

"Something like that," Marian admitted. "What should I have done?"

"Thrown a book at him," responded Mrs. Bently energetically. Then
she leaned back among the pillows, and twisted the corners of her
handkerchief.

"Don't be horrid, Edith, but tell me what to do," pleaded Marian.

Mrs. Bently looked straight out of the window. "I've been married
nearly ten years," she said meditatively, "and I point with pardonable
pride to my husband. There hasn't been any of the 'other woman
business' since the first days of our engagement. He never forgets the
little words of endearment, he brings me flowers, and books, and he's
quite as polite to me as he is to other women."

"I know," replied Marian. "I've seen him break away from a crowd in
the middle of a sentence to put your rubbers on for you."

"All that," resumed Edith, "is the result of careful training. And what
Tom needs is heroic treatment. If you will promise to do exactly as I
say, you will have his entire devotion inside of a month."

"I promise," responded Marian hopefully.

"First, then, take off your engagement ring."

Marian's pretty brown head drooped lower and lower, and a brighter
diamond fell into her lap. She felt again the passionate tenderness in
his voice when he told her how much he loved her, and she remembered
how he had kissed each finger-tip separately, then the diamond, just
because it was hers.

She looked at her friend with eyes full of tears. "Edith, I can't."

"Take it off."

Marian obeyed, very slowly, then threw herself at the side of the couch
sobbing. "Edith, Edith," she cried, "don't be so cross to me! I am so
dreadfully unhappy!"

"Marian, dearest, I'm not cross, but I want you to be a sensible girl.
The happiness of your whole life is at stake, and I want you to be
brave--it is now or never with Mr. Thomas Drayton. If you let him
torture you now for his own amusement, he will do it all his life!"

"I'll try, Edith, but you don't know how it hurts."

"Yes, I do know, dear; I've been through it myself. Now listen. First,
no more tears or reproaches. Secondly, don't allude to his absence, nor
to the Perkins girl. Thirdly, you must find some one else at once."

"That's as bad as what he is doing, isn't it?"

"_Similia similibus curantur_," laughed Edith. "Joe's friend, Jackson,
is coming to the city for a month or so, and he'll do nicely. He's
awfully handsome, and a perfectly outrageous flirt. He always singles
out one girl, however, and devotes himself to her, so we won't have any
trouble on that score. People who don't know Jackson, think that he's
in deadly earnest, but I don't believe he ever had a serious thought in
his life."

"I think I have seen him," said Marian. "Wasn't he at the Charity Ball
with you and Mr. Bently last year?"

"Yes, he was there, but only for a few minutes. Now, let's see--to-day
is Thursday. Have you seen Tom this week?"

Marian hesitated. "N-no, that is, not since Sunday. But I think he will
come this afternoon."

"Very well, my dear, you have an engagement for the rest of the day
with me. Run home and put on your prettiest gown. We'll go to the Art
Gallery and call on Mrs. Kean later. We both owe her a call, and I'll
look for you at two."

Promptly at two o'clock Marian appeared with all traces of tears
smoothed away. "You'll do," said Edith. "I believe you're a
thoroughbred after all."

At the Art Gallery they met what Mrs. Bently termed "the insufferable
Perkins" clad in four different colours and looking for all the world
like a poster. She was extremely pleasant, and insisted upon showing
them a picture which was "one of Mr. Drayton's favourites."

Miss Reynolds adjusted her lorgnette critically. "Yes, I think this is
about the only picture in this exhibit which Tom and I both like. I'm
so glad that you approve of our taste, Miss Perkins," and Marian smiled
sweetly.

Edith squeezed her arm rapturously as they moved away. "I'm proud of
you. Those pictures were hung only day before yesterday. Why, there's
Joe."

Mr. Bently greeted them cordially. "Jackson came this morning, Edith,
and I have asked him to dine with us Monday evening."

"That will be charming. Marian is coming to visit us over Sunday and I
think they will like each other."

"I hope so," was Mr. Bently's rejoinder. "It's really good of you
to come, Miss Reynolds, for I very seldom see you, and Jackson is a
capital fellow."

"Come, Marian," said Edith, "you know we were going to make a call."

"Always going somewhere, aren't you, sweetheart?" and Mr. Bently smiled
lovingly at his pretty wife.

"Never far away from you, dear," she answered and waved her hand to him
as the crowd swept them apart.

"You're going to stay all night with me, you know," Edith said.
"We'll stop at your house on our way back, and leave word with your
mother--incidentally we can learn if any one has called."

It was almost dark when they reached Marian's home, and Edith waited
in the hall, while she went in search of her mother. As she came
down-stairs, Mrs. Bently held up a small white card, triumphantly.
Marian's face flushed as she saw the name.

  "_Mr. Thomas E. Drayton._"

"It's all right," said her friend, "just wait and see."

Friday morning, the servant who admitted Marian, said that Mr. Drayton
had called the previous evening and left some flowers which Miss
Reynolds would find in the library.

A great bunch of American Beauties stood on the table, and almost
overpowered her with their fragrance.

"Dear, dear Tom! He _does_ love me," she thought. "I'll write him a
note."

She sat down to her desk without removing her hat. "Perhaps I've been
mistaken all along." The words shaped themselves under her pen: "My
Dearest." Then she stopped and surveyed it critically. "Not in the
present incarnation of Miss Reynolds." She tore the sheet straight
across, and dropped it into the waste basket. Taking another, she
wrote:

  "MY DEAR TOM:

"The roses are beautiful. I am passionately fond of flowers--of roses
especially, and I must thank you for the really great pleasure the
'Beauties' are giving me.

  "Sincerely yours,
  "MARIAN REYNOLDS."

Over his coffee the next morning Tom studied the little note. "I wonder
what's the matter. 'My Dear Tom'! 'Marian Reynolds' and not a bit of
love in it. It isn't the least bit like her. I must go and see her this
afternoon. No, I'll be hanged if I will, she had no business to be
out," and he chewed a toothpick savagely. "I'll ask her to go to the
theatre."

After much cogitation, he evolved a note which struck him as being a
marvel of diplomacy.

  "MY DEAR MARIAN:

  "I am glad the roses give you pleasure. Will you go to the theatre
  with me on Monday evening?

  "Yours in haste,
  "TOM."

Marian's reply was equally concise:

  "MY DEAR TOM:

  "I am very sorry that I have an engagement for Monday evening and
  cannot possibly break it. You know I enjoy the theatre above all
  things, and I am sure I should have an especially pleasant evening
  with you.

  "Sincerely,
  "MARIAN REYNOLDS."

Tom grew decidedly uncomfortable. What the mischief was the matter
with the girl! One thing was certain, next time he called, it would be
at her invitation. But the following afternoon found him again at the
house.

"Miss Reynolds is out, sir," said the servant as he opened the door, in
response to his ring.

"I know," he responded impatiently; "I want to return a book I borrowed
the other day."

"Certainly, sir," and the servant ushered him into the library.

He put the book in its place, and his glance, travelling downward met
the waste basket. Marian's distinctive penmanship stared him in the
face. "My Dearest!"

Mr. Thomas Drayton was an honourable gentleman, but he wanted to
examine that waste-paper basket. He rushed out of the library, lest he
should yield to the temptation, and said to the servant in the hall:
"Say nothing of my having been here to-day, Jones."

"Certainly not, sir."

"The book is a joke on Miss Reynolds," he said putting a silver half
dollar in Jones's ready palm.

"All right, sir, I see." And Tom went out.

Before he reached the avenue, he was mentally kicking himself for
explaining to a servant. He had of course noticed the roses on the
table, and he was very sure they had not been in Marian's room.

Once she had told him, how she had slept with one of the roses next
her heart, and a thorn had pricked the flesh, making a red spot on a
white petal. She showed him the rose with its tiny blood stain. He had
kissed the flower and put it in a little memorandum book with a gold
clasp. And he had told Marian, over and over again, what a horrid rose
it was--to hurt his sweetheart. He smiled grimly at his own previous
foolishness, and felt sure that none of the American Beauties would
rest next to Marian's heart that night.

Miss Reynolds and Mrs. Bently sat in the latter's boudoir. Edith nodded
sagely over Tom's note, and Marian was curled up in a forlorn heap on
the couch.

"How does he usually begin his notes to you?"

"'My Dearest Girl,' or 'Dear Sweetheart,'" answered Marian.

"H'm! Well, my dear, you may depend upon it, he is 'beginning to take
notice.'"

Sunday, Tom spent morosely at his club, and was so disagreeable that
his friends were very willing to give him a wide berth. Marian was
neither cheerful nor happy, and wept copiously in private, fancying Tom
worshipping at the shrine of Miss Perkins.

Monday evening she and Edith dressed together. Marian had a new gown of
that peculiar shade of blue which seems to be especially made for brown
eyes and hair, and looked, as her friend told her, "simply stunning."

"Joe has a box at the theatre to-night. Isn't he lovely?"

Marian assented, but inwardly hoped that Tom would not hear of her
being there.

Mr. Sterling Jackson was a very pleasant fellow, with an inexhaustible
fund of humour. He devoted himself to Marian and looked unutterable
things whenever opportunity offered. Handsome, he certainly was, and
she was secretly flattered by his evident adoration. Tom didn't matter
quite so much now.

At the theatre Marian sat in the front of an upper box beside Mrs.
Bently. The devoted Jackson leaned forward and talked to her in subdued
tones. After the first act, Edith whispered to her:

"Don't look, nor turn pale, nor do anything rash, but Mr. Thomas
Drayton is down in the parquet with Miss Matilda Perkins." Marian
turned white and grasped the rail of the box. "Don't faint till I tell
you. He hasn't taken his eyes off you since he first saw you, and I
don't believe he has seen the stage at all. Perkins is simply green
with rage, and I wish you could see her hat. It's a dream in pink and
yellow--an equine dream."

Marian's colour returned, and conscious of looking her best, she
flirted outrageously with the ever willing Jackson, though she confided
to Edith at the end of the second act, that she was "perfectly
wretched."

"Nobody suspects it," returned Mrs. Bently, "least of all Tom. He's
chewing Perkins's fan, and she's trying to draw him out."

For the remainder of the week Mr. Drayton studiously avoided the
Reynolds mansion. Marian had been seen on the Boulevard with the
odious Jackson, and Miss Perkins had suddenly lost her charm. Marian
was always at home on Tuesdays. Next week he would drop in, in the
afternoon, and see how the land lay.

Mrs. Bently had heard, through her husband, that Drayton had gone out
of the city, and the intelligence was promptly conveyed to Marian.

The solitaire lay in a corner of Marian's chatelaine bag. She meditated
the propriety of sending it back, but Edith would not hear of it.
Her heart ached constantly for Tom, and she flirted feverishly with
Jackson. "I am at home Tuesdays," she said one evening when he left
her. "Come in for a little while and I will give you a cup of tea."

He came early and found her alone. They chatted for a few minutes, and
then Mr. Thomas Drayton was announced. The two men were civil to each
other, but Marian felt their mutual irritation, and was relieved when
Jackson rose to take his departure. He crossed the room to Tom and
shook hands. "I am very glad to have met you, Mr. Drayton. I am sure we
shall meet often, if you find Miss Reynolds as charming as I do." He
bowed politely to Marian and went out.

"The insufferable cad!" thought Tom. He shivered, and Marian hastened
to the tea table.

"It's awfully cold outside," she said, "and these rooms are not any too
warm. I'll make you some tea. You take two lumps of sugar, don't you?"

Tom said nothing. Marian's pretty hands hovered over the teacups, and
he noticed that the left one was ringless.

"Don't you wear your solitaire any more, Marian?" His voice was strange
and she was half afraid.

"Oh, yes," she responded brightly, "sometimes. The points of the
setting catch in my glove though, and I am afraid of loosening the
stone."

"Marian, don't you care for me?"

"Certainly."

"How much?"

"As much as you care for me, I think, don't you?"

He went over and put his arm around her. She shrank a little at his
touch, but he pulled her down on the sofa beside him.

"Marian, darling, tell me what the matter is. I know I don't deserve
you, and I'll go, if you say I must. Has that fellow Jackson come
between us?"

Marian disregarded one of Edith's injunctions. "Perhaps it's Miss
Perkins."

Tom said a very emphatic swear word, which does not look well in print,
then buried his head in one of the sofa cushions. She was frightened
and sank down on her knees beside him, her armor of self-defence
vanishing in womanly pity. "Tom, dear Tom! What is it? Tell me!"

He straightened up and lifted her to the sofa beside him.

"I see, sweetheart, I've been a fool and a great deal worse than that.
Can you ever forgive me?"

"One thing first, Tom, do you love me?"

"Marian, dear, I never knew until this last wretched week, just how
much you meant to me. I am yours, body and soul, to do with what you
will. I have no right to insult you, Marian, but will you take me
back?" His voice trembled with the agony of love and pain, as she
drew the solitaire out of the chatelaine bag at her belt. She held it
silently toward him.

"Darling, is it good-bye?"

"No, dear, I want you to put it back."

And that evening, in accordance with instructions, the servant said to
Mr. Sterling Jackson, "Miss Reynolds is out."




Träumerei




Träumerei


He stood at the side of the brilliantly lighted opera-house with a
note-book and pencil in his hand. Would that interminable symphony
never be finished? The audience listened breathlessly, but he, the
musical critic of a thriving daily paper, only drummed idly with his
fingers and stared vacantly at the people near him.

There was a momentary hush, the orchestra leader waved his baton, and
the trained musicians, with perfect precision began the brilliant
_finale_. The audience was unusually sympathetic, and for an instant
after the closing passage all was still; then came a great burst of
applause.

The leader bowed his acknowledgment, but the clamour only increased.
The critic sank wearily into an empty seat and looked across the house.
He started and grew pale, as among the throng of fashionables he saw a
face that he knew--that he had known.

A sweet face it was too; not beautiful, but full of subtle charm and a
haunting tenderness that he had tried to forget. He sat like one in a
dream, and did not know that the orchestra was about to play the next
number till its opening measures woke him from his abstraction.

[Illustration: Music]

Träumerei! Anything but that! Oh, God, this needless pain! And he
thought he had forgotten!

[Illustration: Music]

He stood again in a little room which the autumn moonlight made as
bright as day. Down below on the rocks was the far-off sound of the
sea, and she, with his roses on her breast, sat before the piano and
played dreamily, tenderly, yes, this same Träumerei that was now
breaking his heart.

He had stood behind her, with his arms around her, his dark, eager face
down close to hers, and whispered huskily: "Sweetheart, I love you."

And she had turned her face up to his and said, softly, "I
love--you--too--dear;" and he had hugged her tightly to him and
covered her face with burning kisses that were almost pain.
And--that--had--been--their--betrothal. Then for a little while there
was happiness--then there was a misunderstanding--and there--she
was--and----

Up through those arches of light the clear, sweet melody stole. Had he
forgotten? Had she? He seized his opera-glass and a quick turn of the
screw brought her again close to him.

Yes, there were tears in her eyes; he could see the white lids quiver,
and her lips trembled and----

With a deeper throb of pain than any he yet had known, the buried love
came back, strong and sweet, as in those dear days when the whole world
seemed aglow with love of her.

He rose and walked nervously around the shining circle and down the
aisle to where she sat. His breath came quick and fast, he hardly dared
trust himself to speak, but with a great effort he commanded himself
and bent over her chair.

She looked up and her tear-wet eyes met his own. He whispered,
hoarsely, "Forgive me--come out a minute--I want to speak to you."

Hardly knowing what she did, she followed him into the dimly lighted,
deserted foyer.

[Illustration]

With the last strain of that wordless love-sweet song, the dear old
dream came back and, unrebuked, he put his arm about her once more.

"Sweetheart," he said, "I love you."

A soft arm stole round his neck, and she answered as of old,

"I love you, too, dear."




"Swing Low, Sweet Chariot"




"Swing Low, Sweet Chariot"


Down in the negro quarters on a Georgia plantation stood a quaint
little log cabin overlooking cotton fields that were white with their
snowy fruit. Born in slavery, living in slavery and apparently destined
to die in slavery, yet old Joe was happy; for to him slavery was not
bondage--only a pleasant way of being cared for.

His days of active usefulness were over. He had served long and
faithfully in those same cotton fields, then as a house servant and
later as a coachman. Now on account of age and the "misery" in his
back, he spent his days in mending harness, telling stories to the
children and making playthings out of the odd bits of rubbish they
brought him.

His wife, Sally, was head cook at the mansion which stood in another
part of the plantation, in the midst of trees and flowers. Down a
little farther was a tiny brook that sang all the livelong day and
turned back, regretfully perhaps, to wind by the window of old Joe's
cabin.

"The Pines" was a most hospitable house and usually thronged with
guests, for its young mistress had an indulgent husband and money
sufficient to gratify every possible whim. Mrs. Langley she was now,
but to old Joe she would be "Miss Eunice" always. He had carried her
when she was a baby, watched over her when she was ill, and once when
a pair of maddened horses dashed down the drive, utterly beyond their
owner's control, he had snatched the unconscious child from almost
under the wild feet, and--saved her life, they said, but the brave
fellow had received internal injuries and had not been able to do much
since.

"Yes," he said one afternoon, to an appreciative audience of
pickaninnies and white children who sat together around his feet in a
truly democratic fashion, "dat ar day war a great time fo ol Joe. I
war jes agwine to de house wen I see dese yer hosses comin _ker-blip_!
right whar Miss Eunice war a playin wid her doll-buggy. Dere wasn't no
time to call her, so I jes grab her and run, an my foot ketch in de
doll-buggy an I trow Miss Eunice ober my haid in some soft grass an
den de hosses tram on me an I kinder lost my 'membunce. Pretty soon I
fin mysel in de house an de doctor an ol Missis war a standin ober me.
Doctor say, 'he come to all right,' an ol Missis, she jes stoop down an
kiss ol Joe! Tink ob dat!"

"Den Miss Eunice come in, an ol Missis say 'come here dear, and see
Uncle Joe. He done sabe yo life.' An den I lose my 'membunce again. One
day Mas'r walk in an he say, 'Joe, here's yo papers, yo's free now,
jus ez free ez I is.' I say Mas'r, I don't want to go away from you an
Missis an Miss Eunice. I want to stay here on de ol plantation, along
'o my ol woman. And den he wipe is eyes an say, 'I'll gib Sally papers
too' an Sally say, 'No Mas'r, me an Joe don't want to be free; we wants
to stay here where we's happies' an Mas'r say he keep dose yer papers
for us till we done want em. Dose was mighty fine times for ol Joe!"
and he beamed at the children around his feet who had been listening
with ever-fresh delight to the old, old story.

"Now play something, Uncle," the children cried, and Tommy Langley
brought the fiddle that always hung in one corner of the cabin. His
eyes brightened at the sight of the old brown thing, but he gently put
the eager child away, saying, "No, honey, not dis time. I got de misery
in my back wuss en eber. Go way, chillens, ol Joe's--so tired!"

They obediently trooped out of the cabin and the old man's head dropped
on his breast. The gaunt grey figure twisted with pain, and he did not
move until Sally came in to get his supper.

"Well, honey," she said cheerily, "how's yo back to-day?"

"Pears like de pain gets wuss, Sally," he replied.

"Nebber yo min, yo'll get better byme by." Coming closer she dropped a
bundle of illustrated papers into his lap. "See wat Miss Eunice send
yo, an look here!" She pointed proudly to her stooped shoulders, where
a scarlet kerchief shone like a ray of light in the dim cabin.

Joe tried to smile, then said feebly, "Miss Eunice mighty good to us,
Sally."

Sally assented, and moving quickly about the cabin, soon had the
evening meal on the table.

"Come, Joe, move up yo cheer. Dis yere hoe cake done to de tu'n!"

"Pears like I couldn't eat no supper," he said, then gave a
half-suppressed groan that betokened an extra twinge of the "misery."

"Po ol man," said Sally sympathetically, and she ate in silence,
watching the kindly pain-drawn face, with ever-increasing anxiety.

As twilight fell, the sufferer sought his couch, where he moaned and
tossed restlessly, and the pitying Sally, stretched wearily on a faded
rug near the door was soon fast asleep.

       *       *       *       *       *

Up at "The Pines" all was light and laughter and music, for a crowd
of young folks were gathered 'neath its hospitable roof and guitars
and mandolins made the whole house ring with melody of a more or less
penetrating quality. In the midst of the gaiety, Tommy stole up to his
mother with a troubled look on his usually merry little face.

"What is it, dearie?" she asked, putting her arm about him.

"Mamma, I'm afraid Uncle Joe is going to die. His 'misery' hurts him
awful."

"Is Uncle Joe very sick, dear? I knew he was not well, but he has
always been ailing, you know. I'll have the doctor see him to-morrow."

"All right, mamma," and the little face grew bright again.

She kissed him tenderly and said: "Run away to bed, little son, the
birds went long ago."

Tommy went off obediently, but Mrs. Langley felt worried about
the faithful old fellow who had saved her life. "I'll see to him
to-morrow," she thought and began to plan various things for his
comfort and happiness.

A little later a pretty girl with a mandolin, said: "Do you know I feel
like having a lark. Excuse the slang, please, but there's no other word
that will express my meaning."

"Try a swallow," suggested a young man in a way that was meant to be
funny. "There's lots of lemonade left in the pitcher."

She scorned the interruption. "I want a lark, a regular lark!"

"How would a serenade do?"

"Capital!" she laughed. "Just the thing! We'll take our mandolins and
guitars into the moonlight and make things pleasant generally."

"But," said a maid with a practical turn of mind, "who is there to
serenade? There aren't any neighbours, are there?"

"Give it up!"

"Ask Mrs. Langley--she'll know," and a smiling ambassador from the
merry group, Mrs. Langley's own nephew, went to the fair-haired hostess
who sat with her husband in the library.

"Aunty, who is there in this charming spot whom we can serenade? The
girls think it would be fun, but we don't know where to find a victim
in this isolated Eden."

Mrs. Langley rose quickly, and going to the little party, told them of
old Joe and how she owed her life to those strong arms. She finished
the story with an eloquent gesture that brought tears to the eyes of
many, and added: "Go down to the old man's cabin and sing the quaint
negro melodies he loves so well--that he used to sing to me when I was
a little child. And take these roses with you; he used to love them so;
you can throw them in at the open window."

As she spoke, she took a great handful of white roses from a vase and
with a little pearl-handled knife, dextrously removed the thorns, then
handed them to her nephew.

"How do we get there, Aunty?" he asked, with something like a tremor in
his voice.

"Follow the brook," she replied. "It flows right under his window, and
you cannot miss the place. I'd go with you, only I can't sing, and
wouldn't be of any use." She smiled brightly at them as they went down
among the shadows, then to the tiny brook that seemed like a musical
stream of silver in the moonlight.

The party was strangely silent for one bound for a "lark," and by much
crossing of the little stream that wound its tortuous way through the
grounds, they came to Uncle Joe's tiny cabin in an unseen nook of the
plantation. They grouped themselves under the window in silence.

"Now then!" whispered one of them. The mandolins and guitars played the
opening strains of the sweet old melody, then their fresh young voices
rose high and clear:

[Illustration (music):
  Swing low, sweet char-i-ot,
  Com-ing for to car-ry me home,
]

The old grey head turned feebly on its hard pillow, and Sally stirred
restlessly.

[Illustration (music):
  Swing low, sweet char-i-ot,
  Com-ing for to car-ry me home.
]

Above the song of the brook that seemed like a tender accompaniment to
the tinkle of the mandolins the music rose, and old Joe woke from his
dream of pain.

[Illustration (music):
  I looked o-ver Jordan and what did I see
  Com-ing for to car-ry me home? A
]

[Illustration (music):
  band of an-gels com-ing aft-er me,
  Com-ing for to car-ry me home.
]

Oh, light of the angels! Oh, rapture of the song! The familiar words
brought back so much to the old man's listening soul!

[Illustration (music):
  Swing low, sweet char-i-ot,
  Com-ing for to car-ry me home,
]

The fragrant shower fell around him. He grasped a great white rose that
was within reach of his hand and pressed it to his parched lips.

[Illustration (music):
  Swing low, sweet char-i-ot,
  Com-ing for to car-ry me home.
]

Out of the clouds was the chariot coming for _him_? Yes--wrapt in
celestial glory.

[Illustration (music):
  Swing low, sweet char-i-ot.
]

The song died away, and the singers heard no sound within.

But the tired head fell back upon its pillow with a sigh of infinite
content, the chariot came, and Uncle Joe forgot the "misery" and the
roses alike in passing from supreme shadow to supreme dawn.




The Face of the Master




The Face of the Master


In a little town in Italy, there once lived an old violin maker, whose
sole pride and happiness was in the perfect instruments which he had
made. He had, indeed, a son, or rather a stepson, for his wife had been
a pretty widow with this one child when he married her a year before.

Pedro was a dark little fellow, with great deep eyes which seemed to
hold a world of feeling and sometimes sadness. He idolised his mother,
but shrank from his father with a feeling of instinctive dislike.
Perhaps the old man noticed this, though he was so absorbed in his
work and in directing his careless assistants that he seemed entirely
oblivious to his surroundings.

The child was errand-boy for the little shop, and all his tasks were
patiently and cheerfully done. Occasionally, one of the workmen would
pat him on the head, and he distinctly remembered one day when the
lady next door, gave him a piece of candy.

Before he and his mother came to live in the little shop, he had never
seen a violin, and even now he could not be said to have heard one, for
neither his father nor any of the workmen knew how to play;--they were
quite content with putting the bridge in place, leaving the strings
to be adjusted in the neighbouring town where the instruments found a
ready sale.

One day, the last touch was given to an unusually fine instrument, and
in a moment of pride, the old man fitted it with strings. He placed
it under his chin and touched the strings softly with the bow. Faulty
though the touch was, the answer was melody--a long sweet chord.

Pedro's eyes grew darker, and his little face was fearlessly upturned
to the man who held the singer of that wonderful song. In the ecstasy
of the moment, his foot touched a valuable piece of wood upon the floor.

Crack! It became two pieces instead of one, and with a curse and a
blow, the trembling child was pushed, head foremost, into his own
little room. A moment later he heard the key turn in the lock. Pale
and frightened, he sank into a corner, but the memory of the sweetness
was with him still and in his soul was the dawn of unspeakable light.

All was silent in the shop now, but shortly he heard the busy hum of
voices and the old confused sound. Then above the din, the violin
sounded again. He listened in wonder. That single chord had been a
revelation, and as a sculptor sees in a formless stone the future
realisation of a marble dream, so Pedro, guided unerringly by that
faulty strain, saw through break and discord, the promise of a symphony.

He fell asleep that night haunted still by that strange sweet sound,
and dreamed that it had been his fingers to which the strings had
answered. _His_ fingers? He awoke with an intense longing in his
childish breast. Oh, to touch that dear brown thing! Oh, to hear again
the whisper of the music!

Though the sun had risen he was still in a dream, and, mingled with the
notes of the lark above his window, was the voice of the violin.

Presently his stepfather appeared in the doorway, and with more than
usual unkindness in his tone ordered him away on an errand. Pedro
gladly went, and all that day tried ineffectually to conciliate the
angry man by patience, gentleness, and obedience. Night came, and
though weary, he was sent on a still longer journey. He started with
an important message from his father to the home of the man who was to
furnish wood for a lot of new violins. He had often been to the shop,
but it was late now, the man must have gone home, and his house was
much farther away.

He dared not complain, however, and trudged wearily on. But with all
his fatigue, his heart was light, for he fancied there might be music
in the home toward which he was hastening. Some day, perhaps, he might
hear the blessed chords again! He would wait. Through his childish
fancy flitted a dream of a symphony--the unthought melody which might
be sleeping in those broken chords.

He delivered his message safely, and the man kindly showed him a short
cut home. It was very late, and the streets were still, but he was not
afraid. He passed house after house that was gayly lighted, and looked
longingly at the revelry within, but he hurried onward till he came to
a little house in a side street.

Hark! He stopped suddenly. Out of the darkness came the sound of
music--was it a violin? Yes, no, it could not be. He crept closer to
the cottage. Then a burst of harmony came into his consciousness--long,
sweet, silvery notes; a glad rush of sound that brought tears to his
eyes--a delicate half hushed whisper, and then the twinkle of a brook,
with the twilight gentleness of a shadow. Clearer and stronger the
music grew, and the child's breath came in quick, short gasps. The
brook was a river now, he could hear the swaying of the trees in the
forest; the heart of the wind was in the music, and on it swept in glad
resistless cadence, from the brook to the river, then down to the sea.
A pause, a long low note, then a glorious vision of blue, as into the
rush of the song, there came the sweet, unutterable harmonies of the
ocean.

He was in ecstasy; he scarcely dared to move. Oh, could he but see
whence the music came! Could he look for a moment only, upon the face
of the master! The moon came out from behind a cloud, and the child
looked up. At the open window he saw an old man with deep-set eyes,
a kindly smile, and long white hair that hung down to his shoulders.
He held a violin in his hand, but the picture needed not this touch to
tell the child who it was that had made this wonderful music, for he
felt that he now looked upon the face of the master.

With a sigh, the old man again placed the instrument in position, and
drew the bow across the strings. The boy trembled. In slow, measured
sweetness the music came--a deep wonderful harmony that held him
spellbound. There was a tender cadence that swayed the player's soul,
and into the theme crept the passionate pain of one who had loved and
lost.

The child knew that the man was suffering--that music like that could
only come from an aching heart. With double notes, in a minor key, the
master played on; then the violin slipped to the floor unheeded, and
the old man laid his head on the window sill, and wept like a child.

Pedro crept away; he could bear no more. The glory had entered into his
soul. He went noiselessly to bed, but he heard still that marvellous
music and saw again the pain-shadowed face of the master.

Oh, could he but touch the magic strings! Could he but play one note
of the wondrous song! An idea seized him--he would try sometime. In
a transport of joy he fell asleep, and dreamed all night long of the
heavenly strains. He saw the clear deep blue of the ocean, he heard the
wind symphonies in the forest, and always, too, before him was that
white suffering face.

The next day he was scarcely himself. He moved about as if he still
slept, while his eyes were unusually sad and thoughtful. At night he
could not sleep, and after making sure that every one else was in deep
slumber, he slipped quietly out into the shop. The moon showed him
where to go, and at length he picked up the new violin which had taken
so long to finish, and which was the finest his father had ever made.
Where should he go? Outdoors, assuredly. He went softly out into the
moonlight and down to the brook which was some distance from the house.

The silence, the beauty, the witchery of it all, was overwhelming. A
gentle breeze swayed the tree tops, and, from the instrument in his
hand, drew forth Æolian music. He started, placed it in position,
and drew the bow across the wind-swept strings. His touch awakened
the sleeping voice, and through his soul surged again the long, sweet
chords that had made him glad, and shown him through the broken bits of
melody, the grandeur of the symphony. Tenderly, tremblingly, he touched
the strings again, and another chord, a minor, struck deep into his
heart.

Without thought or knowledge of the art he still blundered on, knowing
naught save that it was _his_ fingers that made a wild, delirious,
rapturous sound, and seeing only the remembered vision of the master's
face.

Conscious of nothing else, he did not see that the sun had risen.
Suddenly he looked up. His father stood before him with a strange
expression on his face. The terrified child dropped the instrument to
ward off a blow, but the father said, with a tremor in his voice: "Is
it so, my boy? Are you then a musician? You shall have lessons; I shall
give you a violin; we go to-day to see the master. Ah, the music! It is
most wonderful!"

The boy was dumb with astonishment. To learn? And who was the master?
That afternoon he dressed himself in his best garments, which were
worn only on festal occasions, and with his father went on the gladdest
errand of his life.

The master! Could it be? The child's heart almost stopped beating.
Yes, down the little street they turned and went up to the door of the
cottage. He could not speak.

Presently he found himself in a plainly furnished little room, and
heard footsteps in the hall. The door opened, and Pedro looked up to
see those deep-set eyes that seemed to smile down at him.

The father rose, and bowing low, he said: "Signor, I would like my son
to play the violin--you are a teacher--he will be a musician. I have no
money, Signor, but if you teach my boy how to play, I will make you a
violin--the finest in the world."

The master was about to refuse; his old violin was a good one, and he
did not like to teach. He turned away hastily, but he caught a glimpse
of the child's uplifted face. His soul was in his eyes, and in their
depths the great artist saw an unutterable longing. He was touched.
"Child," he said, "would you like to play?"

He laid his hand on the boy's shoulder. The touch and the kindly tone
thrilled him unspeakably. To play? To hear again that infinite music?
Glad tears rushed to his eyes and his only answer was a sob.

"Ah, yes," the man's voice was tender. "You love it; I will teach you.
Come to-morrow at this hour and we shall begin."

Pedro went home, wild with delight. To play! To see the master's face!
Ah, it was too much! All night long he dreamed of that delicious
melody, and the dear old head with its crown of silver hair that seemed
like a benediction.

His father gave him a little old violin. To him? Was it all his own?
"And when you can play, my boy," he said, "you shall have the 'Beauty'."

Pedro's first lessons were a revelation. His face was a study for a
painter, and the teacher saw that he had before him the promise of
an artist. He gave himself willingly to the task and soon learned to
dearly love his eager pupil.

And Pedro? No task was too hard, no study too difficult, no practice
too long and tedious, if he might please his good old friend; and even
while he struggled with the difficulties of technique, he never lost
hope or patience, for before him always like a guiding star, was the
serene white face of the master.

So the years went by, and all Italy was being searched for the finest
wood that grew--for the sharpest tools. The wood for the master's
violin must be well seasoned--it would take a long time--the longer,
the better. For centuries the old tree had listened to wind, and river,
and bird; the sounds of the forest were interwoven with its fibre, and
now it must give up its buried music in answer to the strings of the
violin.

The childish stature was changed to that of manhood, and still the
teacher found in Pedro a devoted pupil. The youth had developed in many
ways, but the artist seemed to be little changed. A little more bent,
perhaps, but the same sweet soul.

Pedro had the "Beauty" but the master's violin was not yet finished.
He never asked for it, never spoke of it; in the delight of Pedro's
achievement and greater promise, perhaps he had forgotten the promise
of the old violin maker.

But the old man was growing feeble. A change was coming and the young
man felt it too. He went one day for his lesson, and the housekeeper
met him at the door with her finger on her lip. Hush! The teacher was
ill. But he would like to see Pedro for a few minutes.

He went in and spoke tenderly to the old friend, whose eyes shone with
so much love for his pupil--his boy--as he still called him. Pedro
could not stay long--it was too sad, and the tears were choking his
utterance. He went home with a sorrow-laden heart.

His father said to him as he entered: "The master's violin is at last
finished, my son. See?"

He held up a beautifully fashioned instrument.

"You shall take it to him to-morrow. Ah, its tone! You will play?"

"No, father, I cannot. The master, he is ill--dying--perhaps. Oh! I
cannot."

The old violin maker laid the instrument gently in its case. There were
tears in his own eyes--"The teacher! Well, we must all die," and he
turned to his work.

Night came, and Pedro tossed restlessly on his couch. About midnight
there was a rap on the front door of the shop.

He went quietly and opened it. There was a messenger from the old
housekeeper. The teacher was sinking fast. The physician said he could
not last until morning. He was out of pain, and he knew the end was
near. Would Pedro come and play for him? The night seemed so long!
Pedro dressed himself hurriedly. Oh, if he should be too late! As
he went through the shop he passed the table where lay the master's
violin. A sob came into his throat as he lifted it from the case. He
would play that.

Out into the still street he went with almost breathless haste. The
moon shone gloriously, and the air was sweet with spring. He reached
the cottage and went softly into the little room at the end of the hall
where the man lay, looking like a piece of marble statuary, but still
breathing. Pedro bent over him and looked lovingly into his face.

The master spoke with difficulty--"You are come, then, my friend--my
boy?" The same old tenderness! Pedro could not answer. "You will play
to me? The end is so near, the night seems so long--play to me, my boy."

The feeble man turned his face to the open window, which was on a
level with his couch. With a sigh of content, he laid his head upon
the sill. Pedro started. The position, the moonlight, oh, that far-off
night! Again he was a child crouching in the darkness, and in the old
ecstasy beneath that very window--he heard again that infinitely sad
music, and saw again the white suffering face.

He placed the instrument in position; step by step, unerringly, he
followed the notes of the marvellous melody, for was not the musician
before him, teaching him how to play it?

The grey head turned towards the player--a strange new light in his
eyes. But seeing only the vision of his childhood the young man played
on and on, and somehow into the symphony crept all the love and sadness
of a life time. As he played he threw his whole soul into the music.
Oh, the indescribable sweetness of the master's violin! At last his
vision faded, and he saw the massive head drop on the same old sill--he
heard once more the sobs that come with tears.

The music ended with a broken chord, and he looked up--to find his
friend gazing at him with ineffable happiness. "My boy, where did you
learn that? It is one of my own compositions--I have never written it
all down--where--where did you learn it?"

Pedro drew his chair to the couch, and, clasping the withered hand in
both his own that were strong and young, and beating with life, he
told the story. So long ago that he was but a child, he had heard the
artist play it. He had known even then that it was born of sorrow,
and to-night that far-off time came back into the moonlight, with the
master's face. He had not played from memory only, for the teacher had
shown him some of the notes and he had but followed.

The man feebly raised his head and said brokenly: "My boy, you are
right; I had a sorrow. You are young, but you will understand."

No longer master and pupil, they were now friend and friend.

"I loved her--the best of all the world. But with the end only, came
the peace which had been denied me in life. She loved my music and I
played to her when she lay dying. She did not love me as I loved her--I
was her friend, always; 'her dear, dear friend,' she used to say.

"But," and the voice grew stronger, "my arms were around her when the
angels came--with my kisses on her lips she went to her grave--there
are violets there--she loved them so--for thirty years I have watched
them. Her heart has blossomed into them, and they come from her to me.

"She was so pure--so sweet--and her last word was for me. Such a little
word! With her last strength, she put her arms around me, and drew my
face down to hers--such a little word--it was a whisper--_Sweetheart_!
She loved me then--I know she did. Oh, love, could I break the bonds of
the grave!" He was silent for a moment. "Now you know--you understand.
You will play it again."

The night was deepening toward the dawn. Once more Pedro took the
violin--and played the melody, instinct with the old, old story of
love and pain. The man's eyes were closed; he lay contentedly and
peacefully as a child. As the boy played, the darkness waned, and as
he finished, not with a broken chord, but with a minor that some way
seemed completion, the first faint lines of light came into the eastern
sky.

The master turned to the window again: "See, the day breaks." The sky
grew gold and crimson, but a more celestial light seemed to live around
the grey head, as if, in rifts of heaven, he saw her waiting for him.

He stretched his trembling hands to the east, and whispered: "Yes, I am
coming! Coming! You love me then? Ah, yes! Beyond the sunset--the dawn;
I am coming--coming--coming--such a little word--_Sweetheart_!"

A look of unspeakable rapture; it was transfiguration; then the deep
blue eyes were closed upon the scenes of earth. The first ray of the
sun shot into the little room and rested with loving touch upon the
couch. The sobbing old housekeeper came toward them, but Pedro motioned
her away.

He knelt at the bedside, his own face shining with something of that
celestial glow, and man though he was, with quivering lips he kissed
again and again the dear white face of the master.




A Reasonable Courtship




A Reasonable Courtship


When Tom Elliott graduated from Harvard, that power of the mind which
is known as reason had become a fetish with him. Every human action,
he argued, should be controlled by it. The majority of people were
largely influenced by their feelings; he, Thomas Elliott, twenty-six,
good-looking, and fairly wealthy, would turn his mental advantages to
good account and be guided wholly by his reason.

He explained his theory to an attractive young woman who had gone out
on the veranda with him. Partly because her mind was too much occupied
with the speaker to comprehend the full purport of his remarks, and
partly because her feminine tact forbade opposition to an unimportant
thing, Miss Marshall nodded her pretty head in entire assent.

"It is an assured fact," he went on, "that all the unhappiness in the
world is caused by the inability to reason. Married life is miserable
just because it is not put on a sensible basis. Any two human beings
capable of reasoning would be happy together, if that point were kept
constantly in view. Perfect, absolute truthfulness, and constant
deductions from it, form the only sure foundation for happiness. Am I
right?"

She twisted the corners of her handkerchief. "Yes, I think you are."

Elliott paced back and forth with his hands in his pockets--a symptom
of nervousness which women mistake for deep thought; "Belle," he said
suddenly, "I have always liked you. You have so much more sense than
most girls. I am not going to flatter you, but you are the only woman
I ever saw who seemed to be a reasonable being. What I want to ask is,
will you try it with me?"

Miss Marshall opened her brown eyes in amazement. Since she left
boarding-school, the approach of the Elliott planet had materially
confused her orbit. She had often dreamed of the offer of Tom's heart
and hand, but for once, the consensus of masculine opinion to the
contrary, a woman was surprised by a proposal.

"What on earth do you mean?" she gasped.

"Just this. You and I are congenial, of an equal station in life, and
I believe we could be happy together--happier than the average married
couple. There's no foolish sentimentality about it; we know each other,
and that is enough."

There was a terrific thumping going on in the region where Miss
Marshall had mentally located her heart. She took refuge in that
platitude of her sex which goads an ordinary lover to desperation.

"This is so sudden, Mr. Elliott! I must take time to consider."

"Very well, take your own time. I'll be a good husband to you, Belle,
if you'll only give me the chance."

In the solitude of her "den" Belle Marshall gave the matter serious
consideration. Safely intrenched behind a formal proposal, she admitted
to herself that she loved him--a confession that no woman ever should
make until the Rubicon has been crossed. But even the most love-blinded
damsel could not transfigure Elliott's demeanour into that of a lover.

Within her reach, in a secret drawer, was a pile of impassioned letters
and a withered rose; on her desk a photograph of a handsome face,
which she had last seen white to the lips with pain. He had called her
cruel, and she had smiled faintly at the Harvard pin which she wore,
and bade him go.

Then there was another, of whom Belle did not like to think, though she
went to his grave sometimes with a remorseful desire to make some sort
of an atonement. He was only a boy--and some women know what it is to
be loved by a boy.

She compared the pleading of the others with Elliott's business-like
offer, and wondered at the severity of fate. Then she wrote a note:
"Miss Marshall accepts with pleasure, Mr. Elliott's kind invitation
to become his wife," and sent it by a messenger. Before burning her
relics, as an engaged girl should, she sat down to look them over once
more. With a Spartan-like resolve she at last put every letter and
keepsake into the sacrificial flames. When it was over she sighed, for
she had nothing left but memory and the business like promise of the
morning: "I'll be a good husband to you, Belle, if you'll only give me
a chance."

Her note would doubtless be answered in person, and she donned a
pretty white gown, that she might not keep him waiting. She vainly
tried to tone down her flushed cheeks with powder. "You are a nice sort
of girl," she said to herself, "for a reasonable marriage."

Just then the door-bell rang, and she flew to answer the summons.
There was no one else in the house, the coast was clear and she was an
engaged girl. She started in surprise, as Elliott walked solemnly on by
her, after she had closed the door.

"Nice afternoon," he said.

There was no doubt about it; Miss Marshall had expected to be kissed.
Still unable to speak, she followed him into the parlour. He turned
to offer her a chair and instantly read her thought. "You need fear
nothing of the kind from me," he said in a blundering way, which men
consider a high power of tact. "It's not hygienic, and is a known cause
of disease. Above all things, let us be sensible."

"You got my note?" she enquired faintly.

"Yes, and I came to thank you for the honour conferred upon me. I
assure you, I fully appreciate it--more, perhaps, than I can make you
understand."

Throughout his call he was dignified and friendly, but she was in a
state of nervous excitement which bordered on hysteria.

"You are nervous and overwrought," he said in a friendly way. "Perhaps
I would better go. I'll come again soon, and you shall name the day,
and we will make plans for our future."

He shook hands in parting, and Belle ran up-stairs as if her life
depended upon it. Once in her own room, she locked the door, then threw
herself down among her sofa pillows in a passion of tears.

"A--cause--of--_disease_--of--_disease_," she sobbed. "Oh, the--brute!"

She had kept her lips for her husband, and the wound went deep. When
she descended the stairs, calm and collected, her eyes were set and
resolute, and there was a look around her mouth that boded ill for Mr.
Thomas Elliott, of Harvard, '94.

The next day he asked her to drive.

"I don't want to hurry you in the least," he said, "and the time is
left to you. Only tell me a little time before, that is all. And Belle,
remember this: I am going to be perfectly and absolutely truthful with
you, and I expect you to be the same with me."

It was not long before she found out that he meant what he said.

"Do I look nice?" she asked him one evening, when they were starting
for the theatre.

"I am sorry to say that you do not," answered Elliott. "You've got too
much powder on your nose, and that hat is a perfect fright."

Her eyes flashed, but she said nothing. Offering him her handkerchief
she commanded him to "wipe off the powder," and Elliott did so,
wondering in a half-frightened way, what the mischief was the matter
with Belle.

They were early, and sauntered along the brilliantly lighted street,
with plenty of time to look into the shop windows. One firm had filled
its largest window with ties of a dashing red.

"I think I'll get one of those," Tom said. "They're stylish just now,
and I think it would be becoming, don't you?"

"No, I don't," she answered promptly. "Only a man with a good
complexion can wear one of those things!"

Tom had always thought his dark clear skin was one of his best points,
and that Belle should insinuate that it wasn't, hurt his pride. Neither
spoke until they entered the theatre; then man-like he said the worst
thing possible.

"That's a pretty girl over there," inclining his head toward a blond
beauty. "I always liked blonds, didn't you?"

Belle was equal to the occasion. "Yes, I always liked blond men; I
don't care so much for the girls."

Elliott's lower jaw dropped thoughtfully. He was as dark as Egypt,
himself.

Neither enjoyed the play.

"Seeing it a second time has spoiled it for me," Tom said. "I took Miss
Davis last week and we both enjoyed it very much."

Belle's stony silence at last penetrated Tom's understanding.

"There's no reason why I shouldn't take another girl to the theatre,"
he explained, "just because I happen to be engaged to you. It isn't
announced yet, and won't be until you are willing. And you know it
doesn't change my regard for you in the least to go with any one else.
You are welcome to the same freedom."

A great light broke in upon Belle. The next time he called she had
gone to play tennis with a Yale man. He saw them laughing and chatting
a little way down the street, and the owner of the blue sweater
was carrying her racket. Tom was angry, for the Yale man was an
insufferable cad, and she had no business to go with him. He would
speak to her about it.

On the way home, he wisely decided to say nothing about it. Perhaps
Belle wasn't as fully accustomed to being guided by reason as he was,
though she was an unusually sensible girl. He must be gentle with her
at first; she would grow by degrees.

Acting on this impulse, he took his cherished copy of Spencer's
_Ethics_ and presented it to her.

"You'll like this," he said, "after you have got into it, and it will
help you amazingly about reasoning."

A well-developed white arm threw the Spencer vigorously against the
side of the house. Elliott was surprised, for a woman like this was
utterly outside the pale of his experience. Perhaps she didn't feel
well. He put his arm around her.

"What is it, Belle?" he asked anxiously.

The singular phenomena increased in intensity, for Belle jerked away
from him, with her eyes blazing.

"How dare you touch me?" she said, and walked like an empress out of
the room.

Inside of ten minutes the idea came to Elliott that she did not intend
to return until he left the house. Her handkerchief lay on the table,
and he picked it up. He looked carefully into the hall, and saw no one.
Then the apostle of reason put the handkerchief into his pocket and
walked out of the room to the front door, then slowly down the street,
still in a brown study. "What could a young woman mean by such vigorous
hints of displeasure?" Four years at college had taught him nothing of
women and their peculiar ways, and he was evidently on the wrong track.
It wasn't reasonable to humour her in such tantrums, but he sent a box
of roses by way of a peace offering, and received in return a note
which emboldened him to call.

An old-time friendly chat put them on an equal footing again, and
Elliott grew confidential.

"Every thought of mine rightfully belongs to you, I suppose," he said
one day.

"Every thought of mine _is_ of you," she replied softly, and he watched
the colour in her cheeks with a sensation akin to pleasure.

He thought about it in the night afterward. It was nice for a fellow
to know that a girl like Belle thought of him often. If it had been a
proper thing to do, he wouldn't have minded kissing her when she said
it, for he had never seen her look so pretty.

The Yale man had gone back to college and Elliott settled down in
business with his father. He and Belle were the best of friends, and
he looked forward with increasing pleasure to the day which she had
not yet named. He planned a European tour which he was sure would both
surprise and please her. He did not intend to mention it until after
the ceremony.

Surely no lover ever had a more reasonable and attractive path to
travel. Belle was everything that could be desired. When his visits
were infrequent, she did not seem to miss him, and--rarest quality in
woman!--never asked him any questions as to the way in which he had
spent the time away from her.

Tom felt like a pioneer who had emancipated his sex by applying the
test of reason to every duty and pleasure in life.

The summer waned, and beside the open fire in the long cool evenings
she seemed doubly attractive. In a friendly way, he took her hand in
his, as they sat in front of the flaming brushwood, then started in
surprise.

"What is it?" she asked.

"The queerest thing," Tom answered. "When I touched your hand just now,
I felt a funny little quiver run up that arm to my elbow. Did you ever
feel a thing like that?"

Belle forsook the path of absolute truth.

"No, how queer!"

"Isn't it?" He took her hand again, but the touch brought no answering
thrill. "Must have been my imagination, or a chill," commented Tom.

Alone in her room, Miss Marshall laughed softly to herself.

"Imagination, or a chill! What a dear funny stupid thing a man is!"

Sunday evenings Tom invariably spent with Belle. When he called on the
first evening of the following week, he was astonished to find that she
had gone to church with the Yale man. Mrs. Marshall explained to him
that it was the young man's farewell visit; his mother had been ill and
he had been unexpectedly called home, thus giving him a few days with
old friends.

[Illustration: He saw them laughing and chatting a little way down the
street, and the owner of the blue sweater was carrying her racket.
_From the Drawing by Dalton Stevens._]

"Must be very ill," said Tom ironically, under his breath, as he went
back to his cheerless room.

There was a queer tightness somewhere in his chest which he had never
felt before and it seemed to be connected in some way with the Yale
man. He slept fitfully and dreamed of Belle in a little house, with an
open fire in the parlour, where he would be a welcome guest and the
alumni of the other colleges would be denied admittance. He was tempted
to remonstrate with her, but had no reasonable ground for doing so.
They would be married shortly and then the matter would end.

The next time he went to see her, the peculiar tightness appeared in
his chest again, and he could hardly answer her cheerful greetings. He
noted that she had acquired a Yale pin, which flaunted its ugly blue
upon her breast. He trembled violently as he sat down and drops of
perspiration stood out on his brow. She was alarmed and brought him a
glass of water. As she stood over him, the womanly concern in her face
touched him not a little, and he threw his arms around her and drew her
down to him.

"Kiss me once, Belle," he pleaded hoarsely.

With a violent effort she freed herself.

"It's not hygienic," she explained, "and frequently causes disease."

Tom stared at her in open-mouthed wonder, and soon after took his
departure.

Once inside his room, he sat down to close analysis of himself. He had
been working too hard, and was temporarily unbalanced. She was quite
right in saying that it caused disease; such a thing must not happen.
His reason had been impaired by long hours in the office; otherwise he
would never have thought of doing such a foolish, unreasonable thing.

In the morning he received a note from her. She had been summoned to
the bedside of a sick sister, and would be away from home as long as
she was needed.

The next month was a long one for Tom. He was surprised to find how
much of his life could be filled by a woman. After they were married
there would be no such separations. He wrote regularly and received
in return such brief notes as her duties permitted her to write. Then,
for a week, none came, and he went to her home to see what news had
been received there. The servant admitted him, half smiling, and in
white house gown, by the open fire he saw Belle. She had never seemed
so sweet and womanly, and with a cry he could not repress, he caught
her in his arms. She struggled, but in vain, and at last gave her lips
willingly to his. In that minute Tom learned more than all his college
course had taught him. Utterly unconscious of his own temerity, he
kissed her again and again. The little white figure was silent in his
arms, and bending low he whispered a word which no reasonable man would
ever be caught using.

Her face shining with tears, Belle looked up.

"Tom," she said, "do you love me?"

"Love you!" he said slowly. "Why--I guess--I must."

She laughed happily and he drew her closer.

"Dear little girl," he said tenderly, "do you love me?"

The answer came muffled from his shoulder: "All the time, Tom!"

"All the time! You darling! What an infernal brute I have been!"

He evidently intended to kiss her again, for he tried to lift her chin
from his shoulder. Providence has taught women a great deal about such
things. Her eyes flashed with mischief as she struggled to release
herself.

"You must let me go, Tom; this isn't reasonable at all!"

But his training with the Harvard crew had given him a strength which
kept her there.

"Reasonable!" he repeated. "Reasonable be hanged!"




Elmiry Ann's Valentine




Elmiry Ann's Valentine


"Si," said Mrs. Safford, "didn't Elmiry Ann Rogers come in here to-day
to buy a valentine?"

"Yep," replied the postmaster, without interest. "One of them
twenty-five cent ones, with lace onto it."

"I thought so," grunted the wife of his bosom.

"How, now, Aureely? Why ain't she a right to buy a valentine if she
wants one?"

"She's a fine one to be buyin' sech trash, when everybody in The
Corners knows she ain't hardly got enough to keep soul and body
together, let alone clothes and valentines. I knowed she'd done it,
jest as well as if I'd see her do it, 'cause she aint' missed comin' in
on the twelfth of February sence we come here, and that is nigh onto
fourteen year."

"Well," said Silas, after a long silence, "what of it?"

"Si Safford! do you mean to tell me you've been postmaster for fourteen
year an' ain't never noticed that Elmiry Ann Rogers _gets_ a valentine
every year?"

"No," replied Silas, turning to meet a customer, "I ain't never noticed
it."

"Men do be the beatenest," exclaimed Aurelia under her breath.

"Evenin', Mr. Weeks."

"Evenin' Mis' Safford."

"Moderatin' any?"

"Nope, looks like snow, but I reckon it's too cold."

For perhaps ten minutes the two men talked the dull aimless
commonplaces of the country store. The single lamp with a reflector
behind it, made all three faces unlovely and old. John Weeks was a tall
strapping fellow, slightly stooped, and about fifty years old. His hair
was grey at the temples, but his eyes had a kindly twinkle that bid
defiance to time.

He bought some brown sugar and went out. One could not blame him for
seeking other surroundings, for even at its best, the post-office and
general store at The Corners was a gloomy place.

Two well-worn steps that creaked noisily were the links between it and
the street. The door opened by an old-fashioned latch, worn with much
handling, and inside, a motley smell greeted the inquiring nostril
unwonted to the place.

The curious sickish odour was a compound of many ingredients blended
into one by the all-powerful and all-pervading kerosene. The floor,
moderately clean, was covered with sand and saw-dust, which was
occasionally swept out and replaced by a fresh layer.

On the right, as you went in, was a small show-case filled with bright
coloured candies, displayed in the original packages. Other boxes were
piled in the window and still others on the shelf. Within a radius
of twenty steps one could buy calico, muslin, ruled stationery, or
groceries and kerosene, as he might choose.

Once a year, the commonplace merchandise gave way to "Christmas
novelties," and during the first two weeks in February the candy
show-case was filled with the pretty nonsensical bits of paper called
valentines, with a pile of "comics" on top.

Every year on the twelfth of February, as Mrs. Safford had said,
Elmiry Ann Rogers came in and bought a valentine. Every year on the
fourteenth of February, as the postmaster's keen-eyed wife had noted,
Elmiry Ann Rogers had received a valentine. It was no comic, either,
such as one might send to an unprepossessing old maid of forty, but a
gorgeous affair of lace paper and cupids, in an ornate wrapping, for
more than once, Elmiry's trembling fingers had torn the envelop a bit,
as if she could not wait until she reached home.

In many a country town, the buyer of the valentines would have been
known as "Ol' Mis' Rogers," but The Corners, lazy, rather than tactful,
still clung to the name the pretty girl had gone by.

There was little in Elmiry to recall the graceful figure that was wont
to appear in pink muslin or red merino at church and prayer meeting,
for the soft curves had become angles, the erect shoulders were bent,
and the laughing eyes were now filled with a dumb pathetic sadness.
Elmiry's hair had once fallen in soft curls about her face, but now it
was twisted into a hard little knot at the back of her head. The white
dimpled hands were dark and scrawny now, but people still spoke of her
as "Elmiry Ann."

The morning of the thirteenth dawned cloudy and cold. The postmaster
went out of town on business, and his wife had her hands full. She
moved briskly from one part of the store to the other, making change,
rectifying mistakes, and attending to the mail.

At noon a crowd of children came in after "comics" and John Weeks stood
by, watching aimlessly.

"You want any valentines, Mr. Weeks?" asked Mrs. Safford.

"Reckon not, I've been growed up too long for that."

"Sho, now! You ain't much older 'n Elmiry Ann Rogers, an' she buys one
every year. It's a nice one too--twenty-five cents."

"I ain't never sent but one," said Mr. Weeks, after a silence.

"That so? Well, some folks buys 'em right along. Elmiry Ann Rogers gets
one every year jest as regler as a tea party."

"Who'd you advise me to send one to?"

"Don't make no difference to us, so we sells 'em," laughed Mrs.
Safford. "Stock's runnin' down now, but if there's any lef they can be
kep' over. We've had one now for goin' on five year. It's a fifty cent
one, an it's pretty too. Elmiry's looked at it every year but I guess
it's too expensive."

"Lemme see it."

It was the same size as the others but it had more lace paper on it and
more cupids. Weeks was evidently pleased with it and paid the fifty
cents without a murmur.

"Makes me feel sorter silly to be buyin' one o' them things," he said
awkwardly, "but I'm allers glad to do a favour for a friend an' I'll
take it off your hands."

"Much obliged," returned Mrs. Safford. "Who you lowin' to send it to?"

Weeks considered carefully. "I've got a little nephew over to
Taylorville," he said, "and I reckon he'd be right pleased with it."
Another avalanche of children descended upon the valentine counter and
in the confusion he escaped.

Busy as she was, Mrs. Safford found time to meditate upon Elmiry and
her romance. "They do say that John Weeks used to set up some with
Elmiry," she thought, "and then it was broke off, but there ain't
either of 'em married. I sh'd think he'd want a woman to do for him,
and poor Elmiry--her little house is most eat up by the mortgage.
The squire was a-sayin' the other day that he thought she'd soon be
on the town 'cause she ain't paid the intrust lately. An her a-buyin'
valentines! La sakes! Well, it takes all kinds of people to make up a
world!"

Early in the afternoon she sorted the mail, as usual, but there was
nothing for Elmiry. A strange fact of the case was that the valentine
had always come from The Corners. Mrs. Safford began to hope Elmiry
would not be disappointed, then the latch clicked, and she came in.

"I want half a pound of dried beef, Mis' Safford," Elmiry said, "an'
a quarter of a pound of rice, an' a jug of merlasses, an' a spool of
black thread, number sixty."

"Would you mind writin' down your order, Mis' Rogers? I'll send Si over
with it when he comes, 'cause I've got to get this mail off in a few
minutes an' I ain't got time."

Elmiry seemed disappointed, but wrote her needs on a piece of wrapping
paper, using the short blunt pencil which was suspended by a piece of
twine from the show-case. Her writing was cramped, old-fashioned, and
as distinctive as it was odd.

When Mrs. Safford had time to look at the order, she became greatly
excited. "If that ain't the beatenest?" she said to herself. "Who'd
have thought it? 'Course, maybe it ain't, but I'm goin' to make sure!"

Late in the afternoon Elmiry came in again, and as before, she was the
only customer. "I jest thought I'd take my things, Mis' Safford," she
said by way of explanation, "'cause I want to use some merlasses right
away and 't ain't no need to trouble Mr. Safford, if you've got time to
do 'em up."

"I've got 'em all ready, Elmiry." So Miss Rogers arranged the bundles
under her shawl and Mrs. Safford caught sight of something white, held
tightly in the dark scrawny hand.

"'T want thread, nor rice," she thought, as Elmiry went out, "and I
know 't want her handkerchief. I reckon 'twas her valentine she was
lowin' to send away, and didn't, 'cause she thought I'd look. She ain't
goin' to fool me though."

Dusk brought the storm which had threatened for two days, and a bitter
north wind came with it. In an hour the world was white, and belated
foot-falls were muffled by the snow. At nine the store closed, and at
half-past nine, Elmiry Ann Rogers wrapped her threadbare shawl around
her and started down the street to the post-office.

It was a difficult journey, for the snow was three inches deep and was
still coming down, but Elmiry knew the way so well that she could have
gone with her eyes shut, if necessary.

She was stiff with the cold when she got there, and was fumbling with
the opening in the door marked "mail" when a deep masculine voice at
her elbow startled her into an impulsive little scream.

"Why, Miss Rogers," it said, "what are you doin' here this time o'
night?"

"My goodness, Mr. Weeks, how you scairt me!" she answered trembling.

"You shouldn't be out a night like this," he continued, "it ain't
fittin'."

"I--I jest come out to mail a letter,--an important letter," said
Elmiry weakly.

"Why that's funny--so did I! Strange that we should meet, ain't it? And
now, Miss Rogers, I'm goin' to take you home."

"Oh, you mustn't, Mr. Weeks," cried Elmiry in a panic, "I'd feel wicked
to take you out of your way a night like this, and 't'aint but a few
steps anyway."

"Sakes alive! Elmiry, how you talk! I'm a-goin' to take you home and we
might as well start. Come."

He slipped her arm through his and turned down the street.

Elmiry felt a burning blush on her cold cheeks, for it had been years,
more than she cared to remember, since any one had taken her home.

As they went on, Mr. Weeks did the talking and Elmiry endeavoured to
collect her scattered senses. There was something strangely sweet in
the feeling that she had a protector, and she wondered dimly how she
had ever had the courage to take the trip alone. When they reached her
door, she turned to bid him good-night, but he seemed to take no notice
of it.

"I guess I'll go in an' set a spell," he remarked. "I'm quite chill."
Elmiry had closed the door of the kitchen and turned up the light which
was burning dimly before she remembered she had no fire. Mr. Weeks
opened the stove door and found the interior dark and cold. Then he
looked behind the stove, but there was neither wood nor coal and the
floor was spotlessly clean.

"Why, Elmiry," he said, "I'll go right out and get you an armful of
wood. It's been stormin' so you've got out. I'll bring in a lot of it."

"No, no," she cried. "Please don't! It's too late for a fire to-night
and in the mornin' it'll be clear! Don't go!"

In her tone there was something more than polite anxiety to save him
the effort, and he changed the subject. They talked commonplaces until
he felt the cold in spite of his warm clothing. She still wore her
shawl and looked pitifully thin and weak.

"Ain't you cold?" he asked.

"No," replied Elmiry with great dignity. "I'm warm-blooded an' most
people keep their houses too hot. It ain't healthy."

Mr. Weeks agreed and rose to go. She did not ask him to come again,
and he was half-way down the street when he began to wonder about the
fire. The light was out, so he went back, very slowly approached the
wood-shed by a roundabout way, entered stealthily and struck a match,
shading the light with his hand.

On the floor, in the corner, was a very small pile of kindlings and
the coal-bin was swept clean, no other fuel being in sight.

"It's jest as I thought," he said to himself. "The poor little soul!"

St. Valentine's morning was clear and bright, but enough snow had
fallen during the night to obliterate the telltale tracks around the
wood-shed. Mrs. Safford was up betimes, eagerly anticipating her
husband's peep into the soap box which held chance letters posted after
the store had closed. There were two valentines there, both addressed
to "Miss Elmiry Ann Rogers, The Corners."

"Sakes alive!" said Mrs. Safford. "Si! Elmiry Ann Rogers has been
a-sending herself valentines every year, regler. I wish 't I knew who
t' other was from--this is the first time she's had two."

"How'd you know anything about it?"

"Why one on 'em is in the same hand that was on the order she wrote,
but t' other looks like a man's hand."

"Aureely," said the postmaster, "you keep still about valentines and
everything else you see in the mail, or I'll lose the post-office,
and you'll go to jail! The United States government don't stand no
foolin'!"

Awed by her husband's stern manner, Mrs. Safford decided to keep still,
but she watched Elmiry Ann closely when Silas gave her the valentines.
The thin sad face lighted up with pleased surprise, but Elmiry did
not stop. She clutched her treasures tightly and hurried out looking
younger than she had for years.

When John Weeks came in during the afternoon the Saffords were putting
away the valentines. "This fool business is over for another year,
John," said the postmaster. "We've sold one we've had for more'n five
years. What you steppin' on my feet for, Aureely? Ain't you got room
enough in the store to walk?"

"'Scuse me Si, there's the squire comin' in."

"Mornin', Squire."

"Mornin', Si. Has your clocks stopped, so's you don't know it's
afternoon? How's biz?"

"Oh, so so. What's new?"

"Nothin', only the selectmen held a meetin' yesterday an' Elmiry Rogers
is a-goin' to the poorhouse. She's back in her intrust, and ain't got
no prospects, and the Doctor has got to foreclose. They wanted I s'd
tell her, but someways, I don't like the idea. She'll be kep' warm and
she'll be better off, and she'll have plenty of comp'ny, but I knowed
her when she went to school, an' I knowed her mother too. For the sake
of auld lang syne I don't want to hurt her."

"Sho now, ain't that too bad?" said both the Saffords together.

Nobody knew just when Mr. Weeks left the store, and Elmiry Ann was
startled when she opened the door in response to his vigorous rap. She
had not been at home long, and the colour still burned in her cheeks.
The valentines lay on the table, presenting a strange contrast to their
bleak and commonplace surroundings.

"Why, how do you do?" she exclaimed with a queer little note in her
voice. "Will you come in?"

"Yes, I'll come in," he said decisively. He shut the door with a bang
and took the trembling frightened woman into his arms.

"Elmiry! You poor little soul! I've wanted you 'most twenty years, an'
I ain't never had courage to say it 'til now. We've waited too long,
an' I want you to come and be my valentine--will you, dear?"

"Why, Mr. Weeks," she cried in astonishment, "what's took you all of a
sudden?"

"It's sense, I reckon, Elmiry, an' it's been a long time comin'. I was
huffed 'cause you never made no answer to the valentine I sent you, an'
I thought you didn't want me, so I just stayed away."

"What valentine?" Elmiry's eyes were very big and fearful.

"Don't you remember that valentine I sent you?--Let's see, it's so long
ago--I've most forgot what it was. It said:

  "'The rose is red, the violet blue,
  Pinks are sweet and so are you;
  Give me your heart, you have mine--
  Will you be my valentine?'"

"Yes," said Elmiry slowly, "I remember." She went to the Family Bible
which lay on the marble-topped table in the front room and took it out.
It was worn and faded and there were spots on it which looked like
tears. "Did you mean that," she asked with difficulty, "for a-a----"

"Yes, I did," answered John, "an' I thought it was cunnin', but I see
now, what a blamed fool I was. I should have come and asked you like a
man an' not trusted to your understandin' no fool valentine. I made a
great mistake--Elmiry, dear, won't you never forgive me?"

The poor little old maid smiled through her blinding tears.

"Oh, John," she said, "I've waited so long!" Then she broke down and
sobbed helplessly in his arms.

Elmiry forgot the empty years, and the pathetic valentines, so dearly
bought--it was so sweet to be loved and taken care of by a masterful
man.

Neither heard the jingle of sleigh-bells 'till a voice shouted:

"Whoa," outside, and Doctor Jones started towards the gate.

"Who's that?" said Elmiry.

"It's the Doctor--he wants to see me about something and I'll go right
out."

"No, I'm sure it's me, he wants to see, John," said Elmiry sadly.

"'Tain't neither. He see me a-comin' here."

Without stopping to put on his overcoat Weeks rushed out slamming the
door behind him, as he went. The conversation was brief, but to the
point, and presently the Doctor drove off with a smile on his face.

"Didn't he want to see me, John?" asked Elmiry tearfully.

"No, it was me, as I told you, but he sent in his congratulations."

"His congratulations! Oh, John! What did you tell him?"

"I told him," said John, taking her into his arms, "that we was engaged
an' that you was goin' to be my valentine."




The Knighthood of Tony




The Knighthood of Tony


It was such a pretty bicycle! Tony fondled the glittering spokes and
examined the pedals with the air of a connoisseur. He forgot the hump
on his back, and his solitary little house on the outskirts of the
village in the joy of his new possession.

Only the night before Mrs. Carroll had sent for him and given it to
him. "Arthur wanted you to have it;" she said with a tremor in her
voice. Between Tony and the delicate child for whom the wheel was
bought, there had been a strong bond of sympathy. Tony was always ready
to talk to him, or to take him to the woods, and Arthur was the only
human being Tony knew, aside from Mrs. Carroll, who did not jeer at the
hump on his back, or shrink from him as though he were an evil thing.

When Arthur died, Tony felt a terrible sense of loss, although he was a
man in years and his friend was but a child.

On account of his deformity, the wheel was none too small. If he could
only ride it! He shivered as he thought of the shout of derision which
would inevitably be his share, should he venture to ride it through the
village streets. But there was the long smooth stretch of road which
led to the next town, and there were innumerable paths through the
woods that he knew and loved. The people in the village need never know
that he had it. He could ride out there and no one be the wiser.

He pushed it into his bedroom and shut the door. He had one other
treasure--an old flute; and in spite of the cruel hump it was a very
happy Tony who went to sleep that night, with one hand stretched out
upon the saddle of the beautiful new wheel.

His father had been a shoemaker and by lifelong toil had left a little
competence to his son. Tony knew the trade also and sometimes worked
at it. All that he was thus enabled to make by his own efforts, he
invested in books at the store in the next town. He felt dimly that it
would not be right to use his father's money in this way, but his own
was a different matter.

There was a tiny paint-box too, with which he sometimes copied the
pictures in the books. On the white wall of his bedroom was a poor copy
of a Madonna, whose beauty he felt, but could not express. In some way,
the Madonna took the place of the mother he had never known, and whose
picture, even, he had never seen.

Man though he was in years, Tony had dreams of a soft hand brushing
back his hair, and sweet cool lips pressed against his own. When he
came back from his weekly trips to the village store, stung to the
quick by the taunts and derisions of his fellow-men, he had sobbed
himself to sleep many a time longing for that gracious hollow in a
woman's shoulder, which seemed made for such as he.

With the first streaks of dawn, Tony started for the woods with his
bicycle. There was a wide shady path, well hidden by trees, and here,
he made his first attempts. It seemed a long, long time before he
could ride even a little way, and the hard falls bruised, but did not
discourage him. Day after day, in the early light, he led his silent
steed to the secret place and returned after nightfall that none might
see him.

The trees at the side of the path were more of a help than a hindrance.
Often he had restored his balance by reaching out to a friendly trunk.
The feeling of confidence which every bicyclist remembers, came at
last, and he rode up and down the path, making the turns at the end
with perfect ease, until he dropped off from sheer weariness.

The next day he took his flute and his wheel and a bit of lunch into
the woods. He rode on the path until he was a bit tired, and then sat
down on the grass and began to play. He knew no music but what the
birds had taught him, and the simple little melodies he had heard his
father hum.

Call after call of the mocking-bird and robin he imitated on his flute,
until the little creatures flocked around him as if he had been one of
them.

Tony found the purest pleasure in the society of his feathered friends.
They never noticed his crooked body, but with that unfailing sight
which seems to belong to birds and animals, recognised the soul
within, and knew that they need have no fear of him.

At that very minute, a robin was perched upon the handle-bar of his
wheel, his bright eyes fixed upon Tony, who was calling to him with his
own voice in such a wonderful way that the red-breasted visitor was
well-nigh dumb with astonishment.

With a sudden cry of alarm, Sir Robin fluttered into a tree above and
Tony looked up to behold a strange and altogether lovely thing.

It was only a pretty girl in a well-made bicycle suit of blue corduroy,
with her wheel beside her, but to Tony she was even more beautiful than
the Madonna.

"Excuse me," she said; "but I simply couldn't help stopping to listen."

Tony blushed uncomfortably but he made no reply.

"It must be a great pleasure to be able to call the birds to you like
that," she went on; "I really envy you the gift."

He was transfixed with delight. This beautiful straight human being
actually envied him the tiny bit of music he could make with his flute!
His primitive hospitality came to the rescue.

"Won't you sit down?" he said timidly.

She was very willing to sit down, and almost before he knew it, he
found himself telling her about his little cabin, the father who
brought him up, and how Mrs. Carroll had given him the bicycle because
he had been good to her little boy before he died.

She admired the wheel very much and talked over its good points with
Tony until he felt perfectly at ease. She asked him his name and gave
him her own. She was Miss Atherton, staying in a house just outside the
village with her invalid brother.

The doctor thought the air of the woods would be good for him, so she
had "packed up, bag and baggage," as she expressed it, and brought her
horse, bicycle, piano and a trained nurse to the village for the summer.

She wanted Tony to come and see them the very next morning and bring
his flute. Her brother would enjoy the music and he could come up on
his wheel and stay all day.

She waved her hand to him as she rode away through the woods towards
her home.

It was the first time Tony had ever been asked to visit any one except
the little boy who had died. He remembered every detail of her face
and dress, the velvety softness of the corduroy, the tiny watch at her
belt, and the brown eyes, so much like those of the Madonna, that he
felt as if he had known her always. But one thing troubled him. She did
not seem to see the curve between his shoulders. Perhaps it was because
he was leaning against a tree all the time she was there. If she had
seen it, she would certainly have spoken of it. She might not make fun
of him, but she would surely have pitied him, which was almost as bad.
Even Mrs. Carroll who was always kind, did that. No, Miss Atherton had
not seen it, and his dread of her discovering it was the one flaw in
his present anticipations.

She, herself, in a pretty white gown, welcomed him at the door. Mr.
Atherton lay in an invalid chair with a table at his side, and shook
hands graciously with Tony.

It was such a happy day! He learned the first moves in chess and Miss
Atherton played a tender, running accompaniment on the piano to the
bird music he made with his flute.

They all had luncheon on the wide veranda and Tony had not dreamed such
dainty things were possible.

They talked of their travels in Europe and Egypt, before Mr. Atherton
was taken ill, and showed him pictures of wonderful things in the lands
across the sea. She read aloud and sang softly to the half-hushed
chords her brother picked out on the guitar, and Tony in a perfect
wilderness of enjoyment, forgot all about his crooked shoulders.

That day was the first in a long series of happy ones. He learned to
play chess well enough to make himself a formidable antagonist, and
after Miss Atherton taught him the notes on the piano he found them on
the flute, and began to play simple melodies from the music. Sometimes
they all played together, very softly in the twilight--piano, flute and
guitar; until it became time for the invalid to be wheeled into his
room. Sometimes even after that, Tony would sit on the veranda while
she sang or talked to him. Through the long night he dreamed of her,
as many a lover dreams of his sweetheart. Beautiful Miss Atherton! He
worshipped her from afar off, as a child looks at a star.

It was Tony who knew where the violets grew, and who in the dim silence
of dawn laid handfuls of them at her door. And it was he who brought
her a great sheaf of pond-lilies, dripping and sweet.

"Oh, Tony!" she cried, "where do they grow?"

His face flushed with pleasure. "I'll take you there if you want to go."

"Indeed I do," she exclaimed, "can we go on our wheels?"

"Yes, that's the best way, though it's rough in some places."

"I don't mind that," she answered, "come early in the morning and we'll
stay all day."

That afternoon he went to the village store to buy his week's
provisions. Half-a-dozen men who were loafing in front of it asked
no better sport than to get him into a corner, so that he could not
escape, and fling at him taunts and jeers about his crooked body. It
was fun to see the sensitive face flush with anger, or quiver with
pain, and it was not until his self-control was entirely gone and he
sank in a sobbing heap on the floor, that they let him go.

The night was one of torture to him. It was not the mother he had
never seen who could comfort him now, but Miss Atherton. His idea of
heaven was a place where he might always be within the sound of her
voice, within reach of her hand, and where she would look kindly upon
him.

He was thankful that the way to her house lay beyond the village and
not through it. He would never dare to show himself there on his wheel.
And the road to the lilies ran through the woods; none would see
to-morrow when he went there with her.

She was already on the veranda in her bicycle suit when he rode up the
next morning. She tied a basket of lunch to his wheel and a book to her
own.

"You see we are going to stay all day," she said, "and I couldn't think
of starting without refreshment for body and mind. My brother has an
armful of new books which came from the city yesterday, and he didn't
even hear me when I said good-bye."

They started, Miss Atherton chatting busily and Tony too happy to speak
except in monosyllables. A turn in the road brought them to a branch
of the river, white with lilies in full bloom. She dismounted with a
little cry of delight. "Oh, how white and sweet they are!"

Tony found a boat moored by the side of the stream and they soon
had gathered a great sheaf of the golden-hearted censers, rich with
fragrance, which they covered with cool ferns in the shade of the trees
until they should be ready to take them home. Being collected early in
the day they were fresher and sweeter than if they had been allowed to
feel the heat of the later morning sun.

The lilies well cared for, they sat down under a tree and she read to
him the story of Launcelot. His brave deeds and manly service, his love
for Guenevere, and the spirit of romance and knightly courage which
seemed to fairly breathe from the pages, held Tony spellbound.

"Miss Atherton," he said wistfully, as she finished, "I'd like to be
one of those fellows."

"You can be," she answered.

"How?" he asked, his eyes wide open in astonishment.

"Any man is a knight," she said, "who does what is given him to do,
wisely and well. It's not the horses and the armour, Tony, it's the
man, and you can be as brave and true as Launcelot, if you only will.
Never permit yourself to speak, or even think slightingly of a woman,
and if you have the opportunity to help one, do it at any cost. That's
the foundation of true knighthood and true manhood, too. See, I give
you my colours; be my knight if you will," and she leaned forward
smilingly to tie a white fragrant scarf around his arm.

But to her surprise, Tony burst into tears. And then a part of his
dream came true, for Miss Atherton put her arm around him and drew him
close to her. "Tony, dear, what is it? Tell me!" With his face half
buried in the sweet comforting place he had longed for, but had never
known, he sobbed out all the bitterness of his heart. He told her of
the taunts and jeers which made his crooked life a burden--of all the
loneliness before he knew her, and someway too, he told her of his
longing for his mother whom he had never seen, and whose place he had
tried to fill with the picture of the Madonna.

That day in the woods gave Tony undreamed-of strength. He even offered
to do Miss Atherton's errands at the store.

They did not know that he was a knight bearing his lady's colours--that
he was in her service and would be to the very end of the world, for
even death, he thought, could never make any difference in his loyalty
to her. He was Launcelot and she was Guenevere--it was his secret, and
even she must never know.

Toward the end of the summer he rode up to Miss Atherton's with a great
bunch of goldenrod, which only he knew where to find. She came to the
door white and worried. "My brother is very ill, Tony," she said, "and
I have sent my groom for the doctor, but he has been gone so long that
I fear something may have happened to him. Would you go--on your wheel?"

For a moment, as the vision of the village store, on the only street
that led to the doctor's house, with its crowd of loafers came before
him, Tony hesitated. Would Launcelot hesitate with Guenevere in need?
"I'll go, Miss Atherton," he said quietly.

Terror struck him as he came in sight of the store and saw the men he
most feared, sitting in front of it. Mutely praying for help, he bent
to his pedals. But they had seen him, and rushed out into the street
with a shout. It was an easy matter for them to stop his wheel.

"Let me go! Let me go!" he cried, "Miss Atherton's brother is sick, and
I'm going for the doctor!"

"That's a likely story," said one of them. "Bet a hat you stole this
velocipede. She wouldn't send a hunchy like you anywheres."

"Mebby she might," said the keeper of the store. "That's the city gal
he's goin' to marry. I seen her in the woods kissin' him!"

White with rage, not for himself, but that the dear name of his Lady
should be soiled by their lips, Tony raised his slender arm to strike.
"Say what you please to me," he muttered between his clenched teeth,
"but if you dare to even _speak_ of her, I'll----"

Tony said no more, for one of the men half crazed with liquor, lifted
the bicycle suddenly, and with a single blow across the curve between
his shoulders, dashed him heavily to the ground. Thoroughly frightened,
the crowd dispersed leaving Tony in the dusty road, amid the wreck of
his wheel.

Meanwhile the doctor had arrived with Miss Atherton's servant. In half
an hour the invalid was resting quietly, and as the doctor took his
leave, Miss Atherton told him how she had sent Tony after him on his
bicycle only a few minutes before he arrived.

"You shouldn't have done that," he said. "There's a rough crowd of men
in the town, and they are very likely to harm the little chap if they
have half a chance. I'll look for him as I go home and have him come
and tell you that he is safe."

Not a man was in sight when the doctor found Tony, and even the shades
of the store windows were closely drawn.

After vainly knocking at the door, he smashed in the window with a
strong stick, and entering, found the men who were wont to loaf in
front of the store, huddled in a corner of it. With the voice of one
accustomed to command, he made them improvise a stretcher under his
directions, and three of them helped him carry Tony home.

The doctor shook his head gravely when questioned as to the extent of
the injury. "Some one must stay with him to-night," he said.

One of the men volunteered, but a look of such helpless terror came
into Tony's eyes, that he sent them all away, telling the last one to
go for Miss Atherton.

It was from him that she learned the whole story and fairly trembling
with indignation, turned upon him.

"There isn't one of you in this whole village worthy to touch even the
hand of the boy you have killed to-day. He was a man--you are nothing
but brutes. Now go, and never let me see your face again."

The doctor met her at the door of Tony's little house. "You'd better
stay with him," he said in a low tone. "He can't last until morning,
and your brother will be perfectly safe with the nurse. I'll go up to
your house and send down anything you may need. My man will come and
stay within call."

Miss Atherton gave him a note to the nurse, and then went in to Tony.
His eyes brightened at the sight of her, and he tried to speak.

"Hush, dear," she said, "it's all right. The doctor came just after you
left, and my brother is in no danger now. I've come to stay with you."

Her cool hand brushed back the hair from his forehead, and moved by
an impulse of womanly pity, she knelt beside him and laid her cheek
against his own. He closed his eyes and seemed to sleep.

Her eyes wandered around the little room. A table stood in the corner
of it. A cabinet photograph of herself in a pasteboard frame, around
which Tony had painted a wreath of pond-lilies, stood in the centre of
it beside a cracked cup filled with early autumn flowers. The flute lay
straight across the front, like a votive offering, and underneath the
photograph was written in his large, unformed hand: "My Guenevere."

At last she understood, and feeling that his little shrine was too holy
for even her eyes to see, she turned them away.

Tony stirred, and she slipped her arm under his shoulders.

"Miss Atherton?"

"Yes, dear."

"Did--did--they--tell you--what they said?"

"Yes, dear." Her eyes filled.

"I didn't mind--for myself--but----"

"Hush, dear; I know."

Feeling herself unworthy in the presence of a true knightly soul, Miss
Atherton held him untiringly in her arms. When he cried out with pain,
she drew him close to her, and pillowed his head upon her breast.
"Am--I--going to--die--Miss Atherton?"

She could hardly whisper the words: "I am afraid so, Tony."

"Will you--stay--until----"

"Yes, dear."

"And--afterward--you won't let--them--touch me?"

"No, Tony, no."

His eyes followed hers as she looked at the little shrine again.

"Do you mind?" he whispered anxiously. "I thought--you wouldn't
know--if I called--you--Guenevere--at home."

"Tony, dear, no queen ever had a braver, truer knight than you have
been to me. Even Launcelot was not half so noble in the service of
Guenevere, as you have been in mine."

He smiled happily and seemed to sleep again.

Just at dawn, he said weakly: "Miss Atherton?"

"What is it, Tony?"

"The lilies--are opening--about now,--ar'n't they?"

"I shouldn't wonder. Is there anything you want?"

"Would--you--you--kiss me--just--once? I used--to dream--you
did--and--and----"

With a sob she could not hide, she drew him close. He sighed
contentedly as he put his frail arms around her, like a weary child,
and with his Guenevere's kisses on his lips and brow, her little
Launcelot blossomed into the light of which she had told him.




Her Volunteer




Her Volunteer


The flags fluttered listlessly in the warm spring air, and the little
group on Jean Perry's piazza was scarcely more energetic. There was
a martial significance in the atmosphere, for the heavy tread of
battalions reverberated in the hearts of those who had seen one war,
and came forth with sudden force to those who were about to live
through it for the first time. Yet, the few who lounged in hammocks
spoke in depreciation.

"The regular army is enough," said one; "that's what those fellows
are for. As for me, I'm not anxious to be shot at. I would rather be
excused."

Two or three of the others agreed, but Jack Terrence was watching
Jean with grave trouble in his face. At the first sneering comment
her eyes had flashed and then filled; now her breast was heaving with
excitement, and her sensitive mouth was quivering.

A passing breeze stirred the scarlet veined folds of the flag above
her, and for a moment it seemed to wave in proud defiance. But even as
the century of its glorious history came back to her, one of the men
looking at it reminiscently, was moved to languid speech.

"Funny thing, that rag up there--I suppose it really means a great deal
to some people!"

"Do you honestly think so?" Jean's voice carried a note of fearful
scorn. "I am proud to say that I am one of the people to whom it means
something--more than your little mind can comprehend. If I could die
fighting for it, and have it wrapped round me at the last, it would be
glory enough for one small life, but I'm only a miserable woman, and I
have to stay at home. Why ar'n't you in the ranks, fighting like a man?
What do you think would become of your country if all the men were like
you?" She ended convincingly.

The astonished individual whom she addressed made the earliest exit
compatible with his dignity. The girls followed by twos and threes,
and at last the time came to which Terrence had looked forward for an
hour--a solitary moment with Jean.

"Let's go down to the river," he said, after waiting for her to speak.
He took possession of her in the calm, masterful way that rests and
soothes a nervous woman, and as his ring on her finger gave him the
right to do. He found her hat and put it on her unresisting head
without jabbing her with the pins, for which, even in her excitement,
she was dimly grateful.

"You're such a comfort, Jack," she sighed restfully, as they strolled
in the afternoon sunshine to the bank of the little noisy stream, that
by courtesy was called a river.

"I get tired and fretted, and when you come it's just like putting on a
pair of old shoes after you've been wearing new ones."

Terrence laughed. He was used to Jean's queer similes, and loved her
all the more for her unexpectedness.

"You take things too seriously, dear, but just the same I was very
proud of you this afternoon. You scattered the enemy's forces neatly."
He laughed again, but this time there was no mirth in his face. "I was
glad, too, Jean, because it makes it easier to speak of something I've
been thinking about for the last two weeks."

For an instant her heart stood still. She did not need to be told what
had made him unlike his sunny self for the past few days. He turned
his face away that he might not see the trouble in hers. She began to
understand.

After a little he spoke again. "Dear little woman," he said softly, "it
all rests with you. It is for you to decide--not me. If you feel that
my first duty is to you, you have only to say the word; if you feel
that, dearly as I love you, there is something beyond that, you--you
need not speak at all."

They were sitting on the bank of the stream now, and the late afternoon
light was playing upon its rippling surface, while a glory of crimson
and gold touched each rock and tree.

Half-way up the hill beyond, was a tiny two-story house in process of
construction. On the crest, where the sun might shine on it longest,
the flag seemed beckoning to them both. They felt its meaning.

"Jean," said Jack again, and his lips trembled as they said the little
name, "is the roof of our home coming between us and our flag?"

"If it did," she answered slowly, "it could only be a house--not a
home."

In those few moments she had fought a gallant battle with herself. She
was white now, but there was new strength in her voice.

"Brave heart," said Terrence tenderly, "I knew what you would say!"

Then he went on to tell her of the regiment that was forming, and in
which he had been offered a position in the line of promotion.

Something of the old fire came into her eyes. "Never mind position or
promotion. Put on the private's uniform and fight in the ranks and be
glad you've got the health and the strength and the right to do it.
Though," she added, as an afterthought, "I'd try to be reconciled to
it, even if you were a major-general." She smiled slyly.

There was no one to see him put his arm around her in the twilight and
draw her close. The soft melody of the little stream, as it hurried
noisily away, and the drowsy chirp of the birds came dreamily into the
summer stillness. Up on the hill, like a parting benediction, a soft
sunset glow trembled and shone around the flag.

"My sweetheart," he said, "I want to tell you something for you to
remember for all time." A lump came into his throat, but he choked it
down and went on. "It sounds like a joke in a comic paper for me to say
you're the only woman I ever loved; but it's true, and you know it is,
and it's the kind of love that couldn't die with the body of either of
us, don't you know that, dear?"

A sob from Jean made him draw her closer still. "So I want to tell you
now that, whatever happens, that will always be the same--nothing can
ever change that. I want you to remember that. I haven't half deserved
the love you've given me, but it's the sweetest thing God ever let a
man dream of, and it's made me a better man, Jean, and there won't be
a moment while I'm away that I won't see your dear face, because I'm
fighting for you as well as for my dear country--to be the man you want
me to be, and to make you proud of your volunteer."

The succeeding days were all confusion and preparation. To Terrence,
they were days of drill, recruiting and unaccustomed labour; to Jean
they were days of heartache, mingled with a strange pride that was
neither wholly happiness nor wholly pain.

The day came at last when the regiment was ordered forward, and the
whole town turned out to give its boys a rousing farewell. The love
of fight, mingled with the stern discipline and cool courage of the
Anglo-Saxon, was in the face of every man in the regiment.

Jean never forgot the spectacle as they formed in marching ranks. In
spite of the pain at her heart, she was unreasonably proud at the sight
of Jack in his new uniform--not that of a private, as she had wished
him to go, but as first lieutenant, looking very handsome.

The long column swung into line. Quick and short came the word of
command. Her eyes were upon her volunteer, and across the crowd of
waiting thousands, he saw only her--cheeks crimson with pride, eyes
sweet with love, and lips that trembled and tried to be brave in spite
of all.

"Forward, march!" It was the summons to the glory and the agony of
battle for those who kept time with the music. It was the summons to
as brave a faith to those who remained behind.

After the first shock was over, Jean became almost happy. Jack wrote
letters full of hope and good spirits. Every amusing thing that
happened in camp, he stored away to write to Jean. He even had a little
note-book in which to jot down, from time to time, things which would
interest her. This was a never failing source of pleasure to his mates,
and he was enthusiastically "guyed" by every man in the company. Of
course he told her this, and, womanlike, Jean was much pleased.

Boxes of home delicacies sent to Jack filled the entire company with
a beautiful admiration for "Terrence's girl." Magazines, papers and
letters almost flooded the mails.

"Poor Terrence is getting pale," said one of them at mess.

"Separation," suggested the corporal.

"Naw," rejoined the other. "It's carryin' his mail from the post-office
to his tent. That's what's wearin' on him."

Like a happy lover, Terrence took the jokes cheerfully. The routine of
camp life made some of the men complain bitterly, but he said never a
word. It was for his country--and Jean.

After two months of waiting, the regiment was ordered to the front
and the old confusion began again. The night in camp was a memorable
one. Already the star-spangled flag had been planted in new places,
and the thirst for conquest, which is perhaps, more Anglo-Saxon than
exclusively British, was upon every man in the army.

There is no need to write of the gallant charge at Santiago; no need
to speak of the steadfast courage of those who faced three times their
number in the narrow pass; no need to say that every lad in Uncle
Sam's uniform proved himself to be the stuff of which Republics are
built--for the world knows it all. Whatever criticism the strategists
of the future, sitting in comfortable chairs, may make, as to tactics
and military skill, the valour of the American army has been proved
anew.

Up the burning, blazing heights, Lieutenant Terrence rushed with his
men, stopping not for strange pitfalls and unknown dangers, facing
volley after volley of explosive bullets, heeding not those who fell
by the way, as long as through the smoke of battle, dimly lit by flash
and flame, the flag called--"Follow!"

The orders had been brief: "Take the blockhouse on the height by
storm." And the charge began with a cheer. But only twenty-two
of the seventy-five men reached the summit, and after a fierce
hand-to-hand conflict, dislodged the superior force. The rest lay
upon the hillside,--some past help, and all exposed to the fire of an
unchivalrous foe.

Lieutenant Terrence was among those reported "missing." The corporal
spent the night in the underbrush with a lantern, but to no avail.

"Don't be so cut up, Johnny," said a messmate, "you can't do him no
good."

"Maybe he fell off the side," replied the corporal, after a long
silence, "and, anyway, it's his girl I'm thinking of. I'm going to find
him for her."

Over the wire from headquarters came the list of killed, wounded and
missing. Jean grasped the morning paper eagerly and then grew white
"Missing! Missing!"

A dull dead weight settled down upon her like a suffocating pall. With
sudden meaning, what he had said came back to her: "It's you I'm
fighting for as well as for my country--to be the man you want me to
be, and to make you proud of your volunteer."

The strained nerves and tortured heart could bear no more, and she was
mercifully unconscious when they found her lying with the paper in her
hands.

There were hushed whispers in the house for days to come, and the wires
were kept busy with eager questionings. The old family physician was
fighting an unequal battle with death for Jean had no desire to live.

After a week, a telegram came for Jean. It was the old doctor who
opened it with trembling hands, dreading to give her the message he
knew it must contain. After the first eager glance, his face changed
mysteriously, and then became transfigured with a radiant smile as he
read:

"Wounded, but not seriously. Home on _Olivette_. Terrence."

The little blind god has a healing power quite beyond prosaic belief
and in a very short time Jean was able to go out and once more the
sound of building came from the hillside. All through the days that
followed she listened to it with joy. Every ring of metal or shout of
command was a distinct pleasure.

It was evening when Terrence reached the town unannounced and
unheralded with his right arm in a sling. Those on the piazza merely
knew that some one had entered the gate, but a white-robed figure flew
down the steps with a cry of gladness that sent the family into the
house.

Human hearts did not need to be told that a bronzed and bearded soldier
was holding his sweetheart close, and that a woman was sobbing out more
happiness than one heart could hold, on the shoulder of her volunteer.




In Reflected Glory




In Reflected Glory


Wheels! Wheels! Wheels! The boulevards were full of them, from the
glistening up-to-date mount, back to the antiquated '91 model with its
hard tires and widely curved handle-bars.

The sun struck the sheen of nickel and new enamel and sent a thousand
little needles of light in all directions. Even the '91 model was
beautiful in the light of the spring day, overtaken though it might be
by the swiftly moving procession.

Wheels! Every man, woman, and child in the city of Chicago who could
beg, borrow, or rent a bicycle, was speeding westward to the flagstaff
at the entrance to the Garfield Park Loop. Every spoke and bar had been
polished to the limit, and the long asphalt boulevard was a glittering,
sparkling avenue of wheels.

Wheels! It was the day of the great road race, under the auspices of
the Associated Cycling Clubs. The twenty-five mile course had been
smoothed and measured, the sky was blue and cloudless, and far away in
Wheeling four hundred eager cyclers awaited the bugle call.

John Gardner stood at the door of his news-room and watched with a
wistful eye, the few hundred wheelmen who had chosen to ride on the
business street that went past his door. The orange and black of the
South Shore Club fluttered from many a shining bar, and at the sight of
the colours the old man's face grew tender. For it was Jack's club that
boasted the orange and black--Jack Gardner of the "Varsity, '98," and
his only son. A touch on his arm made him turn his face within.

"Father," said a gentle voice, "why don't we go to the doin's?"

"Land sakes, Mother, who'd take care of the store?"

"Guess the store ain't goin' to run away, and we ain't been out in
years. Let's go, Father, and see Jack ride!"

It was John Gardner's way to oppose everything at first, and then to
generously give in. He liked to feel himself master in his own house,
so he hesitated.

But the stronger will was fully settled upon going. "I'm a-goin'
Father, even if I have to go alone."

She vanished into the back part of the store and began to brush
carefully the state gown, the brown silk, made after the quaint fashion
of a bygone day. After a few minutes the old man appeared in the door.

"I reckon we'll go, Hannah," he said, with the air of one granting a
favour, "but it do seem wrong to leave the little store!"

For many a year the little store had been open on all holidays, as well
as weekdays and evenings, for Jack in school and college had needed
money, and a startling amount of it. Old John Gardner never complained.
Hampered, and made ashamed all his life by his lack of "book larnin',"
he had vowed that his son should have "a bang-up eddication, the best
they is a-goin'," if he could get it for him.

To-day Jack was to ride in the road race, and imbued with solemn
importance Gardner, senior, robed himself for the occasion. They made a
queer picture as they stood on the corner waiting for a car. Hannah's
brown silk was wrinkled and shabby, but her thin gray hair arranged in
tiny puffs around her forehead, looked, as her fond mate said, "right
smart." Twenty years ago, when Jack was a little boy in dresses, his
father had bought a silk hat to wear to a funeral, and it was this
relic of past splendour which now adorned his head.

Once on the car, a new fear presented itself. "Mother," he said,
"sposen Jack should see us!"

For an instant her heart stood still. "He won't," she said bravely; "he
won't see anything but that new bicycle of his'n and we will come home
as soon as it's over."

"I don't know's we'd ought," said the old man doubtfully. "He might not
like it."

"Like what?" demanded Hannah sharply.

"Our goin'!"

"Hush, Father," she answered, "you know we don't see Jack very often
'cause he has to live down where his school is. Lemme see--it's three
months now since he's been home, ain't it?"

"Three months yestidy."

"So what's goin' to hurt if we see him ride to-day? He'll never notice
us among all them folks."

Two girls who sat opposite were watching the old couple with very
evident amusement. "There's rural simplicity for you," said one.

"So I see," responded the other. "They appear to be attached to some
Jack. Wouldn't it be funny if it were Jack Gardner?" They laughed in
unison and Hannah looked up into their faces. John's eyes followed
hers and neither spoke for a moment. They saw nothing but the joy
and happiness of girlhood and something blinded them both. Jack was
forgotten for the moment in the memory of the little girl who lay in
the Silent City beyond the smoke and dust of the town.

They left the car when the others did and followed the crowd.

"I don't b'leeve Jack'll see us, Mother," said the old man. "I ain't
goin' to worry about it no more."

Twenty-five miles away, Jack Gardner surveyed his wheel complacently.
Every screw was tightened, his chains were just right, his tires were
exactly mellow enough and his handle-bars were at the proper pitch. He
was none the less pleased with his own appearance, for he had written
his father that he needed a new suit in the colours worn by the South
Shore Club. He had searched the town for the orange and black and
finally found them. The S.S.C. on his black chest could be seen as far
as his wheel could, and he had topped the glaring outfit with a flaming
orange cap, with a black tassel to stream in the wind behind.

"Get on to the oriole!" The champion of a rival club was inclined to
be sportive at Jack's expense. He retorted with a fling at the green
costume of the other, and then the bugle sounded for the flying start.

Anxious friends and trainers shouted, final directions from behind the
"dead line," as Jack called it. Another blare from the bugle, a sudden
whir, a flash of the shining spokes and they were off.

As the last group flew over the tape the train started back to the
city. A South Shore Club man climbed up on the locomotive to "josh" the
engineer. "You'll have to get a move on you, if you catch Gardner," he
said.

The engineer laughed and looked fondly at his giant of steel. Perhaps
an engineer enamoured of his engine can understand the love of a
cyclist for his wheel.

The people around the Garfield Park Loop were beginning to get
impatient. Most of them had stood for two hours holding their bicycles,
and even a well behaved bicycle is an awkward possession in a crowd.
Pedals scraped the shins of utterly strange riders, handle-bars got
tangled in watch-guards, and front wheels got into mischief with
unpleasant regularity.

Close to the course, and on the grassy bank, sat Mr. and Mrs. Gardner.
Kindly souls had made way for them until they had at last reached the
very front. The day and the multitude were almost spectacle enough, but
a cry from the far north brought them to their feet.

Yes, there they were--a cloud of dust across the field. How small the
riders seemed! Nearer and nearer they came--how the shining wheels flew
through the sunlight! Tense, strained faces almost on the handle-bars:
every man of them was doing his best, and the crowd was cheering like
mad. The band played merrily, as on and on they flew,--past the judges'
stand, over the tape and down, to the mingled praise and solicitude of
their friends. The old people were very much disappointed. Jack had
not ridden after all! Perhaps--but there was another cloud of dust and
another cry from the north. On came another group of riders. They went
by like the whirlwind, but no Jack was there.

"I sh'd have thought he'd got back somewheres near the front," said the
old man. He was hurt to think his son was so far behind.

Group after group passed by, the old people watching anxiously; then
Hannah gripped his arm suddenly.

See! Down the course, only a faint speck now, shone the orange and
black of the South Shore Club. Perhaps----

Yes, riding at the head of thirty tired wheelmen, to the stirring
strains of a Sousa march, their Jack, strong, superb, excited, nerving
himself for the final effort.

Their hearts stopped beating during the instant he was flying by.
"There," she whispered reassuringly, "I told you he wouldn't see us.
My! Wasn't he fine?"

But John Gardner could not speak, for his eyes were dim with happy
pride in remembrance of that superb specimen of perfect manhood six
feet high--his Jack, to whom he had given the "eddication."

They watched the rest of the race with little interest, for the best of
it all had gone by.

When the last rider crossed the tape, the multitude stirred to go. "We
better stand right here, Hannah, till some of these folks gets away,"
he said. So they stood perfectly still and let the crowd surge around
them.

Then a great huzza went up, the track cleared again, as if by magic,
and down the course came a dozen men, shouting in unrestrained joy.
Aloft on their shoulders they held--the old people craned their necks
to see--yes, Jack--their Jack--looking sheepish and very much ashamed.

"Why, Mother," the old man cried, "he's won! Our Jack's won the race!
Do you hear?"

Mother's eyes were fixed on the black and orange sweater, for Jack was
once again in regulation bicycle attire, and her heart was too full to
trust itself for speech.

"Three cheers for Gardner! 'Rah for the South Shore Club!" and the
great field swelled and swelled again with bursts of applause. And
then--the crowd parted some way and Jack saw those pathetic faces
upturned to him.

It is said that when a man is drowning, in the flash of a second his
whole previous life passes in review. Something like this came to him
at the crowning moment of his twenty-three years.

At that minute he knew, as never before, how those hands had toiled for
him, how those lips had prayed for him, and how those honest hearts had
loved him ever since he was born. A sudden lump came into his throat,
for he seemingly had withheld the only reward they wanted for it all.

"Let me down, fellows," he cried, "there's my folks."

Almost before they knew what had happened, he had rushed up to them
with hands outstretched. "Why, Father! Mother!" he exclaimed; "why
didn't you let me know you wanted to come?"

Just a minute the old people doubted the wisdom of their course, then
the gladness in Jack's face set all at rest. The men from the South
Shore Club gathered around and were presented, one by one. They shook
hands with the old gentleman and told them how proud they were of
Jack, and doffed their caps to Mrs. Gardner, "just z's if I was a fine
lady," she said afterward.

Then Jack said everybody was going down to the club for lunch and his
father and mother must come too.

"No, no!" gasped Mrs. Gardner in affright; "no! no!"

"Well, indeed you are coming," said Jack, with a charming air of
proprietorship. "I guess when a fellow wins the race of the year that
his father and mother will go to lunch with him." Then he squeezed her
thin wrinkled hand and whispered tenderly: "Dear little mother! To
think you wanted to come, and I didn't know!"

The hero of the day turned to those who were with him: "Will some of
you fellows get a carriage? I don't think I want any more bicycle
riding to-day and I'll go down with my father and mother if one of you
boys will lead my wheel."

It was an enchanted journey for the old people to roll down the broad
smooth boulevard in a real carriage, with Jack sitting in front of them
telling them all about the race. The President of the South Shore Club,
the son of a man known and honoured throughout Chicago, had asked to
be presented, and said he hoped Jack's father would be willing to be
his guest for the day.

"I told him father would be pleased," concluded Jack, "and he wanted
mother too, but I said I guessed not, that I was going to have my
little mother for my own guest."

At last, when the carriage stopped before an imposing brown stone
house, Jack helped them out, and entered the club with the shabby
little brown figure on his arm. "Just wait here a few minutes," he
said, "until I make myself presentable."

He stationed them on a luxurious sofa, and ran off to the
dressing-rooms.

The old man looked after him fondly. "I didn't think Jack would be
ashamed of us, Mother," he said.

"No, Father, and he ain't."

"My, ain't this a grand place?"

Half awed, they gazed at the rich furnishings in silence. "Seems like
heaven don't it?" he murmured.

"Makes me think more of the chapter in Solomon," she replied.

"How's that, Mother?"

The little old lady looked up at him, her face shining with ineffable
happiness, and repeated softly:

"'_He led me into his banqueting house, and his banner over me was
love._'"




The House Beautiful




The House Beautiful


Four years at College had given Jack Hardy high ambitions, but two
years in society had perceptibly lowered them. Jack had inherited
enough money to make him a prize in the matrimonial lottery and he was
not slow to see that the reason of it lay in his bank account. With
a singular lack of conceit, he did not admit, even to himself, his
personal charms.

Walking home one evening from a large reception, his indignation
rapidly developed into a moving force, and in a sudden flash of insight
he saw two paths which lay straight before him.

One was smooth, leading to gardens of pleasure; the other rough,
toilsome, and strewn with failures, but at the end of it was a goal
well worth working for. His inheritance was all he needed to enter one;
but on the other hand, hard, unfaltering work lay before him and was
the only way to success.

His strong young face was set in lines of unwonted determination.
"Farewell to an idle society life," he said aloud, "here's to hard
work, self-respect, and perhaps an honourable name."

There was not a little comment in his set when it became known that
Hardy had left town without assigning any reasons, length of stay, or
even leaving an address.

He retired to an obscure hamlet on the Jersey coast and secured a
room in a rambling old house which faced the sea. Here he could
work; he could study hard, or write, and become, perhaps, a strong
man intellectually, instead of being a fastidious ornament in a
drawing-room where he felt his financial value was the key-note to his
popularity.

The white-haired mistress of the mansion, however, had a confession to
make which did not agree at all with his inclinations.

"I've got another boarder," she said, "but she's a quiet,
nice-appearing girl and I guess she won't disturb you any."

"Girl!" Hardy scowled, then recovered himself. "Please, don't take any
more boarders," he said smilingly, "I'll make it worth your while."

When he said "please" women instinctively obeyed him. Mrs. Kitson
readily promised to abstain from further extension of the hilarious
pastime of taking boarders, which she had hitherto found to be
necessary to her pocket-book, if not to her inclinations.

He spent the afternoon in getting his traps settled in his new
location. The quiet was broken only by the boom of the breakers on the
shore below, and the room was guiltless of sofa pillows and photograph
frames with which women are wont to burden a helpless bachelor. He felt
a certain sense of emancipation.

It was rather awkward having a girl around, and he contemplated the
propriety of bribing Mrs. Kitson to invent some excuse for dispensing
with her presence. Some country damsel, he reflected, perhaps a
seamstress, or a teacher who "boarded round." He determined to treat
her with cool politeness while he might be forced to endure her
proximity.

Going down to supper he encountered the other boarder in the
sitting-room. His hostess, rather uncertain as to the proper form of
introduction, mumbled something he did not quite understand. He did not
wish to appear at all concerned anyway, and bowed distantly.

Miss Wheeler's dark eyes flashed and the colour came into her face. He
noted the signs of resentment and wondered what he had done; not that
he cared, particularly, only one should always be polite.

The supper was delicious. Everything was well cooked and well served.
The china was dainty and the linen spotless.

Under the kindly influence of food which proverbially melts the
masculine heart, Hardy began to look occasionally, and with some
curiosity at the girl opposite him. She was tall, and well formed,
her head well poised, and her voice, when she spoke, was agreeably
modulated. She must be the teacher who "boarded round."

She was apparently unconscious of his presence. She drew Mrs. Kitson
into volumes of personal reminiscence which prevented any awkward
silence, and when they had finished, went with the hostess into the
kitchen and helped her wash the dishes.

Hardy stood aloof for a moment, and then went up-stairs. He was
accustomed to having girls all smiles and attention when he graciously
consented to appear. This one, however, could not have been more
politely unconcerned if he had been a door-mat!

"She doesn't know," he began unconsciously, as the dull red flooded his
face. "No, and she never shall!"

With that desire for achievement which pique inspires, he went to work.
He had a dim notion of writing a story, such as he used to do for a
college paper, but it eventually became a short sketch, half humorous
and half cynical in tone.

When it was finished, he went out to send it off. He knew the street
number of only one publication--a thing he had bought on the way down
to appease the business instincts of the energetic and persistent train
boy.

When he returned, he glanced through the window of the sitting-room as
he stepped upon the broad, old-fashioned veranda. There was no light
except the driftwood fire in the big fireplace, and Miss Wheeler sat in
a low chair watching it. It was an earnest womanly face full of purpose
and aspiration. The repressed energy, which he had first noticed in
her manner, was gone. She was off her guard, and her eyes were those of
a wistful child, softened and made tender by her dreaming.

When he went down to breakfast the next morning, he learned that Miss
Wheeler had taken her bicycle and gone off to spend the day. With a
little tact, he diverted Mrs. Kitson's conversation to herself. He did
not wish to take an unfair advantage, and besides he was not at all
interested.

It was a long day, for he did not feel like work, so he tramped
through the fields, sat on the sea shore, read a little, envied the
consolation other men seemed to find in smoking, and was conscious of
a new interest in life, when, just at dusk, Miss Wheeler rode up and
dismounted at the gate.

Mrs. Kitson's penetrating voice rang out clearly, and rose to his room.
"How fur did you ride?"

Miss Wheeler was bending over her cyclometer, but her reply was
inaudible.

"Hey?"

"Twenty-three miles." Her young voice was clear and strong this time.

At supper he watched her closely for symptoms of weariness, but she was
fresh and rosy, and unaffectedly hungry. She still wore her bicycle
suit, and talked pleasantly with Mrs. Kitson. She answered Hardy's
questions, to be sure, but it was in monosyllables.

"She must have the strength of an Amazon," he mused, as he sat by the
fire while she was helping Mrs. Kitson with the dishes, and laughing
occasionally in a happy childlike way.

A ten-mile ride would utterly exhaust any girl he knew, and she
apparently considered twice that distance merely a pleasant outing!

She came in after a while and sat on the other side of the hearth. Mrs.
Kitson with many apologies, had gone "visitin'."

After an awkward silence he laughed outright--the boyish hearty laugh
that won him friends everywhere.

"Are you going to keep it all to yourself?" she asked smiling.

"I was thinking," he returned, "of what the Autocrat said when some one
asked him to define happiness."

She dimpled prettily.

"Yes, I know. 'Four feet on a fender.'"

Hers were not so far away but that the contrast in size was evident.

The ice was broken. "And are you happy?" he inquired tentatively.

"Why shouldn't I be?" she answered. "I've got a sound body, a clear
brain, an honest name and a clean heart. Isn't that enough?" She looked
up smiling.

He hesitated, for her point of view was new to him. "Most people would
include money in the list, I've got all the things you say make you
happy, and yet----"

"You haven't the money." She had finished his sentence for him.

"You don't look as if it bothered you a great deal," she added shyly.

He was silent. For once he had been separated from his birthright and
considered apart from his inheritance. The sensation was distinctly
novel. "Do you ever think," she went on, "of the house you would build
if you had all the money you wanted?"

"I used to, when I was a very little boy," he answered with an effort.

"I do even now, it's one of my daydreams and I call it my House
Beautiful," she said.

He asked a timid question and something of the expression he had seen
on her face in the firelight the evening before, returned to it. Had
she been dreaming of her "House Beautiful" then?

The mellow tones of her voice sounded full and soft in his ears. She
was telling of a house of grey stone with wide porches and massive
columns. She spoke of the reception hall, the stately stairway, and the
tiger skin rug in the drawing-room.

A tower room with windows facing both the sunset and the sea, beautiful
things in costly woods, and fabrics in white and gold.

He was interested, in spite of himself, and began to help her plan
it. There was no difference of opinion, even in the smallest detail,
and room by room, and floor by floor, they furnished their imaginary
castle. On the very top of the tower, the Stars and Stripes would
always flutter--"because it's the most beautiful flag in the world,"
with a little choke in her voice, "and it means the most."

Only a week before he had attended that offensive reception, and he was
thinking of the contrast now. The men that night had spoken with an
affected English drawl, and the girls were all "going abroad for the
summer."

And to-night he had forgotten his bank and mining stocks, and was
sitting by a driftwood fire with a girl who had childish dreams of
building a house, and choked when she spoke of the flag.

"And the doors should open forever, and ever, to all who had done
anything noble in the world, or had tried to do it."

With a little lingering sigh, she stretched her white hands towards the
flames. The House Beautiful was finished, but she was still dreaming.

He repeated her thought mentally: "The doors should be open forever,
and ever, to all who had done anything noble in the world, or had
_tried_ to do it." Would that bar him out? He turned uneasily in his
chair.

Mrs. Kitson returned, and he felt that he must say something: "You
should have gone to college," he ventured, in a tone which was meant to
be both fatherly and cheerful.

She rose smilingly and bade him good night. "I am a graduate of
Vassar," she said simply.

A day or two later his heart fluttered gladly when the mail brought
him a check for his sketch, and a request to submit further manuscript.

He shut himself up in his room for a whole day and tried to work, but
a far-away clack-clack grated on his nerves and made him irritable. He
went off for a tramp and on his return found Miss Wheeler sitting on
the porch.

"Did you hear that constant clatter this afternoon?" he asked.

"Yes, it was my typewriter," she answered demurely. She was evidently a
stenographer.

"I'm sorry," said Hardy awkwardly, "but it disturbs me." Then with more
innocent joy than foolish pride, he continued:

"I--ah--write, you know."

Miss Wheeler gathered up her books. "I regret that it annoys you," she
said frigidly, "but I cannot help it." Then with an exact imitation of
his tone and manner, she added: "I--ah--write, you know." And then she
left him alone.

Hardy had business in town of such a pressing nature that he could not
even stop to tell Mrs. Kitson that he was going. He sent her a telegram
from the station, saying he did not know when he would be able to
return.

The gay streets of the city, brilliantly lighted, even in the early
evening, were full of allurement, as they always are, to one who has
been away. But a higher impulse within him was striving with the one
that demanded pleasure. He would go back. So he bought some magazines,
and sat down to wait for the outgoing train, the very next day.

He cut the leaves mechanically, and dipped here and there into the
pages. Then the title of a story caught his attention, and he read
it to the finish. It was a simple tale, told with no striving after
effect, but the lines were broadly human, and it rang true. The
signature was "Constance Wheeler."

The consciousness of his own caddishness came home to him like a blow.

They had a long talk the next day, and he told her what he was trying
to do. "But you discourage me," he said. "I never can do it as you do."

They were sitting by the sea, watching the sunset as the rich colours
came over from the west, and touched the waves with tints of opal.
"I've been doing it three or four years," she said, "and you are just
beginning." Then with unknowing comprehension she went on. "Besides,
what one accomplishes, doesn't matter in the least. It's the work that
makes men and women of us."

The light which was reflected back from the surf made her face tender
then, and leaning forward, with a simple reverence which she could not
misunderstand, he kissed her hand.

The summer promised to be all too short. They studied and read together
and criticised each other's work.

Hardy was fond of rowing, so they spent many hours together on the
water. Constance sat on a cushion in the stern and read aloud, while
Jack pulled vigorously or let the boat drift idly, as best suited his
mood.

One day the book was absorbingly interesting, and one of the oars
slipped into the softly-lapping water, and set out for lands unknown.
Constance saw it first and her face changed. His eyes followed hers,
but he sat quite still for a moment.

They were but a mile from shore and the tide was going in.

"We'll go in with it," she said bravely.

With the remaining oar Hardy turned the boat so as to catch the full
force of the shoreward impulse, but in a very few minutes they saw the
tide would not do as they wished.

A sudden cloud obscured the sun. The wind shifted and grew cold. Quick
to act in an emergency, Jack took off his coat and shoes and tied the
anchor rope under his arms. In an instant she saw what he was going to
do.

"No--no, Jack," she pleaded.

It was the first time she had ever called him Jack. The sky was
threatening and the wind was growing stronger.

"Constance, dearest," he said tenderly, "there is no other way."

He sprang into the water and struck out with long powerful strokes for
the shore.

As if conscious of its precious burden, the boat followed slowly and
steadily, then more slowly, then in fitful jerks. They were half-way to
the shore but Jack's strength was failing fast.

The sky grew darker, and there was a sullen roar of thunder. Constance
knelt in the stern, took off her dress and shoes, and took down her
hair. She slipped into the water just as the storm broke, and Jack was
gasping when she swam up beside him.

"It's a cramp," he said weakly.

"I know. Can you slip the rope over your head?" She held him up while
he obeyed. The sea was rising and she felt her strength to the full.

The boat drifted away and still holding him up she put the braids of
her hair into his hands. As a drowning man will catch at a straw, he
clutched it, then sank almost into unconsciousness, but still held with
spasmodic grasp to the only hope within his hands.

It was too dark now to see the shore, but Constance struggled on,
keeping his head above the water as best she could. She rested from
time to time by floating and spending only strength enough to keep them
from being carried out to sea, but she was rapidly becoming exhausted.

At last, when she was too weak to swim another stroke, she sank
despairingly, and found the firm ground under her feet. It was easy
then, and she half dragged him ashore.

When she awoke out of what seemed a horrible dream, she was in her own
room, and Mrs. Kitson was bustling about her with motherly solicitude.
Jack was kneeling beside her, and when she opened her eyes, his were
shining with the "light that was never on land or sea," as he took her
hand.

An answering glow crept into her face and he stooped, unafraid, to her
lips. There was no need of words between them--love went to meet love
with open arms.

As soon as she was able to sit up, they made plans for their future.
"Just our two pens, Jack," she said happily, "to buy everything we
want. But we won't want much else, if we have each other." A lump rose
in his throat, but it was not yet time to tell her.

He went to the city every day now, "on business," as he said, and as
the summer faded, and the leaves turned crimson and gold, Constance
began her wedding gown. She put so many hopes and fancies into it
with the tiny careful stitches she took that had the white not been
senseless, it must have turned to rose under her hands.

They were married in a little church on a glorious autumn day.

"I think it's the last day," she said; "the summer only just waited for
us."

He would not tell her where the wedding journey was to be, and she
showed little curiosity.

"I don't care where we go," she said as they left the house for the
last time, "only you mustn't be extravagant."

It was not until the train stopped at a little town by the sea, and
very near the city, that he gave her any hint of his plans. They had
taken a carriage and driven down a beautiful winding road. He waved his
hand towards a distant hill.

"That is where we are going," he said. "It's rather a pretty place,"
indifferently. "I think you'll like it."

She saw a stately mansion of grey stone, with wide porches and massive
tower, and where he knew the reception hall and the stately stairway
were just as she would wish her own house to be--even the tiger skin
rug in the drawing-room, and the beautiful things in costly woods,
and fabrics of white and gold. He could stand it no longer and leaned
towards her, thrilling with an unspeakable tenderness.

"Heart of mine," he whispered, "haven't you guessed it?"




From a Human Standpoint




From a Human Standpoint


"Will the madam please walk in to supper?"

Carroll stood in the doorway with a napkin over his arm, the very
picture of servile obedience. Katherine sprang from the sofa, saying
laughingly, "Indeed the madam will!"

His obsequious manner changed at once, and he put his arm around her
waist with a happy sense of proprietorship.

The table was cosily laid for two, linen and china were of the
daintiest, and the tiny kettle swung and bubbled merrily over the
alcohol lamp.

"How dear and homey it all is!" Katherine exclaimed, as she sat down.

"And how primitive," suggested Robert. "But our respective professions
are not worth much if our imaginations can't change our tea into a
banquet. Will you have a little of the quail?" He poised a mutton chop
on his fork and looked inquiringly at Katherine.

"I'm afraid quail is too rich for me to-night," she answered, "but I
will take a little of the toast which is commonly supposed to go with
it, and some of the nectar which I shall brew myself."

"Lucky thing you don't like cream with your nectar," he responded, "for
the cat got into it this afternoon. I'm afraid I neglect my housewifely
duties for my art."

"That doesn't matter, as long as art progresses. Did Mickey behave
to-day?"

Mickey was the name Katherine had given to Carroll's model, who was
posing for his "Aurora." She had the fair skin and blue eyes with which
Ireland compensates her daughters for a somewhat unlovely mouth, and
her hair was a flaming auburn glory which he tried in vain to paint.
It was a little startling until you knew Mickey. People who could pass
hundreds without noting age, colour, or condition of servitude, would
stop and gasp as she went by. But those who were privileged to know
her intimately became so absorbed in contemplation of her manifold
character that mere externals were passed unnoticed.

"Mickey did pretty well to-day," he said. "She put on your best hat
while I was out, and I found her strutting before the mirror when I
came back. I declare to you, solemnly, Katherine, that the effect of
your violets against that hair was absolutely _fortissimo_. She will
wear it to church some day if we don't watch her. But she didn't cut
my brushes into scallops, nor assist in the painting when my back was
turned. No, on the whole Mickey has been angelic. How did things go
with you?"

"About as usual, though I believe more than the usual number of freaky
people have been in. They ask for everything from money and advice, up
to a letter of introduction to the managing editor. They seem to think
that a woman tied down to a newspaper desk, has only to beckon and the
universe hastens to do her bidding. You remember I told you about the
woman who came in last week with a yearning to do 'lit'ery work'?"

Robert nodded.

"She was in again to-day. She is doing 'lit'ery work' and likes it very
much. What do you suppose it is?"

"Give it up."

"Addressing envelopes! Did you ever?"

"Great idea," said Robert, "I'll tell Mickey, and perhaps she'll clean
my brushes. Mickey shall be an artist."

Together they washed up the dishes, then Robert hung the dish-towel out
of the window to dry, and took off his apron.

In the studio was an open fire, the single extravagance which the
Carrolls allowed themselves. Perhaps it was not so extravagant after
all, since it saved gas, and Robert picked up most of the wood in his
daily walks along the lake shore.

"Let's sit on the rug," said Katherine, and they curled up like two
children before the fire. Robert rested his head upon his elbow, and
looked up contentedly into her face. The sweetness of it was half
hidden, half revealed, by the dancing firelight, but there were lines
around the mouth, and faint marks of worry on the forehead. Yet, it was
a patient face--one to teach a man strength and kindliness.

The hand that wore the wedding ring was thin, so thin that the ring
slipped when she moved her fingers. He touched it tenderly.

"Dear, are you sorry?"

"Sorry! For what?"

"For all you left behind to marry a poor artist."

"We leave nothing behind when we gain happiness. Don't you think I'd
rather be here to-night with you, than to have the money without you?"

Katherine's father had proved himself the equal if not the superior of
any stern parent in fiction. A stormy scene followed the announcement
of her determination to marry the man of her own choice, rather than
his, so they had slipped away to Milwaukee--that haven of the fond and
foolish--and set up housekeeping immediately on their return.

Robert had objected a little to the announcement cards, since they
were not in a position to entertain, but they were sent out. Upon the
receipt of his, Katherine's father had written a single line: "Any time
you may repent of this foolishness, your home is open to you."

The avalanche of gifts had followed the wedding instead of preceding
it. The usual miscellany of the very rich had been showered upon them,
and Katherine had often thought of the exquisite irony involved in
the possession of gold candlesticks, real laces, a Royal Worcester
chocolate set, and a genuine Corot, while her shoes were out at the
toes and Robert's clothes were sadly frayed.

Still, eight months had passed and she had not repented of her
foolishness. He still seemed more desirable than money, and she looked
fondly at the Corot which hung in the place of honour.

"I cleaned all the silver to-day," he said, "and put our cut glass
punch bowl safely out of Mickey's reach."

She patted his cheek affectionately.

"You're a dear good boy, and an admirable housekeeper."

"Katherine, I can't stand it any longer," he blurted out. "I simply
won't stay here and paint while you work your dear fingers to the bone
in that confounded old office. It's my business to take care of you,
not yours of me, and here you are, working like a slave, while I do the
elegant leisure at home. It's simply infamous!"

"Hubby, dear," and Katherine's tone was commanding. "I won't let you
abuse yourself like that. In the first place you are working just as
hard as I am, with your painting and keeping things cosy here, and
accomplishing just as much. And it's only for a little while. As soon
as your picture is done, you'll sell it, and I'll resign and do the
housekeeping myself. You know how gladly you would do the same for me;
why won't you let me do it for you? Don't you love me well enough to
let me help you?"

"Katherine! Katherine!" he cried, "don't say that! Don't question my
love for you."

"I don't, dear heart, nor should you question mine for you."

       *       *       *       *       *

Long after Katherine had gone to bed, he lay on the rug and watched the
fire. Outside, cold, gray Michigan beat against the North Shore with
the sound of the sea. In these last days of despondency the lake had
grown into a companion with seeming sympathy for every mood of his. The
vast expanse of water seemed to broaden his horizon. Whenever he looked
at it, it suggested a letting-go of all but the vital things. There was
only one thing that was vital, and she slept in the little room beyond.
Even his art counted for nothing beside her, but she believed in it,
and he must make something of it to please her. The shadows deepened
until even the gold candlesticks ceased to shine, and he went to the
window. Slow, sombre, and restless, old Michigan chafed against the
shore. At times those cold arms beckoned him with compelling strength,
and it was so to-night. Katherine would go home to her father, and, in
time, forget him. He pulled down the shade, shuddering as he did so,
and at last fell asleep with a consciousness of utter defeat.

       *       *       *       *       *

"It's busy I am these days. Misther Carroll, do be afther wantin' to
paint me."

"Paint you, Carrot-Top! And thin may the blessed saints injuce him to
make the hid of yez, some other colour."

"Ah, go on wid yez! What is the likes of yez to know about art?"

It was Mickey in the yard below, blarneying with the milk boy. The
voices awoke Carroll, and he discovered it was very late, indeed, and
that Katherine had gone down-town without waking him. There was a line
pinned to the cushion: "Good-bye, dearest. K."

Mickey appeared at the back door while he was finishing his breakfast.
With unheard-of kindness, she offered to put things right in the
studio, and he left her in charge with some misgivings. But the
marketing had to be done, and it would be impossible to work rightly
without a breath of fresh air.

When he returned every chair was set demurely and properly against the
wall and Mickey sat on the floor with his cherished portfolio of Gibson
pictures in her lap. He repressed an angry exclamation, and ordered
her, somewhat sternly, to put them back.

She complied readily. "It's cross yez are this morning, Misther
Carroll. Thim pictures ain't got no paint on 'em, but I'm thinkin' they
do be better wans than thim ye're afther makin'!"

Carroll made no reply. It was quite true that the Gibson pictures
were better than his, even without paint, but he did not relish her
impartial announcement of the fact.

The light was good, and he worked steadily for an hour, at the end of
which time Mickey announced the necessity for her immediate departure.
In vain he protested and pleaded. The picture was nearly done, and only
a few more sittings would be needed. But Mickey was "goin' to the
theayter wid a coosin--" and she went.

So he put the house in order and decided he would make a cake for
supper. He had never done anything of the kind, and Katherine found
him still deep in the problem when she returned. He couldn't find the
cook-book, he said, so he just threw a few things in, the way she
did when she made cake. It was going to be light too, for he had put
in half a cupful of baking powder. Katherine laughed until the tears
rolled down her cheeks. It was a mean woman, Robert said, who would
go down-town and leave her husband with no cook-book! She pointed it
out to him on the corner of the shelf, and he twisted his mustache
thoughtfully, forgetting the flour with which his hand was covered.
It took them both to make him presentable again, and then Katherine
threw the cake away, and in a very few minutes made the lightest, most
wonderful biscuit that ever gave a man the dyspepsia.

Mickey was faithful during the following week, and the "Aurora" was
finished almost to his satisfaction. It was placed on sale in a Wabash
Avenue gallery, and they anxiously watched the newspapers for notices.
None came, however, and Robert became despondent. An idea came to
Katherine, and she went with fear and trembling to the art critic of
the _Express_, whose judgment was accepted as law and gospel.

Unlike most women she came to the point at once: "Mr. Lester," she
said, "my husband has a picture on exhibition at Stanley & Brown's,
and a favourable notice would mean much to us both. None of the papers
have spoken of it, and I have been wondering if you could not help us a
little."

Philosophers have not yet determined why a woman feels free to ask
anything of a rejected lover, nor why men so willingly grant favours to
women whom they have loved in vain.

"Mrs. Carroll," Lester replied, "I should be only too glad to be of
service to either you or your husband, but I have seen the picture, and
I cannot conscientiously speak favourably of it. In fact, I had written
a roast, and out of consideration to you burned it up."

Katherine's face fell and her eyes filled. He was afraid she was going
to cry, and he went on--"But I'll tell you what I will do. I am called
out of the city to-morrow, and it is the day for my notes; I'll ask
Carleton to let you do my work. You can write what you please."

She clutched the friendly straw gladly. "You are very, very good. But
please tell me what is the matter with the picture."

"Only one thing, Mrs. Carroll; it lacks humanity. Pictures must be
painted from a human standpoint. No doubt you will see what I mean if
you will look at it critically. I haven't time to stop any longer now,
but I'll tell Carleton."

An hour later, Katherine was summoned to the office of the managing
editor. "Mrs. Carroll," he said, "Lester tells me he is called out
of the city and suggests you as the proper person to do his work. I
believe it is a little out of your line, but you can try. Miss Scott
will do your department to-day, and you can take this afternoon to look
around."

So the newly fledged art critic went out to find her copy. There were
several pictures to be noted and she spoke as kindly as she could of
all, trying to mingle helpful criticism with discerning praise. None
were condemned, for she knew what a picture might mean to the artist,
and to the woman who loved him.

Unconsciously, she imitated Lester's style; his full, well-rounded
periods, and sharp, incisive sentences. Very different it was from the
chatty, gossipy way in which she filled the "Woman's Kingdom," on the
back page of the _Express_.

She was afraid to say too much of Robert's work, and toned down her
enthusiasm three successive times. The last note satisfied her and she
sent it up-stairs with the rest.

When the paper came in the morning, he turned feverishly to the page
which contained the "Art of the Week." His shout of joy woke Katherine
and together they laughed and cried over the "good notice."

She felt wicked, but his pleasure was full compensation for her pangs
of conscience. "Lester's approval is worth a thousand dollars," he
said. "I can go to work in earnest now."

Her face changed mysteriously. An overwhelming sense of the wrong she
had done, came upon her, and he looked at her steadily. There was a
queer note in his voice when he spoke: "Katherine Carroll, I believe
you wrote that notice."

It was useless to dissemble longer and she told the whole story. He was
deeply touched by this proof of her devotion, but he shook his head
sadly over Lester's own comment.

"It won't help any, little girl; you can't make fame for me in that
way. My work must stand or fall on its own merits--and--it seems likely
to fall."

She tried to comfort him, but he put her away. "No, it's all wrong. I'm
going to give it up, and try something else."

After she had gone, he put his easel and paints away, and set the house
in order. Then he went into the city, as so many have done before,
to find work, which seems little enough to ask in so great a world.
At five he returned, utterly tired and cast down. He had tramped the
streets for hours and had found absolutely nothing to do.

Half unconsciously, he turned to the window--to the vision of the lake
which had meant strength before, but it brought only weakness now.
"Come,--come--come--" the waves seemed to say--instead of being cold
and cruel, they were promising infinite rest. And it meant a luxurious
home for Katherine.

His decision was quickly made, and he wrote a tender note to leave for
her. He sobbed over that--for it wasn't like painting--he was putting
his heart into it. Then down to the inland sea he went, those impatient
arms beckoning him still.

But Katherine had felt in the office that something was wrong with
Robert. A pang of sudden fear made it impossible for her to work any
longer, and she hurried home. She found the note at once, and seeing
only the "good-bye" at the end she hastened to the door.

"Robert, Robert!" she called, but he was too far away to hear her. And
Katherine ran, crying as she went, "Dear God, make me in time!"

He stood at the end of the pier, old and decayed as it was, and looked
at the sea and sky for the last time. The sunset gates behind him,
royally beautiful with purple and gold, seemed a glimpse of the heaven
he hardly hoped to reach, for though he knew that God was infinitely
merciful, he knew that He was also infinitely just. He took off his
coat and laid it on the pier, just as Katherine, breathless, excited,
her face tense with appeal, appeared beside him.

His eyes lighted for a moment at the sight of her, then returned
to their dull, hopeless look. "It's no use, Katherine," he said
unsteadily, "go back, darling."

"Not alone, dearest."

"Yes, Katherine," he kissed her sadly.

For minutes which seemed like hours, she stood there arguing, pleading,
begging in vain. It was best for her--that was his one thought. He was
a dull, dead weight upon her; it was right to make her free. And the
blue arms beckoned still.

Suddenly she drew his face down to hers and whispered to him. What she
said seemed to rouse him from himself.

"Really?"

"Yes, really. Can you leave me now?"

Something more than the glory of the sunset shone in Katherine's face
as she stood between him and the water. She was subtly beautiful, with
the infinite motherhood, which lives in every woman's heart, and as
he looked at her, the shackles of his dead cowardly self fell away. A
great resolve within him slowly swelled into a controlling power--he
would be worthy of her who stood beside him, cost what it might. His
voice was tender and caressing when he spoke again.

"Leave you? No, Katherine, no."

They walked home together and spoke of other things. There was a
stronger bond between them, and the water seemed cold and bitter
now--very different from the eerie, half-human thing that had tempted
him an hour ago.

He tossed restlessly through the night, thinking of what Lester had
said about painting from a human standpoint. Perhaps he meant that he
should paint men and women, instead of goddesses.

The vision of Katherine came into his mind as she stood with the blue
water behind her and the sunset upon her face and hair; her eyes full
of earthly longing, and more than earthly appeal. He would paint her
like that, and he roused from his cowardly lethargy into high resolve.

Her salary was raised and she worked happily at the office, while
Robert painted at home. In the evening she sat and sewed on tiny
garments for the human secret, which spring was to reveal. He sat and
looked at her, seldom speaking, content to watch the holy joy in her
face, and either that or his coming fatherhood, sometimes thrilled him
with a tenderness so great that his love was almost joy.

The "Aurora" had been sold, not for a large sum, it is true, but
for enough to take care of them both until the new picture should
be finished. It was done at last and placed on sale. Painted from a
human standpoint it undoubtedly was, and it drew many admirers but no
purchaser. For four weeks it had been at the gallery and Robert began
to grow despondent again.

A fall morning dawned, gray and dull, and the lake seemed to tremble
with portent of coming disaster. At night the wind rose and lashed the
water into seething foam. The sound of the storm made Katherine afraid,
but she sank into a fitful slumber at last, while Robert kept a light
in the window, hoping none were at sea.

But at half-past eleven there was a terrific rap at the door. It was
Mickey, disheveled and breathless.

"There do be a wreck, Misther Carroll," she cried, "there's sky-rockets
goin' off and the life crew be ordered out, and I thought ye'd be
afther wantin' to see it."

The thing was evidently a circus for Mickey; we hold life so lightly at
the age of sixteen.

Katherine, trembling and afraid, was already at the door. She wrung her
hands, crying piteously, "Oh, Robert! Robert! don't go."

"I must go, sweetheart, they may need me."

"Then I am going too." And she began to hurry into her clothes.

"Dress warmly, dear," he called.

"Yes, I will, and we must take some blankets with us."

Once outside they had no difficulty in locating the wreck. The northern
sky was aflame with rockets, and people from all directions were
hurrying northward.

The Northwestern University life crew was already on the beach trying
to shoot a line to the sinking ship, half a mile from the shore. The
boat had been ordered back, for it was certain death in such a sea. The
fourth attempt was successful and a shout of joy went up, dimly heard
above the storm.

Mickey danced about excitedly as they tied rope after rope of greater
strength to the slender cord, that had been shot to the upper deck, but
Katherine felt faint, even with her husband's arm around her, when
they made preparations to pull the ship's life-boat ashore.

It required almost superhuman strength, but the rush of water
westward aided them materially. Katherine never forgot that time of
waiting--human lives on shore struggling to save the human lives at
sea, and the tense cruel crash of the cold waves.

Lifted high upon an angry crest, the boat was dashed heavily upon
the beach. The captain of the stranded vessel, eight seamen and one
passenger, were helped out with eager hands.

The passenger was a middle-aged man, who appeared dignified and
prosperous, in spite of his damp and disheveled condition. His first
remark was in the nature of a recapitulation.

"Well, of all the excitin' trips!"

Robert and Katherine laughed in spite of themselves, and hastened to
extend to the stranger the hospitality of their little home for the
remainder of the night. It was barely one o'clock, and the Honourable
Mr. Marchand accepted gladly, if not gratefully.

He trudged sturdily along in the blankets they had wrapped around him,
disdaining Robert's proffered assistance, but once stretched out upon
their couch before a blazing fire, he became much more tractable. He
called for a glass of whiskey complaining that what he had been through
would be enough to kill him if he didn't at once supply this long-felt
want of the inner man. A telephone message to the nearest drug store
brought the quart of stimulant he thought he needed for the night, and
when he was comfortably filled with his favourite beverage, life began
to assume a more pleasant aspect. He graphically told the story of the
wreck to his interested listeners and then imbibed a little more liquid
nourishment. After a while he remarked sagely--"It's a lucky thing I
didn't go down, some folks would have lost millions."

"Is that so?" asked Katherine pleasantly.

"Yes, _millions_! Look here, young woman, did you ever hear of a
syndicate?"

Katherine thought she had heard the word somewhere.

"Well, I'm one of 'em!"

The whiskey was evidently getting in its work in the way of lubricating
the tongue of the shipwrecked capitalist, and after waiting a moment,
he continued:

"I'm on my way to Chicago to perfect a combine in--" and he astounded
Katherine by unfolding the inside history of a daring and infamous
combination--a gigantic steal, which if consummated, would change the
ownership of millions. He named the leading conspirators, explained the
vulnerable points in the scheme, and gleefully boasted of his own skill
and diplomacy.

He finally fell asleep, but not until Katherine had got all the
necessary points concerning the outrageous robbery which had been so
adroitly planned.

Robert met her at the door. "Got a scoop?"

"Well, I should say so. A big one too!"

"How do you know it is true?"

"_In vino veritas_," whispered Katherine. "Besides, Carleton told one
of our night men the other day, that promotion was in store for the
fellow who 'got on to' any of the schemes of this new syndicate." She
had heard so much newspaper slang that her lapse from the grammatical
standard was perhaps pardonable.

Until nearly three o'clock she wrote hurriedly a description of the
wreck, and also of the new "combine," Robert dozing in an easy
chair meanwhile. She woke him up to give him her manuscript. "To the
telegraph office, quick! It'll be in time for the city edition."

The Honourable Mr. Marchand slept late the next morning, and Katharine
sent word to the office that she could not come until the next day.
About noon, however, their guest took his departure, apparently but
little the worse for his vivid night's experience. At a corner he
bought a copy of the morning's _Express_ and shortly thereafter leaned
up against a wall for support. "Gee whiz!" The Honourable Mr. Marchand
mopped his brow and read the startling headlines again. "Might as well
go back to Cincinnati and Cleveland and Toronto, and all them towns
I've just come from! Wonder how in thunder the thing ever got out!"

He strolled down Wabash Avenue to collect his scattered thoughts, and
stopped half mechanically, to look into Stanley & Brown's window.
Carroll's painting stared him full in the face, and a great light broke
in upon him.

"That's her! That's the girl what done it! Blamed if I don't like her
for it!"

That afternoon a messenger boy rapped at the studio door with a letter
from the _Express_ office for Katherine.

"Dear Mrs. Carroll," it ran, "we think you deserve a two weeks'
vacation at full salary which is now double the former sum, and we
beg you to accept the enclosed check as a slight testimonial of our
gratitude for the biggest scoop of the year. Please report for duty on
the eighteenth, and be ready to take the exchange editor's desk."

She was dazed. "Two weeks' vacation, double salary, promotion, and----"

Robert picked it up, it was a check for two hundred dollars.

During the jubilation which followed, a telegraph boy pounded
vigorously at the door, but he might as well have kept still, since his
efforts were unheard. Finally he opened it, and utterly unabashed by
the spectacle of a gentleman kissing a lady, and the lady seeming to
enjoy it, he fairly shrieked: "TELEGRAM."

Katherine vanished instantly, and Carroll read the despatch.

  "Picture sold for highest price. Purchaser unknown.

  "STANLEY & BROWN."

The mythical "quail on toast" became a reality that night, and the
house seemed far too small to hold so much exuberant joy. In the
morning, they went together to Stanley & Brown's to collect the picture
money, and start a "really truly bank account," as Katherine said.

The firm was quite at a loss to know who the purchaser was, as he took
the picture away with him in a carriage, and paid cash instead of
by check, but the man who helped him put it on the back seat of the
carriage reported that he had muttered to himself, as he was climbing
in: "That's her! That's the girl what done it!" This may have given Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll some clue to the identity of the unknown benefactor.




MYRTLE REED'S NOVELS

May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list


_LAVENDER AND OLD LACE._

[Illustration]

A charming story of a quaint corner of New England where bygone romance
finds a modern parallel. The story centers round the coming of love
to the young people on the staff of a newspaper--and it is one of the
prettiest, sweetest and quaintest of old fashioned love stories,
* * * a rare book, exquisite in spirit and conception, full of delicate
fancy, of tenderness, of delightful humor and spontaneity.


_A SPINNER IN THE SUN._

Miss Myrtle Reed may always be depended upon to write a story in
which poetry, charm, tenderness and humor are combined into a clever
and entertaining book. Her characters are delightful and she always
displays a quaint humor of expression and a quiet feeling of pathos
which give a touch of active realism to all her writings. In "A Spinner
in the Sun" she tells an old-fashioned love story, of a veiled lady who
lives in solitude and whose features her neighbors have never seen.
There is a mystery at the heart of the book that throws over it the
glamour of romance.


_THE MASTER'S VIOLIN._

A love story in a musical atmosphere. A picturesque, old German
virtuoso is the reverent possessor of a genuine "Cremona." He consents
to take for his pupil a handsome youth who proves to have an aptitude
for technique, but not the soul of an artist. The youth has led the
happy, careless life of a modern, well-to-do young American and he
cannot, with his meagre past, express the love, the passion and the
tragedies of life and all its happy phases as can the master who has
lived life in all its fulness. But a girl comes into his life--a
beautiful bit of human driftwood that his aunt had taken into her
heart and home, and through his passionate love for her, he learns the
lessons that life has to give--and his soul awakes.

Founded on a fact that all artists realize.


_Ask for a complete free list of G. & D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction_

GROSSET & DUNLAP, 526 WEST 26TH ST., NEW YORK




ETHEL M. DELL'S NOVELS

May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list.


_THE LAMP IN THE DESERT_

The scene of this splendid story is laid in India and tells of the lamp
of love that continues to shine through all sorts of tribulations to
final happiness.


_GREATHEART_

The story of a cripple whose deformed body conceals a noble soul.


_THE HUNDREDTH CHANCE_

A hero who worked to win even when there was only "a hundredth chance."


_THE SWINDLER_

The story of a "bad man's" soul revealed by a woman's faith.


_THE TIDAL WAVE_

Tales of love and of women who learned to know the true from the false.


_THE SAFETY CURTAIN_

A very vivid love story of India. The volume also contains four other
long stories of equal interest.


  GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK




The Master's Violin

By MYRTLE REED


[Illustration]

A Love Story with a musical atmosphere. A picturesque, old German
virtuoso is the reverent possessor of a genuine Cremona. He consents to
take as his pupil a handsome youth who proves to have an aptitude for
technique, but not the soul of the artist. The youth has led the happy,
careless life of a modern, well-to-do young American, and he cannot,
with his meagre past, express the love, the longing, the passion and
the tragedies of life and its happy phases as can the master who has
lived life in all its fulness. But a girl comes into his existence,
a beautiful bit of human driftwood that his aunt had taken into her
heart and home; and through his passionate love for her, he learns the
lessons that life has to give--and his soul awakens.

Founded on a fact well known among artists, but not often recognized or
discussed.

If you have not read "LAVENDER AND OLD LACE" by the same author, you
have a double pleasure in store--for these two books show Myrtle Reed
in her most delightful, fascinating vein--indeed they may be considered
as masterpieces of compelling interest.


_Ask for complete free list of G. & D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction_

GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers, NEW YORK




KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN'S STORIES OF PURE DELIGHT

Full of originality and humor, kindliness and cheer.


_THE OLD PEABODY PEW._ Large Octavo. Decorative text pages, printed in
two colors. Illustrations by Alice Barber Stephens.

One of the prettiest romances that has ever come from this author's pen
is made to bloom on Christmas Eve in the sweet freshness of an old New
England meeting house.

_PENELOPE'S PROGRESS._ Attractive cover design in colors.

Scotland is the background for the merry doings of three very clever
and original American girls. Their adventures in adjusting themselves
to the Scot and his land are full of humor.

_PENELOPE'S IRISH EXPERIENCES._ Uniform in style _with "Penelope's
Progress."_

The trio of clever girls who rambled over Scotland cross the border
to the Emerald Isle, and again they sharpen their wits against new
conditions, and revel in the land of laughter and wit.

_REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM._

One of the most beautiful studies of childhood--Rebecca's artistic,
unusual and quaintly charming qualities stand out midst a circle of
austere New Englanders. The stage version is making a phenomenal
dramatic record.

_NEW CHRONICLES OF REBECCA._ With illustrations by F. C. Yohn.

Some more quaintly amusing chronicles that carry Rebecca through
various stages to her eighteenth birthday.

_ROSE O' THE RIVER._ With illustrations by George Wright

The simple story of Rose, a country girl and Stephen a sturdy young
farmer. The girl's fancy for a city man interrupts their love and
merges the story into an emotional strain where the reader follows the
events with rapt attention.


GROSSET & DUNLAP, 526 WEST 26th ST., NEW YORK




After reading THE ROSARY you will surely want to read the delightful
companion story.

  May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's List


[Illustration]

  THE
  MISTRESS
  OF
  SHENSTONE

By Florence L. Barclay

In this delightful love story, a worthy successor of THE ROSARY, in
which Mrs. Garth Dalmain again appears, we follow the fortunes of
the young and lovely Lady Ingleby, recently widowed by the death of
a husband who was never capable of really understanding her. While
rusticating _incog._ in the country, she meets her heart's delight
under the simple and classic name of "Jim"--in reality an Earl--and
these two proceed to fall deeply and rapturously in love with each
other. When he learns her identity, a situation of singular power and
fascination is developed, which Mrs. Barclay handles in a masterly
manner. A most absorbing and unusual story.


_Ask for complete free list of G. & D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction_

GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers, N. Y.




FLORENCE L. BARCLAY'S NOVELS

  May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list.


_THE WHITE LADIES OF WORCESTER_

A novel of the 12th Century. The heroine, believing she had lost her
lover, enters a convent. He returns, and interesting developments
follow.


_THE UPAS TREE_

A love story of rare charm. It deals with a successful author and his
wife.


_THROUGH THE POSTERN GATE_

The story of a seven day courtship, in which the discrepancy in ages
vanished into insignificance before the convincing demonstration of
abiding love.


_THE ROSARY_

The story of a young artist who is reputed to love beauty above all
else in the world, but who, when blinded through an accident, gains
life's greatest happiness. A rare story of the great passion of two
real people superbly capable of love, its sacrifices and its exceeding
reward.


_THE MISTRESS OF SHENSTONE_

The lovely young Lady Ingleby, recently widowed by the death of a
husband who never understood her, meets a fine, clean young chap who
is ignorant of her title and they fall deeply in love with each other.
When he learns her real identity a situation of singular power is
developed.


_THE BROKEN HALO_

The story of a young man whose religious belief was shattered in
childhood and restored to him by the little white lady, many years
older than himself, to whom he is passionately devoted.


_THE FOLLOWING OF THE STAR_

The story of a young missionary, who, about to start for Africa,
marries wealthy Diana Rivers, in order to help her fulfill the
conditions of her uncle's will, and how they finally come to love each
other and are reunited after experiences that soften and purify.


  GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK




Transcriber's Notes


Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritics repaired.

Hyphen added: up[-]stairs (pp. 23, 107), tear[-]stained (p. 53),

Hyphen removed: door[-]way (p. 191), spell[-]bound (p. 194).

P. 100: a little cry excaped her -> a little cry escaped her.

P. 132: good-night -> good night.

P. 191: more than ususal unkindness -> more than usual unkindness.

P. 342: accept the enlosed check -> accept the enclosed check.

Ad following p. 343: delightful humor and spontaniety -> delightful
humor and spontaneity.