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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/36733-8.txt b/36733-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ba9c824 --- /dev/null +++ b/36733-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6749 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Molly Brown's College Friends, by Nell Speed + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Molly Brown's College Friends + + +Author: Nell Speed + + + +Release Date: July 14, 2011 [eBook #36733] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLY BROWN'S COLLEGE FRIENDS*** + + +E-text prepared by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan, eagkw, +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustration. + See 36733-h.htm or 36733-h.zip: + (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36733/36733-h/36733-h.htm) + or + (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36733/36733-h.zip) + + + + + +[Illustration: She blew in at nightfall with a huge suit-case. +(_Frontis_) (_Molly Brown's College Friends_)] + + +MOLLY BROWN'S COLLEGE FRIENDS + +by + +NELL SPEED + +Author of +"The Tucker Twins Series," "The Carter +Girls Series," etc. + + + + + + + +[Illustration] + +A. L. Burt Company +Publishers New York +Printed in U. S. A. + +Copyright, 1921 +By +Hurst & Company + +Printed in the U. S. A. + + + + +Contents + + + I. NANCE OLDHAM 7 + + II. BY THE FIRELIGHT 21 + + III. THE WOULD-BE'S 37 + + IV. FAIRY GODMOTHERS WANTED 43 + + V. THE CRITICS 67 + + VI. "I HAD A LITTLE HUSBAND NO BIGGER THAN MY THUMB" 75 + + VII. NANCE PACKS HER TRUNK 93 + + VIII. A DAMP COAT 102 + + IX. PLANS 115 + + X. ALL THE OLD GIRLS 122 + + XI. AN INTERESTING COUPLE 139 + + XII. AN OLD-TIME PARTY 150 + + XIII. ADVENTURE 162 + + XIV. AS SEEN FROM THE SUMMER-HOUSE 172 + + XV. THE PROFESSOR AT A KIMONO PARTY 177 + + XVI. WAR RELIEF 187 + + XVII. TILL DEATH DOTH US PART 201 + + XVIII. THE PUNISHMENT OF MILDRED 216 + + XIX. A DEATH 222 + + XX. GERMS 234 + + XXI. HER FATHER'S OWN DAUGHTER 244 + + XXII. THE ARREST 260 + + XXIII. THEY ALSO SERVE 272 + + XXIV. THE TRENCHES 284 + + + + +Molly Brown's College Friends + + + + +CHAPTER I + +NANCE OLDHAM + + +"I am so afraid Nance will be changed," sighed Molly as she put the +finishing touches to the room her old friend was to occupy. + +"I'll wager anything she is the same old Nance Oldham," insisted +Professor Green, obediently mounting the ladder to hang the last snowy +curtain at the broad, deep window in the guest chamber overlooking the +campus. "I think she is the kind of girl who will always be the same. +Is that straight?" + +"A little bit lower at this end--there! What a comfort you are, Edwin!" +and Molly viewed the effect approvingly. + +"Pretty good general houseworker, eh?" and the dignified professor of +English at Wellington College ran nimbly down the ladder and hugged his +wife. She submitted with very good grace to his embraces in spite of the +fact that the fresh bureau scarves and table covers with which she was +preparing to decorate her old friend's room were included in the +demonstration of affection. + +Professor Edwin Green always declared that he never expected to catch +up on all the years he had loved Molly Brown and had been forced to let +"concealment like a worm in the bud feed on his damask cheek." He and +Molly had been married almost four years on that day in March when he +was assisting in the imposing rite of hanging curtains in the guest +chamber, and she was still as wonderful to him as she had been on that +day they had walked through the Forest of Fontainebleau and he had +confessed his love. She was the same charming girl who had lingered too +long in the cloisters and been locked in to be rescued by him on her +first day at college, now so many years ago. + +Indeed, Molly Brown has changed very little since last we saw her. +Little Mildred is walking and talking and singing little tunes and +saying Mother Goose rhymes. She even knows her letters upside down and +no other way, having learned them from blocks, presumably standing on +her curly head as she acquired the knowledge. + +There is another baby in the nursery now: little Dodo, whose real name +is George, a remarkably satisfactory infant who sleeps when he should +and wakes in a good humor, taking the proper nourishment at the proper +hours and going back to sleep. Molly had learned the great secret of +young motherhood from her first born: not to take parenthood too +solemnly and seriously, and to realize that Mother Nature is the very +best mother of all and babies thrive most when left as much as possible +to her all-wise and tender care. + +Nance Oldham, Molly's old friend and roommate at college, was coming at +last to make her long promised visit to the Greens. Little wonder that +Molly feared she would be changed! Nance's path in life had not been +strewn with roses. No doubt my readers will remember that Mrs. Oldham, +her mother, was a clever woman, lecturer, suffrage agitator, anything +but a homemaker. When Nance finished college she had gone back to +Vermont and dutifully kept house for her neglected father, although her +secret ambition was to teach. Mr. Oldham had been so happy in having a +home of his own that Nance had felt fully repaid for her sacrifice. Her +mother, too, had at last realized the delights of home, when someone +else had the trouble of keeping it, and had spent much more time with +her family than she had for many years. + +A lingering illness had attacked Mr. Oldham and after two years of +tender nursing on the part of his daughter and futile ineffectual +attempts at tenderness on the part of his wife, the poor man had passed +away. Then it was that Nance's friends had felt that her career might +begin, but Mrs. Oldham had suddenly decided that she could not live +without the husband who had been ever patient with her vagaries and she +had gone into a slow decline. More nursing and self-denial for the +patient Nance! + +She was an orphan now and although she was in reality little more than +a girl she felt old and settled, that the little youth she had ever had, +had left her years ago. Molly had written her immediately on hearing of +Mrs. Oldham's death, declaring that she and her Edwin were ready and +eager for the long-deferred visit. "I say 'visit,'" wrote Molly, "but I +want you to make your home with us. Little Mildred calls you Aunt Nance +and Dodo will call you the same as soon as he can talk." + +The guest chamber was now in perfect order. The fresh curtains hung as +straight as a learned professor of English could hang them, the bureau +scarf and table cover were smooth and spotless, and on the window sill +blossomed a pot of sweet violets sent by Mrs. McLean from her own +greenhouse. + +"I wonder about Nance and Andy McLean," said Molly, as she and her +husband were walking to the station to meet their guest. + +"Wonder what about them?" + +"Wonder if they will ever marry!" + +"Pooh! I fancy it was just a schoolgirl affair. They don't often amount +to much." + +"Schoolgirl affairs can be right serious, as you of all others should +know!" + +"Thank goodness, some of them!" said Edwin devoutly. + +"I reckon Nance will be in deep mourning," sighed Molly. "I hate +mourning,--I mean long veils and crêpe trimmings." + +"So do I,--a relic of barbarism!" + +"I'll give up my literary club for a while. I know Nance will not feel +like seeing a lot of young people." + +Professor Green said nothing but he felt it was rather hard on +Wellington that any of its pleasures should be curtailed because of the +death of a lady in Vermont. But Molly must do what she thought best. He +hoped their guest would not put too long a face on life and would not +prove inconsolable. + +The long train stopped at the little station at Wellington and Molly +and her husband eagerly scanned the few passengers who alighted from the +Pullman. One lady in a long crêpe veil got an embrace from the impulsive +Molly but she turned out to be an utter stranger and not the beloved +Nance. + +"She didn't come!" cried Molly. + +"Oh yes, she did, but she came on a day coach," and there was Nance +hugging Molly and shaking hands with Professor Green at the same time. + +That gentleman was viewing his wife's old friend with great +satisfaction. Instead of the long crêpe veil and the lugubrious +black-clothed figure, here was a slight young woman in a neat brown suit +and furs, with a close brown velvet toque and a chic little dotted brown +veil. + +"Nance! I was expecting----" + +"Of course you were expecting to find me swathed in black. I am doing +what Mother asked me to do. She hated mourning and so did Father and I +am a fright in black and it would have meant a new outfit, which I can +ill afford, and so----" + +"And so you are a sensible girl," said Professor Green approvingly, as +he took possession of her traveling bag and trunk check. + +"Oh, Nance, you are not changed one bit!" cried Molly. + +"You are changed a lot," said the truthful Nance, "but you are more +beautiful. In fact, you never were really beautiful before, but now, +now----" + +"Oh, spare my blushes!" cried Molly, who did not spare herself but +blushed and blushed and blushed again. + +Nance was the same little brown-eyed person with the same honest look +out of those eyes. In repose her mouth did have a slight droop at the +corners but otherwise she might have been a college girl still, so +youthful were her lines and so clear and rosy her healthy skin. Her hair +was as Molly had always remembered it, smooth and glossy with much +brushing and every lock in place. + +"Are you tired, honey? If you are, we can go home in the bus," suggested +Molly. "Look what a fine motor bus we have now! Do you remember the old +yellow one with the lame horses?" + +"Do I? And also that I met you right at this station when we were both +freshmen and we rode up in that bus together. Oh, Molly, it is wonderful +to be here with you! No, I'm not tired, so let's walk." + +The professor was due for lectures and the girls left him without +reluctance. Even husbands were superfluous when such old friends met +after being separated for so many years. There was so much to talk +about, so many loose threads to catch up, so much belated news that had +not seemed important enough to write. + +"I'm dying to see the children." + +"They are lovely! There is Mildred now waving to us from your window. I +wonder what she is doing in there. I do hope she has not got into +mischief," said Molly uneasily. + +The guest chamber was still spotless and Molly breathed a sigh of +relief. She had had visions of the irrepressible Mildred's making dolly +sheets of the bureau scarf or of putting her black kitten to sleep in +the snowy bed. The chubby imp was standing with her back to the window, +her hands behind her. Her golden curls made a halo around her charming +face, her brown eyes were soft and dreamy and her rosebud mouth looked +as though butter would not melt in it. + +"Come, darling, and speak to Aunt Nance," said Molly. + +"Ain't no Aunt Nance!" + +"Mildred!" + +"Never mind, Molly! Don't force her. She and I will end by being +sweethearts, I am sure," said Nance laughing. + +"Never mind, Dodo will be your sweetheart now," declared Molly, going +through all the agony of motherhood when the offspring refuses to be +polite. "You may go to Katy, Mildred," in a tone as severe as she could +make it. + +Mildred sidled around, carefully keeping her back to her mother. + +"What have you in your hand, darling?" + +"Fings!" + +"What things?" + +"I been a-tuttin'." + +"Scissors! Oh, Mildred, you know how afraid your mother is for you to +play with scissors! What am I to do with you?" + +Mildred made a sudden resolution. Why not throw herself on the mercy of +this new aunt for protection. She darted by her mother and sprang into +the ready arms of Nance. + +"I been a-tuttin' a bunch of vi'lets for my Aunt Nance--an' I been +a-fwingin' her curtains all pretty for her." + +In one hand she had tightly clasped a huge pair of shears and in the +other the violets which she had ruthlessly culled from the pot sent by +Mrs. McLean. + +"Oh, Mildred, see what you have done," agonized Molly. "Mrs. McLean sent +them to you, Nance. I am so sorry they are spoiled." + +"But they are not," declared Nance, trying to keep down the blush that +would come at the knowledge that Andy McLean's mother had shown her +this attention. "We can put this dear little bunch in water, and I am +sure there are many more buds to bloom. Let's see, Mildred." + +"'Deed they is! I wouldn't cut no li'l baby buds off for nothin' or +nothin'. 'Tain't no bad Milly in this house." + +"But the curtains!" wailed poor Molly when she viewed the neat fringes +that her daughter had so carefully slashed with the great shears. + +"Now don't worry about that," insisted Nance. "Mildred and I are going +to cut them off and hem them up. Aren't we, Mildred? Very short curtains +are all the style now, anyhow." + +"Yes!" exclaimed the wily Mildred eagerly, "the windows likes to show +they silk stockings, jes' like the ladies." + +"Oh, you darling!" cried Nance, sinking down and holding the child in +her arms, while Molly rescued the long and dangerous shears. + +"Now, Muvver, you needn't to worry no mo', Aunt Nance an' I is done +made up an' I done forgive her an' all." + +"But how about you! Who has forgiven you?" + +"Me! I done forgive myself 'long with Aunt Nance. I say right easy way +down inside me: 'Milly, 'scuse me!' An' then way down inside me say mos' +politeful: 'You's 'scusable, darlin' chil'.'" + +"Molly, how can you resist her?" asked Nance. + +"Well, I don't reckon I can," said Molly, whimsically. "But you won't do +it any more, will you, Mildred?" + +"No'm, never in my world--cross my heart an' wish I may die--bake a +puddin' bake a pie did you ever tell a lie yes you did you know you did +you broke yo' mammy's teapot lid." + +"Some of Kizzie's nonsense!" laughed Molly, remembering in her childhood +saying exactly the same thing. + +And so Nance Oldham was received into the home of the Edwin Greens. +Already she had won the approval of the master by appearing in colors +and not swathed in black (men always do hate mourning). Mildred had +decided to love and honor and make her obey. Little Dodo soon accepted +her lap as an especially nice place to spend his few waking moments, and +Molly's love and welcome were assured from the beginning of time. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +BY THE FIRELIGHT + + +The only home Nance Oldham had ever known she had made herself after +she left college. Her childhood and girlhood had been spent in boarding +houses with her patient father, while her brilliant mother made +occasional hurried and preoccupied visits to them. There had been a +time when Nance had felt bitterly towards her mother because she was +not as other mothers were, but the realization had finally come to her +that her mother could no more be as other mothers than other mothers +could be as Mrs. Oldham was. She had decided that instead of her +mother's being a mistake, that she, Nance, was the mistake. She should +never have been born; but now that she was born she intended to make +the best of it. The fact that she had never had a home made a home +just that much more precious and desirable in her eyes. + +What a lovely home this square old brick house on the campus made! +Nance remembered well in her college days that it was not such a very +attractive place, rather bleak, in fact. It needed a mistress, the soul +of a house; and now in place of the blank uncurtained windows of old +days, Molly's genial hospitality and kindness seemed to look out from +every pane of glass. The college girls named Mrs. Edwin Green "The Fairy +Godmother of Wellington." She was called into consultation on every +occasion. The President of Wellington wondered if it were not incumbent +upon her to offer Molly a salary for her services. + +"I don't know what we would do without her. I believe the college would +simply go to pieces without Mrs. Edwin Green." + +The students, old and young, rich and poor, flocked to the brick house +which they dubbed "The Square Deal." There Molly administered advice +and love and sympathy with absolute impartiality, also with perfect +unconsciousness that she was the guiding star of the student body. + +"She is the only really truly democratic person I ever knew,--of +course, besides O. Henry, and I didn't exactly know him," Billie McKym +declared. "She and O. Henry simply don't regard money one way or the +other in their judgment of persons. Now most social workers think of the +rich as necessary evils in the way of pocketbooks and such. They really +take no interest in anyone who does not need financial or moral help, +but Molly and O. Henry are just as good to the rich as the poor." + +Billie was back at Wellington taking extra courses that she wasn't +certain what she was to do with, but she felt anything was preferable to +coming out into society in New York, which was the inevitable sequence +the moment she was through with college. + +Billie rather resented the guest at the Square Deal as did many of +Molly's youthful friends. + +"There's never any seeing Molly alone now," she grumbled. + +"Never!" agreed Mary Neil, a red-headed junior who had what she termed +a "mash" on Mrs. Green. Molly, being totally unaware of this, was ever +causing the poor girl to turn green with jealousy. + +"To think of her stopping the 'Would-be's' just because Miss Oldham's +mother died, and she didn't even think enough of her to put on +mourning," asserted Lilian Swift as she peeped in the mirror over the +mantel to adjust her own very becoming black and white hat, worn as +second mourning for a great-aunt who had left her a legacy. + +These girls were assembled in the library at the Greens', waiting to see +their friend. That evening the "Would-be Authors' Club" was to have met, +but Molly, their president, had felt it best to postpone it because of +Nance's recent bereavement. The "Would-be Authors" was now a flourishing +organization with a waiting list that almost stretched around the +campus. They met together for mutual benefit and encouragement and +sometimes for discouragement. The only requisite for membership was to +scribble at fiction. On coming into this club it was necessary to pledge +oneself to take a criticism like a man. No matter how severe a drubbing +your story called forth, you must smile and smile. + +"Girls, I'm so sorry to keep you waiting, but Mildred had got +chewing-gum in her hair and I simply had to get it out before her whole +wig stuck together," said Molly as she came in with Dodo in her arms and +Mildred trotting after her like a veritable little colt following its +dam. "My friend, Miss Oldham, will be down in a moment." + +The girls looked at one another meaningly. + +"I want all of you to like my friend," continued Molly, as though she +could divine their thoughts. "She has had a hard time and she needs the +companionship of young people more than anyone I know." + +Molly then told them of Nance's devotion to her mother and father, of +her thwarted ambition, of her unselfishness and cleverness. + +"It seems strange for her not to wear mourning for her mother," said +Lilian. + +"Perhaps it does, but when you think of it, what you wear has nothing to +do with your feelings. It is in a way part of Nance's unselfishness +that she did not put on mourning. Her father disliked it, her mother +could not abide it, and as she said, it meant a new outfit which she +could ill afford. It is a great deal easier just to give up to grief and +exude gloom than it is to be cheerful and radiate light and happiness." + +Molly was in a measure irritated by Lilian's criticism of her beloved +Nance, but Lilian was a person who always spoke her mind no matter what +was involved, and she had a certain sturdiness and honesty of opinion +that disarmed one. + +"Well, that's all right," she answered bluntly, "but while she is being +so unselfish about her clothes, why doesn't she spunk up a bit about the +'Would-be Authors?'" + +"What about them?" + +"Why, postponing the meeting because she is in such deep grief." + +"That wasn't Nance. I am responsible for that foolishness. She only +found out about it to-day and declares she will go back to Vermont if I +dare make a single change in my way of living. I want all of you to get +messages to the club to be sure and come this evening." + +"Bully for Nance!" cried Billie McKym. + +Nance came into the room just as Billie was cheering her. + +"I'm mighty glad it's bully for me, if I'm the Nance. But why 'Bully for +Nance'?" + +"Just because you are here with Mrs. Green and can come to our literary +club this evening," said Billie with a straight face. + +"But I am no scribbler," declared Nance. + +"But you are a wonderful critic," said Molly. "Among so many scribblers +it is well to have one sane person willing to compose the audience. It +is my turn to read to-night and I want your criticism." + +"If I can come in that capacity, I am more than willing," smiled Nance +as she settled herself to her knitting. + +"I remember many times you saved me from making a bombastic goose of +myself on my college themes," laughed Molly. "What I flattered myself +was pathos, under your cool judgment turned out often to be bathos." + +Molly leaned over and gave her friend an affectionate pat. At this show +of love, Mary Neil jumped up so suddenly that she upset little Mildred, +who was sitting on the sofa by her, and without saying a word rushed +from the room. + +"What on earth!" exclaimed Molly. + +"The suddenness of Mary,--that's all," declared Billie. + +"Good title for a story!" said Lilian, getting out a note-book. + +"Oh, you scribblers!" laughed Nance. + +Little Mildred was picked up and comforted and in a short while the +visitors took their departure. + +"Molly, do you know what was the matter with that interesting looking +red-headed girl?" asked Nance as they settled to the delights of a +twilight chat, while Nance busily plied her knitting needles on the long +drab scarf that seemed to grow under her agile fingers like magic. + +"I have no idea." + +"She was jealous of me. I noticed how she looked at me when I came in +and she never said a single word while all of us were chatting. Then the +moment you gave me a little pat, she jumped up as though she had +received an electric shock and fled." + +"Absurd! I hate to think it of Mary." + +"It's true all the same. Didn't you know she was crazy about you?" + +"No, and I don't want to know it. A girl had better be beau-crazy than +have these silly cases with other girls. I am going to put a stop to it +in some way." + +"How, may I ask?" + +"I might do like Peg Woffington and put my hair up in curl papers and +appear at my very worst." + +"Well, dearie, your worst might be so much better than some person's +best that that might not work. But don't think I've got a case on you." + +"Never! We were foolish enough college girls but we never were that +foolish. I can't remember anyone in our crowd having these silly +mashes. Can you?" + +"Unless it was the affair Judy Kean had with Adele Windsor. Do you +remember when poor Judy turned up with her hair dyed a blue black?" + +"Do I?" and the friends went off into peals of laughter just as Mrs. +McLean ushered herself into the firelit room. + +"The door was open so I came right in," announced that dear woman. She +caught Nance's hands in a strong grasp and drew the girl towards her. +"I am glad to see you, my dear," she said simply. Her well-remembered +Scotch accent fell pleasingly on Nance's ear. + +"The violets were lovely. I thank you so much," faltered Nance. + +Molly wondered at the embarrassment of her friend. She had longed to +talk to Nance about Andy McLean but did not know how to begin. She +shrank from prying into her guest's affairs, but the eternal feminine +in her was on the alert for the romance she had no doubt was there. + +"And now I must tell you all about Andy," said his fond mother. "I know +you want to hear about him,--eh?" + +"Indeed we do," put in Molly quickly, while Nance tried to go on with +her knitting, but I am afraid dropped more stitches than she picked up. + +"He has resigned from the hospital staff in New York where he was doing +so splendidly and is to go to France as an ambulance surgeon." + +"Oh!" came involuntarily from Nance. + +"Splendid!" cried Molly. + +"It is what he should do," declared his Spartan mother. "His father and +I would not have it otherwise. Of course, the States will be at war +before the month is out and Andy might wait and enlist with his own +country, but in the meantime he is needed, and sadly needed, by my +country, mine and his father's." + +"He will come see you before he sails, will he not?" asked Molly. + +"Of course! He may spend a month with us." + +"That will be splendid indeed." + +Nance said nothing, but the flames that sprang from the wood fire lit up +a very rosy countenance. + +"I must be going now. I only ran in for a moment to bring the news of my +Andy and to see this little friend again. Come to see me, both of you," +and the doctor's wife was gone. + +"Molly! I should never have come to you!" said Nance the moment the door +closed on their visitor. Katy, the Irish nurse, had come for the baby. +Little Mildred had fallen asleep, her head in Nance's lap. + +"My darling girl! Why?" + +"I can't spoil Andy's visit to his mother. If I am here, it will be +spoiled." + +"Nance, how can you say so?" + +"Because it is the truth. He will have to see me, and he hates me." + +"He couldn't!" + +"He left me two years ago in a rage and swore it was over for good and +all; and he couldn't have said such things to me if he had not hated +me." + +"And you--do you hate him?" + +"Of course not!" and again the flickering fire showed off her blushes. + +"Did you say nothing to him but nice things?" + +"We-ll, not exactly,--but he said the things he said first." + +"Were the things he said worse than the things you said?" + +"No!" with a toss of her independent head, "I gave him back as good as +he sent." + +"You shouldn't have done it. You knew how the things he said hurt, and +with your superior knowledge of what it meant to be wounded, you were +cruel to hurt him so." + +"But he should have known! That kind of philosophy is above me. Suppose +the Allies conducted their warfare under those principles, what would +become of us? Germany hit first and France and Belgium knew how it hurt, +and so they should not have hit back. There is a big hole in your +reasoning, honey." + +"But that is not the same. Germany and France didn't love one another, +while you and Andy----" + +"Well, it is all over now!" and Nance composed herself and tried to go +on with her knitting. Molly thought in her heart perhaps it was not so +"over" as Nance thought. + +"Why did you and Andy quarrel?" + +"I had promised when Father no longer needed me that I +would--would--marry him. How could I tell that Mother would want to +come live with me when poor Father was gone? Andy came as soon as he +learned of Father's death and seemed to think I could pick right up +and marry him, and when I objected to such unseemly haste he said I +had been flirting with him. The idea of such a thing! He got it into +his head that Dr. Flint, the physician who had been with us through +poor Father's long illness, was the cause of my holding back." + +"A young doctor?" + +"Ye-es!" + +"Was he--was he--attentive?" + +"Perhaps--well, yes--he did propose to me but I had no idea of +accepting him. Andy should have known me well enough to realize that I +couldn't be so low as to jilt him. When Andy came, Mother had just told +me that she never expected to leave me again. I never did have a chance +to tell this to him, he was so angry and so jealous. He wanted me to +marry him immediately and leave Vermont,--and how could I when Mother +was home, sick and miserable and reproaching herself for having been +away from Father so much?" + +"Did your mother not know of your engagement to Andy?" + +"No-o! You see, poor Mother was not--was not the kind of mother one +confided in much. Afterwards, when I nursed her through all those +months, she was so softened if I had had anything to confide I should +have done so, but then there was nothing left to confide." + +"Poor old Nance!" said Molly lovingly. + +"Well, I'm not sorry for myself a bit. No doubt I might have gone +whining to Andy and made him take back all the things he said, but I am +no whiner. It was a good thing we found out in time we could say such +things to each other!" + +"Maybe it was a good thing to find out in time how it hurt to say such +things and have such things said to one, and then it would never happen +again," said the hopeful Molly. + +Nance divined that Molly was thinking how best she could bring these two +estranged lovers together, and determined to frustrate any matchmaking +plans the young matron might be hatching. + +"Promise me, Molly, you will not say a thing to Andy or to anyone. It is +something that is hopelessly mixed up and my pride would never recover +if Andy should know that I cared." + +"You do care then?" + +"Of course I care! I never had very many friends and if I cared for Andy +enough to engage myself to him, I could not get over it ever, I am +afraid. But you have not promised yet." + +"I promise," said Molly sadly. "But if you love Andy, it does seem so +foolish----" + +"But remember you have promised!" + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE WOULD-BE'S + + +What a chattering there was as the crowd of girls gathered for the +weekly meeting of their literary club! Professor Green beat a hasty +retreat from the library. He declared that listening to schoolgirl +fiction was no treat to him. Besides there was so much to be read +concerning the war in that month of March, 1917, and little time in +which to read it. War was an obsession with Edwin Green. Waking and +sleeping it was ever with him. He regretted his being unable to enlist +as a private in the French army, so strong were his sympathies with +that struggling nation. Certain that his country would finally drop its +neutrality and come out strongly for democracy and the Allies, he could +hardly wait for the final declaration of war. He had his den, safe from +the encroachments of the "Would-be Authors' Club," and there he +ensconced himself with enough newspapers and magazines to furnish +reading matter for the whole of Wellington. + +The rules of the club were as follows: Two pieces of original fiction +must be read at each meeting. A chairman for the evening must be +appointed by the two performers. All manuscript must be written legibly +if not typewritten, so that the club need not have to wait while the +author tried to read her own writing. Criticism must be given and taken +in good humor and good faith. + +Molly, in forming this club, had endeavored to have in it only those +students who were really interested in short story writing and ambitious +to perfect themselves, but in spite of her ideals there were some +members who were in it for the fun they got out of it or for a certain +prestige they fancied they would gain from these weekly meetings at the +home of the popular wife of a popular professor. These slackers were +constantly bringing excuses for plots when their time came to read, or +trying to work off on the club old essays and theses on various subjects +not in the least related to fiction. + +"You are to read this evening, I believe, Mary," said Molly to Mary Neil +as the library filled. "You missed last time and so got put on this +week." + +"Yes--I--that is--you see, I sat up all night trying to finish a story +but couldn't get it to suit me." + +"Did you bring it?" + +"Oh no, it was too much in the rough." + +"That's too bad, Mary!" cried Lilian Swift. "There are plenty of us who +had things to read and you cut us out of the chance." + +"Surely some of you must have brought things," said Molly, trying not to +smile, knowing full well that in almost every pocket of the really and +truly "Would-be's" some gem of purest ray serene in the shape of a +manuscript was only waiting to be dived for. The self-conscious +expression on at least a dozen faces put her mind at rest in regard to +the program of the evening. + +"It seems I have the appointing of a chairman for the meeting in my +power, since the other reader has fallen out of the running," said +Molly, looking as severely as she could look at the sullen, handsome +Mary Neil, "so I appoint Billie McKym." + +Billie, a most ardent scribbler, had been drawn into the procession of +short-story fiends by her dear friend Thelma Larson, who was destined to +become famous as a writer of fiction. Billie had no great talent but she +possessed a fresh breezy line of dialogue that covered a multitude of +sins in the way of plot formation, motivation, crisis, climax and what +not. + +"Remember, Billie, the chair is not the floor," teased one of the +members. + +Billie was a great talker and although she was no pronounced success as +a writer of fiction, she was a good critic of the performance of others. + +"Just for that I'll ask you, Miss Smarty, to serve as vice, and when I +have something important to say I'll put you in the chair for keeps." + +"Oh, let Mrs. Green begin and stop squabbling," demanded a girl who had +a plot she was dying to divulge and devoutly hoped she would be called +on when their hostess got through. + +"Then begin!" and Billie rapped for order. + +Molly took her seat by the reading-lamp and opened her manuscript. +Having to read before the club was just as exciting to Molly as to the +veriest freshman. Her cheeks flushed and her hand trembled a wee bit. + +"Silly of me to get stage fright but I can't help it," she laughed. + +"How do you reckon we feel then?" drawled a little girl from Alabama, +who only the week before had been torn limb from limb by the relentless +"Would-be's." + +"This is a story that I have sent on many a journey and it always comes +back to its doting mother. I have received several personal letters +about it----" + +"Oh, wonderful!" came from several members. + +"Only think, the most encouraging thing that has happened to me yet was +once a Western magazine kept my manuscript almost three weeks," sighed +a willowy maiden. + +"Now please criticize it just as severely as you can. I want to sell it, +and something must be done to it before the editors will take it," +begged Molly, getting over her ridiculous stage fright. + +"Fire away!" said parliamentary Billie. + +"How long is it?" asked Lilian Swift. + +"About five thousand words, I think!" + +"Whew!" blew the girl who hoped to get her plot in edgewise. + +There was a general laugh and then Molly cleared her throat for action. +"First, let me tell you I saw a clipping in the _New York Times_ asking +for Fairy Godmothers for the soldiers. That was what put the idea in my +head. The title is: 'Fairy Godmothers Wanted.'" + +You could have heard a pin drop while Molly read, and occasionally one +did hear the scratching of a pencil wielded by a member who was on a +critical war-path. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +FAIRY GODMOTHERS WANTED + + +The ballroom was crowded but very quiet. The belle of the ball was the +night nurse, deftly accomplishing the many duties that fall to the share +of a night nurse. A letter must be written for a poor Gascon who had +lost his right arm; a Bedouin chief must be watered every five minutes; +a little red-headed Irishman begging for morphine to ease his pain, and +a sad Cockney lad sobbing because he was "'omesick for 'Ammersmith," +must be comforted. + +The beautiful old château had been converted into a hospital early in +the war and the _salle de bal_ was given over to the convalescents. The +convalescent male is a very difficult proposition, and the little nurse +sometimes felt her burden was greater than she could bear. There was so +much to do for these sick soldiers besides nurse them. One thing, she +must good-naturedly submit to being made love to in many different +languages. She could stand all but the Bedouin chief. + +"He seems so like our darkeys at home," she had whispered to the one +American who was getting well rather faster than he liked to admit. + +This American wanted to get well and be back in the trenches, but who +was to make love to the pretty night nurse in good old American when he +left the convalescent ward? + +"You promised to do something for me to-night. Don't forget! You must be +almost through with all of these fellows." + +"Ready in a minute!" She flitted down between the rows of cots, tucking +in the covers here, plumping up a pillow there. The Bedouin was watered +for the last time that night and finally closed his rolling black eyes. + +"Now, what is it?" she asked, sinking down on a stool by the American's +bed, which was placed in an alcove at one end of the great salon. "If it +is writing a letter, thank goodness, it won't have to be in the second +person singular in French. Why do you suppose they teach us such formal +French at school? I can't _tutoyer_ for the life of me." + +"Same here! _Je t'aime_'s all I know. But I don't want you to write a +letter for me. I want you to read some. But first I must know your +really truly name. I--I--like you too much just to have to call you +nurse." + +"Mary Grubb!" + +"No! Not really?" + +"Yes! I'd like to know what is the matter with my name. It is a +perfectly good name, I reckon." + +"Yes, Mary is beautiful--but--the other! Never mind, you can change it." + +"I have no desire to do so, at least not for many a day. I think Grubb +is especially nice. It suggests Sally Lunn and batter bread." + +"There now, I would know you are from the South even if your dear little +'reckons' didn't come popping out every now and then. Do you know, I +have a friend who lives in Kentucky, and when the war is over I have +been planning to go see her, but now--but now--I am afraid she won't +want to see me." + +"You mean the scars?" and she looked pityingly at the young man and put +her firm little hand on his head. "Why, they will not amount to much. +They will just make you look interesting. Your eyes will be well, I just +know they will. Look at this long scar that has given the most trouble! +It has turned to a pleasing pink and will be almost gone in a few +months. You see you are so healthy." + +"It isn't altogether the scars. If you think they are pretty, maybe she +will, too. There is something else. I want to read over all this packet +of letters before I decide something. You had better begin or that big, +black, bounding beggar over there will begin to whine for water again. +After you read the letters, maybe I will tell you the other reason why +my friend in Kentucky might not want to see me." + +He took from under his pillow a packet of little blue letters, tightly +tied with a piece of twine. + +"Here they are! These letters have meant a lot to me while I was in the +trenches. They still mean a lot to me. They were written by my Fairy +Godmother." + +"Oh! Are they love letters?" + +"No, indeed! I wouldn't ask a woman to read another woman's love +letters. I wouldn't let anyone but you read these letters, but my eyes +are too punk to read them myself and I have to--to hear them to decide +something, something very important." + +"All right! A nurse is a kind of father confessor and what one hears +professionally is sacred." + +"But, my dear, I am not thinking of you as a nurse." + +"But I am thinking of you as a patient." + +She slipped the top letter from the packet and turned it over. "So your +name is Stephen Scott!" + +"Didn't you know my name, either? How funny!" + +"I only know the names of the patients who have charts, and you are too +well to waste a chart on. We nurses call you the convalescent American. +Sure these are not love letters?" + +"Of course!" impatiently. "But if you don't want to read them to me, +just say so. Maybe you are tired. Of course you are. You look pale and +your little hand is trembling." + +"No, no! I am not tired! Let me begin." + +The _salle de bal_ of the old château was very quiet. The wounded +soldiers were dropping off to sleep one by one. Even the Bedouin chief +had stopped rolling his eyes and was softly snoring. In a low clear +voice she read the letters. + + MY DEAR GODSON: + + It is so wonderful to be a Godmother that I can hardly contain + myself for joy. It is through an advertisement I saw in a New York + paper, headed Fairy Godmothers Wanted, that I happen to have you and + you happen to have me. I consider our introduction quite regular as + it came through the wife of a great general. + + I wonder how you like belonging to me? I wonder if you are as alone + in the world and homeless as I am. I wonder if you are big or + little, dark or fair, old or young. I wonder all kinds of things + about you,--after all, it makes no difference, any of these things. + You are my Godson and every day I am going to pray for you and + think about you. I am going to send you presents and write you long + letters and send you newspapers. The only trouble about it is by the + time I get hold of English papers they will be weeks and weeks old. + I wonder if American magazines and papers would appeal to you. I + wonder what kind of presents you would like,--not beaded + antimacassars and not mouchoir cases surely. I will knit you a + sweater maybe, but I am not very fond of knitting. + + This business of being a Fairy Godmother is a very serious one, more + serious than being a real mother, I believe. A real mother can at + least do something towards forming the character of her child, but a + Fairy Godmother has her child presented to her and takes it as the + husband used to take his bride in the old English prayer book: "With + all her debts and scandals upon her." The worst of it is that she is + ignorant what those debts and scandals are. I don't even know what + kind of smoke to send you. Are you middle-aged and sedate and do you + smoke a corn-cob pipe? Are you young and giddy and do you live on + cigarettes? A terrible possibility has entered into my mind! Are you + one of those awful persons that uses what our darkeys call "eatin' + tobacco"? If so, I shall begin to train you immediately. + + Perhaps you want to know something about me. There is not much to + know. I am an orphan of independent means and character. Being the + first, enables me to be the second, which sounds like a riddle but + isn't. You see I have rafts and oodlums of kin, and if I did not + have an income of my own they would step in and coerce me even more + than they do. I said in the beginning that I was homeless. I am not + really that, but the trouble is I have too many homes. I must spend + the winter with Aunt Sally and the spring with Cousin Kate. Cousin + Maria and Uncle Bruce want me to take White Sulphur by storm with + them as chaperones; and so it is from one year's end to the other, + kind relations planning for me. I am bored to death with it all and + am even now preparing a bomb to throw in this camp of overzealous + kin. But I'll tell you about that later,--that is, if you want to + hear about it. I may be boring you stiff. If I am, it is an easy + matter for you to repudiate me and tell Mrs. Johnson to get you a + more agreeable Godmother. + + My numerous family does not at all approve of my being a Godmother. + They think I am too young for the responsibility and have entered + upon it too lightly. I even heard Aunt Sally whisper to Cousin + Maria: "Just like her mother!" That means in their minds that I am + headstrong and difficult. You see my mother was also of independent + means and character. Also (I whisper this) she was not a Southerner. + That is as serious in a Southerner's eyes as not being British is in + yours. They think it is very forward of me to be writing to a man + what has not been properly introduced. Uncle Bruce suggests that you + may not even be born. I tell him soldiers don't have to be born and + that the bravest soldiers that were ever known sprang up from + dragon's teeth. + + I am sending you as my first present all kinds of tobacco, even + plug. I must not let my prejudices get away with me. If my dear + Godson likes "eatin' tobacco," he shall have it. If you don't + indulge in it, give it to some soldier less dainty. For my part, I + should think the trenches would be dirty enough without adding to + them. + + I want to tell you that I like your name. I think Stephen Scott + sounds very manly and upstanding, somehow. I am hoping for a letter + from you just to give me an inkling of your tastes. Of course I know + one of the duties of a Fairy Godmother is not to worry her charge, + and I don't want to worry you but to help you. I think of you in + those damp, nasty ditches eating all kinds of food, served in all + kinds of ways. (I am sure what should be hot is cold, and what + should be cold is hot.) And when I sit down to batter-bread and + fried chicken I can hardly force it down, I do so want you to have + it instead of me. + + Your affectionate Godmother, + POLLY NELSON. + +The night nurse quietly folded up the first letter and slipped it back +in its blue envelope. She had a whimsical, amused expression on her +face. + +"What are you smiling over? Don't you think that is a nice letter?" + +"I didn't say it wasn't." + +"But you didn't say it was. I think that is a sweet letter. I tell you +it meant a lot to me. Of course, I am not the homeless Tommy she thought +I was. I fancy I have as many Aunt Sallies and Cousin Marias as she has, +but they happen to be in New England." + +"You are not an orphan, then!" + +"Oh, yes! I'm an orphan all right enough, but I am related to half of +Massachusetts and all of Boston." + +"Did you tell your Fairy Godmother that?" + +"No,--that's what makes me feel so bad. I was afraid she would stop +being my Godmother if she found out I was--well, not exactly poor, so +I--I didn't exactly lie----" + +"You didn't exactly tell the truth, either," and the night nurse curled +her pretty lip and looked disgusted. + +"Oh, please don't be angry with me, too. I know she will be. I have +simply got to tell her the truth about myself. I did let her know I am +an American. I am going to write her a letter just as soon as I can see +to do it. But go on with the next, please. You are sure it is not tiring +you too much?" + +"Sure," and the night nurse slipped out another. + + MY DEAR GODSON: + + It was very nice of you to answer my letter so promptly. I am so + glad you are an American and do not chew tobacco. You must not feel + compelled to answer all my letters because you must be very busy and + I have very little to do, so little that I am becoming very + restless. I have thrown the bomb in the camp of the enemy, my kin. + They are shattered into smithereens. I am going to enter a hospital, + take training, and just as soon as I am capable go to France with + the Red Cross nurses. I should like to go immediately but I want to + be a help not a hindrance, and they say all the untrained persons + who butt in on the war zone are a nuisance. Six months of training + should make me fit, don't you think? But how should you know? + + I am very happy at the thought of being of some use. I owe it all to + you, my dear Godson. If I had not been presented with you I should + never have thought of such a thing. Just as soon as I realized that + over in the trenches was a human being who wanted to hear from me + and whom I could help, I began to take a new interest in the war + and all the soldiers, and then I began to feel that maybe I, + insignificant little I, might be of some use to those poor soldiers, + some use besides just knitting foolish caps and mittens and sending + the _Saturday Evening Post_ and cigarettes. I only wish I could go + immediately. My training begins to-morrow. Aunt Sally and Cousin + Maria feel that it is a terrible blot on the family name. They are + sure someone will say that I am doing this because I am not a + success in society, although they say over and over that I am. I + don't know whether I am or not, all I know is that society is not a + success with me. Uncle Bruce is rather nice about it all. + + There are so many I's in this letter I am mortified. I believe + writing to a Godson in the trenches is almost like keeping a diary. + I am sending you some cards and poker chips (but you mustn't play + for money). I'd hate to think that my presents exerted a poor moral + influence on my dear Godson. Would you mind just dropping a hint as + to what kind of presents would be most acceptable? I have never been + in the habit of giving presents to men and the kinds of presents + some of my friends give would not be very appropriate, it seems to + me. Silver match boxes and cigarette holders would not be very + useful, nor would silk socks with initials embroidered on them be + much better. Do you like chocolate drops and poetry? + + Your affectionate Fairy Godmother, + POLLY NELSON. + +The night nurse laughed outright at the close of the letter and Stephen +Scott reached out for the packet from which she was extracting a third +blue envelope. + +"If you are going to make fun of them, you can stop." + +"I wasn't making fun. I was just thinking what funny presents girls do +give men." + +"Well, so they do, but my little Godmother gave me bully +presents,--cigarettes to burn, home-made molasses candy and beaten +biscuit. She had lots of imagination in the presents she sent and the +blessed child never did burden me with a work-box but sent me a gross +of safety-pins that beat all the sewing kits on earth. I don't believe +you like my Godmother much." + +"Don't you? Well, I do." + +"You should like her because somehow you remind me of her." + +"Oh! Have you seen her?" + +"Only in my mind's eye. I begged her for a picture of herself but she +has never sent it. She has promised it, though. You see I got to +answering her letters in the same spirit in which she wrote to me, only +I was not quite so frank, I am afraid. She told me everything about +herself while I told her only my thoughts. I never did tell her I was +not a homeless soldier of fortune. She thinks I am absolutely friendless +and dependent on my pay as a private for my living. Sometimes I wish I +didn't have a sou--at least I have felt that way--but now----" + +"But now what?" + +"But now I don't think it is so bad to have a little tin," and he held +one of the little stained hands in his for a moment. + +She gently withdrew it and opened a third letter. This was full of +hospital experiences and so were all that followed. The tone of them +became more intimate and friendly. The desire to serve was ever +uppermost--just to get in the War Zone and help. + +"I got awfully stuck on her, somehow," confessed the man. "She was so +sweet and so girlish--I did not say so for fear of scaring her off, but +I used to write her pretty warm ones, I am afraid." + +"Why afraid?" + +"Don't you know?" + +"How should I know?" + +"Why, honey, you must see that I am head over heels in love with you. I +oughtn't to be telling it to you when I have written my little Godmother +that as soon as the war is over I am going to find her and tell her the +same thing. But, somehow, I was loving her only on paper and in my mind; +but you--you--I love you with every bit of my heart, soul and body." He +caught her hand and all of the poor little slim blue letters slipped +from the twine and scattered over the floor. + +"Oh, the poor little letters!" she cried. "Is that all they mean to +you?" + +"Oh, honey, they meant a lot to me and still do, but they are just +letters and you are--you." + +"But how about the letters you wrote Miss Polly Nelson? Are they just +letters to her and nothing more? Don't you think it is possible that +she may have treasured your letters, especially the pretty warm ones, +and be looking forward to the end of the war with the same eagerness +that you have felt up to--say----" + +"The minute I laid eyes on you. At first I used to dream maybe you were +she, but I began to feel that she must be much--younger--somehow, than +you. You are so capable, so mature in a way. She is little more than a +child and you are a grown woman." + +"I am twenty-one--but the war ages one." + +"I don't mean you look old--I just mean you seem so sensible." + +"And Miss Nelson didn't?" + +"I don't mean that, I just mean she seemed immature. But suppose you +read the last letter. And couldn't you do it with one hand and let me +hold the other?" + +"Certainly not!" and the night nurse stooped and gathered the scattered +letters. Leaning over may have accounted for the rosy hue that +overspread her countenance. + +"You certainly read her writing mighty easily. I had a hard time at +first. I think she writes a rotten fist, although there is plenty of +character in it, dear little Godmother!" + +"Humph! Do you think so? I wouldn't tell her that if I were you--I mean +that you think her fist is rotten." + +"Of course not, but begin, please, and say--couldn't you manage with one +hand?" + +But the night nurse was adamant and drew herself up very primly and +began to read: + + MY DEAR GODSON: + + I am afraid gratitude has got the better of you. You must not feel + that because a girl in America has written you a pile of foolish + letters and sent you a few little paltry presents, you must send her + such very loverlike letters in return. I am disappointed in you, + Godson. I had an idea that you were steadier. Just suppose I were a + designing female who was going to hold you up and drag you through + the wounded-affections court? There is quite enough in your last two + letters to justify such a proceeding. It may be only your poverty + that will restrain me. In the first place, you don't know me from + Adam or rather Eve. I may be a Fairy Godmother with a crooked back + and a black cat, who prefers a broom-stick to a limousine; I may + have a hare-lip and a mean disposition; I may write vers libre and + believe in dress reform. In fact I am a pig in a poke and you are a + very foolish person to think you want to carry me off without ever + looking at me. I won't say that I don't want to see you and know + you, because I do. I have been very honest with you in my letters + because, as I told you once, it has seemed almost like keeping a + diary to write to you, and I think a person who is not honest in a + diary is as bad as the person who cheats at solitaire. When the war + is over if you want to look me up you will find me in Louisville, + Kentucky. When you do find me, I want you to be nothing but my + Godson. You may not like me a bit and I may find you + unbearable,--somehow, I don't believe I shall, though. I do hope you + will like me, too. One thing I promise--that is, not to fall in love + with anyone else until I have looked you over. And you--I fancy you + see no females to fall in love with. + + I never let myself think about your getting killed. As Fairy + Godmother I cast a spell about you to protect you. There are times + when I almost wish you could be safely wounded. Those are the times + when I doubt the efficacy of my prayers and the powers of my fairy + gifts. + + And now for the news: I am going to the front! I have worked it by + strategy. A girl I know has had all her papers made out ready to + join the Red Cross nurses, and now at the last minute her young man + has stepped in and persuaded her to marry him instead. I have + cajoled the papers from her and am leaving in a few hours. Aunt + Sally and Cousin Kate, Uncle Bruce and Cousin Maria are half + demented. They don't know how I worked it or I am sure they would + have the law on me for perjury. I am free, white, and twenty-one + now, and they could control me in no other way. Good-by, Godson! I + wonder if we will meet somewhere in France. I will write you when I + can, but I am afraid I shall not be able to send any more presents + for a while. + + Your affectionate Godmother. + +"Now don't you hate and despise me for telling you what I did just now? +You see she says she will at least not fall in love with anyone else +until she looks me over, and think what I have done! What must I do? I +am going to try not to tell you I love you any more until that other +girl knows what a blackguard I am, but you must understand all the time +that I do." + +"I understand nothing, Mr. Stephen Scott. I am simply the night nurse in +the convalescent ward and you have asked me to read some letters to you, +and I have read them; and now it is my duty to forget what is in them, +and I am going to do it,--I have done it. All I can say is that you +might give Miss Polly Nelson the chance to find someone else she likes +better than she does you before you are so quick to take for granted she +will stick to her bargain, too. If there is any jilting going on, we +Southern girls rather prefer to be the jilters than the jiltees." + +"Don't say jilting! It isn't fair. Please be good to me! I am so +miserable." + +The night nurse smiled in spite of herself and felt his pulse. + +"There now! Just as I thought! You have worked yourself up into an +abnormal pulse and I shall have to start a chart on you." + +"Abnormal nothing! How is a fellow's pulse to remain normal when you put +your dear little fingers on his wrist? But I forgot! I am not going to +make love to you until I can let my Godmother know. Maybe she has met +some grand English Tommy by this time----" And then he groaned aloud and +cried: "But I don't want her to do that, either!" + +"Blessed if I'm not in love with two girls," he thought. + +The night nurse sat quietly down to her charts after having gone the +rounds of her ward. All was quiet. The convalescent soldiers were +sleeping peacefully, dreaming of home, she hoped. Scott stirred +restlessly now and then. He could not sleep but watched the busy little +stained hand of the night nurse as it glided rapidly over the charts. +She had no light but that of a guttering candle, carefully shaded from +her patients' eyes, but Scott could see her well-poised head and fine +profile as she bent over her writing. How lovely she was! Would she ever +listen to him? How she stood up for her sex,--and still she did not +exactly repulse him. What a strange name for a girl like that to have! +Grubb! It was preposterous. Indeed, he felt it his duty to make her +change that name as soon as possible. Polly Nelson is a pretty +name--dear little Godmother! Would she despise him, too, like this other +girl? But did this other one despise him? + +The night nurse made her rounds again and then left the ward for a +moment. When she returned, she came to the American's bedside. + +"A letter has just come for you, Mr. Scott." + +"For me? Splendid! Will you read it to me?" + +"Yes, if you cannot possibly see to do it yourself." + +"I might, but I'd rather not." + +"It is in the same rotten fist of those I read you to-night." + +"My Fairy Godmother! I--I--believe I can see to read that myself." + +She handed him the letter. Her hand was trembling a little and so was +his. She brought the guttering candle and he opened his letter. + + + _Somewhere in France._ + + MY DEAR GODSON: + + I have always been so frank with you that I feel I must make a + confession. I promised you in my last letter, the one I wrote just + before I left home, that I would not fall in love with anyone until + after the war, when you were to present yourself in Louisville and + we were to view each other for the first time. Dear Godson---- I + have not kept my word. They say a man falls in love with his nurse + often because of the feeling he has for his mother. She makes it + seem as though he were a little child again. I reckon a nurse falls + in love with her patient because he seems so like a little boy. She + loves him first because of the maternal instinct. Be that as it may, + I am in love with one of my patients. I tell you this fearing you + may be wounded and you may fall in the hands of a cap and apron, and + from a feeling of noblesse oblige you may not grasp the happiness + within your reach. + + God bless you, my dear Godson! + + Always, + YOUR FAIRY GODMOTHER. + + P. S.--He is an American. + +A great tear rolled down the scarred cheek of the young soldier and +splashed on the signature. Then something happened that made him sit up +very straight in his cot and stretch out a shaking hand for the night +nurse. She was by his side in a moment. + +"Look! Look! The ink is not dry yet. See where that tear dropped! Dry +ink would not float off like that!" He turned the sheet over. It was a +chart. + +"But you--you--little Fairy Godmother! Who is he?" + +"There is only one American in my ward." + +"But you said your name was Grubb!" + +"That's my official name. Mary Grubb was the girl whose place I got with +the Red Cross. Do you know, you hurt my feelings terribly when you said +my fist was rotten?" + +And Stephen Scott, holding the little stained and roughened hand in his, +wondered that he ever could have made such a break. + +"Thank God, you are just one girl, after all!" he cried. + +But the night nurse wished that there were two of her for a while at +least: one to stay by the bedside of the convalescent American and one +to make out the charts that must be got ready for the morning rounds of +the surgeon in charge. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE CRITICS + + +"Ahem!" said Billie, rapping for order as the girls began all at once to +say what they thought of "Fairy Godmothers Wanted." The one with the +burning plot began rattling her paper in preparation of the turn she +hoped for. + +"First general impressions are in order! One at a time, please! You, +Miss Oldham, you tell us how it strikes you." + +"Pleasing on the whole, but----" + +"We'll come to the 'buts' later," was the stern mandate of the chairman +of the day. + +"You, Lilian Swift, you next!" + +"Too long!" from the blunt Lilian. + +"The idea! I think it was just sweet," from the gentle Alabamian. + +"I got kind of mixed in the middle and couldn't tell which was the nurse +and which Polly Nelson," declared one who had evidently gone off into a +cataleptic fit, no doubt dreaming of a story she meant to write some +day. + +"I never, never could love a man who had deceived me," sighed the +sentimental one with big eyes and a little mouth. + +"Personal predilections not valuable as criticism," said Billie sternly. + +Many and various were the opinions expressed. Molly diligently and +meekly took notes, agreeing heartily with the ones who thought it was +too long. + +"Where must I cut it?" she asked eagerly. + +"Cut out all the letters!" suggested Lilian. + +"How could she? It is all letters," asked Billie, whose chair was +becoming a burden as she felt she must get into the discussion. + +"Cut 'em, anyhow. Letters in fiction are no good." + +"Humph! How about the early English novelists?" asked Molly. + +"Dead! Dead! All of them dead!" stormed Lilian. + +"Then how about Mary Roberts Rinehart and Booth Tarkington and lots of +others? Daddy Longlegs is all letters." + +"All the samey, it is a poor stunt," insisted the intrepid Lilian. "I +call it a lazy way to get your idea over." + +"Perhaps you are right, but the point is: did I get my idea over?" + +"We-ll, yes,--but they tell me editors don't like letter form of +fiction." + +"Certainly none of them have liked this," sighed Molly, who had devoutly +hoped her little story would sell. The money she made herself was very +delightful to receive and more delightful to spend. A professor's salary +can as a rule stand a good deal of supplementing. + +"How about the plot, now?" asked Billie, having finished with the +general impression. + +"Slight!" + +"Strong!" + +"Weak!" + +"Impossible!" + +"Plausible!" + +"Original!" + +"Bromidic!" + +"Involved!" were the verdicts. The matter was thoroughly threshed out, +Billie with difficulty keeping order. Nance was called on for the "but" +that she had been left holding. + +"The plot is slight but certainly original in its way. The letters are +too long, longer than a Godmother would be apt to write, I think. The +story could be cut to three thousand words, I believe, to its +advantage." + +"I have already cut out about fifteen hundred words," wailed Molly. "The +first writing was lots longer." + +"Gee!" breathed the one eager for a hearing. + +"Now for the characterization! Don't all speak at once, but one at a +time tell what you think of it." + +"Did you mean to make Polly so silly?" asked Lilian. + +"I--I--perhaps!" faltered Molly. + +"Of course if you meant to, why then your characterization is perfect." + +"Silly! Why, she is dear," declared the girl from Alabama. "I don't like +her having to nurse that black man, though." + +"Too many points of view!" suddenly blurted out a member who had +hitherto kept perfectly silent, but she had been eagerly scanning a +paper whereon was written the requisites for a short story. + +"But you see----" meekly began Molly. + +"The point of view must either be that of the author solely or one of +the characters," asserted the knowing one. "Why, you even let us know +how the Bedouin feels." + +"Oh!" gasped the poor author. "I think you would limit the story teller +too much if you eliminated such things as that." + +"Here's what the correspondence course says----" + +"Spare us!" cried the club in a chorus. + +"I hate all these cut and dried rules!" cried Billie. "It would take all +the spice out of literature if we stuck to them." + +"That's just it," answered Lilian. "We are not making literature but +trying to sell our stuff. Persons who have arrived can write any old +way. They can start off with the climax and end up with an introduction +and their things go, but I'll bet you my hat that you will not find a +single story by a new writer that does not have to toe the mark drawn by +the teachers of short story writing." + +"Which hat?" teased Billie. "The one you put on for Great-aunt Gertrude? +If it is that one, I won't bet. I wouldn't read a short story by a new +writer for it." + +"To return to my story," pleaded Molly, "do you think if I rewrite it, +leave out the letters, strengthen the plot a bit and make Polly a little +wiser that I might sell it?" + +"Sure!" encouraged Lilian. + +"Yes, indeed!" echoed Nance. + +"And the black man--please cut him out! I can't bear to think of him," +from the girl from Alabama. + +"Dialogue,--how about it?" asked the chairman. + +"Pretty good, but a little stilted," was the verdict of several critics. + +"I think you are all of you simply horrid!" exclaimed Mary Neil, who had +been silent and sullen through the whole evening. "I think it is the +best story that has been read all year and I believe you are just +jealous to tear it to pieces this way." + +"Stuff and nonsense!" said Lilian. + +"We do hope we haven't hurt your feelings, Mrs. Green," cried the girl +who was taking the correspondence course. + +"Hurt my feelings! The very idea! I read my story to get help from you +and not praise. I am going to think over what you have said and do my +best to correct the faults, if I come to the conclusion you are right." + +"You would have a hard time doing what everybody says," laughed Nance, +"as no two have agreed." + +"Well, I can pick and choose among so many opinions," said Molly, +putting her manuscript back in its big envelope. "I might do as my +mother did when she got the opinion of two physicians on the diet she +was to have: she simply took from each man the advice that best suited +her taste and between the two managed to be very well fed, and, strange +to say, got well of her malady under the composite treatment." + +"Ahem!" said the girl with the burning plot, rattling her manuscript +audibly so that the hardhearted Billie must perforce recognize her and +give her the floor. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +"I HAD A LITTLE HUSBAND NO BIGGER THAN MY THUMB" + + +"Aunt Nance, what's the use you ain't got no husband an' baby children?" +Mildred always said use instead of reason. + +"Lots of reasons!" answered Nance, smiling at her little companion. +Mildred had moved herself and all her belongings into the guest-chamber. +Her mother had at first objected, but when she found it made Nance happy +to have the child with her, she gave her consent. + +"Ain't no husbands come along wantin' you?" + +"That is one of the reasons." + +"I'm going to make Dodo marry you when he gets some teeth." + +"Thank you, darling! Dodo would make a dear little husband." + +"Dodo wouldn't never say nothin' mean to you. He's got more disposition +than any baby in the family." + +"I am sure he wouldn't," said Nance, trying to count the stitches as she +neatly turned the heel of the grey sock she was knitting. Nance was +always knitting in those days. + +"'Cose if I kin get you a husband a little teensy weensy bit taller than +Dodo, I'll let you know." + +"Fine! But Dodo will grow." + +"Maybe you'll make out to shrink up some. Katy kin shrink you. My muvver +said Katy kin shrink up anything. She done shrinked up Dodo's little +shirts jes' big enough for my dolly. I's jes' crazy 'bout Katy. I'm +gonter ask her kin she shrink you up no bigger'n Dodo an' then won't you +be cunning? You can look jes' like you look now only teensy weensy +little. Your little feet'll be so long, not great big ones like mine, +an' your little hands will be 'bout as big as my little fingers +an'--an'--you kin knit little bits of baby socks an' I kin take you out +ridin' in my little doll-baby carriage, all tucked in nice." + +"But then I'll be too little to marry Dodo. You won't trust your doll to +Dodo, and if I'm so teensy maybe he might break me." + +"Well, then, I guess Katy'll have to stretch you some. She done +stretched the shirt mos' a mile." + +"What do you say to taking a little walk?" + +"I say: 'Glory be!' That's what Kizzie, our cook, says when she's +happy." + +"Shall we take Dodo out in his carriage?" + +"If I can put my dolly in, too!" + +Dodo was awake and pleased to be included in this outing, if gurglings +and splutterings were an indication of happiness. He and the doll were +tucked safely in. Katy, who had been longing for the time to come when +she could scrub the nursery, was delighted to be relieved of her charge +for the time being. + +"Where shall we walk?" asked Nance. + +"Down by the lake! My dolly ain't never seed the lake yet. They's a +little blue boat down there what my papa, the 'fessor, done say he +gonter set sail in some day. He say he gonter go way out in the middle +of the lake where th' ain't no little girls with curls to come tickle +his nose in the morning. My papa is kind and good, but he sho' do hate +to have his nose tickled with curls early in the morning." + +The lake! How many memories it brought back to Nance! The blue boat +might be the same one in which Judy Kean had her memorable midnight +jaunt, or was it a canoe? Nance smiled at the picture that arose in her +mind's eye. It was their Junior year and Judy had gone off in a fit of +jealousy and rage, and when she came to herself she was out in the +middle of the lake while Molly and Nance rowed frantically after her. +What a time they had covering their tracks to keep Judy from being found +out and perhaps even expelled! Nance laughed aloud. + +The sun was warm on that day in late March, almost like a southern sun. +Dodo, lazy baby, had slipped from his sitting posture and lay flat on +his back. He had the same characteristics as Mildred's doll baby: the +moment he lay down his eyes closed. + +"Oh, what a sleepy husband I have got!" cried Nance. "Let's camp out +here, darling. I brought my knitting and while my little husband +sleeps----" + +"And my doll baby, too!" + +"You can play in that nice clean sand. Don't go too close to the water." + +There was a stretch of beach at that side of the lake where a small pier +had been built for a boat-landing. The sand was fine and white, a most +delectable medium for houses or pies, whatever the young sculptor wished +to create. + +Nance seated herself on a nice warm rock while her little companion +busied herself collecting pebbles for the castle she contemplated +building. The sock grew under the girl's skillful fingers while her +thoughts were miles away from the poor soldier whose foot it was +destined to cover. Dodo snoozed peacefully and no doubt the doll did, +too. + +"Look! Look! Aunt Nance, I've done found some kitty flowers!" cried +Mildred, rushing to Nance with a switch of willow catkins she had found +growing near the water's edge. + + "'I had a little pussy + Her coat was silver grey. + She lived down in the meadow, + She never ran away. + + "'Her name was always Pussy, + She never was a cat. + 'Cause she was a Pussy-Willow. + Now what do you think of that?'" + +sang Nance. "Now let me teach you that nice verse so you can say it to +your father." + +Mildred obediently learned the poetry in so short a time that her +teacher marveled at her cleverness and good memory. + +"Now, darling, you mustn't go quite so close to the water again. Aunt +Nance will gather a big armful of the pussy-willows to take back to +Mother, but you might get your little tootsies wet if you go too close +to the edge. Then I'll have to put you in the carriage with my husband +and run home every step of the way." + +Mildred trotted off with assurances of caution. Nance settled herself to +her knitting and her thoughts. What a boon this universal knitting has +become to women who want to think and be busy at the same time! The +girl's thoughts were centered on herself. What was she to do with her +life? The desire to teach had left her with the years she had spent +nursing her father and mother. United States was on the verge of +war--any moment it might be declared. That would mean the women of the +land would be in demand just as they had been in Europe. There would be +work to do, but what was her share to be? + +This little breathing time with Molly was very sweet, but it could not +go on forever. The time would come when she must take up life again. Her +unruly thoughts would dwell on how different things would have been had +Andy McLean not shown himself so unreasonable. She might have gone to +the front with him. There was work in the hospitals in France for others +besides trained nurses, lots of work! Cooking, cleaning, sewing, peeling +potatoes, scrubbing floors--nothing was too menial for her. It would +have been sweet to work near Andy, shoulder to shoulder in spirit even +if he would happen to be the surgeon in charge and she a poor scrub +girl. She might have been taking care of some of the war orphans. +Minding little babies was her long suit, it seemed. A big tear gathered +and spilled on the toe of the sock that was being so neatly finished +off. + +A shrill scream broke on the still air. + +"I'm a-sinkin'! I'm a-sinkin'!" + +"Mildred!" cried Nance, jumping to her feet. + +"Never mind, nurse, I'll go after her," said a stern voice from behind +her. "You had better look after your other charge," in a tone which made +no attempt to veil its sarcasm. + +Dodo had awakened and was sitting up in the carriage reaching for the +willow catkins. His position was precarious, as one more inch might have +sent him headlong in the sand. + +Nance dropped her knitting and grabbed the venturesome baby while the +stern voice materialized into a tall grey figure with sandy hair who ran +towards the water's edge, skinning out of his coat and vest as he ran +and in some miraculous way also divesting himself of his shoes. His hat +he had already hurled at Nance's feet. + +Mildred had walked out on the little pier and decided that she would get +in the pretty blue boat that her father considered such a safe refuge +from tickling curls. It was bobbing about most invitingly in easy +stepping distance. + +"Won't Aunt Nance be 'stonished?" the child had said to herself. "She's +gonter holler out: 'M-i-i-l-dred! Where you Mi--ldred baby?' an' I +gonter lay low an' keep on a-sayin' nothin'." + +She put out her little foot and set it firmly on the bow of the boat +that was almost grazing the edge of the landing. + +"My legs is a-gettin' mos' long enough to step up to the moon an' +stars," she boasted. + +But how strangely boats behaved! This one did not stay still as she had +expected but ran away from her. Her legs had not grown nearly so long +as she had thought and they refused to grow another bit. The boat +got farther and farther away and the horrid little pier seemed to be +moving, too, and in the opposite direction. The time came when Mildred +must choose between land and water. She decided to stay on shore and +with a mighty effort jerked her little foot from the unsteady blue boat. +Three years going on four is not a period of great equilibrium. Fate +took matters out of Mildred's hands and kersplash! she went in the cold +waters of the lake. It was not very deep so close to the shore, but +neither was the little girl so very tall. By standing on her tiptoes she +might have managed to keep her inquisitive nose out of the water, but +the naughty blue boat came swinging back to her rescue and she clutched +first the painter and then the side of the boat, screaming lustily as +she clung. + +The grey figure with the sandy hair ran lightly along the pier and with +one swoop gathered the child up into his arms. He might have saved +himself the trouble of taking off his coat and shoes, but he had seen +the child as she fell in the water and did not know what would be +required of him as life saver. Mildred was sobbing dolefully as she +buried her wet curls in the neck of her rescuer. + +"Your nurse should have looked after you," he muttered. + +"She had her husband to 'tend to," said Mildred, "an' I was a-keepin' +keer of myself. 'Sides she ain't my nurse but my 'loved aunty." + +"Oh! And who may you be?" + +"I'm Mildred Carbuncle Green." The family name of Molly's mother, which +was Carmichael, was thus perverted by this scion of the race. + +"And your aunt's name?" asked the young man as he picked up his +discarded coat and wrapped it around his burden. + +"She's Aunt Nance----" + +"Nance Oldham!" and he almost dropped little Mildred. "And you say she +was busy with her husband?" + +"Yessir! He keeps her busy mos' of the time." + +The rescue and this conversation had taken but a moment. In the +meantime, poor Nance had shoved her little husband back in the carriage +and was rapidly wheeling him towards the scene of disaster. + +She had recognized Andy McLean in the tall grey figure and sandy hair. +The moment he had spoken to her so sternly she had known it was he. At +that moment she envied no creature in the world so much as an ostrich. +If she could only bury her head in the sand. Why should Fate be so cruel +to her? Why should Andy McLean come back on her horizon at that moment +when she was neglecting her duty? But then, she reflected, if he had not +come back at that psychological moment either Mildred would have drowned +or Dodo broken his neck. She could not have rescued both of them at +once. Indeed, both of them might have been killed! The fact that the +water was shallow and Mildred could have walked out of it was no comfort +to Nance, nor did it allay her suffering and self-reproaches in the +least to know that almost every baby that has grown to manhood has at +one time or another fallen out of his carriage or bed, down the steps or +even out of the window. + +Andy McLean, too, was going through some uncomfortable moments as he +held the dripping child close in his arms and made his way across the +beach to Nance. There had never been a moment since he and Nance had +parted that he had not regretted his hasty words; but what good were +regrets? Nance could not have cared for him or she would have felt that +at her father's death he was the person to whom she must turn instead of +that Dr. Flint. As far as he could see, there was no reason under Heaven +why Nance should not have married him immediately. He knew nothing +of her mother's determination to give up her public life nor of her +decision to remain at home for Nance to nurse. He had not yet learned of +Mrs. Oldham's death, as he had arrived at Wellington only the evening +before, and Mrs. McLean, with a wisdom sometimes granted mothers, had +not mentioned Nance's name to him, much less the fact that she was even +then visiting the Greens. + +"Married! and so engrossed with her husband that she let little children +entrusted to her care fall in the water and almost fall out of baby +carriages! But where is the--the--cad?" was what Andy was thinking as he +approached the frantic Nance, who was pushing the carriage as for dear +life through the heavy sand. + +"Mildred! Mildred! You promised not to go near the water's edge!" + +"I never went near it but jes' ran out on the little wooden street. I +wasn't goin' to be naughty. I knowed I might get my feet wet down by the +edge so I walked on the planks. I never done nothin' nor nothin'! 'Twas +the bad little blue boat what wobbled." + +Nance and Andy both laughed at the amusing child. The laugh made matters +easier for them. + +Brown eyes looked into blue and then such a blush o'erspread their +countenances that a day's fishing under a summer sun could not have +accomplished. + +"You had better put her in the carriage--it is warm there and I can +carry Dodo." + +"No, I will keep her wrapped in my coat. That will be better." + +"But you--you might be cold." + +"Not at all! I never catch cold," shortly. + +Nance remembered otherwise, but there was nothing to do but turn and +wheel the baby back to the house on the campus. + +"I--you must think--I know I was careless to let such an accident happen +to my charges. I have no excuse--I was just thinking!" + +"About your husband, I fancy!" + +Again Nance's cheeks were crimson, remembering only too well what her +thoughts had been as she sat in the sand knitting. + +"I----" + +"Mildred told me about him," said Andy grimly. + +"Did she?" laughed Nance, thinking that Andy was speaking of Dodo, of +course. "He is a darling husband." + +"Humph!" They walked on in silence, Andy taking great strides with +Mildred clasped closely in his arms, while Nance wheeled the baby +carriage, almost running to keep up. + +"I don't know what to call you," said Andy at last. + +"Call me? Why, call me Nance! Why not? My name is still Nance no matter +what has happened." + +"I--I--perhaps he wouldn't like it." + +"Who?" + +"Your husband! Is it Flint?" + +"Andy McLean, you are a fool! There is no other word for you!" and Nance +grabbed Dodo from his carriage and ran up the steps, thankful that they +had arrived at the Square Deal. + +"If not Flint, who?" muttered Andy under his breath. "I am going to stay +here until I find out." + +Molly was not at home to receive her wet daughter. Nance and Katy rubbed +her down and dressed her while Andy waited miserably in the library. Why +had his mother not warned him that Nance Oldham was in Wellington? They +had had a long talk and she had told him news of all their old friends. +Molly and Edwin had been mentioned again and again but the fact that +they had a guest had been kept dark. He had never talked to his mother +about his break with Nance. A certain reticence in his make-up withheld +him. Many times he had longed to put his head in her lap and tell her +all about it. + +A great intimacy existed between Mrs. McLean and this only child, but +instead of his being like a daughter to her, as is the case sometimes +with a woman and an only child when that child happens to be a son, this +worthy mother had adjusted herself more into the relationship of an +elder brother to Andy. There were few if any subjects they could not +discuss together, but somehow he could not bring himself to tell her of +Nance. She had known they were engaged--that was easy to tell, and she +knew the engagement was no more--that was all. Mrs. McLean bided her +time. + +"They are young yet," she had said to her husband. "Some +misunderstanding has come up, but if they are really meant for one +another it will be explained away. If they can't forgive, then they +are not suited for mating." + +The good woman had been delighted beyond measure that Nance should be in +Wellington while her son was on his farewell visit to her, and she had +devoutly prayed that they might meet by chance, just as they had. Of +course she had not stipulated in her prayers that Andy should mistake +Nance for the Greens' nurse and reprimand her for carelessness; and then +fish Mildred out of the water; and get Dodo and the hated Dr. Flint +hopelessly mixed, and be called a fool for his blunder! + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +NANCE PACKS HER TRUNK + + +Molly, coming in hurriedly from her labors at the French War Relief +rooms where she had been engaged in making surgical dressings until her +back ached so that she had more sympathy for the poor wounded than ever, +if possible, found young Dr. McLean cooling his heels and drying his +coat by her library fire. + +"Andy! I am so glad to see you!" she cried, grasping both of his hands. +"When did you come? Did you know Nance Oldham is with me?" + +"Yes, I have seen her," grimly. + +"Oh, then you know of her trouble?" + +"Trouble! I shouldn't call it that. She evidently does not consider it +in that light." + +"Andy McLean, how can you say such a thing?" + +"Well, I formed my opinions from the evidence of my own eyes. In fact, +she told me with her own lips that she was contented; if not in so many +words, at least she gave me that impression." + +"Resigned, of course! That is Nance's way, but she is very sad and +lonesome for all that." + +"Lonesome! Ye Gods, how many does she want?" + +"Excuse me, Andy, but you are talking like a goose," declared Molly, +irritated in spite of herself. + +"Thank you, madam," he said, bowing low. "Your guest has just called me +a fool and now you call me a goose. I bid you good-by." + +"Good-by, indeed! Andy McLean, sit down here and let me send for your +father. I believe my soul you are in a fever or something." Molly pushed +him down in a chair near the fire. "Why, Andy, your coat is damp! Where +have you been?" + +She drew a chair by him and seated herself, looking anxiously into his +flushed face. Andy laughed in a hard tone. + +"Perhaps you are right, but don't send for Father. I got my coat wet in +a perfectly sane way, but perhaps you had better find out about that +from Mrs. Fl--Nance--I mean." + +Andy balked at that name of Mrs. Flint and then, besides, Nance had +called him a fool when he had hinted at the doctor's being the happy +man. At this juncture little Mildred came running into the library. + +"Mumsy! Mumsy! Is you heard 'bout me an' the blue boat?" + +"No, darling! But what makes your curls so wet?" + +"That was that baddest blue boat. It wouldn't stay still 'til I got +in--it jes' moved and moved--an' the little wooden street, it moved an' +moved an' I went kerblim! kersplash!" + +"In the lake! Oh, Mildred! I know you didn't mind Aunt Nance. Are you +cold? Did Aunt Nance get wet? Where is Dodo?" + +"You 'fuses me with so many ain't's an' do's and didn't's." + +"You tell me all about it," said the doting mother, trying to compose +herself as she gathered the first-born in her arms. + +"Well, you see, me'n' Aunt Nance we went a-walkin' an' we tooked Dodo +along an' my dolly, an' Aunt Nance she says that one use she ain't got +no husband is 'cause don't no husband want her, an' I done tol' her that +if Katy kin shrink her up some that Dodo kin be her husband. You see, +Mumsy, I been a-feelin' sorry for Aunt Nance ever since that time I mos' +went to sleep in her lap an' she talked about a beau lover what got to +fightin' with her an' she hit him back. She wetted my ear all up with +her tears. I jes' done thunk somethin'!" the child exclaimed, getting +out of her mother's lap and peering curiously into Andy's face. "Is you +the Andy what talked so crule to my Aunt Nance? 'Cause if you is, I'm +sorry you done pulled me out'n the lake." + +"Mildred! Mildred!" admonished Molly, but in her heart of hearts she +knew that what the enfant terrible was saying to the young doctor was +no doubt of a very salutary nature. He needed a good talking to and he +was getting it. + +"I am the one," said Andy meekly. + +"Well, when Dodo grows up to be big enough he is goin' to--to--cut you +up in little pieces. He's growin' up fast an' bein' a husband is makin' +him cut his teeth early----" + +"Molly Brown!" interrupted Andy McLean eagerly. "Is Nance not married?" + +"Married! The idea, Andy! Of course not!" + +"Yes, she is! She's married to Dodo Green. I married 'em this morning," +declared Mildred defiantly. + +"Oh, oh! I see it all now!" laughed Molly hysterically. "You were +talking about her mythical marriage while I was speaking of her mother's +death." + +"Her mother dead? I had not heard a word of it. Strange that so +important a woman as Mrs. Oldham should have died without my seeing it +mentioned in the paper." + +"But Mrs. Oldham dropped out of public life two years ago, when her +husband died, in fact. Nance had hardly rested from the long siege of +nursing her father before she began on her mother." + +Andy bowed his sandy-haired head in his hands and groaned: + +"Fool! Fool! Every kind of fool and goose you and Nance choose to call +me,--fool and knave! Bad-tempered brute! Jealous idiot! Oh, Molly, +please call Nance." + +When Nance had hurled her "fool" at Andy's sandy head, she flew +up-stairs, determined never to speak to him again. She longed for a few +quiet moments in her own room, but Mildred must be rubbed down and +dressed before she could seek retirement. She was sure he would leave +the house immediately. His coat was wet and no doubt his vest and shirt, +too, after having carried the dripping child such a distance. Of course +he would not want to call on the Greens while she was in the house. The +girl bitterly regretted having timed her visit so unfortunately. The +Greens and McLeans were very intimate, and would perforce see each +other often. She hated to be a wet blanket--a skeleton at the feast. She +determined to pack her trunk and go on a promised visit to an old +college friend then living in New York. Molly would object, she knew, +but it was surely best for all of them that she should take herself off +for a few weeks. + +Nance was always an orderly person and packing a trunk with her was a +very simple matter. She began in her usual systematic way and had +already folded her dresses neatly in the trays and was emptying the +bureau drawers when Molly's voice was heard calling her from the lower +hall. + +"Nance! Oh, Nance!" + +She sounded quite excited. No doubt she had just been informed of +Mildred's accident and wanted to hear the details of it. + +"Coming!" called Nance, hurrying down the steps. "Oh, Molly, what do you +think of me for taking out the children and almost drowning Mildred? And +while that was going on, little Dodo came within an ace of tumbling out +of the carriage on his precious sleepy head! You will never trust them +with me again." + +"Nonsense! Mildred is old enough not to try to get in boats alone, and +as for Dodo, Aunt Mary always said: 'Whin chilluns grows up 'thout ever +gittin' a tumble, they is sho' to be idjits.'" + +"Well, then, my real duty was to let him tumble," laughed Nance. "What +do you want with me, honey? I am very busy." + +"Not too busy to come in and talk with me a little while," insisted the +wily Molly, putting her arm around her friend's waist and leading her to +the library door. + +"I do want to talk to you a moment," agreed Nance. "Molly, I am going +away for a few weeks." They had reached the door, which was ajar, and +Andy, ensconced in the sleepy-hollow chair dear to the professor's +bones, could plainly hear the conversation. + +"Going away! You are going to do no such thing." + +"I must. There is no use in asking me why--you know why---- It is too +hard for me and there is no use in pretending it is not." + +"But, Nance----" + +"I have begun to pack and I will go to-morrow." + +Instead of the hospitable protestations characteristic of Molly, that +young housewife said not a word, but giving her friend a little push +towards the fireplace, she grabbed up Mildred and rushed from the room, +closing the door after her. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +A DAMP COAT + + +Andy undoubled himself with alacrity and sprang from the sleepy-hollow +chair. His stern face was softened and filled with a boyish eagerness. + +"Oh, Nance! Can't you forgive me?" + +"Excuse me, Dr. McLean, I did not know you were still here," and Nance +turned to leave the room. + +Andy with long strides reached the door first and with his back against +it held out beseeching hands. + +"Yes, I'm here and am going to stay here----" + +"Well, I am not! Please let me pass." Nance was filled with a righteous +indignation against Molly at having played this trick on her. + +"But, my dear, I must tell you what a fool I have been----" + +"That is not necessary. I know." + +Andy laughed. Nance had a laconic way of putting things that always +tickled his humor. + +"Now you sound like yourself, honey, but oh, please act like yourself! +The real Nance Oldham could not be so cruel as to go off without letting +me explain--I have no excuse--there could be none for my blind rage and +jealousy--none unless loving you too hard could be called one. Will you +listen to me?" + +"I shall have to unless I stop up my ears, since you stop up the +doorway." Nance was very pale and trembling. Two years of suffering +could not be done away with in a moment and the girl had surely +suffered. + +"Couldn't we sit down and let me tell you?" + +"We could!" + +Andy eagerly directed Nance to the sofa, but she sedately seated herself +in a small isolated sewing rocker. Andy accepted the amendment and +placed his chair as near to hers as the frigid atmosphere around her +permitted. + +"Before I explain I must apologize. I would have done it the very day +after that awful row we had, the very moment after it, if I had not +thought you hated me." + +"And now?" + +"And now I am going to apologize and explain, whether you hate me or +not. I could do it lots better if you would let me hold your hand while +I am doing it," but Nance drew Molly's knitting from a bag hung on the +back of the chair and declared her hands were otherwise occupied. Molly +had reached the purling end of a sleeveless sweater and no doubt would +be glad of Nance's expert assistance. + +"Nance, there never has been any other woman in my life but you, you and +my mother. You know perfectly well from the time I met you, when I was +at Exmoor College and you were here at Wellington, that you were the +only girl in the world for me. I had a kind of notion in my fool brain +that I was going to be the only man in the world for you. When we were +engaged I thought I was, but when I realized that Dr. Flint was paying +you such devoted attention, at your home constantly----" + +"My father's physician!" + +"Yes, I know,--but, honey, you see you were way up there in Vermont and +I was down in New York and I was hungry for you all the time, and when +your father died I thought you would pick right up and come to me--I +knew nothing of your mother's determination to stay with you--nothing of +her illness--nothing but that you were staying in the same town with +Flint and I must go back to New York. You did not tell me." + +"Well, hardly, after the way you raged and tore! I felt if you could +rage that way we had better separate." + +"But, my dear, I'll never rage that way again--I've learned my lesson. +Can't you forgive me?" Nance was silent. + +"I love you just as much as I always did,--more, in fact. When little +Mildred Green told me you had let her fall in the water because you were +so busy with your husband, I wanted to die that minute. Of course I +thought it was Flint. How could I know the child was playing a game with +you? Nance, do you hate me as much as you did that terrible day two +years ago?" + +"Yes!" Nance's answer was very low but Andy heard it. + +"Well, then, there is no use in saying any more," he sprang to his feet, +his face grey with misery. + +"I didn't hate you then at all--nor do I now." + +"Oh, Nance, don't tease me! Can you forgive me?" and poor Andy sank on +his knees and bowed his head on her knees. + +Nance's arms were around him in a moment. She hugged his sandy head to +her bosom with one hand and patted his back with the other while he gave +a great sob. + +"Andy McLean, you are still wringing wet. Get up from here this minute +and take off that coat and let me dry it! And your shirt is damp, too! +My, what a boy! Here, sit right close to the fire and dry that wet +sleeve." + +Andy meekly submitted in a daze. Nance's motherly attitude and sudden +melting were too much for him. The coat was hung by the fire to dry +while the young doctor stood helplessly by in his shirt sleeves. + +"And now, Andy, I'm going to apologize to you and ask you to forgive +me," declared Nance, stoutly trying to go on with her knitting. + +But Andy firmly took it from her and possessed himself of those busy +hands. + +"I was worse than you--when you said those hard things to me they hurt +like fury--you didn't know how they did hurt, but I did, and I should +not have done the same thing to you. I said worse things to you than you +did to me,--at least I tried to." + +"You did pretty well," said Andy whimsically, pressing one of the +imprisoned hands to his lips. + +"Dr. Flint did want to marry me; I guess he still does, but--but----" + +"But what, lassie?" Sometimes Andy dropped into his parents' vernacular. + +"I am not going to tell a man in his shirt sleeves why I didn't marry +Dr. Flint," said Nance firmly. "It is too unpicturesque." + +"Then I'll put on my coat." + +"No, you won't! I wouldn't tell a man in a wet coat, either." + +"Why not?" + +"Because I don't like to lay my brown head on a damp shoulder. Why don't +you do as I told you and dry that shirt sleeve? Hold it close to the +fire, sir!" + +"I won't do it unless you tell me why you didn't marry Dr. Flint." + +"Well, then, to keep you from catching your death of cold, I will +tell you, but remember I have saved your life. It was--it was +because--because he didn't have sandy hair and a bad temper," and Nance +was enfolded in the despised shirt sleeves and found a very nice dry +spot on which to lay her brown head. + +The sun had set and twilight was upon them. The front door opened to +admit the master of the house, but Molly was in ambush ready to catch +him to keep him out of the library. Kizzie had started in to mend the +fire but Molly stopped her. + +"Never mind the fire, Kizzie. It is all right for such a warm evening. +Give us tea in the den." + +"Why all of this mystery?" asked Edwin Green as he followed his wife +back to the den, going on tiptoe as she demanded. + +"Andy and Nance are in there." + +"Andy McLean! Fine! I want to see him. Won't he be here to tea? I'll go +in and speak to him." + +"You'll do no such thing! Edwin Green, you may be--in fact, are, a grand +lecturer on English, but you have no practical sense. Don't you know you +might break in just at the wrong moment and Andy may get off to France +without their making it up?" + +"Making up what? Who making up: the Allies and the central powers?" + +"Oh, Edwin, you know I mean Nance and Andy!" + +"What are they making up? If it is a row, let's go help them." + +"Not a soul shall go in that room until they come out, unless it is over +my dead body." + +"Well, well! I'd rather stay in this room with your live body than go in +there over your dead one," and the professor pulled his wife down on the +sofa by him, "especially if you will give me some tea," as Kizzie came +in grinning with the tea tray. + +"They's co'tin' a-goin' on in yander, boss. The fiah is low an' the +lights ain't lit, but Miss Molly she guard that do' like a cat do a +mouse hole. Cose Miss Nance ain't got no maw to futher things up for her +but Miss Molly is all ready to fly off an' git the preacher, seems +like." + +"I can't remember that things were made easy for me this way when I was +addressing my wife," complained Edwin as he stirred his tea with his arm +around his wife, a combination that could not have been made had his +arm not been long and Molly still slender. + +"Ungrateful man! Why, Judy and Kent took the bus from Fontainebleau to +Barbizon when they were simply dying to walk, just to give you a chance. +Have you forgotten?" + +"I haven't forgotten the walk--I never will--and if they really rode on +my account, I'll pass on the favor to other lovers and stay out of my +library until the cows come home; that is, if you will stay with me." + +Molly told him then of the whole affair and how Mildred had righted +matters, telling Andy just exactly the right thing to bring him to his +senses. + +"I am almost sure they have made up and are engaged again," sighed Molly +ecstatically. A romance was dear to her soul and being happily married +herself, she felt like furthering the love affairs of all her friends. + +"They are either engaged or dead," laughed Edwin. "Such silence +emanating from the library must bode extreme calamity or extreme +bliss. If it continues much longer I think it is my duty as a +householder to break in the door and offer congratulations or call the +coroner, as the case demands." + +"It is getting late. Maybe I had better go in and ask Andy to stay to +dinner." + +Molly, who had a deep-rooted objection to noise and usually talked in a +low tone, now spoke in a loud voice as she bumped her way along the +hall, pushing chairs and rattling the hat rack and calling out shrilly +to the amused husband following her. Strange to say, she could not +remember on which side of the door the knob was, although she had lived +several years in that house. She fumblingly hunted it and finally opened +the door with a great rattle. + +Nance was seated sedately knitting and Andy was holding his coat close +to the dying flames. The room was almost dark. + +"Kizzie should have lighted the lamp and attended to the fire," Molly +said briskly. Oh, Molly, how could you be so untruthful, blaming things +on poor Kizzie, too? (Molly's conscience did hurt her for dragging +Kizzie in and she gave the girl a long coveted blue hat that she had +meant to keep for second best, feeling that it might act as a salve on +her own tender, truth-loving soul. Kizzie, quite ignorant of the cause +for this generosity, gratefully accepted the hat and asked no +questions.) + +"Yes, it gets dark before one realizes," said Nance demurely. + +"Ahem!" from the professor. + +"Oh, Andy, your coat is still wet! Mildred told me you wrapped it around +her. I'll get you Edwin's smoking jacket and have your coat dried. You +must stay to dinner with us. I can 'phone your mother not to expect you +at home." + +Andy did not need much persuading, but accepted the invitation with +alacrity. Molly called up Mrs. McLean to ask for the loan of her son for +dinner. + +"Yes!" exclaimed that wise lady at the other end of the wire. "I have +been expecting a telephone call for the last half hour. You may keep him +but I shall wait up to see him when he gets home. I am sur-r-e he'll +have something to tell me. From my back window I saw Nance with the +perambulator full of babies on her way to the lake and I sent Andy off +for a walk, first putting a flea in his ear by suggesting that the lake +was getting shallower and shallower. He has always been that inquisitive +that I was sur-r-e he would make for that spot to find out why. I knew +that all those poor-r young folks had to do was to meet. Keep him, +Molly--and God bless you!" + +There was a little choking sound at the other end that Molly understood +very well. She hung up the receiver "with a smile on her lip but a tear +in her eye." It is all very well for a mother to be unselfish and want +her son to marry and to be happy, but there is a tug of war going on in +her heart all the time. + +"I know how I will feel when Dodo gets engaged," Molly said to Edwin +when she told him of what Mrs. McLean had said; but that young father +went off into such shouts of laughter, Molly had a feeling that mere man +could never understand a mother's heart. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +PLANS + + +"I have no idea of going through dinner without letting you and old Ed +know all about us!" said Andy as he took his place at Molly's hospitable +board. + +"What about you?" asked Molly, who was growing deceitful, her husband +feared. + +"About Nance and me! I can't keep it any longer," declared the happy +young doctor. Nance kept her eyes on her plate but her mouth was +twitching with amusement. + +"What about you and Nance?" solemnly asked the professor. + +"Why, we're engaged!" + +"No! Not really?" and Edwin grinned. + +"Oh, Andy! I'm so glad!" and Molly reached a hand out to her two +friends, who were perforce placed across the table from each other +since there were only four for dinner. + +Nance got up and kissed her hostess. "Oh, Molly, you are too lovely! +Don't you know that I know that Andy and I have not fooled you one +moment? Don't I see brandy peaches on the side table all ready for +dessert, and don't you know that I know that those precious articles are +only brought out on highdays and holidays? Isn't that fruit cake I +smell, that you know perfectly well you made and put away for next +Christmas so it would be ripe and get better and better?" + +"Well, I had to express my feelings somehow, and how did I know that you +and Andy were going to tell your secret this very evening? I knew I +mustn't say a thing until you two said something, and if I could not say +anything, I could at least feed you." + +"All I can say, Andy, is that if your experience in choosing a girl from +that class of 19-- is as fortunate as mine, you will be a pretty happy +man, and by Jove, I believe you are running me a mighty close second," +and to the astonishment of his wife, as Edwin Green was certainly a far +from demonstrative man, he actually jumped from his seat and embraced +Nance. Then Andy felt that he must kiss Molly, and Kizzie coming in at +this juncture almost dropped the dish she was carrying. + +"Sich a-carryin's on I never seed. I'm a-thinking you folks had better +sort yo'selves," and the girl went off chortling. + +"Now tell me your plans!" demanded Molly when they settled down to +dinner. Strange to say, they had got rather mixed up in the promiscuous +embracing that had been going on, and Edwin and Andy had changed places. +Edwin found himself seated at Molly's side while Andy had greatly +disarranged the table by plumping himself down by his Nance. + +"We are to be married immediately," announced Andy stoutly. + +Nance gasped. The fact was they had been so busy explaining the past and +living in the present while the fire had died so low in the library, +that the future had not been touched upon. + +"Of course I may start for France at any time now, but before I go I +mean to get me a war bride. It will be pretty bad leaving her, but then +the war can't last forever, and I have decided it is my duty to go help, +and I fancy it still is. When Uncle Sam steps in, maybe he can finish up +things in a hurry. Then I can get back to Nance." + +"Get back to me, indeed! If you think you are going without me, Andy +McLean, you are vastly mistaken. If it is your duty to go help, it is my +duty, too. Oh, I know I am no trained nurse, but I can do lots of other +things. Dr. Flint says I am better than most trained nurses----" + +Nance stopped short. She should not have mentioned Dr. Flint. Only +suppose it had hurt Andy's feelings! Not a bit of it! + +"Bully for Flint!" cried the accepted lover. "Oh, Nance, would you go +with me?" + +"I can scrub and cook and take care of babies." + +"I don't know about that," teased Andy. + +"But you will always be near and pull them out of the water when I let +them fall in," suggested Nance. "Won't you?" + +"That I will! Just as near as I can get!" and Andy hitched his chair a +little closer, thereby disarranging the table even more than he had done +before. But although Molly was a very careful housekeeper and most +particular about the looks of her table, she cared not one whit, but +beamed on Andy as though he were the pink of propriety instead of a +naughty boy. + +What a change a little lovering had made in the appearance of both Nance +and Andy! The girl's clear skin was flushed and her eyes sparkling. The +corners of her mouth had no trace of downward tendency now. The years of +sadness and confinement spent in nursing her father and mother were +forgotten. Nance had come into her own--her woman's heritage: to be +beloved, to be guarded and cherished; at the same time to know that she +was to be the companion, the helpmeet. As for Andy,--he beamed with +joy. His face had lost the stern lines that had so distressed his +mother. He looked again like the boy he was, not like the tired, +disappointed man she had known of late. + +Nance had no romantic notions of what life in France meant in that +early spring of 1917. She knew that there was no room for drones and +unproductive consumers in that war-worn country. She knew that in +marrying Andy and going with his unit she was to face work, privations, +danger, even death; but with her eyes open she was determined to see it +through. + +"I would enlist in the United States army," Andy said to his host after +dinner, as they lounged in the den and puffed away at their comforting +pipes, "but I feel that I can be of more good right now in France where +they are crying out for surgeons." + +"It can't be many days now before war is declared," sighed Edwin. "By +jiminy! I hate myself for not being able to get in the game." + +"Too bad, old man! A fellow with a wife and two children has to think of +them." + +"Of course! I wouldn't let Molly know how I feel about it for any +thing. I am not so young as I was, but I am stronger now than I was as a +youth. As for my eyes--they are good enough eyes in glasses and my bald +head would be no drawback." Edwin always would call his sparsely covered +top "bald," but Molly, by diligent care, had made two blades of grass +grow where only one had grown before, and with a microscope one could +see the beginnings of a fuzzy crop of hair, at least so the fond wife +insisted. + +"I bet she would say go, if it were put to her," said Andy. + +"I'll not do it, though! It wouldn't be fair." + +"Well, if it is put up to her, I bet on Molly Brown!" + + + + +CHAPTER X + +ALL THE OLD GIRLS + + +"I've got a wonderful scheme, Edwin," said Molly when she had finally +engineered her husband out of the den and Nance in. + +"I'll be bound you have. I never saw such a Mrs. Machiavelli!--First I +mustn't go in the library but stick to the den, and now that I had just +made myself at home in the den I must flee to the library." + +Molly laughed at her husband's pretended discomfiture as he settled +himself to find out what was going on at the front. + +"Now read the news to me while I knit. There is no knowing how soon our +own boys will be needing sweaters. I feel that every stitch I put in is +important. Mercy, what a mess my knitting is in! I do believe that +little monkey of a Mildred has been working on it. But she can't purl +at all! Someone else has done it. No one has been here but Andy." + +"Well, I can't think Andy McLean would attempt a sweater," laughed +Edwin. "Maybe Nance is responsible." + +"But Nance is a past master!" + +"She might have been trying a one-handed stunt and failed. I don't +believe even Prussian efficiency could knit and get proposed to and +accept all at the same time. Under the circumstances I think she should +be forgiven for purling where she should have knitted and knitting where +she should have purled." + +"You sound like the prayer book," said Molly, patiently pulling out +stitches and deftly picking up where Andy asked to hold Nance's hand. "I +almost feel as though I were committing a sacrilege. This sweater is +like a piece of tapestry where the lady has recorded her emotions, using +the medium she knew best. I just know dear old Nance tried to go on with +her work all the time Andy was making love," and Molly wiped a wee tear +off on the ball of yarn. + +"I tell you that sweater could tell tales if it could speak," teased +Edwin. "Why don't you sew in one of your golden hairs so that the happy +soldier who finally gets it will have some inkling of how the beautiful +girl looks who made it?" + +"Silly! But don't you want to hear what my scheme is?" + +"Dying to!" + +"I am going to try to get the old Queen's girls, that is our 'special +crowd, to come to Nance's wedding. Katherine and Edith Williams are both +in New York; Judy is there; Otoyo Sen is in Boston; Margaret Wakefield +is in Washington; Jessie Lynch is in Philadelphia----" + +"Are there no husbands?" + +"Oh, yes, plenty of them, but I'm not going to invite husbands! The +babies can come if the mothers can't leave them, but the husbands are +not invited. Katherine Williams and Jessie Lynch are the only ones who +are still in single blessedness." + +"Are you going to have them all stay here?" asked Edwin in amazement, +never having quite accustomed himself to Molly's wholesale hospitality. + +"Of course! I can manage it finely. That will be only six extra ones. +Why, at Chatsworth we had that much company any time. This house is +really almost as big as Chatsworth and there we had our huge family to +put away besides." + +"All I can say is that you are a wonder, but please don't break yourself +down over this wedding. What does Nance say to it?" + +"I haven't asked her, but I know she is dying to see all the girls +together. We have often talked about it, and wedding or no wedding I was +going to try to get them here this next month. Otoyo has already +promised to come, you remember, and now she can just hurry up and get +here for the wedding. She will have to bring Cho-Cho-San, who is just a +bit older than Mildred. They can have great times together. You don't +mind, do you, honey?" + +"Mind! Of course not! You know I like company. I was just afraid you +were giving yourself too large an order." + +Nance, on being consulted, thought it would be wonderful to see all the +old girls again before embarking on her great adventure, so letters were +forthwith written and sent to the six friends, who one and all joyfully +accepted. Business, husbands, babies, society were to be left behind for +this grand reunion of the old Queen's crowd. + +Otoyo Sen, now Mrs. Matsuki, whose exceedingly regretfully but honorable +husband was gone on short journey and baby Cho-Cho-San must stay with +humble mother for the wedding. As Molly had expected to have the child, +this was as it should be. + +Katherine had demanded leave from the lectures she was delivering, and +Edith had an excellent nurse for her baby and could leave her family +easily. Margaret Wakefield had no children and was able to cancel the +many engagements that such an important person was sure to have, and her +house was in such good running order that her husband, the rising young +congressman, would want for nothing in her absence. Jessie Lynch had +declined two luncheons, a dinner dance, and a theatre party, besides +breaking as many more engagements in order to come to this wedding of +the old college friend. Jessie was still unmarried although she had been +the one that the prophecy had married off first. Pretty little Jessie +had so many lovers it was hard to choose among them. + +The very first reply was from Judy and she, Judy-like, answered in +person. She blew in at nightfall with a huge suitcase, many parcels and +her gay chintz knitting bag stuffed full of various things besides +knitting. + +"Kent was dying to come but I told him no children and dogs were +allowed," announced that glowing young matron as she dropped her +belongings, scattering them all over the library floor, and rushed +around kissing and hugging everybody in the room. "I have come to help. +I know you, Molly! You always act like triplets when there is any work +on hand, and I know you, too, Nance! Your New England conscience will +make you neglect Andy rather than seem to shirk work. I am here to sweep +and dust and cook, take care of babies, or even to flirt with Andy if +Nance does not look after him. I am going to dress the bride; find +Edwin's collar buttons and studs for his dress shirt; see that the best +man has the ring safe in his pocket; pay the preacher; put in the supply +of rice and old shoes--in fact," she sang: + + "'Oh, I am a cook and a captain bold, + And the mate of the Nancy brig, + And a bo'sun tight, and a midshipmite, + And the crew of the captain's gig.'" + +The Greens had been sitting quite sedately around the lamp engaged in +their various occupations when Judy burst in on them. The professor was +getting up a lecture for the morrow, Mildred was cutting out paper +dolls, and Molly and Nance had for the moment put down their eternal +knitting and were giving their attention to whipping on lace for the +modest trousseau. But the whirlwind that came in swept aside all sane +business. Needles were hastily thrust in cloth; thimbles were mislaid; +paper dolls dropped for something livelier; and lecture preparation +abandoned. When Judy, after the breathless announcement of having come +and her reasons for coming, began on the Nancy Bell, Edwin sprang to his +feet and, joining in the dance that Judy was improvising, sang in a +rollicking mixture of tenor and baritone: + + "'And he shook his fist and tore his hair, + Till I really felt afraid, + For I couldn't help thinking the man had been drinking, + And so I simply said: + + "'Oh, elderly man, it's little I know + Of the duties of men of the sea, + And I'll eat my hand if I understand + However you can be + + "'At once a cook and a captain bold, + And the mate of the Nancy brig, + And a bo'sun tight, and a midshipmite, + And the crew of the captain's gig.'" + +Little Mildred clapped her hands to see her dignified father cutting +pigeon wings. She had yet to learn that dignity and Mrs. Kent Brown +could not stay in the same room. + +"Oh, Judy! It is good to see you," gasped Molly when the chorus, in +which all of them joined, had been sung over twice. "What a Judy you +are, anyhow!" + +"Let me take your suitcase up-stairs," suggested Edwin. + +"And I will carry your parcels," insisted Nance, who was happy indeed +over seeing her old college friend again. + +"There is not a bit of use in taking a thing up-stairs. All of my +clothes are in the knitting bag. Those parcels are wedding presents and +the suitcase is full of all kinds of plunder. This big bundle is a tea +basket from Kent and me. You and Andy can go to housekeeping in it. We +thought you would rather have it than silver or cut glass, since you are +going where there are no side boards to speak of." + +"Oh, Judy, how splendid! It is exactly what I have been longing for," +cried Nance, opening the charming Japanese basket. "Only look, plates, +cups and saucers, tea pot, coffee pot, sugar bowl, cream pitcher, +spoons, knives, forks, cannisters for coffee, tea, sugar, crackers, hard +alcohol stove, chafing dish and tea kettle! All packed in two square +feet of basket!" + +"A regular kitchen cabinet!" declared Molly. "Nobody but Nance could +ever get them packed again in the right place, I am sure, Nance and +Otoyo, perhaps." + +"I just know Otoyo is going to bring her one like mine! I never thought +of that when I got it. I saw it at Vantine's and simply fell in love +with it. I wanted it so bad myself I got it for Nance. If Otoyo does +bring one, I will exchange mine," said Judy generously. + +"Indeed no! I wouldn't mind having two one bit and I am certainly not +going to give up my very first wedding present," blushed Nance. + +"Here is a steamer rug from dear old Mary Stuart. See how warm and soft +it is! This is a pocket set of Shakespeare from Jimmy Lufton! He brought +it to the train!" + +"But how lovely! I didn't dream of getting any presents," said Nance. + +"How did they know about Nance?" asked Molly. + +"I 'phoned them! I got your letter while Kent was at the armory so I +just called up everybody I knew and told them the news. There is no +telling what the excess calls will amount to, but I had either to do +that or burst! 'Phoning is cheaper than bursting. + +"Now I bet you can't guess what is in this great round box," said the +effervescent Judy. + +"Your wedding hat!" solemnly suggested Edwin. + +"Hat your grandmother! Guess again!" + +"A German bomb!" + +"No! Cold, cold! You'll never get it! It is a wedding cake sent by +Madeline Petit and Judith Blount. Now what do you think of that?" + +"Wonderful!" cried Molly, as she lifted the cake from its careful +packing. "Fruit cake with white icing! How on earth did they happen to +do it?" + +"You see I 'phoned them, too, because I always did like little Madeline +in spite of the fact that she talks a fellow's ear off. I am not so fond +of Judith, but I do admire her. She has spunked up so splendidly and +taken her medicine like a man. She and Madeline are doing a thriving +business in a swell part of town with tea rooms and all kinds of fancy +cakes. Judith was the one who suggested sending the cake, Madeline told +me. She said Judith said she knew Molly Brown would work herself to +death over the wedding and she, for one, was going to send something to +help out Molly. She said you were just goose enough to make the cake at +home." + +"I had planned to do it," laughed Molly. "I was going to start +to-morrow." + +"This huge box is candy to eat right now--that is Kent! I am almost +afraid to eat it. He wanted to come so bad that he might have poisoned +it for spite." + +"Why didn't you let him come? Dear old Kent!" exclaimed Molly. + +"Well, I knew perfectly well that it is some job to sleep seven persons +outside of one's own household, and it is doubly difficult when there +are two sexes. Kent is as busy as can be anyhow: drilling day and +night." + +Kent Brown had taken the training at Plattsburg and was then engaged in +passing on this training to a company of militia in New York. He and +Judy were eagerly awaiting the declaration of war by the United States. +There was no such thing as neutrality for them. Having been in France in +that August of 1914, Judy considered herself already at war and Kent +enthusiastically shared the sentiments of his wife. He was prepared to +leave his profession of architecture, in which he was proving himself +very successful, and join any regiment that was likely to see service. + +Judy had done exactly what the Marquis d'Ochtè had asked her to do: she +had come back to New York and plunged into war relief work. Because of +her enthusiasm and untiring energy she had been of great assistance in +recruiting workers. Her admiring husband said that she was what one +might call a real booster. Any campaign Judy plunged in was sure to be a +whirlwind campaign. She had her father's capacity for infinite work. Up +to a certain period it had evinced itself in the form of infinite play, +but now that the serious side of life had presented itself to her, the +girl was working quite as hard as she had ever played. There was never +anything half-way about our Judy. In New York she was canvassing for +suffrage, keeping up her painting, and with her own hands cutting and +folding enough surgical dressings to fill the peace ship, besides +rounding up many workers for the cause. With it all she managed to be a +very satisfactory wife and housekeeper. She and Kent were blissfully +happy. There were red letter days in their calendar when both of them +stopped working and went on some mad frolic. They had made many friends +in New York, friends with whom they both worked and played. They had a +hospitable apartment where the redoubtable Ca'line reigned in the tiny +kitchen, Ca'line, trained by Mrs. Brown at Chatsworth and chastened by +dear old Aunt Mary until she "knowed her place an' kep' it." + +Isn't it fun to see Judy again? I hope my readers feel as glad for her +to come bounding into these pages as the Greens and Nance Oldham did +when she opened the door of the library at the Square Deal and, +upsetting everything, scattered papers and parcels hither and yon, her +vivid personality permeating every corner of the room. + +Just before Judy said good-night, she paused and exclaimed, "I must tell +you, Molly, how much I enjoy the dear little Virginia girls you have +passed on to me. The Tucker twins and Page Allison are just about the +nicest girls I know, and Mary Flannagan is a duck. I used to be an awful +snob about college girls,--somehow, I thought girls who did not go to +college were not worth knowing, but I have changed my mind since I have +met these girls. They are an interesting lot and as far as I can see +know as much as we do." + +"I knew you would like them. I simply fell in love with them last spring +in Charleston. Have you met their father?" + +"No, but he must be some father! The girls call him Zebedee, which +appeals to me, having always called mine Bobby." + +"Zebedee? What a strange name!" said Nance. + +"They say it is because nobody ever believes he is their father and so +they want to know: 'Who is the father of Zebedee's children?' It seems +he is only about twenty years older than they are and is one of those +persons who never gets on in years. They declare they are really more +mature than he is and not nearly so agile," laughed Judy. + +"I have been meaning to ask them to Wellington and must certainly do it +before they go back to Richmond," declared Molly, on hospitality bent as +usual. + +"All right, honey, but let's get Nance safely married and the wedding +feast disposed of," insisted Judy, who thought her brother-in-law looked +a little alarmed, fearing that Molly might decide that this was as good +a time as any to have the Tuckers and Page Allison visit them. + +"Of course! I didn't mean now but later on, although it is a pity to put +it off too long," teased Molly, seeing the worried look on Edwin's face. +"I might make up two bunks on the pantry shelves and let one of them +sleep in the bath tub." + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +AN INTERESTING COUPLE + + +"I came from New York with a very interesting couple," said Judy the +next day as she vigorously stitched away at some of the wedding finery. +"Of course I talked to them--I always talk to the interesting persons I +meet traveling." + +"So do I," said Molly as she finished a garment and put it aside for +Kizzie to press. + +"I never do," sighed Nance. "I do wish I had some of your and Judy's +warm-heartedness." + +"Nonsense! Your heart is just as warm as any that beats," objected +Molly. "Ask Andy!" + +"You see, honey, Vermont is Vermont and Kentucky is Kentucky! Persons +from Kentucky haven't quite as hard shells as the ones from Vermont, but +when once you get below the shell the kernel is about the same. You and +Molly couldn't be any more alike than Kentucky beeches and Vermont +pines," said Judy, pausing long enough in her labors to give Nance an +encouraging pat. + +"Yes, and pines stay green all the year around," said Molly. "It is much +better to be a pine than a beech." + +"Well, tell us about the interesting couple," laughed Nance, much +comforted. + +"They were from Alsace but were very French in their sympathies. They +looked a little German but they spoke beautiful French except that they +did have a tendency to call Paris 'Baree.' They love Paris as much as I +do. The man, Misel is his name, Monsieur Jean Misel,--is the best +informed person I have seen for many a day. He knows the war situation +as few persons do, I am sure. He seems to have been everywhere and known +everybody. He even knew my father,--at least, knew all about him and was +greatly interested in the fact that Bobby is soon to sail for France to +help rebuild the roads. Madame Misel is much quieter than her husband +but is very intelligent, I am sure. With all her reserve, she never +misses a trick." + +"Where was this interesting couple going?" asked Molly. + +"Coming right here to Wellington! They have taken a cottage in the +village and mean to live here. He is writing and she wants to do war +work." + +"How splendid!" cried Molly. "We need workers more than I can tell you. +The students give what time they can, but a full college course is about +all a normal girl can take care of in the way of work." + +"You must call on them right off, Molly. I will go with you and Edwin +must go, too. I know he will like Monsieur Misel." + +"I'll ask him, but Edwin is sure to want to know why this lover of Paris +is not fighting for France." + +"Ah, the poor fellow! He is quite lame--walks with a cane and a crutch. +He hinted rather darkly that his lameness is in some way due to the +Germans, but I do not know in just what way. He was sensitive about his +affliction, so his wife told me when he left us and went in the smoker, +so naturally I did not ask him how the Germans were responsible for it. +He is a young man, too, that is under forty, and very handsome." + +Professor Green was quite interested in what Judy had to tell him of the +Misels. He promised to call with Molly and do all he could to make +Wellington pleasant for them. He looked forward with pleasure to the +conversations Judy assured him he would enjoy with that highly educated +gentleman. Holding the chair of English in a woman's college is not bad, +but there were times when Edwin Green longed for more man talk. He and +Dr. McLean were sworn friends and saw much of each other, but they both +of them welcomed with enthusiasm any masculine newcomer. + +"I wonder if your friend could teach French, Judy," asked her +brother-in-law. "Miss Walker is quite put to it for the end of the term. +The French professor took French leave last week. He seemed too old to +hold anything more weighty than a pen, but he has gone to fight." + +"That is the terrible part of it," sighed Judy. "They say all the +superannuated dancing masters and French teachers are leaving to take up +arms. It means that France is having a hard time. Why, oh why, don't we +hurry up and get in the game?" + +The call was made and Molly and her husband were quite as enthusiastic +as Judy had been over the charms of the new neighbors. Monsieur Misel +seemed the very person to take up the labors of the flown French +professor, and Miss Walker accordingly engaged him. Molly felt she must +have them to dinner in spite of the fact that she was deep in the +preparations for the wedding. + +"I'll have a very simple dinner and not make company of them, just make +them feel at home," she declared, and her husband and Nance and Judy +smiled knowingly. Molly always would have company and there was no use +in trying to stop her. + +"I know when I die she will feel called upon to give me a good wake," +laughed Edwin. + +"Certainly, if people come hungry to your funeral, I'll feed them," +answered Molly. + +"Are our new friends, the Misels, hungry?" + +"Not hungry for food, but they must be lonely so far away from their +country and friends. Anyhow, they are invited now and have accepted, so +there is no use in teasing me. You just see that there are cigars here +for Monsieur Misel to smoke after dinner, and I'll attend to the rest." + +How sad it was to see a man of Misel's beauty a hopeless cripple! He was +a tall, stalwart fellow with a military bearing which the use of a +crutch and cane could not take from him. His lameness had not affected +the comeliness of his limbs or his erect carriage. He had very courteous +manners and it seemed to be very hard on him not to spring from his seat +when a lady entered the room. + +On the evening of Molly's informal dinner when Nance, who was the only +member of the household who had not met the strangers, came into the +library, Misel stood up to be introduced, but his wife gave a low cry of +alarm and sprang to his assistance, eagerly placing his crutch in one +hand, his cane in the other. He sank to his seat with a smothered groan. + +"Jean, Jean! What am I to do with you?" said Madame Misel irritably. "He +is so imprudent," apologetically to Molly, who had tears in her eyes at +this exhibition of courage and weakness. She could well understand how +Monsieur Misel's courteous desires could get the better of his strength. + +Andy McLean was present and the doctor in him immediately became +interested in the pitiable case. He had none of the hesitation Judy had +shown in regard to questioning the Misels concerning the cause of the +lameness. + +"What is your trouble?" he asked bluntly. "If you can stand without +support as you did a moment ago, I see no reason why you cannot be +cured." + +"In time! In time!" said Misel with patient resignation. + +"He has had the best medical attention," put in his wife. + +Madame Misel usually spoke with a kind of slow hesitation, but now her +words came rapidly. She had the air of trying to shield her husband from +farther questioning on the part of Andy. Andy, however, was totally +oblivious of this fact and went on. + +"Who is his surgeon?" + +"The great F----, in Baree!" + +"What did he say?" asked Andy, impressed by the name. + +"He--he--said--nerve centres--disturbed," answered Madame, returning to +her hesitating speech. She did not stammer at all but seemed to pause to +choose her words. + +"If I can be of any assistance to you, I hope you will call on me," said +Andy kindly. + +In the meantime Misel sat with his hands over his eyes as though in +great pain and his wife hovered over him solicitously. + +Dinner was soon announced and this time the lame man arose very +cautiously and made his way slowly to the dining-room. + +"Kindly--go--in--front--of--us," faltered Madame, and Molly marshalled +her family and guests so that the Misels might bring up the rear. She +fully appreciated how the wife felt about wanting to be the one to +assist her poor lame husband. If her Edwin had been so crippled no one +should have helped him but his own wife. + +Molly turned to smile on the poor woman for whom her heart was sore. She +could well understand the misery it must bring to see one most dear +having to suffer so acutely. There was a dark place in the hall leading +to the dining-room and the hostess feared the poor lame man might +stumble there, so she stopped to warn him of a rug. She distinctly heard +Madame say to her husband in no gentle tones but with an asperity almost +malevolent: + +"_Narr! Narr!_" + +Molly began assiduously to hunt in the archives of her brain for the +small German vocabulary which she could call her own. + +"_Narr!_ What can _narr_ mean?" the question kept recurring to her as +dinner progressed. She visualized lists of words in a worn old blank +book used at school. "_Narr_, _Nase_, _Nesse_, _Nest_!" She tried to +remember the English on the opposite page. How well she remembered the +little old book wherein was written the despised German exercises. The +script in itself had been almost impossible to learn and as for +mastering the language,--she had been so half-hearted about it that she +had not been compelled to keep it up. + +"_Narr_, _nase_, _nesse_, _nest_!" ran through and through and over and +over in her mind. Suddenly just as Professor Green asked her what she +would say to adjourning to the library, the list of English words +flashed on her brain. + +"'Fool, nose, nephew, nest'!" she cried audibly. + +"What?" Edwin feared his Molly had gone crazy. + +"Oh--I--I--mean, yes--coffee in the library!" and she arose from her +seat in confusion. + +Why should that calm-looking, slow-speaking woman call her poor lame +husband a fool? _Narr! Narr!_ It was certainly strange. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +AN OLD-TIME PARTY + + +The first one of the old girls to arrive was Otoyo, Mrs. Matsuki, with +the little Cho-Cho-San. Otoyo had changed not at all in the years that +had elapsed since college days. Perhaps an added matronly dignity was +hers, but this was not much in evidence when she was with her dear old +friends. She was beautifully and elegantly dressed. All her clothes were +made of the most exquisite fabrics. Her blouses were of the finest and +sheerest, if of linen; and the heaviest and richest, if of silk. Her +furs were the furriest and her suits of the most approved cut and +material. Her little boots were a marvel of fit and style. + +"Perfect, like a Japanese puzzle!" Judy declared. "Every little part +made to fit every other little part!" + +"Yes, and the whole a wonderful creation like some rare print or bit of +pottery!" agreed Molly. + +Otoyo had adapted herself to the manners and customs of her adopted +country, wearing them with the same grace she did the garments. She had +an English nurse for the little Cho-Cho-San and the child was being +reared as much like American children as possible. A tiny little thing, +she was, with coal black hair and slanting eyes. There was much mischief +peeping from those eyes around the tip-tilted nose. The mouth was a +crimson bow, ever ready to break into a tinkling laugh. She and Mildred +rushed together as though their short lives had been spent waiting for +this opportunity. Mildred was younger by several months but taller by +several inches than the little Japanese. What a picture the two children +made! Mildred, with her red gold hair curling in little ringlets all +over her head, her round rosy face and wide hazel eyes, was exactly the +opposite to Cho-Cho-San, with her straight, bobbed, ebony black hair, +her oval, olive face and almond eyes. + +"I b'lieve I can tote you," said Mildred, who often used words current +in Kizzie's vernacular. + +"Tote! Tote! What is tote?" and the tinkling laugh rang out like glass +chimes assailed by a sudden gust of wind. + +"Why I tote my dolly--an' Mr. Murphy totes the coal--an'--an' Daddy +totes his books to lexures--an'--an'--" + +"May I tote something, also?" + +"Oh, yes, you can tote Dodo. He's my baby brother." + +"Oh, I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee!" and the little thing danced in glee. +"My honorable mother told me when I came for a visit to her friends that +it would be all 'appiness." The English nurse had left her stamp upon +her charge just as Kizzie had upon Mildred. The occasional dropping of +an h was the result. Cho-Cho-San's lingo was most amusing with its +mixture of Cockney and Japanese. + +"You'd look 'zactly like my Jap dolly if you only had a bald spot on +top," said Mildred as she led her new friend to the sunny nursery where +she and Dodo reigned supreme with the Irish Katy to do their bidding. + +"And phwat Haythen is this?" cried Katy when she saw the little Japanese +girl. "And ain't she the cutey?" + +"She's my bes' beloved," announced Mildred. "Me'n' Cho-Cho-San is gonter +be each other's doll babies. I'm a-gonter be her kick-up dolly an' she's +gonter be my Jap dolly." + +"Oh, I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee!" was all the tiny Haythen could say +as she danced around the nursery. + +"Aunt Nance done said we could be her flower girls, too," went on the +loquacious Mildred. "We's all gonter get married day after another day." + +"All the doll babies going to be married!" sang the guest. "Kick-up +dolls and Japanese dolls!" + +The Williams girls arrived next and close on their heels Margaret and +Jessie. I cannot bring myself to designate the girls by their married +names any more than they could one another. Husbands were not much in +evidence at that gathering. The talk was all of the past. Of course +Andy, the soon-to-be husband, was allowed some consideration, although +the first night after the arrival of the guests even he was debarred and +the old chums had a kimono party in the library. The host fortunately +had an engagement that took him from home, otherwise he would have had +to spend his evening shut up in his den. + +The revellers opened the ball by singing "Drink her down," to each one +in the crowd. Molly's old guitar was brought out and Otoyo produced a +tiny ukelele which added much to the harmony. After the singing was +finished and every one drunk down, the words that were used most often +were: "Do you remember?" All of the scrapes were recalled and talked +over. Bits of gossip were recounted that had never come to light before, +the noblesse oblige of the college spirit having kept matters dark, but +now that the years had rolled by there seemed to be no longer reason for +silence. + +"I'd like to get into some mischief this very night!" cried Judy. "I've +been good and pious so long I feel like whooping life up a bit." + +"I'm game," drawled Katherine Williams. + +"Did I hear an aye from the eminent educator?" questioned Judy. + +"That's me!" + +"I'll do whatever it is if I don't have to walk too far," said lazy +Jessie. + +"But what are you to do?" from Margaret, in whom the spirit of adventure +was not so rampant. + +"Listen to the Gentleman from Missouri!" cried Judy. "Come on and we'll +show you." + +"I like very muchly to be in the vehicle of musicians but I also like +muchly to know what is the ultimately destination," said Otoyo softly. + +"She means the band wagon! She means the band wagon!" cried Judy. "Oh, +my dear little Otoyo, if you were changed I could not bear this sad grey +world." + +"Others, too, have notly changed," said Otoyo slyly. + +"What are you planning, Judy honey?" asked Molly, laughing. + +"I haven't any plan--nothing but something crazy and adventurous. I am +dead tired of being so good and proper. I have rolled bandages and drawn +threads and cut gauze until I feel like a machine. I want to have a +romantic adventure. I'd like to put a tick-tack on Miss Walker's +window--I'd like to burn asafetida on the teacher's stove, or put red +pepper in the Bible so when she opens it to read she would sneeze her +head off. I might content myself with making an apple pie bed for my +dear brother-in-law----" + +"Oh, please not that!" begged Molly. "My supply of sheets is stretched +to the limit." + +"O. Henry would advise you to go out in the night and await Adventure. +Adventure is always just around the corner. Step up to him and tap him +on the shoulder," suggested Katherine. + +"It is very comfortable in here," purred Jessie. + +"Infirm of purpose!" cried Judy. + +"Well, I'm not infirm of purpose," said Molly. "I've been purposing all +along to have a Welsh rarebit and make some cloudbursts and I'm still +going to do it. If you Don Quixotes want to go off and hunt trouble in +the meantime, though, you are welcome, only don't stay too long." + +"Ain't Molly the broad-minded guy, though? Live and let live was always +Molly. Aren't you coming, Nance?" And Judy sprang from her cross-legged +position on the rug ready for any fray. "Come on, Margaret! Come on, +Edith." + +"Don't you know Edith is too stuffy to do such a thing? She's afraid her +perfectly good husband would not approve," teased her sister. + +"No such thing, but I'm not going. I mean to help Molly. You crazy kids +go get in all the trouble you want to. Me for the house this night!" + +"And Margaret? You, too, must keep the 'home fires burning,' I fancy." + +"I am going to stir the rarebit," announced Margaret firmly. + +"I'm going to pick out nuts for the cloudbursts," purred Jessie. + +"I must whip lace," blushed Nance. + +"Oh, you middle-aged persons! I bite my thumb at you!" cried Judy. "Who +among you is young enough to go hunt adventure?" + +"I told you I intended to go," said Katherine, looking rather longingly +at the crowded shelves of poetry that she was simply dying to poke in. +"No one is going to call me middle-aged." + +"And I, too, will take greatly pleasure to knock the kindling from the +shoulder of Adventure," said little Otoyo. + +"She means the chip! She means the chip!" screamed the delighted Judy. +"Oh, Otoyo, I love you in all the world next to my immediate family!" + +It took but a moment to slip on great coats over kimonos and then, +heavily veiled, the three adventuresses started forth, with admonitions +from Molly not to be gone more than half an hour. + +"And please don't get arrested!" she called after them. "Kent says he +always expects Judy to get arrested some day. This spirit of adventure +seizes her every now and then and nothing will stop her." + +"It is well it struck her here at Wellington instead of in New York. She +can't get into very much mischief here," laughed Edith. + +"She could in the old days," put in Margaret, "but now that she is not +compelled to keep rules I fancy she will not care to break them. What a +Judy she is! It must be great to have her in the family, Molly." + +"Indeed it is! She is the favorite in-law with the whole lot of Browns. +Mother adores her and all the boys think she is just about perfect. Even +Aunt Clay can't help liking her." + +"I wonder what they will find to-night. I almost wish I had left the +lace off of this old camisole and gone with them," said Nance. + +"I think you need not hunt adventure right now," drawled Jessie. "Any +girl who is deliberately getting married and going to the war zone will +have enough to keep her busy for a lifetime. I don't believe they will +do more than go to the drug store and get limeades." + +"You don't know Judy and Katherine," said Edith, "and little Otoyo with +her determination to knock the kindling from the shoulder of Adventure. +I wonder what Mr. Matsuki would say if he could know that his sedate +little wife is engaged in such a harum scarum pursuit." + +"Why, he would just smile and bow and look more like an ivory Buddha +than ever. Otoyo has the charming little gentleman completely under her +thumb. She works a kind of mental jiu jitsu on him and he just lets her +have her way. The joke of it is he thinks she is the most docile, +obedient little wife in all the world, and so she is. She simply makes +him want what she wants," explained Molly. + +Molly was busily engaged in the preparations for the midnight feast. It +would have been simpler and easier just to have gone to the kitchen and +made the rarebit over the gas stove, but that would not have been at all +like college days and this night must be as near a reproduction of +those times as possible. Chafing dishes must be used and dishes must be +scarce or the spell would be broken. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +ADVENTURE + + +It was after ten o'clock as the three veiled figures glided from the +square house on the campus. The night was dark, fit for the deed they +had to do. They did not know what the deed was but whatever it was the +intrepid females were fully prepared to do it. + +"First we'll go by Prexy's house and perchance she may see us and then +we'll run. That will be fun!" suggested Judy. "Nothing would so warm my +old blood as to be taken for a junior." + +It so happened that a consultation was being held at the president's +home and as they passed, Miss Walker opened the front door and Professor +Green emerged. + +"Ministers and saints defend us! My brother-in-law!" cried Judy. + +"Who is that?" called Miss Walker as the three girls ran swiftly out of +the broad band of light pouring from the open door. + +"Run for your lives!" hissed Judy. + +"Shall I chase them?" laughed Professor Green. "I'd much rather not." + +"No," sighed poor Prexy. "I fancy they are up to no harm, but it is late +for girls to be out alone. Such terrible things seem to be happening all +over the world. I'll have to deliver a lecture to the whole student +body, I am afraid, about late rambles and pranks." + +"Those girls were veiled, so evidently whatever they were doing they did +not want to be recognized. I'd hate to hold your job, Miss Walker. I'd +much rather be the humble professor of English." + +"Surely it is not a sinecure," laughed the president, "but when all is +told, my girls are a pretty good lot. Their mischief is never, at least +hardly ever, serious. How glad I am to see Judy Kean again,--Mrs. Kent +Brown! She is the same old Judy. Such pranks as that child could play! +I shall never forget when she dyed her hair purple-black." + +"Judy is a great girl. I am glad we married into the same family," +declared the professor. "But tell me, Miss Walker, how Misel is doing. +I feel quite responsible for him since it was I who introduced him to +you." + +"The students like him. He seems to be able to impart knowledge. I am +afraid he is too handsome, however. It isn't quite safe to have a +professor too good-looking. College girls are very impressionable." +Then Miss Walker realized she had made quite a break. Edwin Green +was certainly a very good-looking man but not the type to make girls +languish with love. While M. Misel was a much more romantic figure with +his flashing eyes and lameness. + +"Are the girls losing their hearts to him?" laughed Edwin. "Again I am +thankful I am what I am and not what others are." + +And so the two old friends chatted in the doorway while the three veiled +figures made their way towards the village. + +"We got them going that time," panted Judy after the run through the +dark. "I bet you anything Prexy lectures the girls to-morrow morning. +Dear Prexy!" + +"Let's tick-tack the math teacher. I bet you she's still out of bed +thinking up deviltry to make the girls miserable with on the morrow," +suggested Katherine. + +"I can make a noise very muchly like a cat. Would not that be as +gruesomely as a mathematicktack? We might be the Musicians of Bremen, as +one reads in the beautifully fairy story." + +"Fine, Otoyo! Here's her domicile! Cut loose!" whispered Judy. "I'll be +the donkey and Katherine crow like the rooster." + +Crouched down under the window where a light still burned for the much +abused teacher of mathematics, the Musicians of Bremen, all but the dog, +got ready for their song. The noise was something shocking. Judy's bray +was so lifelike that little Otoyo sprang aside as though in fear of +kicking hind legs. + +A dog in the neighborhood, feeling that harmony could be established by +his voice alone, joined in the chorus. + +Windows were opened on the campus! Silence reigned supreme! + +"Don't run!" whispered Judy. "Scrooge down close to the wall." + +"Who is there?" called the math teacher. + +Mr. Dog went on howling as though he had been responsible for the whole +infernal racket. His timely tact seemed to satisfy the curious ones and +windows were closed, lights went out and the campus took itself off to +bed. + +"Once more for luck!" commanded Great Commander Judy. + +"Practice makes perfect," so this time the Musicians of Bremen outdid +themselves. Otoyo made a most wonderful pussy; Maud Adams herself could +not have been a more realistic chanticler than Katherine; and Judy's +donkey was so good that one could almost see the ears wagging as her +great bray made night hideous. + +"Now run before they have a chance to open their windows!" and Judy was +up and off in the darkness with the two other girls close on her heels. + +"I bet you investigating will go on at a great rate to-morrow," gasped +Katherine, as after leaving the college grounds they came to the +outskirts of the village. + +"It was so funnily," giggled Otoyo. "We must amusement make for the +smally Mildred and Cho-Cho when the to-morrow has come." + +"I can't believe I am a full-fledged teacher in a model modern school in +our great metropolis," said Katherine. "I feel just exactly like a +schoolgirl,--not even a college girl. I know I could run a mile and +there is no mischief I would not welcome." + +"I tooly!" agreed Otoyo. "It seems but a dream that I have honorable +husband and smally babee, Cho-Cho. I feel like badly naughtily Japanese +girl in masque." + +"Well, it is surely great to be a boy again just for to-night," declared +Judy. + +"What next?" asked Katherine. + +"Next will be our great adventure! This has been only in the foothills +of happenings. Soon we will have something really great come to us," +encouraged the captain. + +The village was well-lighted on the principal street, but that the girls +avoided and crept down the side streets where all was quiet and almost +dark, except at the corners where small gas-posts sent out feeble rays +of light. They passed comfortable homes surrounded by large yards where +the élite of Wellington lived. The élite were evidently a well-behaved +lot, as they were all safely bestowed in bed, sleeping the sleep of the +just as our naughty girls crept in front of their spacious mansions. + +Next to the great, came the near great: a row of pleasant cottages, +each one with its little garden separated from its neighbor's by neat +whitewashed palings. After these, they approached a cottage set in a +large yard and isolated as much as if it were in the country. It was +well back from the street and instead of the white palings of its +neighbors, it boasted a box hedge about five feet high and at least +three feet broad. Generations of close clipping had made this hedge as +solid as a brick wall. The yard enclosed was laid out as a formal garden +with box labyrinth and winding paths. In the rear was a summer-house +with stone pillars covered with ivy. Two stone benches were on each side +in this quaint house where no doubt dead and gone lovers had sat and +perhaps caught rheumatism. Box bushes were placed at the four sides of +the garden and these had been cut to represent armchairs by some zealous +gardener long since passed away. The modern shears had but followed the +lines of the original ones and the armchairs were still there although +somewhat lopsided and hazy in drawing. There was the sun-dial and a +snub-nosed stone Hebe who held aloft her little pitcher with a cup in +the other hand ready to serve the Gods with imperceptible nectar. + +Our girls' eyes had become accustomed to the darkness and they peeped +over the hedge (at least Katherine and Judy did, poor little Otoyo was +too short), plainly discerning the charming ensemble of the little +formal garden. + +"There, Adventure awaits us!" said Katherine melodramatically. + +"I want muchly to see," pleaded Otoyo. So Judy lifted her up for a peep. + +"I believe that is where the Misels live," said Judy. "It looks quite +different at night, but I'm almost sure it is the place. Molly and I +called at dusk and we came up on the other side, but I think it is this +cottage. Isn't it lovely? I am so sorry for them, they do seem so +friendless, somehow. Madame is already working for the Red Cross. Molly +says she can make surgical dressings faster than anybody she ever saw. +She takes them home and does them and brings them back so neatly folded +and tied up that they think it is perfect foolishness to inspect them. +They are sure there will be no mistakes where such a careful worker is +on the job. M. Misel is so lame he can hardly locomote." + +"Let's go in their garden and sit down a little while," suggested +Katherine, who but a few moments before had declared she could run a +mile. The sedentary life as a teacher had not improved her wind. Her +spirits might have been those of a schoolgirl but her endurance was +equal only to a full-fledged teacher in a model school. + +They passed through the small green turnstile and silently crept around +the labyrinth to the summer-house. The three girls sank on one of the +cold stone benches and peered out into the picturesque garden. Their +veils were raised but ready to be pulled down at a moment's notice. + +"Ghosts might walk in such a garden," whispered Judy. + +"The bench is coldly like a ghost," shivered Otoyo. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +AS SEEN FROM THE SUMMER-HOUSE + + +"And now, Adventure, come forth!" commanded Katherine in sepulchral +tones. + +The side door of the cottage, leading to the garden, now opened as +though at Katherine's orders, and a broad ribbon of light fell across +the labyrinth, picking out the snub-nosed Hebe and the sun-dial and one +of the box chairs to illuminate. A man's figure was silhouetted in the +doorway, a figure so beautiful that the artist in Judy gasped. He had on +running togs which exposed his clean-cut limbs and shapely shoulders. A +woman stood beside him and Judy recognized the outline of Madame Misel. +The Greek god of a man was strange to her, although there was something +familiar about the poise of his head on its column-like neck. + +The woman spoke in German in a low clear voice. Judy and Katherine both +knew German fairly well and Otoyo had some knowledge of it. They heard +Madame Misel say distinctly: + +"It is wiser if you wait until midnight for the exercises. Some of these +blockheads might be out." + +"Oh, absurd!" answered the man. "There is no one in this whole stupid +place with the spirit to be from under cover after ten. I am cramped +enough and must run and leap. Stand aside!" + +"Misel, himself!" gasped Judy. Where were his crutch and cane and his +lame back? + +The girls sat as still as the stone Hebe. It was inky black in their +corner of the summer-house where they cowered, not afraid at all but +ready to knock the chip from the shoulder of Adventure. Judy's first +instinct on recognizing Madame Misel was to make herself known and +explain their presence in her garden at such a late hour, but the +realization that Misel was the man in running togs, which usually means +running, glued her to her bench. What did it all mean? + +The door was shut and then Misel began a series of exercises of which +any circus actor might have been proud. He began by leaping over the +clipped hedge of the labyrinth,--back and forth with most surprising +gyrations. It was so dark that it was difficult to follow his every +movement, and so rapid were his leaps and bounds that he was now here, +now there before eyes could be focussed to take in the impression. Then +almost without the girls realizing what had happened, he had cleared the +five-foot hedge and was out on the deserted street running like a deer. + +"Quick, before he is back!" gasped Judy, and the seekers for sensations +were out of the garden and through the little turnstile in not much more +time than it had taken the master of the house to leap the hedge. + +Without a word they hastened back to the college grounds. As they turned +a corner, they ran plump into Misel, who seemed to have let off steam +enough to be trotting contentedly home. They need not have feared him. +He was much more anxious to escape from them than they were from him. +He turned and ran like the wind in the opposite direction. + +"Gee, I wish we could have tripped him up!" exclaimed Judy. + +"And I might have jiu jitsued him most neatlily," put in little Otoyo. +"I think he is what you might call a traitor-r-r." + +"I was never more excited in my life. What will the girls think when we +tell them of what has happened to us?" panted Katherine. + +"Do you realize we have run against a tremendous thing?" said Judy +soberly. "Almost international importance! I fancy we must keep kind of +quiet about it. Of course we will tell Molly and Edwin and the girls, +but I have an idea this thing will have to be worked up slowly and +cautiously. I bet you it will be a case of secret service men and enemy +aliens and what not. Why should Misel have pretended to be lame? Why +should they come to live at Wellington? Why--a million whys about the +whole matter!" + +"One thing:--Misel thought we were college girls on a lark and he will +have no fear of our saying we met him or anyone outside the campus at +such an hour," said Katherine wisely. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +THE PROFESSOR AT A KIMONO PARTY + + +The Welsh rarebit was just assuming its required thickness and +smoothness and the toast was done to a turn ready to receive its +libation of cheese, when the wanderers came pattering in. + +"Where is Edwin?" demanded Judy. + +"In his den! You see this is a kimono party and gentlemen are not +admitted," said Molly, helping Judy off with her coat and veil. "Now +tell us all about it! Something has happened, I can see by your eyes and +hair." + +"Happened! I should say it has! Something has bounced! Call Edwin! I +don't give a hang if we are in kimonos! I'll be bound he does not know +a kimono from a ball gown--I can't tell it twice." + +"Otoyo and I are not dumb. We might help out when you fall by the +wayside," laughed Katherine, "but I, for one, don't mind the professor." + +"Nor I! Nor I!" chorused the others. + +"I think mine is vastly becoming," Jessie whispered to Margaret, who +called her a vain puss. + +Edwin came in, rather pleased at being admitted and being allowed to +have some of the party. + +"I never expected to get in on a fudge party," he said, contentedly +settling himself by Judy, who was bursting with news. + +"Now begin!" commanded Margaret, rapping for order in much the old +manner of class president and presiding officer. + +"Begin at the beginning!" begged Edith. + +"Well, first we went by Prexy's, just to get the feeling of youth back +in our veins. She saw us, but we chased by." + +"So it was you! I wish I had run you down," cried the brother-in-law. + +"It is a blessing you did not or a good story would have been ruined," +said Katherine. + +Margaret rapped for order and Judy took up the tale. + +"Then we went to call on Mattie Math. She was burning the midnight oil, +at least the 10 P. M. oil, and when we acted the Musicians of Bremen, +she threw up the sash." + +"The hash? What hash?" asked Jessie, who often arrived a bit late. +Shrieks and more rappings from Margaret. + +"My, how much I have missed in never being asked to a kimono party +before," whispered the male guest in Judy's ear. + +"After we had brayed and crowed and meouwed and a dog had barked for +us----" + +"All together!" cried Katherine, and the musicians gave a sample of +their performance, Mrs. Matsuki outdoing all cats by her lifelike +caterwauling. + +"After that, we went silently down to the village." + +"I don't believe it, not silently!" asserted Edwin. + +"No interruptions from the minority! We went silently down to the +village, veils down, steps stealthy, eyes open and mouths shut. The +garden at the Misels' was most inviting in its sweetness and beauty. Of +course we wanted to go in and rest on the nice warm stone benches, so we +walked through the turnstile and seated ourselves in the little dark +summer-house, there to await Adventure." + +"Bang! Adventure comes stalkingly in!" cried Otoyo. + +"Leaping was more like it!" from Katherine. + +"Yes! Who should come springing from the side door, totally oblivious of +us, but Misel, stripped for running and looking like a detail from a +Greek frieze!" + +"Monsieur Misel! Why, Judy, you are mad! Misel is so lame he can't stand +alone without crutch and cane!" cried Molly. + +"Lame your grandmother! He is a perfect circus actor. I have never seen +a private citizen with such control of his muscles. He actually turned +somersaults over the hedge in the labyrinth, walked on his hands better +than I can on my feet, and cleared the five-foot hedge that borders the +street with as much ease as--as--I eat this fudge," reaching for another +piece. + +"But, Judy, are you sure it was he?" asked Edwin excitedly. + +"Of course I am sure!" And then Judy repeated the conversation they had +overheard between Misel and his wife. "My German is shady when I have to +use it, but I can understand very well." + +"So can I," declared Katherine. + +"And while I am constructionally verily faultily, I comprehend can," +said Otoyo, so excited that she ran off to adverb forms as was her wont +in times of stress. + +"This is serious," said Edwin solemnly. "So serious that I feel I must +do something about it and do it immediately. What time is it, honey?" he +asked Molly. + +"Eleven-fifty! Why, what can you do? Not go fight Misel--not that!" + +"No, not that, at least not that yet, although I should like to break +his lying crutch over his traitorous head. I must get in touch with the +Secret Service. War will be declared any day now and Germany is getting +busy even in quiet Wellington." + +"You forget Exmoor College is so near," put in Margaret. "Our college +boys will officer the new army in part. I'll wager anything that this +man has already begun his pacifist propaganda here in Wellington and at +Exmoor, too. Has he been to Exmoor?" + +"Why, certainly! He got me to take him over and introduce him, the +beast!" stormed Edwin. "Please pack my little grip for me, honey," he +asked, drawing Molly to him. "I can catch the twelve-forty to New York. +Don't give out that I am away. We had better do a little camouflage act +of our own. I am ill, very ill! That will do! Let it be--what shall it +be?" + +"Mumps!" cried Edith. + +"Not mumps, please!" cried Jessie. "Nothing contagious or we might catch +it!" + +"Or worse than that, even, be quarantined!" laughed Nance. + +"Pretty hard on you, honey, as it would stop the ceremony," suggested +Molly. + +"What do you usually have when you have anything?" asked Margaret with +her judicial manner. + +"Neuralgia!" + +"Then neuralgia would be the natural thing to have when you have not +anything." + +"Of course! Then, Molly, all day to-morrow your poor husband is ill with +neuralgia. Not even the servants and children must come in my darkened +room. I'll be home in the night and wake up the next morning feeling +much better," and Molly hurried off to pack the grip. + +"In time to give the bride away!" suggested Judy. + +"May I tell Andy all about it?" asked Nance shyly. + +"Of course! We would not be so cruel as to make you start out with a +secret from your lord and master," said Edwin. + +"It makes me so mad to think how kind Andy was to that man, offering his +medical services to him and what not. I know the brutes had a good +laugh over his gullibility. Andy told me afterwards that he could not +understand the case, and if the man wasn't shamming, it was the most +peculiar thing he had ever seen: the way he jumped up out of his chair +when he was so lame." + +"Now I remember that very night that I heard Madame Misel call her +husband a fool on the way into the dining-room. I had forgotten all +about it until this minute. I kept wondering what she meant," said +Molly. + +"I tell you they are deep ones," put in Katherine. + +"Not a bit of it!" stormed Judy. "They are the worst of all fools +because they think no one else has any sense. Bobby, my beloved parent, +always says that is the worst kind of fool. That the wise man, who wants +to put over anything, must go to work with the idea that all the persons +he wants the scheme to get by with have as much and more sense than he +has. Now these Huns think they are the only pebbles on the beach and +take for granted that they are dealing with children and fools, and as +a rule they get caught up with." + +"Not before they do lots of damage, however," said Nance. + +"I hope in this instance their machinations have not done any," said +Edwin devoutly. "Be sure and give the Misels no inkling they are +suspected. All of you remember to be as polite as usual to them if you +happen to run across them." + +"I'll try, but it will surely go against the grain," said Judy, her eyes +flashing. + +"Prove your father's statements, dear little sister, and we shall let +these foreigners know that we are not the blockheads they call us." + +"Also we are not the sleepily heads that must go bedwardly at such +earlyly hour," and little Otoyo opened her almond eyes very wide to show +that she at least would neither slumber nor sleep until the enemies to +her country and her adopted country were safely caught up with. + +Molly came in with the grip packed. Some fudge was tucked in to help out +his journey and Edwin, with the warm wishes of the kimono party, +started on his patriotic travels. + +"Remember to let Prexy know I am almost dead with neuralgia and do not +let a soul but Andy on to the fact that I am off on a journey. I'll +creep in to-morrow night. Keep your eyes open for deviltries that the +Misels may be up to, but don't let them know you are not the dummies +they think you. They will not be classed as alien enemies until war is +formally declared, and that will be day after to-morrow, according to +the latest news." + +Nance was quietly stitching while most of the above conversation was +going on, but her thoughts were very busy. The idea that was uppermost +in her mind was that the day United States was to form an alliance with +the nations, she was to form one equally strong with her Andy. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +WAR RELIEF + + +Edwin Green occasionally had an attack of neuralgia that incapacitated +him for work for at least a day, so when Molly solemnly gave out the +news that her poor husband was suffering with one of his spells of +that painful malady, sympathy was expressed by servants, teachers, and +students. Blinds in the invalid's room were carefully closed and the +door locked, with the key in Molly's pocket. Instructions were sternly +given that nobody must disturb him. When he felt better he would ask for +what he wanted. Little Mildred was very sad that she was not allowed to +take him his "tup of toffee." + +"I weckon he's a-gonter die, sho," she confided to Cho-Cho-San. "Only my +mother don't know it or she wouldn't be a-smilin' an' laughin' so +hard." + +"I am going to work this morning at my war relief, even if we are to get +married to-morrow," declared Molly at breakfast. "If I let anything +short of death interfere I get into bad habits, and the work simply must +be done. They are crying out for more and more dressings." + +"Let's all of us go help! We can turn out oodlums of work if we try," +cried Judy. + +"Not Nance!" insisted Molly. "I know she has a lot of little stitches to +put in before to-morrow." + +"If you will excuse me, I will beg off," blushed Nance. "Andy is coming +in this morning for a few moments, besides." + +"I tell you, you must stay at home to take care of poor dear Edwin," +laughed Judy. "It would look terribly heartless for all of us to go +leave him." + +"Oh, I forgot Edwin!" declared Molly, just as Kizzie came in with a +stack of waffles. The girl looked at her mistress in astonishment. What +was coming over her Miss Molly, "fergittin' of the boss and then +a-larfin' about it?" + +"Shall I take Andy up to see him?" asked Nance soberly. + +"Perhaps!" + +"Hadn't we better take the kids along so their noise won't disturb poor +dear Brother Edwin?" suggested Judy, "Mildred and Cho-Cho and Poilu, the +puppy." Poilu was a diminutive mongrel, the love of Mildred's heart. + +"Oh, Mother, please, please!" begged Mildred. + +"I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee!" sang Cho-Cho as Molly smiled her +consent. + +"They can play in the churchyard and will be good, I am sure," she +declared. + +And so Nance was left to put in her finishing stitches, to receive her +lover and to take care of the fictitious case of neuralgia. + +"Hot cloths on his head if he is in very great agony," Molly called back +as the gay throng started for the war relief rooms. "There is more +aspirin in the top drawer if he is in much pain." + +Nance had a busy morning answering the 'phone, which rang many times +with inquiries for the popular professor. Mary Neil sent a box of candy +to Molly as a kind of consolation prize and Billie McKym sent Edwin a +pot of flowers. Lilian Swift sent a basket of fruit. + +"If their friends rally around them so for an imaginary disease, what +would they do if something were really the matter?" thought Nance. + +M. Misel and Andy met at the front door, Misel to inquire for the poor +ill man and Andy to catch a glimpse of his Nance. Misel had walked +slowly and painfully across the campus from his class room. Nance, from +the window, had watched him approaching and she could but admire his +patience as he made his crippled way. + +"It must be worse to have to pretend to be lame than to be lame," she +said to herself. "I wonder if Andy is still fooled." + +The two men came into the library together, Andy showing great +solicitude for the disabled foreigner. Misel was so extremely polite and +seemed so distressed at Edwin's illness that Nance could hardly believe +that Judy and the girls could be right in the discovery they had made +the night before. His manner was perfect, so respectful, so kindly and +courteous. + +"I believe I am to wish you joy, Dr. McLean,--and I do so with all my +heart." Andy grinned his appreciation. "My wife and I were quite charmed +by Miss Oldham. I hear you are to go to the front to assist poor +stricken France. I admire the courage of your fiancée to contemplate +going with you." + +"It would take more for me to stay away," whispered Nance softly. + +"Ah, it is the spirit of the women which is what the Germans have to +fight!" + +"Is not the spirit of the German women quite as courageous as ours?" +asked Nance, looking at Misel keenly. + +"Ah! _Wonderschön!_" his eyes glowed. Suddenly the fact that he had +dropped into German seemed to embarrass him. "That is--that is the +word for the German women, just as 'wonderful' is the one for the +Americans." + +"Tell me about Edwin," interrupted Andy, as though he meant to put Misel +at his ease again. "Is he very ill?" + +"Oh, very!" + +"Can't I go up to see him?" + +"Molly said he was not to be disturbed. These headaches just wear +themselves out. He will be all right to-night." + +"But there is something to be done before it wears Edwin out as well as +itself," insisted the young doctor. + +"Molly says not!" Nance shook her head at Andy as much as to tell him he +was talking too much, and that young man subsided until Misel had gone. +Then Nance revealed to her lover the whole nefarious plot. + +"I had my doubts about that man from the first. I could not see how +anyone as lame as he was could have jumped up so briskly. The beast! How +could you be so polite to him?" + +"Camouflage! Fighting the devil with fire!" + +"I am glad old Ed took matters in hand so promptly. I tell you these +college professors show up pretty well in these times! Wilson and Green +forever!" + +In the meantime the industrious war relief workers were hard at it. The +be-aproned and be-kerchiefed ladies of Wellington held their séances in +the basement of the little church. It was astonishing how large was +their output, but busy fingers had been steadily at work ever since word +had come from France that wounded men were dying for lack of surgical +dressings, and that word had come very soon after the breaking out of +the World War. + +Women with earnest faces were bending over the long tables, some rolling +bandages; some tearing cotton cloth; some pulling threads for careful +cutting of gauze, later to be deftly folded in the prescribed shape. In +one corner, cotton batting was being fluffed up for the making of +fracture pillows. Huge baskets were being emptied by one group as they +stuffed the pillows, while others were being filled by the fluffers, +as Judy called the women whose duty it was to pick the cotton. Much +sneezing went on in this corner and he who wonders why, might try once +fluffing unrefined cotton. + +"Let me make the tampons!" begged Jessie. + +"I know why! Because they look like powder puffs," teased Edith. + +The house party was received with enthusiasm by the Wellington workers. +There always seems to be more work than can be accomplished and then +workers come and by hook or crook the task is completed. All of our +girls had done some war relief work, so it was easy to set them to +their stints. Pretty Jessie could make tampons that were so soft and so +regular that they really did look like powder puffs. Katherine could +pick cotton as fast as Mother Carey can chickens and her advent caused +an increase of sneezing. Edith stuffed fracture pillows just to show +that she could go faster than her sister. Margaret rolled bandages with +a precision equal to her parliamentary ruling when she was presiding +officer. Otoyo and Judy and Molly folded the gauze into the neat little +six-inch squares. This is the most difficult part of the work, requiring +such accuracy that only the expert should choose that table. The edges +must come just together, no threads must be left on the gauze, the +corners must be turned under exactly enough and the finished articles +stacked in even piles. + +Madame Misel came in with the work she had taken home to finish. Never +were such neat, wonderful dressings as hers. In the short time she had +been at Wellington she had accomplished the work of two women, bringing +in great stacks of the accurately-made dressings. + +It was difficult for the girls to treat her with the courtesy they +knew it was policy to employ. Behind that calm mask they could now +detect the lying spy. Her expression was as demure as ever and she +spoke with the same hesitation that they felt was assumed, just as +her husband's halting gait was. Why they should have taken up that +particular disguise, Molly and her friends were at a loss to know. + +Madame Misel was almost a beautiful woman. Animation would have made her +quite beautiful, animation and better dressing. Her hair was parted in +the middle and brushed as slick as glass, coiled in a tight knob at +exactly the wrong angle. She habitually wore an old-fashioned basque of +a bygone cut buttoned up close to the neck with a narrow band of white +collar, which but accentuated the severity of her garb. Her shoes were +broad and ugly with no heels, her skirt skimpy and badly hung. + +Judy studied the countenance of the foreigner as she bent over her work. +The nimble fingers moved very rapidly as she folded the gauze. + +"Gee, I'd like to sketch her!" Judy whispered to Molly. "A mixture of +Mona Lisa and the Unknown Woman and plain repressed devil!" + +She whipped out her sketch book, which was never far from her, and with +a few strokes had Madame Misel's pose, then with a skill that was quite +wonderful had suggested her features. The model moved uneasily as though +conscious of scrutiny, but before she looked up Judy had closed her book +and was demurely folding gauze. Madame arose and walked away, standing +by the table where Margaret was rolling bandages. Judy again whipped +out her book and made a rapid impression of the unstylish figure in its +flat shoes and tight basque. + +Just then little Mildred and Cho-Cho came screaming from the churchyard +where they had been playing happily. Mildred had in her arms the poor +little much-petted puppy. Blood was streaming from the creature's leg +and he was giving forth pathetic wails. + +"A big dog done bitted him all up!" cried Mildred. + +"Greatly dog 'ave 'urt little puppee!" said Cho-Cho-San. + +"First aid to the injured!" exclaimed Judy, as she took the bleeding +canine in her arms. The pile of beautifully made dressings Madame Misel +had just brought in was on the corner of the long table. Without a +by-your-leave, Judy snatched up one from the top and bound it around the +poor gory leg. "There, you poor little precious! You may be part French +poodle, anyhow, and surely a wound is a wound." + +Madame Misel put out a hand as though to stay her, but before she could +say anything Judy had the dressing wrapped around the puppy's little +leg. + +"Too bad to take one so perfectly made, but I just grabbed the one +closest to hand. Now, Mildred, you and Cho-Cho can be Red Cross nurses +and little Poilu can be your wounded warrior. Take him out and nurse him +carefully. It isn't much of a place and no doubt with good care he will +be all well by to-morrow." + +"I--think--it--would be--advisable to--apply--iodine to the +wound--is it--not so, Madame Brown? I shall be pleased to--go +to--my--house--and--procure some," faltered Madame Misel. + +"I don't think it is really necessary," insisted Molly. "We shall be +going home presently and I can put some on then. You are very kind." +Enemy alien or not, Madame Misel was certainly very thoughtful to want +to take the trouble for the pet. Molly, ever ready to see the good in +persons, had a feeling that this quiet, pleasant woman could not be +shamming. Perhaps Misel was not what he should be, but not this wife, +who was so untiring in her labors of mercy. + +When they started home, the roly-poly Poilu seemed to have recovered +entirely. He did not even limp, so he was spared the ordeal of having +the stinging iodine poured on the wounded leg. It was nothing more than +a scratch anyhow, Judy declared. + +At midnight Edwin returned, letting himself quietly in the front door. +Molly was waiting for him, eaten up with curiosity about what had +transpired. He had been closeted with the Secret Service officials, who +considered the matter of the gravest importance. Two of the cleverest +and most cautious of the detective force were put on the job. + +"They were no doubt on the train with me," he said, "but I have no idea +what they look like or what disguise they themselves will employ. At +least a dozen persons got off the train at Wellington Station and all of +them or none of them may have been Sherlock Holmeses." + +"I hope your neuralgia is better," laughed Molly. + +"Well, the joke of it is, I really did have neuralgia all day, not +severe enough to keep me from enjoying a very good luncheon with your +brother Kent and Jimmie Lufton at the Press Club, but quite bad enough +to keep you from having told a lie." + +"Poor dear! I am so sorry for you to have suffered at all, but it is +certainly considerate of you to be instrumental in saving my soul. And +now, since to-morrow is the wedding day, we had better get all the sleep +we can." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +TILL DEATH DOTH US PART + + +The small home wedding that Nance and Molly had originally planned grew +to be quite large. Little by little it seemed impossible to get married +without first one person and then the other. Andy had many friends at +Exmoor and Wellington; Dr. and Mrs. McLean knew half the country and had +a long list to be invited; Nance wanted the whole faculty and some of +the girls who were favorites of Molly's; Kent Brown arrived from New +York bringing with him Mr. Matsuki, frankly delighted to be included in +so honorable an assemblage. + +"Surely they can't all of them sleep here," said Edwin to his wife as he +put on his wedding garments. + +"They can, but they won't," she answered, laughing at his woeful +expression. "The house party breaks up after the ceremony. Do I look all +right?" + +"Beautiful!" + +"I mean my dress!" + +"But I mean you! I don't know anything about your dress except that it +is blue as it should be." + +"Can you find your collar buttons and is your tie all right?" asked the +anxious housewife as she accepted with very good grace the embrace Edwin +felt was necessary to his happiness just then. + +"Yes! Everything O. K.! I am sorry for the bride because you are so +lovely, honey. Nance is a pretty girl but I am afraid nobody will see +her because of the matron of honor." + +"Such a goose! Now I must go look after the flower girls. Katy has them +coralled in the nursery where they can't get dirty. They are the +sweetest looking creatures you ever saw in your life. Dodo looks like a +beautiful cabbage rose himself, his cheeks are so rosy. I wish Mother +could see him." + +"Why doesn't she come on to the wedding?" + +"Sue needs her in Kentucky. The only trouble about Mother is that there +is only one of her. I need her more than anything right now. If she were +here she would take hold of this wedding breakfast and I would know it +would come off right," sighed Molly, who, true to her character, had +planned to do enough for two persons. "Thank goodness, Judy is here!" + +The ceremony was to be at twelve and then a wedding breakfast served. +This meant Molly was to be very busy. The girls were helping, but at the +same time they were more or less flustered trying to get themselves +dressed all in one room. They had determined to make this a gay light +wedding as to clothes at least. There was a feeling of excitement in +every breast, excitement mingled with sadness. Was not this the most +momentous day in the life of every true American? War was declared! +Perhaps had they realized just what war meant, those girls could not +have donned those gay, bright garments. Would they have had the courage +to wish their friend God-speed so cheerily? I believe they would. They +were of the stuff of the mothers of men. On that second of April, 1917, +every woman in the United States must have felt somewhat as Molly +Brown's college friends felt. It was a feeling of excitement, awe, +exhilaration and dread combined. + +Nance was gowned in white with a wonderful lace veil Otoyo had brought +as her present. It was as filmy as the clouds that rest on Fujiyama, the +sacred mountain of Otoyo's country. + +"Only suppose she had brought a tea basket like mine! What would that +have looked like on your head?" giggled Judy, who was in a strangely +hysterical state. She was one girl who very well knew what the war was +to mean. Had she not been on the outskirts of war in 1914 when she was +stranded in Paris? Had she not seen the soldiers marching off bidding +farewell to their nearest and dearest,--sometimes a final farewell? Kent +had spent all the time he could in training camps since they had been +opened to citizens of the United States, and now he was confident of +receiving a commission. Perhaps it would mean that her husband would be +in the trenches in a short time. She wanted him to want to go, was proud +of him for wanting to,--but oh, the agony of it all! + +Almost time for the ceremony now! Molly made her final tour of +inspection. Edwin, Kent and Mr. Matsuki were safe in the den where they +eagerly discussed politics. Dr. and Mrs. McLean arrived, holding Andy +between them as though they might lose him before it was time. + +"I meant to help you, Molly, child, but my hea-r-r-t is so joompy I am +afraid it will be best for me to compose meself," said the poor mother. +"Don't let Andy know!" + +Molly kissed the dear lady and asked Katherine to stay near her. +Katherine's dressing was always a simple matter, as her gowns consisted +of shirt-waists and skirts in various materials to suit various +occasions. She declared she could dress in the dark and look just as +well as though she had had cheval glasses and a blaze of light. + +The other girls were ready and came down to the parlors to help receive +the guests. Nance was lovely and looked as fresh and sweet as a white +violet as she sat in her room sedately awaiting the hour. A visit to the +nursery disclosed the children piously standing with backs to the window +and arms held well away from their fluffy skirts, as charming flower +girls as one could find. + +"I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee! I'm Mildred's Japanese dollee! She's my +kick-up dollee!" sang the little Cho-Cho-San. "All I want is bald spot, +and all she wants is stick up hair!" + +"Ain't we your little comforts, Muvver?" asked Mildred. + +"Indeed you are, my darling! Now when Judy calls, you come running so +you can go down the stairs in front of Aunt Nance. Judy will have your +wreaths all ready. Where is Katy?" + +"She's peeking at the comply." + +"Well, you kiddies be good and don't get your dresses mussed. It is +almost time now. Don't wake Dodo." Of course Dodo had gone to sleep, +since there was nothing more important on hand just then. Molly hurried +off to the kitchen to see that the wedding breakfast was coming on as +she had planned. Mrs. Murphy had hobbled up to help Kizzie, and Mrs. +McLean had sent over her two maids. + +"All they need is a boss," sighed poor Molly. "If I only could be two +places at one time!" + +But whose familiar figure was that seen through the scullery door? The +maids were all in a broad grin and Kizzie, as she expressed it, "was +fittin' to bust." + +"Mother! Mother! Where on earth did you come from?" and Molly had that +dear lady clasped in her arms. "What are you doing in the back? Come on +and hurry and get dressed! It is almost time!" Molly felt like little +Cho-Cho when she cried out: "I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee!" + +"I just this minute arrived and have no idea of dressing!" cried that +dear lady when she could speak. + +"Of course you needn't dress! You are lovely as you are--your hair is a +bit mussed--and----" + +"You mussed it but it will do very well for the part I am to play. I +have no idea of appearing. I mean to serve this breakfast." + +"But, Mother, I couldn't let you!" + +"Nonsense! That is what I hurried on for. Why, child, when I realized +that you were having a house party and a wedding and going to serve a +great breakfast, I simply jumped on the train with a hand-bag and flew +to you. You always have behaved as though you were triplets. Now run +along and don't tell a soul I am here. I can be honored later on; now I +want a big apron and room to operate. Kizzie has already told me what +the breakfast is to be and you need not think about it. Run along!" + +"Well, one more hug and I am gone. Aren't you even going to peek at the +comply, as Mildred says?" + +"Oh, I'll see the ceremony, never fear; but fly, Molly! The guests are +coming." + +Molly felt as though she really could fly. Her mother's arrival had +relieved her of all fear about the wedding breakfast. It would be +obliged to go off without a hitch now. Dear, dear Mother! How like her +to come quietly slipping in the back way just in the nick of time! + +One could have heard a pin drop in the old square house on the campus as +the first strains of the wedding march arose and the rustle of skirts on +the stairway announced the approach of the wedding procession. Andy was +shaking and shivering in the hall, tightly clutching his father's arm. +He had declared that Dr. McLean must be his best man and would hear of +no other. Of course he was just as scared as the groom always is, at +least, all proper grooms. + +At Judy's signal the little flower girls came dancing from the nursery, +their fluffy skirts flying. The wreaths and garlands were handed them +and they marched down the stairs feeling much more important than Nance +herself. + +"Heavens!" thought Molly as she followed them with Nance, "what on +earth is the matter with Mildred's hair?" It was standing up in a most +peculiar way. Instead of the curls that Katy had so carefully made, her +ringlets had been brushed out and Molly realized that at least four +inches of her daughter's hair had been cut off. "And Cho-Cho-San! What +has happened to her?" In the middle of the child's head was a bare spot +at least three inches in diameter. It looked as though it had been +shaved. + +Whatever the matter was, it affected the flower girls not in the least. +With many tosses of those shorn heads they marched into the parlor, +scattering their posies as they had been told. When Otoyo saw the bald +spot on the head of her offspring she almost fainted and had to hold on +to the ready arm of honorable husband. Cho-Cho-San had clipped Mildred's +hair to make it stand up like a kick-up dolly, and Mildred had stolen +her father's safety razor and converted her little friend into a +veritable Japanese dolly. + +Nothing but the solemnity of the occasion kept Molly from hysterics. The +little wretches must have got busy after she made her visit to the +nursery. Evidently they were doing what Mildred called "playing true." +Cho-Cho was a Japanese dolly and Mildred was a kick-up. The little +visitor did look exactly like one of those fascinating Japanese dolls, +and Molly could but smile in spite of her distress. She was afraid to +catch Judy's eye as she stepped back to let Andy take his place by +Nance's side. + +Never had the wedding ceremony seemed so impressive as on that second of +April. Every mind was filled with the importance of the step that the +country was taking, and with the prayer that Andy and Nance would +prosper, was breathed the thought that the United States might come out +victorious. + +Nance was to go with Andy's unit in the capacity of interpreter. She was +not a brilliant French scholar but was thorough in her knowledge of that +as of everything she had undertaken. She frankly declared that she had +been separated from Andy long enough and she intended to follow him to +the ends of the earth if need be. It was that wonderful fact that made +Andy's "I will!" so strong and clear. His tremblings left him and he +stood by his dear girl like the soldier of the Red Cross that he was. +Nothing was impossible or too hard if Nance was to be with him. + +Mrs. McLean's good, honest face was like an angel's as she gazed on +her new daughter-in-law. No jealousy was depicted there--nothing but +adoration, gratitude that the girl was to make her Andy happy. Poor Dr. +McLean was sobbing like a baby and his good wife had to put her arms +around him to comfort him. + +All over! "Whom God hath joined together let no man put asunder." Andy +clasped his Nance with the look of: "I dare anyone to try!" + +Otoyo and Molly held a whispered consultation over their imaginative +offspring and decided that nothing was to be said or done to the +culprits on that day of days,--the reckoning must be deferred. + +Those infants were greatly astonished, somewhat relieved and secretly +chagrined that their prank was not noticed. They had expected to be even +more important than the bride in their rôles of Japanese and kick-up +dolls. + +"I weckon nobody don't love us 'nough to spank us even," pouted Mildred. + +"Japanese babee gets not spank-ed--but honorable mother frowns on +Cho-Cho when she loves her most after naughtiness--but now--but now--she +smiles, but not with love," was the wail of the companion in crime and +misery. + +The efficient helmsman in the kitchen steered the wedding breakfast to +safety. The affair went off with such expedition that the housekeepers +present marveled at Molly's cleverness. + +"She must have trained her servants wonderfully well," whispered one. + +"I remember the joke they got off on Molly in college," laughed Miss +Walker. "It was that she came of a family of famous cooks." + +"It is not only the cooking now," said Mrs. Fern, Edwin's cousin and the +mother of the perfect Alice. "It is the way it is served and the +orderliness of the waitresses. I wonder that Molly can be with her +guests while it is being done unless she has had a caterer come up from +New York. I simply have to be in the pantry myself when my daughters +entertain on a large scale. That is, unless I can hire someone to come +take charge, and Wellington does not boast such a person. Alice is very +particular but not willing to do much herself,--not able, in fact," she +added lamely, a little afraid of having criticized her perfect daughter +in public. + +Mrs. Fern was very fond of Molly and admired her greatly in spite of +the fact that she could not help bearing her a tiny secret grudge for +marrying Edwin Green. That good lady had in her heart of hearts hoped +that Alice was to bear off the professional prize. Perfect persons are +not always very pleasant to live with and Alice Fern was no exception to +the rule. Mrs. Fern wished no harm to Edwin but she would have been glad +to shift her burden of perfectness to other shoulders. + +"We are just asking ourselves how you do it, my dear," she said as Molly +came up to see that all was going well with her guests. + +"Do it! I'll tell you a secret that I was not to divulge but I am simply +bursting with it: Mother is in the pantry! She came in the back way, +without my even knowing she had left Kentucky, and now she is directing +operations. She refuses to appear until the party is over." + +"Ah, that is the reason for that glow in your eyes!" exclaimed Miss +Walker. "I used to say when you were a college girl that I could tell by +your expression when the western mail had brought you a letter from +Kentucky." + +"I didn't know it showed so," blushed Molly, "but it does make me feel +warm all over when I know my mother is near." + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +THE PUNISHMENT OF MILDRED + + +The last rice thrown and the bridal party gone! Molly and Judy all that +was left of the gay girls! The old crowd once more dispersed! I wonder +if they will ever come together again. It had been a perfect time, and +Molly, although dead tired, was very happy that she had been able to +gather them in under her roof. All that worried her now was the fact +that Mildred was to be punished. How, she was not certain. + +Mrs. Brown, no longer in her apron but now the most honored of all, was +ensconced on the sofa with Dodo in her arms and Mildred snuggled up +close to her side. The child's eyes were big and sad. Her little cropped +head was drooping and her mouth trembling. Even Granny was not noticing +her naughtiness. Evidently nobody loved her! + +Kent was seated on the floor, his head against his mother's knee, where, +without exerting himself, he could see Judy's animated face and bright +fluffy hair. Perhaps the time was soon coming when he would have to be +far away from these beloved women. He was sure of his commission now and +was ready for his country's call, but oh, it was hard to be uprooted +from the pleasant spot where love had planted him! Ah, well! The war +could not last forever and maybe there was a good time coming for all of +them. It was hard to leave Judy, but it would be harder to take her with +him if duty sent him to France. He did not criticize Andy McLean in the +least. He knew his own business and Nance wanted to go with him but he, +Kent Brown, had no idea of exposing his Judy to any more horrors of war. +The taste both of them had had of it was enough. + +The little group around the fire was very quiet. Dormouse Dodo went +off into his usual soporific state. Judy was knitting rapidly, and the +click of her needles was all that broke the stillness. Judy always +declared she did not mind knitting if she could just make her needles +click. Molly was too tired to knit, too tired to do anything. If only +she had settled matters with her first born! Her conscience told her it +must be done and done soon. If only something would happen to keep her +from having to do it, whatever it was to be. She actually prayed for +strength to take the matter up and also that she would not have to take +it up. + +Suddenly on the twilight calm of the library there arose a +broken-hearted wail! Mildred had broken out into an abandon of grief. +Her wails rent the air. + +"Gee whilikins! I thought the Germans had come," exclaimed Kent, jumping +to his feet. + +"My darling, what is it?" asked Mrs. Brown as Mildred clutched her +around the neck. + +"Oh, Granny, Granny! My muvver hates me!" + +"Oh, Molly! What have you done to this angel?" asked the grandmother +almost sternly. + +"Nothing! I declare!" + +"That's jes' it! She ain't done nuffin! That shows she hates me. Kizzie +done say, 'Who de Lord loveneth he chases,' an' I done did the wussest +thing I could do an' my muvver she ain't so much as said: 'Why, +Mildred!' I wants to git spanked! I wants to git spanked!" + +"Why, darling, what have you done?" asked Mrs. Brown, trying to control +her risibles. + +"I done shave-pated, number-eighted my little Haythen friend. Kizzie +called Cho-Cho: + + "'Shave pate, number eight + Hit yo' haid aginst the gate.' + +"It sho did hurt Cho-Cho's feelings. And Cho-Cho, she slish-slashed my +hair off so's I'd look cute. Nobody ain't told us we look cute--and +nobody ain't spanked us nor nothin'--and nobody don't love us." This +tirade came out between sobs. + +Kent and Judy roared with laughter but Molly and her mother tried to +look sad and mournful. + +"Molly, I'm astonished! Why don't you spank your kid? I never heard of +such an inhuman parent," teased Kent. + +Molly was very happy indeed. The miracle had come! Her prayer was +answered. She did not have to punish Mildred. Mildred was punished. + +"You wouldn't have treated yo' dear little children so mean, would you, +Granny?" + +"You bet she wouldn't have," insisted Kent. "Why, if I had shave-pated, +number-eighted my little Haythen friends, your granny would have torn me +limb from limb and beaten me black and blue." + +"Sho nuf?" + +"Yes, indeed, and if my little Haythen friend had chopped off all my +pretty curls, I am sure her mother would have thrown her in the fire and +poked holes in her with a red hot poker." + +"Jes' 'cause they loved you so much?" + +"Yes, just because they loved us so much." + +"Me'n' Cho-Cho wisht we could git throwed in the fire," sighed the +repentant Mildred. "But, Uncle Kent," and she got up and put her little +mouth close to his ear, "don't you think I made a mighty cunning little +Japanese dolly out'n my Haythen friend?" + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +A DEATH + + +"Aunt Judy, my Poilu is tellible sick! He can't open up his mouf mo'n +'bout a minute far. Won't you please, ma'm, punch it open wif the button +hook so's I kin poke some breafkast down him?" + +Mildred had the little puppy clasped in her arms and he did seem to be +very miserable. His eyes were partly closed and his teeth were tightly +clamped together. + +"I weckon that big ol' dog what eated a piece out'n him done made him so +sick." + +"But, honey, that was a week ago, and if it had been going to make him +sick it would surely have affected him long ago. It was nothing but a +scratch, and don't you remember Aunt Judy bound it up so tight it only +bled a moment?" + +Judy and Kent had remained at Wellington for a visit. Kent was so soon +to join his regiment that he felt he could not tear himself away from +his mother and sister, so they had lingered on after the other guests +had departed. The bride and groom had also returned after a flying visit +to Nance's old home and were now with the McLeans, Nance declaring that +Andy's mother must have all she could of her son before he was to sail +for France. + +Judy took the puppy in her lap and smoothed his silky sides. The little +fellow opened his eyes and gave her a grateful glance. Mildred did +squeeze a little too tight when a fellow felt as sick as poor little +Poilu did. + +"Maybe we had better get the doctor for him," suggested Judy. "There +come Andy and Aunt Nance now, across the campus! Call them, Mildred! +Andy is not too proud to doctor a dog." + +Mildred delightedly ran to the door and waved her arms frantically. "Hi +there, brideangroom! brideangroom! Somebody's mighty sick in this here +house. Better hurry up or they might go deaded!" + +Andy and Nance quickened their pace and hastened into the house. + +"Who is it?" they cried anxiously. + +"It's my littlest brudder!" + +"Dodo! What is the matter with my little husband?" asked Nance +anxiously. + +"'Tain't Dodo! He ain't my littlest brudder. I'se got anudder brudder. +Ain't you knowed about him?" + +Nance and Andy were much mystified, but they followed the amusing little +creature into the library. Nance thought perhaps the big-hearted Molly +had adopted a French orphan,--Molly was quite capable of doing it. + +"There's my brudder!" and Mildred pointed to the suffering puppy. "Ain't +it too bad he's got a tail?" + +Andy laughed as he lifted the poor little Poilu to his own knees. + +"What is the matter with him, Andy?" was Judy's anxious query. + +"It looks like the last stages of tetanus." The patient was even then in +a violent convulsion. Andy mercifully laid his handkerchief over the +little fellow's head, dreading that Mildred should see his suffering. + +"I'd put him out of his misery but he will be gone in a moment anyhow," +he said sadly. "Has he been hurt?" + +"A week ago he got bitten by a dog, but it was a mere scratch and did +not amount to a row of pins, so Molly and I decided." + +"Did you put anything on the wound?" + +"Nothing but a surgical dressing down at the war relief rooms. I +remember it was one of the beautifully made dressings Madame Misel had +just brought in----" + +Andy sprang up, a wild light in his eye. The puppy had breathed its last +so he handed it over to Judy without more ado. + +"Where is Molly?" + +"She has gone down in the village to pack supplies at the war relief +rooms. There were lots of things to get off, so she went quite early. I +am to follow a little later, just as soon as Kent finishes primping. +What is the matter?" + +"There may be much the matter. You and Kent come as fast as you can," +and Andy and Nance hurried off without any more explanation. + +The news was broken to Mildred that her pet was no more and her bruised +heart was much comforted with promises of a funeral later on when Kizzie +got time to make arrangements. Kent and Judy caught up with Andy and +Nance before they reached the old church where the war work was carried +on. + +"What under Heaven is the matter?" panted Judy. + +"It may be nothing, but I must investigate. Let's go in as quietly as +possible. Does Madame Misel still work on the surgical dressings?" + +"Yes, indeed! And such beautiful work as she does! Molly insists that +she must have a great deal of good in her to give so much time to this +work. Sometimes I think I must have dreamed that they spoke as they did +that night in the garden. Why should pro-Germans and spies choose this +particular spot, anyhow?" + +The workroom was filled with very busy ladies when our young couples +entered. Molly was tying up dressings, after carefully inspecting and +counting them. An order had come for many bandages and other dressings +and all hands were at work trying to get them off. Madame Misel was +deftly arranging the rolled bandages in pyramids and then tying them +with strings made of the selvedge torn from the cotton. Nothing goes to +waste in this war work. Madame's countenance was as calm as ever as she +bent over her work, but when she saw the two men enter, Judy noticed a +sudden alertness in her glance and a tiny spot of red on her usually +white cheek. As she pulled the selvedge string, she must have given it +an unusual tug for it broke and the tightly-rolled bandages flew hither +and yon over the floor. + +"Humph! There is no telling how many germs got picked up in that +scatteration," muttered Andy as he stooped and gathered the bandages. + +"The--bandage--does--not--touch the--wound," said Madame, evidently +forgetting she was speaking to a surgeon. + +"No?" said Andy shortly. + +"Molly," he said, "I must speak with you a moment." + +"Well, Andy dear, I am awfully busy. You come home to luncheon with me, +you and Nance, and then you can speak all you've a mind to." + +"I must speak now," whispered Andy sternly. + +"Heavens! Is anything the matter?" asked Molly. + +"I am not sure," and Andy drew her towards the vestry at the back of the +church. "Tell me, Molly, have you packed all the dressings that that +Misel woman has made?" + +"Why, no, not all of them! Why?" + +"Have you mixed them with the others?" + +"No! They are so beautifully folded that I do not have to inspect them, +and so I have put them in boxes to themselves. She is the best worker I +ever saw." + +"Molly, I shall have to ask you not to get this shipment off to-day." + +"But, Andy, it is most important! The poor wounded are bleeding to death +and the ship sails in two days. We must get them off this evening if +they are to catch that boat. What is your reason?" + +And then Andy told her of the puppy's death. He said the fact that his +first aid had come from those very rooms, and that tetanus, or lock-jaw, +had set in on a perfectly healthy puppy when he had a mere scratch from +another dog, made him suspicious that tetanus germs were on some of the +bandages. + +"Why, Andy, that is ridiculous! Poor Madame Misel may be in sympathy +with Germany in spite of all she says, she and her husband, but she +could not do such a vile thing as that." Molly could not help feeling +impatient and indignant with her old friend. "Only look at her sweet +face and all thought of such infamy will leave your mind." + +Andy did glance towards Madame Misel and the look of venomous hatred +that he surprised on her face was shocking. The young physician laughed +grimly. "Molly, you are no judge of persons unless they happen to be +angels. You think wings are getting ready to sprout even from our +enemies." + +"Perhaps they are! Who knows?" + +"You may be right, but in the meantime, please don't let any of these +dressings get off. I must see those Secret Service men. Where are they?" + +"Edwin knows, I believe, but he has not told me." + +Molly was irritated beyond endurance. How was she to let these women +know that the shipment must be held up? It was all of it so absurd. The +women had done the work and now these men must come poking their fingers +into the pie that they had had none of the work of making. The idea of +accusing Madame Misel of such a crime! Judy, too, seemed to be doubting +the stranger, and Nance, of course, would be aiding and abetting Andy. + +"I shall have to ask you to be very quiet, not to give this creature an +inkling of our suspicions," commanded Andy sternly. "That is very +important." + +"Well, naturally, I'll hardly be so rude as to let her think anyone is +so unkind as to doubt her," and Molly's lip trembled. + +"Molly, dear Molly, don't hate me so. I can't help seeing that something +is wrong and if I have the slightest suspicion, I must surely probe to +the bottom. You must see that." + +"Of course I do, Andy, but I just can't bear to have anybody abused, +especially a woman who makes such lovely dressings," and Molly tried to +smile at her friend. + +"Well, I'll depend upon you to stop the work of getting them off and +still not let the woman know she is under suspicion. Just go on packing +but do not make the shipment." + +"I hate to resort to such subterfuge, but I'll do my best," sighed +Molly. + +"Wouldn't it be better to bring one criminal to justice than to kill +thousands of poor wounded men by dressing their wounds with tetanus +germs?" + +"Of course, only--but--you see----" + +"Yes, I see that your heart is so tender and you are so honest yourself +you think all the world must be like you." + +Molly went sadly back to her packing, all the joy and zest gone out of +her work. How could nice men like Andy and Kent think such things about +a poor defenseless woman? No doubt she did have a sneaking sympathy for +Germany. Was not that natural? Had she and her countrymen not been under +German rule long enough to consider the kaiser as their rightful ruler? +Because her husband chose to pretend to be lame was no reason why +everybody should think Madame Misel capable of such a dastardly thing as +putting tetanus germs on the bandages of poor wounded soldiers. That was +something no woman, no matter how bad, could do,--and surely this woman +was not bad, not really bad. Molly Brown was so constituted that one had +to be proven to be bad before she could believe evil of him or her, and +then, as a rule, she would find some excuse for the sinner if not for +the sin. + +Nance and Judy stayed on to help in the work, while Andy and Kent went +to find the Secret Service agents. While the task of making bandages, +etc., went rapidly forward, the detectives quietly ransacked the cottage +occupied by the Misels. This was the first opportunity they had had of +going over the house. The occupants had never before left it alone. Much +of dire importance was discovered. Among other things a small laboratory +where no doubt all kinds of evil germs were incubated. The search was +made very rapidly, as they were anxious to leave things in such order +that the owners would not suspect that they were under surveillance. + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +GERMS + + +As the two quietly-dressed, intelligent looking men were in the act of +going through a desk, they saw from the window the slow and painful +approach of M. Misel. Without a word they let themselves out of a back +window, left open for emergencies, and before the master had opened the +front door the detectives were over the back fence and out of sight. +They were desirous of catching more than the Misels in their net and did +not want to act too quickly. + +Had they peeped through the window, they would have seen Misel with an +impatient gesture sling his crutch in one direction, his cane in +another. + +"Lena!" he called, in anything but a gentle tone. "Lena!" And then with +muttered curses, when he found his wife to be absent, he settled himself +to look over the bunch of mail he had just obtained at the post-office. +One letter he examined very critically before opening. It was an +inoffensive enough looking envelope, addressed on a typewriter and with +a postmark from New York. It had the appearance of a circular or +advertisement of some sort, being made of cheap, greyish-white paper, +the kind of letter one would wait until last to open in a pile of mail, +being sure it was of no especial interest or importance. Misel seemed to +find it very interesting, however. It was the one he chose from all the +letters and papers, and as he examined it, he scowled darkly. + +"Lena!" he called as Madame Misel hurriedly entered the cottage, "Lena, +some fool has been meddling with my mail!" + +"Perhaps not such a big fool as you are!" she answered tartly. + +"Look! The envelope has been opened before. Of course it is the letter +from Fritz von Lestes, the one we have been awaiting." He tore it open +and read aloud: "'The paint which you have ordered will be delivered +immediately. Am sorry there should have been any delay. I am sending a +light grey, as agreed upon.' Umm--I don't see how they could make much +out of that." + +"Let me see the letter.--Of course they can make much out of it as there +is no address,--you men bungle things so! Why should a man who is in the +paint business write a letter with no address and sign his name so +illegibly that no one could make it out? He should have had a letter +head and a business envelope." + +"And speaking of bungling,--why did you go and leave the house with no +one in it? Can't you see that is imprudent?" + +"Mrs. Green came for me and I had no excuse.--Besides, I am sure if I am +by when the dressings are handed in that no one will inspect my work. I +have been packing all morning and have seen to it that my labor has not +been in vain." + +"Oh, peerless woman!" he said sarcastically. + +Madame Misel said nothing but busied herself over the luncheon. Suddenly +she gave a little cry, half distress, half indignation. Misel hastened +to her. + +"What is it?" + +"Look! This back window is not quite closed! Did you open it?" + +"No! I have not been here in the kitchen." + +"Then someone has been in the house," she announced in a dead tone. + +"Are you sure?" + +"Of course! I left the windows locked, stupid! Look about and see if all +is in order." + +The detectives had worked as neatly as detectives can work, but the +Misels found several traces of them. In one room a chair had been moved; +in another a drawer had not been shut as close as Madame was confident +she had left it; papers had been turned over in the desk, Misel was +sure, although none were missing. + +"Someone has been in the laboratory, too! Look at this crucible! I +always place them so,--and this has been turned." + +The pair faced each other with despair on their countenances. + +"What now?" they gasped. + +"We must make a flitting this very night!" exclaimed the woman. "Thank +goodness, nobody dreams that you are not crippled nor that I am anything +but the homely hausfrau I appear. The dressings will be off this very +afternoon, too, so my work is completed in that line, at least. If you +could boast as much, no doubt you would not mind leaving. I told you to +begin the teaching at Exmoor sooner." + +"The youths were not ripe for it. I have begun in a way, but not much +has been accomplished. Perhaps the person who has been here is just some +prying neighbor and we are not really being watched. Go out and see if +you can discover anything!" + +When Madame Misel peeped through the windows of the old church she saw +enough to make her turn pale. Andy McLean was there with two strange men +and Professor and Mrs. Green. Molly was weeping bitter tears as she +untied the carefully packed surgical dressings. Madame saw at a glance +that it was her work that was being examined by the men. She did not +stop to make sure what they found on her beautifully made dressings, but +turned and fled towards the cottage that she called home. + +"Why is she weeping?" she asked herself, and there was woman enough in +her to know that Molly wept because one of her own sex had proved +faithless. + +Blinds were pulled down in the cottage with the lovely old garden, and +the activities that ensued could only be equaled by a circus breaking up +to leave town. Madame Misel moved with a quiet precision that showed she +was an adept at making a quick get-away. Misel worked with a fury of +impatience. He went through his desk, scattering papers hither and yon +and burning everything of no value. Other documents he stowed carefully +away in his breast pocket. The laboratory was dismantled and small, +mysterious-looking vials packed in boxes and placed in the huge +suit-case that seemed to hold most of their belongings. + +A letter was written to the landlord informing him that his tenants had +been called out of Wellington by the illness of a fictitious sister. A +month's rent was enclosed. Another letter was written to the postmaster +asking that mail be forwarded to an entirely imaginary address. The work +proceeded rapidly. The cottage was always in apple-pie order, as Madame +Misel was certainly an excellent housekeeper. + +"You must write to the president of the college," commanded Madame. + +"Naturally! Must I use the same sister?" + +"Of course! Why two lies when one will suffice?" + +A letter to Miss Walker was dispatched forthwith. + +"And now for our disguises,--or rather the time has come to discard our +disguises!" cried Madame almost joyfully. "I hate to appear as such a +frump!" + +Misel's disguise was composed principally of cane and crutch, but at his +wife's instigation he shaved his mustache. With the help of a checked +suit and red necktie and a brown derby hat a trifle too small for +him, the pathetic and interesting teacher of the French language was +transformed into the type of man one sees hanging around a race track. +With a clever brush Madame put a quirk in his eyebrows that completed +the portrait. Then a bit of court plaster was stuck on one of the +perfect teeth which gave the handsome Misel a sinister look and +suggested to the beholder former battles and fisticuffs in which he +had been struck in the mouth. + +"Even your dying sister will not recognize you!" exclaimed his wife. + +Madame's transformation was even more startling than her husband's. +First she shook out her smoothly brushed hair and with the help of +curling tongs soon had a wave that the finest hair dresser in New York +could not have exceeded. She piled her abundant hair up in curls and +twists and coils, pulling out puffs over her ears. Then with pencil and +rouge pot and powder puff she went to work on her countenance. A raging +beauty was the outcome, but rather fast and loud looking. A lavender +suit lined and slashed with corn-colored silk was then donned, with +many rings and bracelets. The flat-heeled shoes were packed away in the +suit-case with the sober costume, and high-heeled French boots were +fitted on in their stead. A plentiful sprinkling of musk was added so +that the nostrils were assailed as soon as the eyes. + +"Tough sports!" would have been the verdict of anyone meeting the +Misels. They had decided on the night train to New York. The cottage was +carefully locked, the key enclosed in the letter to the landlord, which +they posted on their way to the station. Everything was going smoothly. +The station was empty when the pair stepped upon the platform and in a +moment the New York train came steaming around the curve. + +"Thank God, we are getting away unnoticed!" gasped Misel. + +"Thank God if you choose, but it would be more to the point if you +thanked me. I can't see that anyone has helped you but me." + +"Oh, well! Have it your own way!" said the spurious bookmaker as they +boarded the train. + +"Someone got left," he laughed as they took their seats in the chair +car. "I saw a man and woman running down the road just as we got aboard. +I am glad they got left. Whoever it is might have recognized us." + +"Nonsense! Didn't I tell you your own dying sister would not know you?" +and Madame Misel smoothed her lavender draperies and jangled her many +bracelets and rings, peeping in the mirror meantime to adjust her large +beplumed hat. There was a commotion in the end of the Pullman and she +heard a familiar voice. In the mirror she espied a familiar face, and +under the heavily laid on rouge, the woman paled and the hand that +adjusted her hat shook. Misel buried his face in the evening paper some +traveler had left in his seat, while the innocent cause of their +perturbation found a seat with the help of the porter. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +HER FATHER'S OWN DAUGHTER + + +"I don't see why you take it so hard, Molly darling," said Judy as Molly +told her of the detectives' findings and of the perfidy they had +unearthed. + +"Why, I fancy I am grieving that such wickedness can be in this world," +sighed Molly. "I liked Madame Misel so much." + +"Well, I never did like her," declared Judy. + +Molly smiled, well remembering Judy's enthusiasm on arriving at +Wellington and telling of the interesting couple she had met on the +train. + +"I know what you are thinking about--of course I said they were +interesting, but I never did like the woman much--she was too catty for +me." + +This conversation was interrupted by the loud ringing of the telephone +bell, which proved to be a long distance call for Judy from Mr. Kean in +New York. His marching orders had come and he was to sail for France in +a few days, and for the first time on record he could not take his +little wife with him. Building roads and bridges in war time was very +different from times of peace, and France at that time was no place for +delicate little ladies. + +"You had better come right up to New York on the next train," was his +ringing command. "Your mother needs you and I must see you, too." + +"All right, Bobby! Meet me at the Pennsylvania Station. I'll take the +12.45--I am not going to let Kent come. He must be with his mother one +more day,--his mother and Molly. So long! Be sure and meet me!" + +Then such a scrambling ensued! Kent must be persuaded he was neither +wanted nor needed, a few things hurled into a bag, her sketch book +tucked in her jacket pocket, and Judy was off like a whirlwind. She and +Kent ran all the way to the station only to see the train pulling out +as they stepped upon the platform. + +"I can get it! Keep the old bag!" cried that young woman as she sprinted +down the track, her young husband running lightly by her side, laughing +in spite of himself. If you have never run after a train and caught it +you cannot realize the triumphant feeling Judy had as she grasped the +rail and swung herself up on the rear coach. Fortunately it was not a +vestibule train or she would have been shut out. Kent slung the bag up +after her and then stood in the middle of the track until his Judy was +lost in the darkness. + +"What a girl she is!" he laughed to himself. "What a dear girl!" + +The dear girl was rescued by a rather indignant brakeman and led through +the empty coach that happened to be hitched on to the train and finally +installed in the chair car, after many explanations and excuses had been +made to train conductor and then Pullman conductor. + +Young women have no business on night trains with no tickets--certainly +no business in boarding those trains from the rear, thereby risking +their own necks and making the railroads liable to damage suits. + +"But you see my father telephoned me from New York," she confided to the +train conductor, a grizzled looking old fellow with a decidedly military +bearing. "He is going to France next week and he simply had to see +me.--Perhaps you know my father," she added with a certain assurance +that everybody connected with railroads ought to know Bobby. + +"More than likely!" was the grim reply. The conductor had no idea of +being cajoled into good humor by this daring girl. + +"He is Mr. Robert Kean,--Bobby!" + +The conductor was suddenly a changed creature. + +"Know him! I should say I did! Bless my soul, if you don't look like +him--same eyes--same mouth! Ha, ha! See Bob Kean missing a train! Not +much!" and the erstwhile stern captain of the train now grasped Judy's +hand. "Come on, I'll see that you get a chair, Miss Kean. I'm certainly +pleased to make your acquaintance." + +"I'm not Miss Kean any more,--I'm Mrs. Kent Brown now.--It was my +husband who pitched me and my luggage on the back end of the train." + +"Married! By jiminy! I can't believe Bob Kean has a married daughter! +And your husband aided and abetted you in jumping on the back of fast +trains, did he?" and the once grim captain laughed aloud. "Well, I'm +glad you got a game husband. I don't know what your father would have +done with a 'fraid cat." + +Judy's entrance in the Pullman caused some commotion. The old conductor +was laughing heartily and the brakeman was in a much pleasanter frame of +mind as he handed over Judy's bag to the grinning porter. There were +about eight persons in the chair car as Judy entered and Judy-like, she +immediately became intensely interested in them. + +Of course, the spot of color made by a flashy dame in lavender attracted +her attention first, and then her companion in loud checks cried out to +be noticed. What a couple! Race track written all over both of them! +Even from three seats off Judy could smell the musk on the woman. The +man's face was hidden by the newspaper and the woman seemed to be +engaged in rapt contemplation of her beauty in the narrow little mirror +by her chair. To Judy's disappointment the gaudy dame whirled her chair +around so she could not see her face. + +"I bet she's a peacherino!" she said to herself. + +There were other persons in the train that proved interesting, too: +among them a mother and child who appealed to Judy's artistic sense; a +G. A. R. veteran who was sure he had been in worse battles than the +Marne; an ancient lady from Louisiana who made our young artist wild to +paint her white hair and patrician nose. Opposite Judy's chair was a +young man, (or was he a young man?) At least he was not an old man! +There were a few tiny lines around his twinkling bright blue eyes, but +his movements were as alert as a college athlete's, and his mouth, +though very firm, had the saucy expression of a street boy. Judy was +sure she had seen his face before. The way his hair grew on his forehead +in a so-called widow's peak reminded her vaguely of someone,--the cleft +chin she was sure she had known somewhere. He was interested in her, +too, she could plainly see. He had a pleasant, dependable expression, +the kind of look one felt meant that in time of trouble he would be a +good person to call on. He was making himself generally useful to the +madonna-like mother and child; he had assisted the ancient lady from +Louisiana to get up and sit down several times since Judy had so +unceremoniously boarded the car. + +"I wish I knew where I had known him. His face is as familiar to me as +my own." + +She felt in her jacket pocket for her sketch book. She must get an +impression of the mother and child, and the old lady was destined to be +sketched in, too. She longed to do the youngish-oldish person opposite, +but he was too close for her to permit herself such a familiarity. She +turned over the leaves of her book and suddenly came upon the page +given up to the Tucker twins and their friend Page Allison. What +delightful girls they were! Suddenly she could place the resemblance +seen in the gentleman across the aisle. Of course his forehead and +widow's peak were the same that Dum Tucker owned, and his cleft chin was +the identical one belonging to Dee Tucker. Could he be their father? + +She remembered what the girls had told her of their delightful father. +He was a newspaper man in Richmond, Virginia, and according to the twins +was just about the most wonderful person in the world. Page Allison, +too, had given him praise, although not quite so wildly unstinted as his +daughters. + +"I think I'll drop something and let him pick it up for me and get in a +conversation with him," Judy laughed to herself. "He is such a squire of +dames, he is sure to pick it up." + +She turned the pages of her sketch book until she came to the quick +impressions she had made of Madame Misel at the war relief rooms. + +"The wretch!" was her inward comment, and her thoughts went back to the +last days at Wellington. She looked up; her eye was again chained by the +gaudy lavender spot and she suddenly became conscious that she could see +the woman's face in the large mirror at the end of the Pullman. Her eyes +were down as she perused the pages of a magazine. + +Another familiar face! Where under Heaven had she seen just that chin +and nose? Her eyes fell again on the open sketch book. Why, it is Madame +Misel--no other! With quick strokes she copied the sketch and then +cleverly added the beplumed hat, fluffy collar and fashionably cut coat. +The woman stood up for a moment to get something from the pocket of her +great coat, hanging on the hook at one side, and then Judy took in her +general contours standing, and added some draperies to the full length +figure she had also obtained of Madame Misel in the work room. High +heels were put on the flat, unstylish shoes. The straight severe dress +and basque were transformed into the fashionable, if gaudy, creation. +Judy was careful not to erase any of the original lines and all of the +new parts she sketched in in dots and dashes. + +The gentleman opposite was plainly interested in what she was doing and +it evidently required all his self-control to keep from asking to be +allowed to see. + +"They are the Misels and they are running away!" flashed into Judy's +mind. "It is up to me to stop them--but how? The gent in checks is +undoubtedly Misel. They can't fool me; I remember his ears too well and +the way his hands held things." + +She glanced across the aisle and her eyes met the bright blue ones +belonging to the widow's peak and cleft chin. + +"What would Bobby do in this case?" she asked herself. + +"Use the sense God gave him and get help if he couldn't cope with a +thing single-handed," she answered herself. + +She accordingly let her sketch book slide from her lap, rubber and +pencil hopping gaily after it. + +"Oh, thank you so much!" she exclaimed as the squire of dames +immediately dived for the belongings and restored them to her. "I would +not loose my sketch book for worlds." + +"I should say not! I have a daughter who is very much interested in +art,--in fact, she is studying in New York now,--her specialty is +sculpture, though." + +"Yes, I know her! She is Dum Tucker!" + +"You know my Dum! How wonderful! And how did you know she was--I was her +father?" + +"By your widow's peak! I also know you are Dee's father by your chin." + +Mr. Tucker changed his seat, taking the one by Judy. + +"By Jove! You artists are a clever lot. You would make a great +detective, Mrs. Brown. You must excuse me for knowing your name, but I +heard you tell the captain what it was,--Mrs. Kent Brown. My girls have +written me how kind you have been to them and I have been dying to make +myself known to you, but was waiting for some kind of opening wedge." + +"And I, too, Mr. Tucker, have been wondering where I had seen you, when +I found your girls' pictures in my little book. See! Here they are!" + +"And little Page, too!" He exclaimed eagerly scanning the sketches. "You +are wonderfully clever at a likeness." + +"Do you think so? I--Mr. Tucker--I deliberately scraped up an +acquaintance with you because I want you to do something for me," and +Judy looked frankly into the honest eyes of her new acquaintance. + +"Why, Mrs. Brown, you know I am at your service." + +"I was sure of you somehow, even if I had not been almost certain you +were related in some way to Dum and Dee Tucker. My little sketch book +told me that and it told me something else, too, but I must begin at the +beginning." + +Judy, whispering, began with her meeting of the Misels, of her +interesting the Greens at Wellington, of Misel's substituting in French +at the college and of Madame's work in the war relief. Jeffrey Tucker's +eyes flashed as the newspaper man in him scented a rousing good story. +When Judy got to the part where she and her friends went out in the +night to hunt for adventure and found it in the manly shape of Misel +taking strenuous exercise for a cripple, he beamed with joy and felt in +his pocket for a pencil. Judy rapidly told him of the puppy's wounded +leg and of the tetanus germs as well as ground glass being found in the +dressings. He set his square jaw and looked as though he could eat the +kaiser and all his crew at one mouthful. + +"And now I have come to the _dénouement_!" gasped Judy, excitement +making her breathless. "If I could recognize you by your likeness to my +sketches, I fancy I could also recognize Madame Misel by sketches of +herself. I got two of her this morning at the war relief. The detectives +did not arrest them, as they want to get others in their dragnet, but in +some way the spies must have caught on to the fact that they were under +suspicion, as they sneaked away." + +"Are you sure?" + +"Sure as shooting! In fact they are on this train." + +"No!" excitedly. + +"Now, Mr. Tucker, you must compose yourself if we mean to catch the +creatures!" + +"Certainly!" and the eager man sank back in his seat and tried to look +as though he were having a mild conversation with the attractive young +woman who had jumped on the back of the moving train. + +"Now that is better! Keep that nonchalant expression for what I am going +to tell you----" + +"All right, fire away!" + +"They are on this coach, just three seats down.--Good boy, not to jump +out of your skin! Now I am going to show you my sketch of the woman +before and after. See, there is no doubt about her! You walk to the +smoker and on the way back get a good look at her face and I bet you +will be convinced." + +Jeffrey Tucker did as he was bid, giving Madame Misel such a casual look +that he aroused no suspicion in her mind. + +"Gee! This is great! I'd rather bag some of these spies than do big +hunting in the African Jungle. Now, most wise of all female detectives, +what do you advise? We must act quickly." + +"I think you should take the conductors, both train and Pullman, into +your confidence, and then send telegrams to New York to have the spies +met with the proper reception. You can telegraph Bobby, I mean my +father, if you think it best, and he can get in cahoots with the Secret +Service people in New York. Bobby is the kind of man who doesn't let +things go wrong. When he bores a hole in the mountain it comes out on +the opposite side just exactly where he meant it to,--when he swings a +bridge across a river it stays swung,--there is no giving way of +supports and undermining from washings,--Bobby knows. If you telegraph +him, he'll have detectives there all right and they will have the +necessary warrants and handcuffs, too." + +"Well then, Bobby it is!" and Jeffrey Tucker quickly took Mr. Kean's +address. Next the conductors were interviewed, and those good Americans +quickly complied with any and every request. A long and explicit +telegram was written to the gentleman who did not let mistakes happen, +another one sent to the chief of police, in case Mr. Kean should not be +at home to receive the telegram, (Jeffrey Tucker being the kind of man +who did not let mistakes occur, either,) and then there was nothing to +do but sit quietly in the Pullman and wait for the train to steam into +New York. + +It seemed to Judy to be hours and hours, although the time certainly +passed pleasantly with the friends she made on the train. She and Mr. +Tucker talked to everybody except the two sporty looking individuals, +and they would have had the audacity to talk with them if they had been +given the slightest encouragement. But the Misels kept their backs +studiously turned to their fellow travelers and did not court +sociability. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +THE ARREST + + +"Suppose they get off at Manhattan Junction and go to the Hudson +Terminal instead of the big Pennsylvania Station!" panted Judy, her eyes +shining with excitement and her fluffy hair standing on end as though an +electric shock had gone through her system. + +"Who is giving the game away now?" teased her new friend. "I thought of +that and warned the chief when I telegraphed him. If they do get off +there, I'll get off, too, and you can go on to the other station where +your father will meet you." + +"Not much I will! I'm going to keep my eye on that lavender spot until I +see those wrists with something on them besides gold bracelets. You see, +I feel responsible for this pair, having been the one to introduce them +to Wellington society. If they get off at Manhattan Junction, so do I. +Bobby will understand! He would have no use for me if I didn't see it +through." + +"I believe you are a real patriot, Mrs. Brown." + +"Of course I am! But one thing sure I am not going to give my husband to +the cause, and my father, and then let these mean spies go Scot-free. +Now my dear friend and sister-in-law Molly,--Mrs. Edwin Green,--is so +good that she can't believe anyone can be bad. She is just as patriotic +as I am but she can't believe in the perfidy of Germany and the Germans. +I truly believe she would not have the heart to nab these wretches even +if she could not deny their guilt. Molly is an angel herself and I fancy +maybe her angelic qualities do rub off some even on the worst +characters. She may have helped this Madame Misel some, who knows? But I +am going to help her even more by letting her get a taste of real +punishment." + +"And I am going to do my best to help you help her," laughed Mr. Tucker. +"We are nearing Manhattan Junction now and I do not see our friends +making ready to get off." + +The pair sat quietly while the train stopped for a moment for passengers +to change for the downtown station. Judy and Mr. Tucker were on the +alert to leave the train if they saw the slightest movement on the part +of the Misels, but the latter sat in evident certainty of their disguise +not having been penetrated. + +"Now the curtain is to go up in a moment!" cried Judy. "I have never +been in such a stew of expectation!" + +The train had entered its under-water tunnel and in what seemed hardly +a minute they found themselves in the Pennsylvania Station. Jeffrey +Tucker, true to his nature, must assist the old lady from Louisiana and +the mother and child, but this time he assisted them by calling the +porter and, with a generous tip, put them in his hands. He had other and +more urgent fish to fry. + +"There's Bobby!" cried Judy. "They have let him through the gates!" + +So they had, and others, also. Mr. Robert Kean was eagerly scanning the +windows of the coaches as they slowly passed in review. By his side were +several alert looking men in plain clothes and near them were some +brass-buttoned policemen. + +"You go out first," whispered Mr. Tucker to the impatient Judy, who +looked like a hunting dog straining at the leash. "I'll bring up the +rear in case of a bolt." + +The Misels got up quickly and without any delay moved towards the door. +They seemed perfectly unconcerned, the woman patting her curls and hat +into shape and Misel actually having the hardihood to cast an ogling +glance at Judy. That young woman returned his admiring look with a saucy +toss of her head, entering into the game with her usual vim. + +One hug for Bobby and a whisper in his ear: + +"The handsome dame in lavender and the lout in checks!" + +He in turn handed the information on to the plain clothes men, who were +ready with their bracelets not made of gold. + +The arrest was made so quietly that the mother and child who were in the +midst of it never did know what was going on, and the old lady from +Louisiana took her serene way right by the handcuffed Madame Misel +without knowing that that lady had had an addition made to her bangles. +Misel was inclined to give some little trouble. When he realized they +were trapped, he started back into the chair car, but was met in a head +on collision by Jeffrey Tucker, who had a few football tricks left over +from his not so far distant youth. + +"Get out of my way! You fool!" cried the enraged Misel. + +"Softly, my friend! The exit is the other way," purred the redoubtable +Mr. Tucker, at the same time putting up his guard, seeing the foreigner +was about to spring upon him. "Madame has gone out by the door behind +you." + +Bang! Misel's fist shot out, but Jeffrey Tucker was a match for any +ordinary boxer, having practiced that manly art to keep up with his +daughters who always put on the gloves to settle any difficulty, and, as +they expressed it, to let off steam when the family atmosphere got too +thick. He dodged the blow, holding his guard ready for the next. + +Before the furious creature could recover himself after having given the +empty air such a drubbing, the detectives approached him from the rear +and in a twinkling he was overcome. + +"What does this mean?" he asked, attempting an air of dignity. + +"You shall have to come and find out!" was the laconic reply deigned him +by the grim policeman who had him in charge. + +"Mr. Kean, I am sorry to tell you, but your daughter will have to come +to the police court to tell what she knows of these persons," said the +leader of the plain clothes men. + +"I'm not sorry! I want to see it through!" cried Judy. + +"And so, we are to thank you for this indignity," hissed Madame. + +"Thank me or the picturesque garden by your cottage--whichever you +choose. It is a stirring thing to creep in that lovely garden on a +romantic night and suddenly to see a poor lame man who has won the +sympathy of the community, come springing out in running togs and have +him beat Douglas Fairbanks and George Walsh in his jumping. Then to have +the gentle, courteous Madame Misel boldly state that Wellington is +composed of blockheads,--all in perfect German, too, which was a strange +language for such good Frenchmen to employ in the bosom of the family." + +"Judy, I wouldn't say any more!" said her father, but his eye was +twinkling as he tucked his daughter's hand under his arm. + +Mr. Tucker and Mr. Kean met as long lost friends. They were what Judy +called soul brothers from the first. The old train conductor stopped to +exchange greetings with his one-time acquaintance. He was loud in his +praise of the young lady who had scared them all to death by jumping on +the rear end of the moving train. He said nothing of the scolding he +had given her before he found out she was Bob Kean's daughter. + +The sketch book was convincing evidence that the sporty couple were no +other than Monsieur and Madame Misel. Judy told her story well to the +chief, showing the clever sketches taken before and after. + +While they were at the police court, a long distance message was +received from Wellington with the news that the flitting of the spies +had been discovered by the detectives sent there on the case. + +"It would have been too late if you had not been so wide awake," the +chief informed Judy. + +"And I could have done nothing if Mr. Tucker had not taken hold," +declared Judy. + +"Why, my dear Mrs. Brown, you would have found some other way, I am +sure. You do not come of a breed that lets accidents happen." + +The Misels turned out to be pure Prussian, with not one drop of the +blood of Alsace in their veins. Their name was Mitzel and they had many +crimes to answer for. They had been on the stage prior to the war and +the man was a noted acrobat and prestidigitator; the woman had traveled +with her husband and assisted him in his work on the stage, being the +hypnotized lady, the Herodian mystery, the disappearing spirit, the +person who got tied up in the chest and had a sword run through +her,--anything, in fact, that is usually required of the assistant in +such a business. They were employed to act as spies and to disseminate +all the German propaganda in their power. + +Misel, or Mitzel, was to have insinuated an anti-draft spirit at Exmoor, +the male college near Wellington. Also to influence the girls at +Wellington, who in their turn were to influence their brothers and +sweethearts. + +"Oh, Bobby! Only suppose we had not gone out that night in search of +adventure!" cried Judy, when she was safe under her mother's wing. + +"Why don't you just suppose you had never been born?" boomed the +delighted Bobby. "When you were once born you were sure to be out +hunting adventure. You are made that way, eh, Mother?" + +"Yes, I am afraid she is," sighed that tiny lady. "You and Judy are +exactly alike." + +"Do you mind?" asked her big husband humbly. + +"No, I would not have either one of you different. But I fancy Kent and +I are in for lives of anxiety." + +"Well, he likes us the way we are, too," declared Judy, blushing. + +"Well, I have two things to say:" declared Mr. Kean, giving a mighty +yawn, "I am glad I let you have a Parisian education if with it you can +make clever enough sketches to catch these German spies; and the other +is, that it is high time we were all of us in bed." + +Madame Mitzel, before she was sentenced to the imprisonment that she so +richly deserved, requested an interview with Judy, which was granted, +although Judy was most reluctant. + +"I can't bear to see her again! She looked like a snake caught in a +net." + +"I--want--you--to tell--Mrs. Green--that--I--am sorry for--her +to--know--about me--That is all! If--I could--have--had a woman--like +that--to--be--my friend--in my--youth--I would have--been different." +She spoke in the faltering manner she had used at Wellington, one she +employed in speaking English, and then she plunged into voluble German, +so rapid that Judy could hardly follow her: + +"But you! You have outwitted me and I cannot but admire you for it, but +I hate you with all my heart." + +"That is all right! I'd rather have your hate than your love! I'll tell +Molly, though." + +Before we leave the Misels, or Mitzels, for good, I must tell you that +the shipment of paint arrived at Wellington as the mysterious dealer +had informed Monsieur Jean Misel it would. One of the Secret Service +men remained in Wellington to receive it. It was light grey, as was +promised; at least, it was marked light grey on the outside of the +six large cans. On opening these cans, which I can assure you the +detective did with the utmost caution, many things besides paint were +disclosed,--in fact, there was no paint there at all. He found various +chemicals, necessary for the making of the modern bomb; poisons of all +sorts, and innocent looking little vials containing deadly germs. Those +six cans if let loose on the unsuspecting community would have caused as +much damage as the imps in Pandora's box. + +Even Molly had to confess that the Misels were not very good persons, +and when her husband gave her to understand that her own little Mildred +and Dodo might have been poisoned by polluted water had the foreigners +accomplished all they no doubt intended to with some of those bottled +germs, the young mother came to the conclusion that they were not only +not very good but they were extremely wicked, and perhaps just +imprisonment was too mild a punishment to be meted out to them. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +THEY ALSO SERVE + + +There was a very serious meeting of students of Wellington being held in +the library of the Square Deal. Twenty of the leading spirits of the +student body had asked Mrs. Edwin Green to let them confer with her on a +most important matter. + +The college authorities had announced that the H. C. of L. had affected +Wellington just as it had every person and every institution, and +students' board would have to be raised for the ensuing year. This came +as a blow to the majority of girls. Going to college is an expensive +matter at best, and while there are many rich girls gathered in those +institutions, the majority come from homes of moderate incomes and many +from actual poverty. It will never be known how many sacrifices had +been made to educate some of those Wellington girls, and the H. C. of L. +had affected their families just as much as it had the institution; and +the news that the following year college expenses would increase had +caused much consternation in the student body. + +"We won't stand for it!" said one tense little girl from Indiana, who +had been working her way through three years of college by doing all +kinds of odd jobs, which reminded Molly of her own strenuous student +days. + +"It's harder on you than me, Mary Culbertson," said a sturdy sophomore. +"You haven't but one more year. At least I haven't wasted as much time +in this old joint as you have." + +"But, my dear, please don't look upon it as wasted time," begged Molly. + +"Well, I came for a degree and if I don't get it, I consider I have +wasted two years. I might just as well have taken a job at home. A +teacher's place was open for me then and now it may be filled for good. +A degree will give one a better salary, but two years of college won't +get you anywhere." + +"I am sure some scheme can be worked to keep down the expenses," +insisted Molly. + +"We can't live on less food!" bluntly declared Lilian Swift. + +"Nor plainer!" from a discontented one. + +"It might be plainer without being less nourishing," suggested Molly. +"How about your doing some light housekeeping on your own hook and not +trying to board with the college?" + +"But I am sure the college authorities do not make money on the girls +as it is," said Billie McKym, who had come to the meeting from truly +altruistic motives, as expenses made no difference to her personally. +"If a great body of girls cannot be fed on the amount charged now, I am +certain a girl could not live on less if she went in for herself." + +Billie, with all her wealth, had a good keen eye for business and +understood the management of money rather better than any poor girl at +Wellington. + +"I reckon you are right," said Molly sadly. "Would you girls mind if I +ask my husband to come in and talk it over with you?" + +"No!" in chorus. "Bring him in!" + +"Not that knowing how to read Chaucer in old English will make him wise +as how to live on nothing a year," whispered one. + +Professor Green was in the den with his cousin, old Major Fern, who had +motored in from the country to have a chat with his favorite kinsman. +Molly entered, smiling at the clouds of tobacco smoke which almost +obscured the two gentlemen. + +"Edwin, I know the Major will excuse you for a moment. I need you +badly." + +"Of course, my dear! But I hope it is nothing serious that is beclouding +your fair brow," said the old gentleman with the courteous manner of his +generation. + +"Yes, it is serious in a way," and Molly told her husband and his cousin +what was the problem the girls had brought to her to solve. + +"Of course, I can't blame the college authorities," she sighed. "It is +hard to feed people as it is, and with expenses going up, up, I know +they will have to raise the board. But on the other hand, there are many +girls who simply cannot pay more than they are already paying. I feel +for them, as I was one of them when I was at college. If the board had +been raised one nickel I should have had to stop. I almost had to as it +was. If it had not been for Edwin's fondness for apples, I should have +been degreeless to this day." + +"Adam and I!" laughed the professor. "But what do you want me to do, +Molly? I am yours to command." + +"I don't know exactly! I thought you might talk to the girls and we +might keep on thinking and praying until some solution is reached." + +"I have a proposition to make that might interest your college friends," +said Major Fern. "They may scorn it, but on the other hand they may like +the idea. Let me talk to them." + +"Oh, how lovely! I knew there would be a way," cried the optimistic +Molly. + +"Wait until you hear it first," smiled the old gentleman. + +Molly led the way to the library, where the twenty girls were having a +hot discussion on ways and means. She introduced Major Fern, who took +his seat among them and beamed on them with kindly eyes. + +"Ahem!" he began. "I am not much of a public speaker but I am going to +put a plan before you and see how it strikes you. I understand that you +are making a kick because of the raising of board for the ensuing +year----" + +"We are!" + +"Well, you know that everything is going up?" + +"Everything but prayer!" from the discontented one. + +"Even that may be going up, too," he answered solemnly. "Now listen: +Perhaps you know that I am rich,--not so rich as some, but richer than +I have any right to be or any reason for being----" + +Here Mary Culbertson tossed her proud little head as much as to let him +know that charity was not what she wanted. Major Fern saw her and smiled +his approval. + +"I have no idea of offering any of my ill-gotten gold to you.--I know +how you would hate that. In fact, I haven't any gold to offer. I am rich +only in land and about as poor as they make 'em in other things. I am +really land poor, having much more land than I have any use for or can +till. I can't get labor to keep up my farms. I have been thinking of +selling an especially fertile farm about four miles from Wellington, but +I don't want to lose money on it, and if I sell at this time I am sure +to. This farm comprises about two hundred acres of as good land as one +can find in these parts, and that is saying a great deal. And now I am +coming to my scheme----" + +The old gentleman paused while the girls waited in breathless eagerness. + +"I will let you have this farm if you will work it for me,--have it for +as long as you need it. You don't know what can be done in the way of +intensive farming if one can get the labor. You could raise enough +potatoes to run your mess for the winter; enough tomatoes and beans to +can, and what's more you can can them right on the spot." + +"Hurrah! Hurrah!" shouted Billie McKym. "The problem is solved or I'm a +Boche." + +"Are you willing to undertake it?" asked the Major. + +"Of course we are willing!" cried Lilian. + +"The ones who live far can take the first part of the summer, and the +last, just before college opens, and the ones who are close can fill in +during the midsummer," said Molly, immediately grasping the possibility +of the plan. + +"Well, I'll leave it to you young ladies to work up, and when you care +to, I'll take you over the place. There is a good house and well and +plenty of fruit,--apples to feed to the hogs----" + +"That suits me!" declared Edwin, who had been quiet while his cousin was +unfolding the plan. "I see no reason, seriously, why this idea should +not be wonderfully successful,--not only should it bring you back to +college and keep you for the same, or even less, money than you have +hitherto had to pay, but it will at the same time help materially in the +food situation that the country is going to have to face." + +"Will you be one of that committee that must take hold of this thing?" +asked Billie. + +"If the student body so wishes!" + +"Well, we so wish!" came from twenty throats. + +"You and Mrs. Green,--she is already one of us. As for you, Major Fern, +we hardly know how to thank you for what you have done," said the +president of the juniors. + +"Don't thank me! I have done nothing! Instead of selling a farm at a +loss when I can't get labor to work it, I am going to ask some beautiful +young ladies to work it for me." + +"We might drink him down," whispered a timid girl. + +"Of course! Drink him down!" + +And without more ado the twenty girls, with Molly chiming in and Edwin +holding down a second, sang: + + "Here's to Major Fern! Drink him down! + Here's to Major Fern! Drink him down! + Here's to Major Fern! Here's to Major Fern! + Drink him down! Drink him down! Drink him down!" + +"Fine! That beats a wreath of bay," beamed the dear old gentleman. "And +now I'll take myself off. I forgot to say I'll have the land turned +under for you and give the use of a team whenever you need it." + +He was gone. The girls, who only a few moments before had felt so +depressed, were now filled with hope and animation. Degrees were to be +had, after all. Of course it meant work, but that would be fun. + +"Oh, gee! I'm happy!" cried Mary Culbertson. "But we must get busy in a +hurry." + +"First we must see Prexy and get her to coöperate," suggested Molly. + +"Sure! Let's do it in order, and find out if we do our part if the +college authorities will do theirs. I dote on digging potatoes, myself," +said Lilian. + +Committees were formed immediately; one to see Prexy; one to go view +their estate; another to look into housing conditions; another to canvas +the student body and find out who would and who wouldn't, who preferred +to plant and who to reap. + +Billie McKym was wild with enthusiasm. "Do you realize, Molly, that I +won't have to spend a summer in Newport, after all? I can put it up to +my relations that I am needed in these parts. I mean to ask for a larger +allowance, though, as I can help out some on the sly. I am thinking +about buying some Close-to-Nature houses and presenting them to the +agricultural club. We shall have to have overalls, too,--and farming +implements.--I think I'll make Grandmother and Uncle come across in good +shape." + +Prexy, Miss Walker, was not only willing to coöperate but delighted that +the students were finding a way out of the difficulty. It was a deep +grief to her, this raising of prices, and she knew only too well how +many girls would be cut out of their degrees by this necessary step. + +Many interviews with Major Fern had to be arranged and many meetings of +committees had to be held, but finally everything was under way for the +agricultural club's work on the farm so kindly donated by its delighted +owner. + +"By Jove, I begin to feel that I'm helping to win the war!" he declared. +"I have been hating myself for a useless hulk of a veteran who was too +old to fight and too old-fashioned to suggest to others how to fight, +but if I can be the means of keeping a lot of girls at college I think I +am doing pretty well; especially if by so doing, those girls will grow +food enough for themselves. Every potato is equal to a hand grenade and +every bean to a bullet." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +THE TRENCHES + + +Molly and Edwin found themselves deeper in this agricultural scheme than +they had at first bargained for. If it was to be done at all, it must be +well done and quickly. There must be order and system. Suddenly they +awoke to the realization that if it was to be well done and quickly +done, it was up to them, the Greens, to do it. + +"I am afraid, my dear, that you must be the chaperone and I must turn +farmer. This is a stupendous undertaking and for the good name of +Wellington we must see it through." + +"It will mean work all summer for you, when you so need a holiday, you +poor old fellow." + +"I need no more holiday than you do. You haven't been idle one minute +this whole college year. I have a feeling that this summer we have no +business with holidays anyhow. The world is too busy, too upset for any +of us, who are able, to lay off. I mean to dig and delve here at home +and do all the good I can." + +"I think we ought to rent the Orchard Home for the summer, don't you?" +asked Molly, turning her head away so her husband could not see what it +cost her to make that suggestion. + +"Why, Molly honey, I can't bear to think of it. It is hard enough on you +not to be able to go to Kentucky for vacation, but I don't think you +should have to think of strangers as being among your apple trees." + +"It won't be bad, not nearly so bad as you think. At least, the little +brown bungalow won't be quite so lonesome as it would be empty all the +year, and we might buy tons of seed with the rent money or even take +care of some war orphans." + +"I guess you are right,--you usually are. I'll write to a real estate +agent in Louisville immediately and put it on the market for the summer. +I hate to do it, though. Not that it will make so much difference to +me. Wherever you are is my Orchard Home, honey!" + +The Major's farm was dubbed "The Trenches" by the members of the +agricultural club. It was a suitable name, for these girls felt that +they were in the war almost as much as the soldier boys themselves. + +Early in May Molly moved to the old farmhouse to superintend +arrangements for the many girls later to be housed there. It was +decided to run the place more or less as a military camp is run, with +squads detailed for various duties. + +"Only our trench digging will be in the potato fields and our drilling +in the bean patch," Billie declared. + +Billie was in a state of ecstasy from the first. She was General Molly's +aide-de-camp, giving time, money, and thought to the undertaking. + +"It is so splendid really to be helping! I wanted to do something to +help the Government and now I believe I am going to. I should like best +to shoulder a gun and take a crack at the Huns, but since that cannot +be, I'll shoulder a pick and take a crack at the soil." + +Billie, whose post-graduate studies at Wellington were not very +important, had cut and gone to The Trenches with Molly. They had +installed themselves in a corner of the rambling old farmhouse and were +as busy as bees getting ready for the thirty girls who were to land on +them the last week in May. Katy and the two children were with them, but +Kizzie had been left in Wellington to look after the master, who was up +to his neck in work for the finals at college. + +The students at Wellington had been canvassed from A to Z, and with a +deal of clerical work, all of the ones who were to join the agricultural +club had been enrolled and their time of service settled on and arranged +for. Billie had donated six Close-to-Nature houses which were to be set +up on the grassy lawn of the old farm. The cots she had wheedled out or +her uncle. Farming implements, such as hoes, rakes, spades, gasoline +ploughs and cultivators she had, as she expressed it, "blasted out of +Grandmother McKym." + +"They don't understand me in the least, my uncle and my grandmother, but +they love me, I really believe, and I fancy they always hope I'll come +to my senses and marry in 'the set' some of these days. They are really +dears," Billie explained to Molly as they helped to unload the wagons +that had just arrived laden with the tents and implements. + +"I think they are certainly very generous," declared Molly, pulling out +a bundle of rakes. + +From the beginning these girls had determined not to be dependent upon +the merely masculine to fetch and carry for them, and Molly and Billie +had pitched in with a will to do without men if need be. + +"Oh, yes, generous enough! They are glad when I let them off with +nothing more troublesome than writing checks. I believe Uncle Donald was +scared stiff that I might insist on his coming down here to help dig. +And as for Grandmother,--she would rather ante up thousands of dollars +than have to drag her silk skirts around in the wet grass here at The +Trenches. They don't see for an instant that I am kind of patriotic in +helping this way. They think I am just a faddist. Maybe I am, but +somehow I feel that I have ideals! Do you think I am just a silly goose +to think so?" + +"No, indeed! I know you have ideals,--I should hate to think you +didn't,--very high ideals," said Molly, as together they wheeled the +barrow laden with hoes and rakes out to the tool house. "I reckon your +uncle and grandmother have them, too, only perhaps they are not so open +about them." + +"Oh yes, they have them. Uncle Donald loves to talk about them, but +Grandmother isn't so keen on expressing herself. Sometimes I think his +ideals are mostly literary and hers sartorial. He is a great reader of +_belles lettres_ and Grandmother has an instinct for clothes that is +truly remarkable." + +"You have it, too." + +"Well, I do like 'em, but I like to dress other persons better than I +do myself. If I had been poor, I'd have gone into the business. I may do +it yet, but now until this war is over it seems to me it doesn't make a +bit of difference how anyone is dressed--anybody but Mother Earth. The +soil dressed with a good fertilizer is more important than silk +raiment." + +"How about literature?" laughed Molly, her friend's enthusiasm amusing +her and at the same time pleasing her. "Do you think writing should stop +as well as dressing?" + +"Oh, of course scribblers will scribble and anyone who has a message to +deliver will have to spout it out, war time or not, but they may not +think they are so all-fired important. A letter from the most ignorant +soldier at the front will have more real stuff in it than all of the +vaporings of the poet who only imagines gunfire." + +"And here far from the strife----" + +"Here we will make sonnets with hoe and rake!" + +"Our lines made by the gasoline plough shall be beautiful and +harmonious!" suggested Molly. + +"Our onion patch shall be worthy to be put into verse along with Eugene +Field's Onion Tart," said Billie, going Molly one better. + +"Our potato field shall be as full of solid refreshment as Charles +Dudley Warner's five feet of classics. Only smell the newly-ploughed +earth! Isn't it delicious?" + +The wagons were unloaded, the farming implements piled neatly in the +tool house and the Close-to-Nature houses dotted about the lawn ready +for the stupendous task of being put up. The girls were waiting for +Katy, whom they had dubbed "the powerful Katrinka," to come help them +with that job. Katy was in her element. She had been born and raised in +the country, and now that she was once more where things were growing, +where she could help them grow, she was as happy an Irish girl as there +was in all the land. Nothing was too difficult for her to do and her +great strength helped Molly and Billie out of many a quagmire of work +that seemed too heavy for them to accomplish without masculine aid. + +"And now Oi'm ready for to help put oop the little play houses," she +said as she joined Molly and Billie. + +"That's fine," said her mistress, "but before we begin, just let's smell +the ploughed ground a little. Don't you love it, Katy?" + +"Sure! And it beats the perfumery that comes in a bottle, to my moind," +said the girl, sniffing delightedly. + +"I don't see why they don't bottle the smell of new ploughed earth just +as they have new mown hay," laughed Billie. "I know two who would want +to buy it." + +"Deed and Oi'd buy a gallon of sooch smells!" + +"Do you know Masefield's 'Everlasting Mercy,' Billie? You and Katy +listen while I tell you the part about ploughing and then we'll put up +the tent houses." + +Very charming was the picture made by this group of girls. So Edwin +Green thought as he walked silently across the lawn of the old farm. +Katy, the sturdy Irish girl, was not without picturesque lines. Her look +was somewhat that of Bastien Lepage's peasant Jeanne d'Arc as she stood +in rapt reverie while her beloved mistress gave voice to those wonderful +lines of England's greatest modern poet. Billie looked very down-to-date +in her khaki overalls and stubby shoes, while Molly was very Mollyesque +in the blue linen blouse that was the only true Molly Brown blue. + +She did not hear her husband as he stepped lightly across the green +spring grass and he motioned to Billie not to let her know he was there. +He stood silently, with bared head while she recited. Molly's voice had +always appealed to Edwin, in fact it had been the first thing that had +attracted him--and when Molly recited poetry! + + "'The past was faded like a dream; + There came the jingling of a team, + A ploughman's voice, a clink of chain, + Slow hoofs, and harness under strain. + Up the slow slope a team came bowing, + Old Callow at his autumn ploughing, + Old Callow stooped above the hales, + Ploughing the stubble into wales. + His grave eyes looking straight ahead, + Shearing a long straight furrow red; + His plough-foot high to give it earth + To bring new food for men to birth. + + "'O wet red swathe of earth laid bare, + O truth, O strength, O gleaming share, + O patient eyes that watch the goal, + O ploughman of the sinner's soul. + O Jesus, drive the coulter deep + To plough my living man from sleep. + + "'Slow up the hill the plough team plod, + Old Callow at the task of God, + Helped by man's wit, helped by the brute, + Turning a stubborn clay to fruit, + His eye forever on some sign + To help him plough a perfect line. + + * * * * * + + "'I kneeled there in the muddy fallow, + That I should plough, and as I ploughed + My Savior Christ would sing aloud, + And as I drove the clods apart + Christ would be ploughing in my heart, + Through rest-harrow and bitter roots, + Through all my bad life's rotten fruits. + + "'O Christ, who holds the open gate, + O Christ, who drives the furrow straight, + O Christ, the plough, O Christ, the laughter + Of holy white birds flying after, + Lo, all my heart's field red and torn, + And thou wilt bring the young green corn, + The young green corn divinely springing, + The young green corn forever singing; + And when the field is fresh and fair + Thy blessèd feet shall glitter there, + And we will walk the weeded field, + And tell the golden harvest's yield, + The corn that makes the holy bread + By which the soul of man is fed, + The holy bread, the food unpriced, + Thy everlasting mercy, Christ.'" + +Katy wiped her eyes and Billie winked away the tears that would gather. +Molly turned and saw Edwin standing only a few feet from her. + +"Oh, Edwin, I didn't know you were there. I declare I haven't been +spouting poetry ever since we got here! We have done a lot and were +going now to put up the tent houses, but you aren't to help. I'll give +you some tea and let you rest up after your tramp. We weren't expecting +you until Saturday----" + +"And don't want me now?" + +"Want you! Why, Edwin Green, B. A., M. A., P. H. D.! You know I always +want you," and then Billie and Katy thought it was time to leave the +married lovers alone for a while. + +"I want to help put up the houses, though," insisted Edwin as he and +Molly wended their way to a pretty little arbor covered by a crimson +rambler that gave promise, if one might judge from the many buds, of +being a glorious sight later in the season. + +"But we can do it later by our lonesomes. You don't know how many things +we can do without the help of men, especially when one of us is as +powerful as Katy and one as spunky as Billie." + +"And how about you?" and he pinched her rosy cheek. + +"Oh, I'm not much force, I am afraid, but I have the bump of +stickativeness which is sometimes as good as strength and takes the +place of cleverness." + +"Do you really think you girls could run this farm without the help of a +man?" + +"Of course we could, once the heavy ploughing is done, and Katy says she +could have done that, too, if we had wanted her to. Do you want to go +off on a trip somewhere and let us try to run it without you?" + +Edwin looked searchingly into Molly's blue eyes. His gaze was long and +earnest and in his brown eyes Molly read a kind of sadness she had never +seen there before. + +"Edwin, dearest, what is it?" + +"Molly, it isn't anything unless you want it to be." + +"Tell me!" + +"Would you think it right or wrong if I should try to get into the +service, military service, I mean?--I have taken an examination and am +physically fit.--I won't apply to go into training at Fort Myer unless +you approve.--It rests entirely with you, honey." + +"You must go if you think it right." Molly spoke without a tremor, +although it did seem to her for a moment as though her heart would +burst. How could a heart get so big all of a sudden? And then it seemed +to her she was sounding cold and unemotional when Edwin wanted something +else. "I--I--want you to go! I think it is right for men just like you +to go--men with brains and the power of taking hold and leading--I +wouldn't have you stay behind for me for anything on earth. I--I--am +proud of you and want you to do exactly what you think is right, +and--and--I think you are right--just as right as can be--and--and--I +love you more than ever." + +It seemed to both Edwin and Molly that at no time since their walk in +the forest of Fontainebleau when the eternal question had been settled +between them had any moment been so filled with love and understanding +as now when he folded her in his arms. His Molly! His own, brave, true +Molly! Her Edwin! Her honorable, courageous Edwin! + +"I thought that I could content myself by digging and delving, but +somehow I have been feeling lately that if you would consent, it was up +to me to do something else. I don't feel critical in the least towards +the men of my age who are not going to the war,--not the younger ones, +either, if they do not feel called upon,--but somehow when one has been +called as I have, I think he should answer. I don't know why a staid +college professor should think it is his vocation, but I do think it, +and, oh, dearest, it is good of you to take it this way!" + +"I could take it no other way. Is not my mother giving God-speed to her +sons? Is not Judy encouraging Kent? Is not Nance not only sending Andy +but going with him? Who am I that I should say you shall and you shan't +do things for your country?" + +"But you see, dear girl, there are the children to take care of in +case--in case--in case I should--should--well--stump my toe." + +"I can take care of them as my mother did of all of us. My father died +when I was a tiny child and still my mother raised me. But don't stump +your toe. Pick up your feet when you walk--and--and----" + +Here Molly came very near shedding the tears that she felt must be shed +sooner or later, but she was determined that it should be later and that +her soldier boy should not see them. She jumped up and offered to race +him to the house where Katy was laying the tea table on the porch. + +Edwin knew Molly too well not to understand that this gaiety was nothing +but camouflage to conceal emotions that she was too brave to show. + +"What will your mother think?" + +"She will think that I have married well," was her gay rejoinder. + +"And what does my Mildred think when I tell her her daddy is going to be +a soldier?" he asked as he held the little girl close in his arms. + +Mildred had been busy with a tiny hoe and shovel on a patch of ground +given over to her tender ministrations. Her hands were very grubby and +her face not much better, but Edwin seemed not to mind the general +griminess of his daughter. + +"Oh, I say bully for Daddy! An' I bet if Dodo'll wake up, he'd say he +was a-goin', too. Boys is so rombustious." + + * * * * * + +And now we must leave Molly Brown and her College Friends at the +momentous hour when their country is plunged in a great and righteous +war. What the future holds for them is as much a mystery as what it +holds for any of us. One thing is sure: Molly is doing her duty,--doing +it cheerfully and bravely. Around her are college girls and more college +girls, each one doing her bit. And so the fields are ploughed, the crops +are planted and gathered. Fruit and vegetables are preserved and canned. +The men and boys are training for the trenches, but the women and girls +are in training, too. + +Molly often thinks of that moment when she stood sniffing the up-turned +mould, with her husband standing near listening to her as she recited +the lines from Masefield; and now as the days multiply she finds comfort +in Masefield's ending to "The Everlasting Mercy": + + "'How swift the summer goes, + Forget-me-not, pink, rose. + The young grass when I started + And now the hay is carted, + And now my song is ended, + And all the summer spended; + The blackbird's second brood + Routs beech leaves in the wood; + The pink and rose have speeded, + Forget-me-not has seeded. + Only the winds that blew, + The rain that makes things new, + The earth that hides things old, + And blessings manifold.'" + + +THE END + + + + +[Illustration] + + The + Girl Scouts + Series + +BY EDITH LAVELL + + +A new copyright series of Girl Scouts stories by an author of wide +experience in Scouts' craft, as Director of Girl Scouts of Philadelphia. + +Clothbound, with Attractive Color Designs. + +PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH. + + THE GIRL SCOUTS AT MISS ALLEN'S SCHOOL + THE GIRL SCOUTS AT CAMP + THE GIRL SCOUTS' GOOD TURN + THE GIRL SCOUTS' CANOE TRIP + THE GIRL SCOUTS' RIVALS + THE GIRL SCOUTS ON THE RANCH + THE GIRL SCOUTS' VACATION ADVENTURES + THE GIRL SCOUTS' MOTOR TRIP + +For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +Publishers + + A. L. BURT COMPANY + 114-120 EAST 23rd STREET NEW YORK + + + + +[Illustration] + + Marjorie Dean + High School + Series + +BY PAULINE LESTER + +Author of the Famous Marjorie Dean College Series + + +These are clean, wholesome stories that will be of great interest to all +girls of high school age. + + All Cloth Bound Copyright Titles + +PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH + + MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL FRESHMAN + MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL SOPHOMORE + MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL JUNIOR + MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR + +For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +Publishers + + A. L. BURT COMPANY + 114-120 EAST 23rd STREET NEW YORK + + + + +[Illustration] + + Marjorie Dean + College + Series + +BY PAULINE LESTER. + +Author of the Famous Marjorie Dean High School Series. + + +Those who have read the Marjorie Dean High School Series will be eager +to read this new series, as Marjorie Dean continues to be the heroine in +these stories. + + All Clothbound. Copyright Titles. + +PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH. + + MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE FRESHMAN + MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE SOPHOMORE + MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE JUNIOR + MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE SENIOR + +For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +Publishers. + + A. L. BURT COMPANY + 114-120 East 23rd Street New York + + + + +[Illustration] + + The Camp Fire + Girls Series + +By HILDEGARD G. FREY + + +A Series of Outdoor Stories for Girls 12 to 16 Years. + + All Cloth Bound Copyright Titles + +PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS IN THE MAINE WOODS; or, The Winnebagos go + Camping. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT SCHOOL; or, The Wohelo Weavers. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT ONOWAY HOUSE; or, The Magic Garden. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS GO MOTORING; or, Along the Road That Leads + the Way. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS' LARKS AND PRANKS; or, The House of the Open + Door. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS ON ELLEN'S ISLE; or, The Trail of the Seven + Cedars. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS ON THE OPEN ROAD; or, Glorify Work. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS DO THEIR BIT; or, Over the Top with the + Winnebagos. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS SOLVE A MYSTERY; or, The Christmas Adventure at + Carver House. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT CAMP KEEWAYDIN; or, Down Paddles. + +For sale by booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +Publishers + +A. L. BURT COMPANY +114-120 EAST 23rd STREET NEW YORK + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's note: + +A few minor printer's errors have been corrected. Otherwise the +original has been preserved, including inconsistent spelling and +hyphenation. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLY BROWN'S COLLEGE FRIENDS*** + + +******* This file should be named 36733-8.txt or 36733-8.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/6/7/3/36733 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre> +<p>Title: Molly Brown's College Friends</p> +<p>Author: Nell Speed</p> +<p>Release Date: July 14, 2011 [eBook #36733]</p> +<p>Language: English</p> +<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p> +<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLY BROWN'S COLLEGE FRIENDS***</p> +<p> </p> +<h3 class="center">E-text prepared by<br /> + Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan, eagkw,<br /> + and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br /> + (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" /> +<p> </p> + +<div class="figcover"> +<img src="images/molly8cover.jpg" width="420" height="627" alt="Cover" title="" /> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter"><a name="Frontispiece" id="Frontispiece"></a> +<img src="images/molly8frontis.jpg" width="400" height="576" alt="She blew in at nightfall with a huge suit-case." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a href="#Page_127">She blew in at nightfall with a huge suit-case.</a><br /> +<span class="lft">(<i>Frontis</i>)</span> <span class="rght">(<i>Molly Brown’s College Friends</i>)</span></span> +</div> + +<div class="bbox"> +<h1>MOLLY BROWN’S<br /> +COLLEGE FRIENDS</h1> +<hr class="l4"/> + +<p class="tp"><span class="smcap">By</span> NELL SPEED</p> +<hr class="l6"/> + +<p class="tp2"><span class="smcap">Author of</span><br /> +“The Tucker Twins Series,” “The Carter<br /> +Girls Series,” etc.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/tp.png" width="113" height="228" alt="logo" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="l4"/> + +<p class="tp">A. L. BURT COMPANY<br /> +<span class="lft">Publishers</span> <span class="rght">New York</span><br /> +Printed in U. S. A.</p> +</div> + +<p> </p> + +<p class="tp2">Copyright, 1921,<br /> +BY<br /> +HURST & COMPANY, <span class="smcap">Inc.</span></p> +<p> </p> +<p class="right">Printed in U. S. A.</p> +<hr class="l2"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>Contents</h2> + + +<div class="center"> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents"> +<tr><td class="col1">I.</td><td class="col2">Nance Oldham</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">II.</td><td class="col2">By the Firelight</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">III.</td><td class="col2">The Would-Be’s</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">IV.</td><td class="col2">Fairy Godmothers Wanted</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">V.</td><td class="col2">The Critics</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">VI.</td><td class="col2">“I Had A Little Husband No Bigger +Than My Thumb”</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">VII.</td><td class="col2">Nance Packs Her Trunk</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">VIII.</td><td class="col2">A Damp Coat</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">IX.</td><td class="col2">Plans</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">X.</td><td class="col2">All the Old Girls</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XI.</td><td class="col2">An Interesting Couple</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XII.</td><td class="col2">An Old-Time Party</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XIII.</td><td class="col2">Adventure</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_162">162</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XIV.</td><td class="col2">As Seen from the Summer-House</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_172">172</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XV.</td><td class="col2">The Professor at a Kimono Party</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XVI.</td><td class="col2">War Relief</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XVII.</td><td class="col2">Till Death Doth Us Part</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_201">201</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XVIII.</td><td class="col2">The Punishment of Mildred</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XIX.</td><td class="col2">A Death</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XX.</td><td class="col2">Germs</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XXI.</td><td class="col2">Her Father’s Own Daughter</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_244">244</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XXII.</td><td class="col2">The Arrest</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XXIII.</td><td class="col2">They Also Serve</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_272">272</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="col1">XXIV.</td><td class="col2">The Trenches</td><td class="col3"><a href="#Page_284">284</a></td></tr> +</table></div> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span><br /> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p> + + +<h1>Molly Brown’s College<br /> +Friends</h1> + + +<h2>CHAPTER I<br /> + +<small>NANCE OLDHAM</small></h2> + + +<p>“I am so afraid Nance will be changed,” +sighed Molly as she put the finishing touches to +the room her old friend was to occupy.</p> + +<p>“I’ll wager anything she is the same old Nance +Oldham,” insisted Professor Green, obediently +mounting the ladder to hang the last snowy curtain +at the broad, deep window in the guest +chamber overlooking the campus. “I think she +is the kind of girl who will always be the same. +Is that straight?”</p> + +<p>“A little bit lower at this end—there! What +a comfort you are, Edwin!” and Molly viewed +the effect approvingly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Pretty good general houseworker, eh?” and +the dignified professor of English at Wellington +College ran nimbly down the ladder and hugged +his wife. She submitted with very good grace to +his embraces in spite of the fact that the fresh +bureau scarves and table covers with which she +was preparing to decorate her old friend’s room +were included in the demonstration of affection.</p> + +<p>Professor Edwin Green always declared that +he never expected to catch up on all the years +he had loved Molly Brown and had been forced +to let “concealment like a worm in the bud feed +on his damask cheek.” He and Molly had been +married almost four years on that day in March +when he was assisting in the imposing rite of +hanging curtains in the guest chamber, and she +was still as wonderful to him as she had been on +that day they had walked through the Forest of +Fontainebleau and he had confessed his love. She +was the same charming girl who had lingered too +long in the cloisters and been locked in to be +rescued by him on her first day at college, now +so many years ago.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p> + +<p>Indeed, Molly Brown has changed very little +since last we saw her. Little Mildred is walking +and talking and singing little tunes and saying +Mother Goose rhymes. She even knows her letters +upside down and no other way, having +learned them from blocks, presumably standing +on her curly head as she acquired the knowledge.</p> + +<p>There is another baby in the nursery now: +little Dodo, whose real name is George, a remarkably +satisfactory infant who sleeps when he +should and wakes in a good humor, taking the +proper nourishment at the proper hours and going +back to sleep. Molly had learned the great +secret of young motherhood from her first born: +not to take parenthood too solemnly and seriously, +and to realize that Mother Nature is the +very best mother of all and babies thrive most +when left as much as possible to her all-wise and +tender care.</p> + +<p>Nance Oldham, Molly’s old friend and roommate +at college, was coming at last to make her +long promised visit to the Greens. Little wonder +that Molly feared she would be changed!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> +Nance’s path in life had not been strewn with +roses. No doubt my readers will remember that +Mrs. Oldham, her mother, was a clever woman, +lecturer, suffrage agitator, anything but a homemaker. +When Nance finished college she had +gone back to Vermont and dutifully kept house +for her neglected father, although her secret ambition +was to teach. Mr. Oldham had been so +happy in having a home of his own that Nance +had felt fully repaid for her sacrifice. Her +mother, too, had at last realized the delights of +home, when someone else had the trouble of keeping +it, and had spent much more time with her +family than she had for many years.</p> + +<p>A lingering illness had attacked Mr. Oldham +and after two years of tender nursing on the +part of his daughter and futile ineffectual attempts +at tenderness on the part of his wife, the +poor man had passed away. Then it was that +Nance’s friends had felt that her career might +begin, but Mrs. Oldham had suddenly decided +that she could not live without the husband who +had been ever patient with her vagaries and she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span> +had gone into a slow decline. More nursing and +self-denial for the patient Nance!</p> + +<p>She was an orphan now and although she was +in reality little more than a girl she felt old and +settled, that the little youth she had ever had, had +left her years ago. Molly had written her immediately +on hearing of Mrs. Oldham’s death, declaring +that she and her Edwin were ready and +eager for the long-deferred visit. “I say +‘visit,’” wrote Molly, “but I want you to make +your home with us. Little Mildred calls you +Aunt Nance and Dodo will call you the same as +soon as he can talk.”</p> + +<p>The guest chamber was now in perfect order. +The fresh curtains hung as straight as a learned +professor of English could hang them, the bureau +scarf and table cover were smooth and spotless, +and on the window sill blossomed a pot of sweet +violets sent by Mrs. McLean from her own +greenhouse.</p> + +<p>“I wonder about Nance and Andy McLean,” +said Molly, as she and her husband were walking +to the station to meet their guest.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Wonder what about them?”</p> + +<p>“Wonder if they will ever marry!”</p> + +<p>“Pooh! I fancy it was just a schoolgirl affair. +They don’t often amount to much.”</p> + +<p>“Schoolgirl affairs can be right serious, as +you of all others should know!”</p> + +<p>“Thank goodness, some of them!” said Edwin +devoutly.</p> + +<p>“I reckon Nance will be in deep mourning,” +sighed Molly. “I hate mourning,—I mean long +veils and crêpe trimmings.”</p> + +<p>“So do I,—a relic of barbarism!”</p> + +<p>“I’ll give up my literary club for a while. I +know Nance will not feel like seeing a lot of +young people.”</p> + +<p>Professor Green said nothing but he felt it +was rather hard on Wellington that any of its +pleasures should be curtailed because of the death +of a lady in Vermont. But Molly must do what +she thought best. He hoped their guest would +not put too long a face on life and would not +prove inconsolable.</p> + +<p>The long train stopped at the little station at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span> +Wellington and Molly and her husband eagerly +scanned the few passengers who alighted from +the Pullman. One lady in a long crêpe veil got +an embrace from the impulsive Molly but she +turned out to be an utter stranger and not the +beloved Nance.</p> + +<p>“She didn’t come!” cried Molly.</p> + +<p>“Oh yes, she did, but she came on a day +coach,” and there was Nance hugging Molly and +shaking hands with Professor Green at the same +time.</p> + +<p>That gentleman was viewing his wife’s old +friend with great satisfaction. Instead of the +long crêpe veil and the lugubrious black-clothed +figure, here was a slight young woman in a +neat brown suit and furs, with a close brown +velvet toque and a chic little dotted brown +veil.</p> + +<p>“Nance! I was expecting——”</p> + +<p>“Of course you were expecting to find me +swathed in black. I am doing what Mother +asked me to do. She hated mourning and so did +Father and I am a fright in black and it would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span> +have meant a new outfit, which I can ill afford, +and so——”</p> + +<p>“And so you are a sensible girl,” said Professor +Green approvingly, as he took possession +of her traveling bag and trunk check.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Nance, you are not changed one bit!” +cried Molly.</p> + +<p>“You are changed a lot,” said the truthful +Nance, “but you are more beautiful. In fact, +you never were really beautiful before, but now, +now——”</p> + +<p>“Oh, spare my blushes!” cried Molly, who +did not spare herself but blushed and blushed +and blushed again.</p> + +<p>Nance was the same little brown-eyed person +with the same honest look out of those eyes. In +repose her mouth did have a slight droop at the +corners but otherwise she might have been a college +girl still, so youthful were her lines and so +clear and rosy her healthy skin. Her hair was as +Molly had always remembered it, smooth and +glossy with much brushing and every lock in +place.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Are you tired, honey? If you are, we can +go home in the bus,” suggested Molly. “Look +what a fine motor bus we have now! Do you +remember the old yellow one with the lame +horses?”</p> + +<p>“Do I? And also that I met you right at this +station when we were both freshmen and we rode +up in that bus together. Oh, Molly, it is wonderful +to be here with you! No, I’m not tired, so +let’s walk.”</p> + +<p>The professor was due for lectures and the +girls left him without reluctance. Even husbands +were superfluous when such old friends met after +being separated for so many years. There was +so much to talk about, so many loose threads to +catch up, so much belated news that had not +seemed important enough to write.</p> + +<p>“I’m dying to see the children.”</p> + +<p>“They are lovely! There is Mildred now waving +to us from your window. I wonder what she +is doing in there. I do hope she has not got into +mischief,” said Molly uneasily.</p> + +<p>The guest chamber was still spotless and Molly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span> +breathed a sigh of relief. She had had visions of +the irrepressible Mildred’s making dolly sheets of +the bureau scarf or of putting her black kitten to +sleep in the snowy bed. The chubby imp was +standing with her back to the window, her hands +behind her. Her golden curls made a halo +around her charming face, her brown eyes were +soft and dreamy and her rosebud mouth looked +as though butter would not melt in it.</p> + +<p>“Come, darling, and speak to Aunt Nance,” +said Molly.</p> + +<p>“Ain’t no Aunt Nance!”</p> + +<p>“Mildred!”</p> + +<p>“Never mind, Molly! Don’t force her. She +and I will end by being sweethearts, I am sure,” +said Nance laughing.</p> + +<p>“Never mind, Dodo will be your sweetheart +now,” declared Molly, going through all the +agony of motherhood when the offspring refuses +to be polite. “You may go to Katy, Mildred,” +in a tone as severe as she could make it.</p> + +<p>Mildred sidled around, carefully keeping her +back to her mother.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p> + +<p>“What have you in your hand, darling?”</p> + +<p>“Fings!”</p> + +<p>“What things?”</p> + +<p>“I been a-tuttin’.”</p> + +<p>“Scissors! Oh, Mildred, you know how afraid +your mother is for you to play with scissors! +What am I to do with you?”</p> + +<p>Mildred made a sudden resolution. Why not +throw herself on the mercy of this new aunt for +protection. She darted by her mother and +sprang into the ready arms of Nance.</p> + +<p>“I been a-tuttin’ a bunch of vi’lets for my +Aunt Nance—an’ I been a-fwingin’ her curtains +all pretty for her.”</p> + +<p>In one hand she had tightly clasped a huge +pair of shears and in the other the violets which +she had ruthlessly culled from the pot sent by +Mrs. McLean.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Mildred, see what you have done,” agonized +Molly. “Mrs. McLean sent them to you, +Nance. I am so sorry they are spoiled.”</p> + +<p>“But they are not,” declared Nance, trying to +keep down the blush that would come at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span> +knowledge that Andy McLean’s mother had +shown her this attention. “We can put this dear +little bunch in water, and I am sure there are +many more buds to bloom. Let’s see, Mildred.”</p> + +<p>“’Deed they is! I wouldn’t cut no li’l baby +buds off for nothin’ or nothin’. ’Tain’t no bad +Milly in this house.”</p> + +<p>“But the curtains!” wailed poor Molly when +she viewed the neat fringes that her daughter had +so carefully slashed with the great shears.</p> + +<p>“Now don’t worry about that,” insisted +Nance. “Mildred and I are going to cut them +off and hem them up. Aren’t we, Mildred? +Very short curtains are all the style now, anyhow.”</p> + +<p>“Yes!” exclaimed the wily Mildred eagerly, +“the windows likes to show they silk stockings, +jes’ like the ladies.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, you darling!” cried Nance, sinking +down and holding the child in her arms, while +Molly rescued the long and dangerous shears.</p> + +<p>“Now, Muvver, you needn’t to worry no mo’,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span> +Aunt Nance an’ I is done made up an’ I done +forgive her an’ all.”</p> + +<p>“But how about you! Who has forgiven +you?”</p> + +<p>“Me! I done forgive myself ’long with Aunt +Nance. I say right easy way down inside me: +‘Milly, ’scuse me!’ An’ then way down inside +me say mos’ politeful: ‘You’s ’scusable, darlin’ +chil’.’”</p> + +<p>“Molly, how can you resist her?” asked +Nance.</p> + +<p>“Well, I don’t reckon I can,” said Molly, +whimsically. “But you won’t do it any more, +will you, Mildred?”</p> + +<p>“No’m, never in my world—cross my heart +an’ wish I may die—bake a puddin’ bake a pie did +you ever tell a lie yes you did you know you did +you broke yo’ mammy’s teapot lid.”</p> + +<p>“Some of Kizzie’s nonsense!” laughed Molly, +remembering in her childhood saying exactly the +same thing.</p> + +<p>And so Nance Oldham was received into the +home of the Edwin Greens. Already she had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span> +won the approval of the master by appearing in +colors and not swathed in black (men always do +hate mourning). Mildred had decided to love +and honor and make her obey. Little Dodo soon +accepted her lap as an especially nice place to +spend his few waking moments, and Molly’s love +and welcome were assured from the beginning of +time.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER II<br /> + +<small>BY THE FIRELIGHT</small></h2> + + +<p>The only home Nance Oldham had ever +known she had made herself after she left college. +Her childhood and girlhood had been spent in +boarding houses with her patient father, while +her brilliant mother made occasional hurried and +preoccupied visits to them. There had been a +time when Nance had felt bitterly towards her +mother because she was not as other mothers +were, but the realization had finally come to her +that her mother could no more be as other +mothers than other mothers could be as Mrs. Oldham +was. She had decided that instead of her +mother’s being a mistake, that she, Nance, was +the mistake. She should never have been born; +but now that she was born she intended to make +the best of it. The fact that she had never had a +home made a home just that much more precious +and desirable in her eyes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p> + +<p>What a lovely home this square old brick house +on the campus made! Nance remembered well +in her college days that it was not such a very +attractive place, rather bleak, in fact. It needed +a mistress, the soul of a house; and now in place +of the blank uncurtained windows of old days, +Molly’s genial hospitality and kindness seemed +to look out from every pane of glass. The college +girls named Mrs. Edwin Green “The Fairy +Godmother of Wellington.” She was called into +consultation on every occasion. The President +of Wellington wondered if it were not incumbent +upon her to offer Molly a salary for her services.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know what we would do without her. +I believe the college would simply go to pieces +without Mrs. Edwin Green.”</p> + +<p>The students, old and young, rich and poor, +flocked to the brick house which they dubbed +“The Square Deal.” There Molly administered +advice and love and sympathy with absolute impartiality, +also with perfect unconsciousness that +she was the guiding star of the student body.</p> + +<p>“She is the only really truly democratic person<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span> +I ever knew,—of course, besides O. Henry, and I +didn’t exactly know him,” Billie McKym declared. +“She and O. Henry simply don’t regard +money one way or the other in their judgment +of persons. Now most social workers think +of the rich as necessary evils in the way of pocketbooks +and such. They really take no interest in +anyone who does not need financial or moral help, +but Molly and O. Henry are just as good to the +rich as the poor.”</p> + +<p>Billie was back at Wellington taking extra +courses that she wasn’t certain what she was to +do with, but she felt anything was preferable to +coming out into society in New York, which was +the inevitable sequence the moment she was +through with college.</p> + +<p>Billie rather resented the guest at the Square +Deal as did many of Molly’s youthful friends.</p> + +<p>“There’s never any seeing Molly alone now,” +she grumbled.</p> + +<p>“Never!” agreed Mary Neil, a red-headed +junior who had what she termed a “mash” on +Mrs. Green. Molly, being totally unaware of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span> +this, was ever causing the poor girl to turn green +with jealousy.</p> + +<p>“To think of her stopping the ‘Would-be’s’ +just because Miss Oldham’s mother died, and she +didn’t even think enough of her to put on mourning,” +asserted Lilian Swift as she peeped in the +mirror over the mantel to adjust her own very becoming +black and white hat, worn as second +mourning for a great-aunt who had left her a +legacy.</p> + +<p>These girls were assembled in the library at +the Greens’, waiting to see their friend. That +evening the “Would-be Authors’ Club” was to +have met, but Molly, their president, had felt it +best to postpone it because of Nance’s recent bereavement. +The “Would-be Authors” was now +a flourishing organization with a waiting list that +almost stretched around the campus. They met +together for mutual benefit and encouragement +and sometimes for discouragement. The only +requisite for membership was to scribble at fiction. +On coming into this club it was necessary +to pledge oneself to take a criticism like a man.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span> +No matter how severe a drubbing your story +called forth, you must smile and smile.</p> + +<p>“Girls, I’m so sorry to keep you waiting, but +Mildred had got chewing-gum in her hair and I +simply had to get it out before her whole wig +stuck together,” said Molly as she came in with +Dodo in her arms and Mildred trotting after her +like a veritable little colt following its dam. +“My friend, Miss Oldham, will be down in a +moment.”</p> + +<p>The girls looked at one another meaningly.</p> + +<p>“I want all of you to like my friend,” continued +Molly, as though she could divine their +thoughts. “She has had a hard time and she +needs the companionship of young people more +than anyone I know.”</p> + +<p>Molly then told them of Nance’s devotion to +her mother and father, of her thwarted ambition, +of her unselfishness and cleverness.</p> + +<p>“It seems strange for her not to wear mourning +for her mother,” said Lilian.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps it does, but when you think of it, +what you wear has nothing to do with your feelings.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span> +It is in a way part of Nance’s unselfishness +that she did not put on mourning. Her +father disliked it, her mother could not abide it, +and as she said, it meant a new outfit which she +could ill afford. It is a great deal easier just to +give up to grief and exude gloom than it is to be +cheerful and radiate light and happiness.”</p> + +<p>Molly was in a measure irritated by Lilian’s +criticism of her beloved Nance, but Lilian was a +person who always spoke her mind no matter +what was involved, and she had a certain sturdiness +and honesty of opinion that disarmed +one.</p> + +<p>“Well, that’s all right,” she answered bluntly, +“but while she is being so unselfish about her +clothes, why doesn’t she spunk up a bit about the +‘Would-be Authors?’”</p> + +<p>“What about them?”</p> + +<p>“Why, postponing the meeting because she is +in such deep grief.”</p> + +<p>“That wasn’t Nance. I am responsible for +that foolishness. She only found out about it to-day +and declares she will go back to Vermont if I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span> +dare make a single change in my way of living. +I want all of you to get messages to the club to +be sure and come this evening.”</p> + +<p>“Bully for Nance!” cried Billie McKym.</p> + +<p>Nance came into the room just as Billie was +cheering her.</p> + +<p>“I’m mighty glad it’s bully for me, if I’m the +Nance. But why ‘Bully for Nance’?”</p> + +<p>“Just because you are here with Mrs. Green +and can come to our literary club this evening,” +said Billie with a straight face.</p> + +<p>“But I am no scribbler,” declared Nance.</p> + +<p>“But you are a wonderful critic,” said Molly. +“Among so many scribblers it is well to have one +sane person willing to compose the audience. It +is my turn to read to-night and I want your criticism.”</p> + +<p>“If I can come in that capacity, I am more +than willing,” smiled Nance as she settled herself +to her knitting.</p> + +<p>“I remember many times you saved me from +making a bombastic goose of myself on my college +themes,” laughed Molly. “What I flattered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span> +myself was pathos, under your cool judgment +turned out often to be bathos.”</p> + +<p>Molly leaned over and gave her friend an affectionate +pat. At this show of love, Mary Neil +jumped up so suddenly that she upset little Mildred, +who was sitting on the sofa by her, and +without saying a word rushed from the room.</p> + +<p>“What on earth!” exclaimed Molly.</p> + +<p>“The suddenness of Mary,—that’s all,” declared +Billie.</p> + +<p>“Good title for a story!” said Lilian, getting +out a note-book.</p> + +<p>“Oh, you scribblers!” laughed Nance.</p> + +<p>Little Mildred was picked up and comforted +and in a short while the visitors took their departure.</p> + +<p>“Molly, do you know what was the matter +with that interesting looking red-headed girl?” +asked Nance as they settled to the delights of a +twilight chat, while Nance busily plied her knitting +needles on the long drab scarf that seemed to +grow under her agile fingers like magic.</p> + +<p>“I have no idea.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p> + +<p>“She was jealous of me. I noticed how she +looked at me when I came in and she never said a +single word while all of us were chatting. Then +the moment you gave me a little pat, she jumped +up as though she had received an electric shock +and fled.”</p> + +<p>“Absurd! I hate to think it of Mary.”</p> + +<p>“It’s true all the same. Didn’t you know she +was crazy about you?”</p> + +<p>“No, and I don’t want to know it. A girl had +better be beau-crazy than have these silly cases +with other girls. I am going to put a stop to it +in some way.”</p> + +<p>“How, may I ask?”</p> + +<p>“I might do like Peg Woffington and put my +hair up in curl papers and appear at my very +worst.”</p> + +<p>“Well, dearie, your worst might be so much +better than some person’s best that that might not +work. But don’t think I’ve got a case on +you.”</p> + +<p>“Never! We were foolish enough college +girls but we never were that foolish. I can’t remember<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span> +anyone in our crowd having these silly +mashes. Can you?”</p> + +<p>“Unless it was the affair Judy Kean had with +Adele Windsor. Do you remember when poor +Judy turned up with her hair dyed a blue +black?”</p> + +<p>“Do I?” and the friends went off into peals of +laughter just as Mrs. McLean ushered herself +into the firelit room.</p> + +<p>“The door was open so I came right in,” announced +that dear woman. She caught Nance’s +hands in a strong grasp and drew the girl towards +her. “I am glad to see you, my dear,” she +said simply. Her well-remembered Scotch accent +fell pleasingly on Nance’s ear.</p> + +<p>“The violets were lovely. I thank you so +much,” faltered Nance.</p> + +<p>Molly wondered at the embarrassment of her +friend. She had longed to talk to Nance about +Andy McLean but did not know how to begin. +She shrank from prying into her guest’s affairs, +but the eternal feminine in her was on the alert +for the romance she had no doubt was there.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p> + +<p>“And now I must tell you all about Andy,” +said his fond mother. “I know you want to hear +about him,—eh?”</p> + +<p>“Indeed we do,” put in Molly quickly, while +Nance tried to go on with her knitting, but I am +afraid dropped more stitches than she picked up.</p> + +<p>“He has resigned from the hospital staff in +New York where he was doing so splendidly and +is to go to France as an ambulance surgeon.”</p> + +<p>“Oh!” came involuntarily from Nance.</p> + +<p>“Splendid!” cried Molly.</p> + +<p>“It is what he should do,” declared his Spartan +mother. “His father and I would not have +it otherwise. Of course, the States will be at +war before the month is out and Andy might wait +and enlist with his own country, but in the meantime +he is needed, and sadly needed, by my country, +mine and his father’s.”</p> + +<p>“He will come see you before he sails, will he +not?” asked Molly.</p> + +<p>“Of course! He may spend a month with +us.”</p> + +<p>“That will be splendid indeed.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p> + +<p>Nance said nothing, but the flames that sprang +from the wood fire lit up a very rosy countenance.</p> + +<p>“I must be going now. I only ran in for a +moment to bring the news of my Andy and to see +this little friend again. Come to see me, both of +you,” and the doctor’s wife was gone.</p> + +<p>“Molly! I should never have come to you!” +said Nance the moment the door closed on their +visitor. Katy, the Irish nurse, had come for the +baby. Little Mildred had fallen asleep, her head +in Nance’s lap.</p> + +<p>“My darling girl! Why?”</p> + +<p>“I can’t spoil Andy’s visit to his mother. +If I am here, it will be spoiled.”</p> + +<p>“Nance, how can you say so?”</p> + +<p>“Because it is the truth. He will have to see +me, and he hates me.”</p> + +<p>“He couldn’t!”</p> + +<p>“He left me two years ago in a rage and swore +it was over for good and all; and he couldn’t +have said such things to me if he had not hated +me.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p> + +<p>“And you—do you hate him?”</p> + +<p>“Of course not!” and again the flickering fire +showed off her blushes.</p> + +<p>“Did you say nothing to him but nice +things?”</p> + +<p>“We-ll, not exactly,—but he said the things he +said first.”</p> + +<p>“Were the things he said worse than the things +you said?”</p> + +<p>“No!” with a toss of her independent head, +“I gave him back as good as he sent.”</p> + +<p>“You shouldn’t have done it. You knew how +the things he said hurt, and with your superior +knowledge of what it meant to be wounded, you +were cruel to hurt him so.”</p> + +<p>“But he should have known! That kind of +philosophy is above me. Suppose the Allies conducted +their warfare under those principles, what +would become of us? Germany hit first and +France and Belgium knew how it hurt, and so +they should not have hit back. There is a big +hole in your reasoning, honey.”</p> + +<p>“But that is not the same. Germany and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span> +France didn’t love one another, while you and +Andy——”</p> + +<p>“Well, it is all over now!” and Nance composed +herself and tried to go on with her knitting. +Molly thought in her heart perhaps it was not so +“over” as Nance thought.</p> + +<p>“Why did you and Andy quarrel?”</p> + +<p>“I had promised when Father no longer +needed me that I would—would—marry him. +How could I tell that Mother would want to +come live with me when poor Father was gone? +Andy came as soon as he learned of Father’s +death and seemed to think I could pick right up +and marry him, and when I objected to such unseemly +haste he said I had been flirting with him. +The idea of such a thing! He got it into his +head that Dr. Flint, the physician who had been +with us through poor Father’s long illness, was +the cause of my holding back.”</p> + +<p>“A young doctor?”</p> + +<p>“Ye-es!”</p> + +<p>“Was he—was he—attentive?”</p> + +<p>“Perhaps—well, yes—he did propose to me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span> +but I had no idea of accepting him. Andy should +have known me well enough to realize that I +couldn’t be so low as to jilt him. When Andy +came, Mother had just told me that she never expected +to leave me again. I never did have a +chance to tell this to him, he was so angry and so +jealous. He wanted me to marry him immediately +and leave Vermont,—and how could I when +Mother was home, sick and miserable and reproaching +herself for having been away from +Father so much?”</p> + +<p>“Did your mother not know of your engagement +to Andy?”</p> + +<p>“No-o! You see, poor Mother was not—was +not the kind of mother one confided in much. +Afterwards, when I nursed her through all those +months, she was so softened if I had had anything +to confide I should have done so, but then there +was nothing left to confide.”</p> + +<p>“Poor old Nance!” said Molly lovingly.</p> + +<p>“Well, I’m not sorry for myself a bit. No +doubt I might have gone whining to Andy and +made him take back all the things he said, but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span> +am no whiner. It was a good thing we found out +in time we could say such things to each other!”</p> + +<p>“Maybe it was a good thing to find out in time +how it hurt to say such things and have such +things said to one, and then it would never happen +again,” said the hopeful Molly.</p> + +<p>Nance divined that Molly was thinking how +best she could bring these two estranged lovers +together, and determined to frustrate any matchmaking +plans the young matron might be hatching.</p> + +<p>“Promise me, Molly, you will not say a thing +to Andy or to anyone. It is something that is +hopelessly mixed up and my pride would never +recover if Andy should know that I cared.”</p> + +<p>“You do care then?”</p> + +<p>“Of course I care! I never had very many +friends and if I cared for Andy enough to engage +myself to him, I could not get over it ever, I am +afraid. But you have not promised yet.”</p> + +<p>“I promise,” said Molly sadly. “But if you +love Andy, it does seem so foolish——”</p> + +<p>“But remember you have promised!”</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER III<br /> + +<small>THE WOULD-BE’S</small></h2> + + +<p>What a chattering there was as the crowd of +girls gathered for the weekly meeting of their +literary club! Professor Green beat a hasty retreat +from the library. He declared that listening +to schoolgirl fiction was no treat to him. Besides +there was so much to be read concerning the +war in that month of March, 1917, and little time +in which to read it. War was an obsession with +Edwin Green. Waking and sleeping it was ever +with him. He regretted his being unable to enlist +as a private in the French army, so strong +were his sympathies with that struggling nation. +Certain that his country would finally drop its +neutrality and come out strongly for democracy +and the Allies, he could hardly wait for the final +declaration of war. He had his den, safe from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span> +the encroachments of the “Would-be Authors’ +Club,” and there he ensconced himself with +enough newspapers and magazines to furnish +reading matter for the whole of Wellington.</p> + +<p>The rules of the club were as follows: Two +pieces of original fiction must be read at each +meeting. A chairman for the evening must be +appointed by the two performers. All manuscript +must be written legibly if not typewritten, +so that the club need not have to wait while the +author tried to read her own writing. Criticism +must be given and taken in good humor and good +faith.</p> + +<p>Molly, in forming this club, had endeavored +to have in it only those students who were really +interested in short story writing and ambitious to +perfect themselves, but in spite of her ideals there +were some members who were in it for the fun they +got out of it or for a certain prestige they fancied +they would gain from these weekly meetings at +the home of the popular wife of a popular professor. +These slackers were constantly bringing +excuses for plots when their time came to read,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span> +or trying to work off on the club old essays and +theses on various subjects not in the least related +to fiction.</p> + +<p>“You are to read this evening, I believe, +Mary,” said Molly to Mary Neil as the library +filled. “You missed last time and so got put on +this week.”</p> + +<p>“Yes—I—that is—you see, I sat up all night +trying to finish a story but couldn’t get it to suit +me.”</p> + +<p>“Did you bring it?”</p> + +<p>“Oh no, it was too much in the rough.”</p> + +<p>“That’s too bad, Mary!” cried Lilian Swift. +“There are plenty of us who had things to read +and you cut us out of the chance.”</p> + +<p>“Surely some of you must have brought +things,” said Molly, trying not to smile, knowing +full well that in almost every pocket of the really +and truly “Would-be’s” some gem of purest ray +serene in the shape of a manuscript was only +waiting to be dived for. The self-conscious expression +on at least a dozen faces put her mind at +rest in regard to the program of the evening.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p> + +<p>“It seems I have the appointing of a chairman +for the meeting in my power, since the other +reader has fallen out of the running,” said Molly, +looking as severely as she could look at the sullen, +handsome Mary Neil, “so I appoint Billie McKym.”</p> + +<p>Billie, a most ardent scribbler, had been drawn +into the procession of short-story fiends by +her dear friend Thelma Larson, who was destined +to become famous as a writer of fiction. +Billie had no great talent but she possessed a +fresh breezy line of dialogue that covered a multitude +of sins in the way of plot formation, motivation, +crisis, climax and what not.</p> + +<p>“Remember, Billie, the chair is not the floor,” +teased one of the members.</p> + +<p>Billie was a great talker and although she was +no pronounced success as a writer of fiction, she +was a good critic of the performance of others.</p> + +<p>“Just for that I’ll ask you, Miss Smarty, to +serve as vice, and when I have something important +to say I’ll put you in the chair for keeps.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, let Mrs. Green begin and stop squabbling,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span> +demanded a girl who had a plot she was +dying to divulge and devoutly hoped she would +be called on when their hostess got through.</p> + +<p>“Then begin!” and Billie rapped for order.</p> + +<p>Molly took her seat by the reading-lamp and +opened her manuscript. Having to read before +the club was just as exciting to Molly as to the +veriest freshman. Her cheeks flushed and her +hand trembled a wee bit.</p> + +<p>“Silly of me to get stage fright but I can’t +help it,” she laughed.</p> + +<p>“How do you reckon we feel then?” drawled +a little girl from Alabama, who only the week before +had been torn limb from limb by the relentless +“Would-be’s.”</p> + +<p>“This is a story that I have sent on many a +journey and it always comes back to its doting +mother. I have received several personal letters +about it——”</p> + +<p>“Oh, wonderful!” came from several members.</p> + +<p>“Only think, the most encouraging thing that +has happened to me yet was once a Western<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span> +magazine kept my manuscript almost three +weeks,” sighed a willowy maiden.</p> + +<p>“Now please criticize it just as severely as you +can. I want to sell it, and something must be +done to it before the editors will take it,” begged +Molly, getting over her ridiculous stage fright.</p> + +<p>“Fire away!” said parliamentary Billie.</p> + +<p>“How long is it?” asked Lilian Swift.</p> + +<p>“About five thousand words, I think!”</p> + +<p>“Whew!” blew the girl who hoped to get her +plot in edgewise.</p> + +<p>There was a general laugh and then Molly +cleared her throat for action. “First, let me tell +you I saw a clipping in the <cite>New York Times</cite> +asking for Fairy Godmothers for the soldiers. +That was what put the idea in my head. The +title is: ‘Fairy Godmothers Wanted.’”</p> + +<p>You could have heard a pin drop while Molly +read, and occasionally one did hear the scratching +of a pencil wielded by a member who was on a +critical war-path.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER IV<br /> + +<small>FAIRY GODMOTHERS WANTED</small></h2> + + +<p>The ballroom was crowded but very quiet. +The belle of the ball was the night nurse, deftly +accomplishing the many duties that fall to +the share of a night nurse. A letter must be +written for a poor Gascon who had lost his right +arm; a Bedouin chief must be watered every five +minutes; a little red-headed Irishman begging +for morphine to ease his pain, and a sad Cockney +lad sobbing because he was “’omesick for ’Ammersmith,” +must be comforted.</p> + +<p>The beautiful old château had been converted +into a hospital early in the war and the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">salle de +bal</i> was given over to the convalescents. The +convalescent male is a very difficult proposition, +and the little nurse sometimes felt her burden was +greater than she could bear. There was so much +to do for these sick soldiers besides nurse them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span> +One thing, she must good-naturedly submit to +being made love to in many different languages. +She could stand all but the Bedouin chief.</p> + +<p>“He seems so like our darkeys at home,” she +had whispered to the one American who was getting +well rather faster than he liked to admit.</p> + +<p>This American wanted to get well and be back +in the trenches, but who was to make love to the +pretty night nurse in good old American when he +left the convalescent ward?</p> + +<p>“You promised to do something for me to-night. +Don’t forget! You must be almost +through with all of these fellows.”</p> + +<p>“Ready in a minute!” She flitted down between +the rows of cots, tucking in the covers here, +plumping up a pillow there. The Bedouin was +watered for the last time that night and finally +closed his rolling black eyes.</p> + +<p>“Now, what is it?” she asked, sinking down +on a stool by the American’s bed, which was +placed in an alcove at one end of the great salon. +“If it is writing a letter, thank goodness, it won’t +have to be in the second person singular in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span> +French. Why do you suppose they teach us +such formal French at school? I can’t <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tutoyer</i> +for the life of me.”</p> + +<p>“Same here! <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Je t’aime</i>’s all I know. But I +don’t want you to write a letter for me. I want +you to read some. But first I must know your +really truly name. I—I—like you too much +just to have to call you nurse.”</p> + +<p>“Mary Grubb!”</p> + +<p>“No! Not really?”</p> + +<p>“Yes! I’d like to know what is the matter +with my name. It is a perfectly good name, I +reckon.”</p> + +<p>“Yes, Mary is beautiful—but—the other! +Never mind, you can change it.”</p> + +<p>“I have no desire to do so, at least not for +many a day. I think Grubb is especially nice. +It suggests Sally Lunn and batter bread.”</p> + +<p>“There now, I would know you are from the +South even if your dear little ‘reckons’ didn’t +come popping out every now and then. Do you +know, I have a friend who lives in Kentucky, and +when the war is over I have been planning to go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span> +see her, but now—but now—I am afraid she +won’t want to see me.”</p> + +<p>“You mean the scars?” and she looked pityingly +at the young man and put her firm little +hand on his head. “Why, they will not amount +to much. They will just make you look interesting. +Your eyes will be well, I just know they +will. Look at this long scar that has given the +most trouble! It has turned to a pleasing pink +and will be almost gone in a few months. You +see you are so healthy.”</p> + +<p>“It isn’t altogether the scars. If you think +they are pretty, maybe she will, too. There is +something else. I want to read over all this +packet of letters before I decide something. You +had better begin or that big, black, bounding beggar +over there will begin to whine for water +again. After you read the letters, maybe I will +tell you the other reason why my friend in Kentucky +might not want to see me.”</p> + +<p>He took from under his pillow a packet of little +blue letters, tightly tied with a piece of twine.</p> + +<p>“Here they are! These letters have meant a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span> +lot to me while I was in the trenches. They still +mean a lot to me. They were written by my +Fairy Godmother.”</p> + +<p>“Oh! Are they love letters?”</p> + +<p>“No, indeed! I wouldn’t ask a woman to +read another woman’s love letters. I wouldn’t +let anyone but you read these letters, but my eyes +are too punk to read them myself and I have to—to +hear them to decide something, something very +important.”</p> + +<p>“All right! A nurse is a kind of father confessor +and what one hears professionally is sacred.”</p> + +<p>“But, my dear, I am not thinking of you as a +nurse.”</p> + +<p>“But I am thinking of you as a patient.”</p> + +<p>She slipped the top letter from the packet and +turned it over. “So your name is Stephen +Scott!”</p> + +<p>“Didn’t you know my name, either? How +funny!”</p> + +<p>“I only know the names of the patients who +have charts, and you are too well to waste a chart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span> +on. We nurses call you the convalescent American. +Sure these are not love letters?”</p> + +<p>“Of course!” impatiently. “But if you don’t +want to read them to me, just say so. Maybe +you are tired. Of course you are. You look +pale and your little hand is trembling.”</p> + +<p>“No, no! I am not tired! Let me begin.”</p> + +<p>The <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">salle de bal</i> of the old château was very +quiet. The wounded soldiers were dropping off +to sleep one by one. Even the Bedouin chief had +stopped rolling his eyes and was softly snoring. +In a low clear voice she read the letters.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">My dear Godson:</span></p> + +<p>It is so wonderful to be a Godmother that I +can hardly contain myself for joy. It is through +an advertisement I saw in a New York paper, +headed Fairy Godmothers Wanted, that I happen +to have you and you happen to have me. I consider +our introduction quite regular as it came through +the wife of a great general.</p> + +<p>I wonder how you like belonging to me? I wonder +if you are as alone in the world and homeless +as I am. I wonder if you are big or little, dark or +fair, old or young. I wonder all kinds of things +about you,—after all, it makes no difference, any of +these things. You are my Godson and every day I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span> +am going to pray for you and think about you. I +am going to send you presents and write you long +letters and send you newspapers. The only trouble +about it is by the time I get hold of English papers +they will be weeks and weeks old. I wonder if +American magazines and papers would appeal to +you. I wonder what kind of presents you would +like,—not beaded antimacassars and not mouchoir +cases surely. I will knit you a sweater maybe, but +I am not very fond of knitting.</p> + +<p>This business of being a Fairy Godmother is a +very serious one, more serious than being a real +mother, I believe. A real mother can at least do +something towards forming the character of her +child, but a Fairy Godmother has her child presented +to her and takes it as the husband used to +take his bride in the old English prayer book: +“With all her debts and scandals upon her.” The +worst of it is that she is ignorant what those debts +and scandals are. I don’t even know what kind of +smoke to send you. Are you middle-aged and sedate +and do you smoke a corn-cob pipe? Are you +young and giddy and do you live on cigarettes? A +terrible possibility has entered into my mind! Are +you one of those awful persons that uses what our +darkeys call “eatin’ tobacco”? If so, I shall begin +to train you immediately.</p> + +<p>Perhaps you want to know something about me. +There is not much to know. I am an orphan of +independent means and character. Being the first, +enables me to be the second, which sounds like a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span> +riddle but isn’t. You see I have rafts and oodlums +of kin, and if I did not have an income of my own +they would step in and coerce me even more than +they do. I said in the beginning that I was homeless. +I am not really that, but the trouble is I have +too many homes. I must spend the winter with +Aunt Sally and the spring with Cousin Kate. +Cousin Maria and Uncle Bruce want me to take +White Sulphur by storm with them as chaperones; +and so it is from one year’s end to the other, kind +relations planning for me. I am bored to death +with it all and am even now preparing a bomb to +throw in this camp of overzealous kin. But I’ll tell +you about that later,—that is, if you want to hear +about it. I may be boring you stiff. If I am, it +is an easy matter for you to repudiate me and tell +Mrs. Johnson to get you a more agreeable Godmother.</p> + +<p>My numerous family does not at all approve of +my being a Godmother. They think I am too young +for the responsibility and have entered upon it too +lightly. I even heard Aunt Sally whisper to +Cousin Maria: “Just like her mother!” That +means in their minds that I am headstrong and difficult. +You see my mother was also of independent +means and character. Also (I whisper this) she +was not a Southerner. That is as serious in a +Southerner’s eyes as not being British is in yours. +They think it is very forward of me to be writing +to a man what has not been properly introduced. +Uncle Bruce suggests that you may not even be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span> +born. I tell him soldiers don’t have to be born and +that the bravest soldiers that were ever known +sprang up from dragon’s teeth.</p> + +<p>I am sending you as my first present all kinds of +tobacco, even plug. I must not let my prejudices +get away with me. If my dear Godson likes “eatin’ +tobacco,” he shall have it. If you don’t indulge in +it, give it to some soldier less dainty. For my part, +I should think the trenches would be dirty enough +without adding to them.</p> + +<p>I want to tell you that I like your name. I think +Stephen Scott sounds very manly and upstanding, +somehow. I am hoping for a letter from you just to +give me an inkling of your tastes. Of course I +know one of the duties of a Fairy Godmother is +not to worry her charge, and I don’t want to worry +you but to help you. I think of you in those damp, +nasty ditches eating all kinds of food, served in all +kinds of ways. (I am sure what should be hot is +cold, and what should be cold is hot.) And when +I sit down to batter-bread and fried chicken I can +hardly force it down, I do so want you to have it +instead of me.</p> + +<p><span class="rght3">Your affectionate Godmother,</span><br /> +<span class="rght1">Polly Nelson.</span><br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>The night nurse quietly folded up the first +letter and slipped it back in its blue envelope. +She had a whimsical, amused expression on her +face.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p> + +<p>“What are you smiling over? Don’t you +think that is a nice letter?”</p> + +<p>“I didn’t say it wasn’t.”</p> + +<p>“But you didn’t say it was. I think that is a +sweet letter. I tell you it meant a lot to me. Of +course, I am not the homeless Tommy she +thought I was. I fancy I have as many Aunt +Sallies and Cousin Marias as she has, but they +happen to be in New England.”</p> + +<p>“You are not an orphan, then!”</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes! I’m an orphan all right enough, +but I am related to half of Massachusetts and all +of Boston.”</p> + +<p>“Did you tell your Fairy Godmother that?”</p> + +<p>“No,—that’s what makes me feel so bad. I +was afraid she would stop being my Godmother +if she found out I was—well, not exactly poor, so +I—I didn’t exactly lie——”</p> + +<p>“You didn’t exactly tell the truth, either,” and +the night nurse curled her pretty lip and looked +disgusted.</p> + +<p>“Oh, please don’t be angry with me, too. I +know she will be. I have simply got to tell her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span> +the truth about myself. I did let her know I am +an American. I am going to write her a letter +just as soon as I can see to do it. But go on with +the next, please. You are sure it is not tiring +you too much?”</p> + +<p>“Sure,” and the night nurse slipped out another.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">My dear Godson:</span></p> + +<p>It was very nice of you to answer my letter +so promptly. I am so glad you are an American +and do not chew tobacco. You must not feel compelled +to answer all my letters because you must +be very busy and I have very little to do, so little +that I am becoming very restless. I have thrown +the bomb in the camp of the enemy, my kin. They +are shattered into smithereens. I am going to enter +a hospital, take training, and just as soon as I am +capable go to France with the Red Cross nurses. +I should like to go immediately but I want to be a +help not a hindrance, and they say all the untrained +persons who butt in on the war zone are a nuisance. +Six months of training should make me fit, don’t +you think? But how should you know?</p> + +<p>I am very happy at the thought of being of some +use. I owe it all to you, my dear Godson. If I had +not been presented with you I should never have +thought of such a thing. Just as soon as I realized +that over in the trenches was a human being who +wanted to hear from me and whom I could help, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span> +began to take a new interest in the war and all the +soldiers, and then I began to feel that maybe I, insignificant +little I, might be of some use to those +poor soldiers, some use besides just knitting foolish +caps and mittens and sending the <cite>Saturday Evening +Post</cite> and cigarettes. I only wish I could go +immediately. My training begins to-morrow. Aunt +Sally and Cousin Maria feel that it is a terrible +blot on the family name. They are sure someone +will say that I am doing this because I am not a +success in society, although they say over and over +that I am. I don’t know whether I am or not, all +I know is that society is not a success with me. +Uncle Bruce is rather nice about it all.</p> + +<p>There are so many I’s in this letter I am mortified. +I believe writing to a Godson in the trenches +is almost like keeping a diary. I am sending you +some cards and poker chips (but you mustn’t play +for money). I’d hate to think that my presents +exerted a poor moral influence on my dear Godson. +Would you mind just dropping a hint as to what +kind of presents would be most acceptable? I have +never been in the habit of giving presents to men +and the kinds of presents some of my friends give +would not be very appropriate, it seems to me. +Silver match boxes and cigarette holders would not +be very useful, nor would silk socks with initials +embroidered on them be much better. Do you like +chocolate drops and poetry?</p> + +<p><span class="rght3">Your affectionate Fairy Godmother,</span><br /> +<span class="rght1">Polly Nelson.</span><br /> +</p> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p> + +<p>The night nurse laughed outright at the close +of the letter and Stephen Scott reached out for +the packet from which she was extracting a third +blue envelope.</p> + +<p>“If you are going to make fun of them, you +can stop.”</p> + +<p>“I wasn’t making fun. I was just thinking +what funny presents girls do give men.”</p> + +<p>“Well, so they do, but my little Godmother +gave me bully presents,—cigarettes to burn, +home-made molasses candy and beaten biscuit. +She had lots of imagination in the presents she +sent and the blessed child never did burden me +with a work-box but sent me a gross of safety-pins +that beat all the sewing kits on earth. +I don’t believe you like my Godmother +much.”</p> + +<p>“Don’t you? Well, I do.”</p> + +<p>“You should like her because somehow you +remind me of her.”</p> + +<p>“Oh! Have you seen her?”</p> + +<p>“Only in my mind’s eye. I begged her for a +picture of herself but she has never sent it. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span> +has promised it, though. You see I got to answering +her letters in the same spirit in which she +wrote to me, only I was not quite so frank, I am +afraid. She told me everything about herself +while I told her only my thoughts. I never did +tell her I was not a homeless soldier of fortune. +She thinks I am absolutely friendless and dependent +on my pay as a private for my living. +Sometimes I wish I didn’t have a sou—at least I +have felt that way—but now——”</p> + +<p>“But now what?”</p> + +<p>“But now I don’t think it is so bad to have a +little tin,” and he held one of the little stained +hands in his for a moment.</p> + +<p>She gently withdrew it and opened a third letter. +This was full of hospital experiences and +so were all that followed. The tone of them became +more intimate and friendly. The desire to +serve was ever uppermost—just to get in the +War Zone and help.</p> + +<p>“I got awfully stuck on her, somehow,” confessed +the man. “She was so sweet and so girlish—I +did not say so for fear of scaring her off,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span> +but I used to write her pretty warm ones, I am +afraid.”</p> + +<p>“Why afraid?”</p> + +<p>“Don’t you know?”</p> + +<p>“How should I know?”</p> + +<p>“Why, honey, you must see that I am head +over heels in love with you. I oughtn’t to be telling +it to you when I have written my little Godmother +that as soon as the war is over I am going +to find her and tell her the same thing. But, +somehow, I was loving her only on paper and in +my mind; but you—you—I love you with every +bit of my heart, soul and body.” He caught her +hand and all of the poor little slim blue letters +slipped from the twine and scattered over the +floor.</p> + +<p>“Oh, the poor little letters!” she cried. “Is +that all they mean to you?”</p> + +<p>“Oh, honey, they meant a lot to me and still +do, but they are just letters and you are—you.”</p> + +<p>“But how about the letters you wrote Miss +Polly Nelson? Are they just letters to her and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span> +nothing more? Don’t you think it is possible +that she may have treasured your letters, especially +the pretty warm ones, and be looking forward +to the end of the war with the same eagerness +that you have felt up to—say——”</p> + +<p>“The minute I laid eyes on you. At first I +used to dream maybe you were she, but I began +to feel that she must be much—younger—somehow, +than you. You are so capable, so mature in +a way. She is little more than a child and you +are a grown woman.”</p> + +<p>“I am twenty-one—but the war ages one.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t mean you look old—I just mean you +seem so sensible.”</p> + +<p>“And Miss Nelson didn’t?”</p> + +<p>“I don’t mean that, I just mean she seemed +immature. But suppose you read the last letter. +And couldn’t you do it with one hand and let me +hold the other?”</p> + +<p>“Certainly not!” and the night nurse stooped +and gathered the scattered letters. Leaning over +may have accounted for the rosy hue that overspread +her countenance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p> + +<p>“You certainly read her writing mighty easily. +I had a hard time at first. I think she writes a +rotten fist, although there is plenty of character +in it, dear little Godmother!”</p> + +<p>“Humph! Do you think so? I wouldn’t tell +her that if I were you—I mean that you think her +fist is rotten.”</p> + +<p>“Of course not, but begin, please, and say—couldn’t +you manage with one hand?”</p> + +<p>But the night nurse was adamant and drew +herself up very primly and began to read:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">My dear Godson:</span></p> + +<p>I am afraid gratitude has got the better of +you. You must not feel that because a girl in +America has written you a pile of foolish letters +and sent you a few little paltry presents, you must +send her such very loverlike letters in return. I +am disappointed in you, Godson. I had an idea +that you were steadier. Just suppose I were a designing +female who was going to hold you up and +drag you through the wounded-affections court? +There is quite enough in your last two letters to +justify such a proceeding. It may be only your +poverty that will restrain me. In the first place, +you don’t know me from Adam or rather Eve. I +may be a Fairy Godmother with a crooked back +and a black cat, who prefers a broom-stick to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span> +limousine; I may have a hare-lip and a mean disposition; +I may write vers libre and believe in dress +reform. In fact I am a pig in a poke and you are a +very foolish person to think you want to carry me +off without ever looking at me. I won’t say that I +don’t want to see you and know you, because I do. +I have been very honest with you in my letters because, +as I told you once, it has seemed almost like +keeping a diary to write to you, and I think a person +who is not honest in a diary is as bad as the +person who cheats at solitaire. When the war is +over if you want to look me up you will find me in +Louisville, Kentucky. When you do find me, I +want you to be nothing but my Godson. You may +not like me a bit and I may find you unbearable,—somehow, +I don’t believe I shall, though. I do hope +you will like me, too. One thing I promise—that +is, not to fall in love with anyone else until I have +looked you over. And you—I fancy you see no females +to fall in love with.</p> + +<p>I never let myself think about your getting +killed. As Fairy Godmother I cast a spell about +you to protect you. There are times when I almost +wish you could be safely wounded. Those +are the times when I doubt the efficacy of my +prayers and the powers of my fairy gifts.</p> + +<p>And now for the news: I am going to the front! +I have worked it by strategy. A girl I know has +had all her papers made out ready to join the Red +Cross nurses, and now at the last minute her young +man has stepped in and persuaded her to marry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span> +him instead. I have cajoled the papers from her +and am leaving in a few hours. Aunt Sally and +Cousin Kate, Uncle Bruce and Cousin Maria are +half demented. They don’t know how I worked it +or I am sure they would have the law on me for +perjury. I am free, white, and twenty-one now, and +they could control me in no other way. Good-by, +Godson! I wonder if we will meet somewhere in +France. I will write you when I can, but I am +afraid I shall not be able to send any more presents +for a while.</p> + +<p><span class="rght3">Your affectionate Godmother.</span><br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>“Now don’t you hate and despise me for telling +you what I did just now? You see she says +she will at least not fall in love with anyone else +until she looks me over, and think what I have +done! What must I do? I am going to try not +to tell you I love you any more until that other +girl knows what a blackguard I am, but you must +understand all the time that I do.”</p> + +<p>“I understand nothing, Mr. Stephen Scott. +I am simply the night nurse in the convalescent +ward and you have asked me to read some letters +to you, and I have read them; and now it is my +duty to forget what is in them, and I am going to +do it,—I have done it. All I can say is that you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span> +might give Miss Polly Nelson the chance to find +someone else she likes better than she does you +before you are so quick to take for granted she +will stick to her bargain, too. If there is any +jilting going on, we Southern girls rather prefer +to be the jilters than the jiltees.”</p> + +<p>“Don’t say jilting! It isn’t fair. Please be +good to me! I am so miserable.”</p> + +<p>The night nurse smiled in spite of herself and +felt his pulse.</p> + +<p>“There now! Just as I thought! You have +worked yourself up into an abnormal pulse and I +shall have to start a chart on you.”</p> + +<p>“Abnormal nothing! How is a fellow’s pulse +to remain normal when you put your dear little +fingers on his wrist? But I forgot! I am not +going to make love to you until I can let my Godmother +know. Maybe she has met some grand +English Tommy by this time——” And then +he groaned aloud and cried: “But I don’t want +her to do that, either!”</p> + +<p>“Blessed if I’m not in love with two girls,” he +thought.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p> + +<p>The night nurse sat quietly down to her charts +after having gone the rounds of her ward. All +was quiet. The convalescent soldiers were sleeping +peacefully, dreaming of home, she hoped. +Scott stirred restlessly now and then. He could +not sleep but watched the busy little stained hand +of the night nurse as it glided rapidly over the +charts. She had no light but that of a guttering +candle, carefully shaded from her patients’ eyes, +but Scott could see her well-poised head and fine +profile as she bent over her writing. How lovely +she was! Would she ever listen to him? How +she stood up for her sex,—and still she did not +exactly repulse him. What a strange name for +a girl like that to have! Grubb! It was preposterous. +Indeed, he felt it his duty to make +her change that name as soon as possible. Polly +Nelson is a pretty name—dear little Godmother! +Would she despise him, too, like this other girl? +But did this other one despise him?</p> + +<p>The night nurse made her rounds again and +then left the ward for a moment. When she returned, +she came to the American’s bedside.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p> + +<p>“A letter has just come for you, Mr. Scott.”</p> + +<p>“For me? Splendid! Will you read it to +me?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, if you cannot possibly see to do it yourself.”</p> + +<p>“I might, but I’d rather not.”</p> + +<p>“It is in the same rotten fist of those I read +you to-night.”</p> + +<p>“My Fairy Godmother! I—I—believe I can +see to read that myself.”</p> + +<p>She handed him the letter. Her hand was +trembling a little and so was his. She brought +the guttering candle and he opened his letter.</p> + + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p><span class="rght2"><cite>Somewhere in France.</cite></span><br /></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">My dear Godson:</span></p> + +<p>I have always been so frank with you that I +feel I must make a confession. I promised you in +my last letter, the one I wrote just before I left +home, that I would not fall in love with anyone +until after the war, when you were to present yourself +in Louisville and we were to view each other +for the first time. Dear Godson—— I have not +kept my word. They say a man falls in love with +his nurse often because of the feeling he has for +his mother. She makes it seem as though he were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span> +a little child again. I reckon a nurse falls in love +with her patient because he seems so like a little +boy. She loves him first because of the maternal +instinct. Be that as it may, I am in love with one +of my patients. I tell you this fearing you may +be wounded and you may fall in the hands of a +cap and apron, and from a feeling of noblesse +oblige you may not grasp the happiness within your +reach.</p> + +<p>God bless you, my dear Godson!</p> + +<p><span class="rght3">Always,</span><br /> +<span class="rght1">Your Fairy Godmother.</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>P. S.—He is an American.<br /></p> +</div> + +<p>A great tear rolled down the scarred cheek of +the young soldier and splashed on the signature. +Then something happened that made him sit up +very straight in his cot and stretch out a shaking +hand for the night nurse. She was by his side in +a moment.</p> + +<p>“Look! Look! The ink is not dry yet. See +where that tear dropped! Dry ink would not +float off like that!” He turned the sheet over. +It was a chart.</p> + +<p>“But you—you—little Fairy Godmother! +Who is he?”</p> + +<p>“There is only one American in my ward.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p> + +<p>“But you said your name was Grubb!”</p> + +<p>“That’s my official name. Mary Grubb was +the girl whose place I got with the Red Cross. +Do you know, you hurt my feelings terribly when +you said my fist was rotten?”</p> + +<p>And Stephen Scott, holding the little stained +and roughened hand in his, wondered that he ever +could have made such a break.</p> + +<p>“Thank God, you are just one girl, after all!” +he cried.</p> + +<p>But the night nurse wished that there were two +of her for a while at least: one to stay by the bedside +of the convalescent American and one to +make out the charts that must be got ready for +the morning rounds of the surgeon in charge.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER V<br /> + +<small>THE CRITICS</small></h2> + + +<p>“Ahem!” said Billie, rapping for order as the +girls began all at once to say what they thought +of “Fairy Godmothers Wanted.” The one with +the burning plot began rattling her paper in +preparation of the turn she hoped for.</p> + +<p>“First general impressions are in order! One +at a time, please! You, Miss Oldham, you tell +us how it strikes you.”</p> + +<p>“Pleasing on the whole, but——”</p> + +<p>“We’ll come to the ‘buts’ later,” was the stern +mandate of the chairman of the day.</p> + +<p>“You, Lilian Swift, you next!”</p> + +<p>“Too long!” from the blunt Lilian.</p> + +<p>“The idea! I think it was just sweet,” from +the gentle Alabamian.</p> + +<p>“I got kind of mixed in the middle and +couldn’t tell which was the nurse and which Polly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span> +Nelson,” declared one who had evidently gone off +into a cataleptic fit, no doubt dreaming of a story +she meant to write some day.</p> + +<p>“I never, never could love a man who had deceived +me,” sighed the sentimental one with big +eyes and a little mouth.</p> + +<p>“Personal predilections not valuable as criticism,” +said Billie sternly.</p> + +<p>Many and various were the opinions expressed. +Molly diligently and meekly took notes, agreeing +heartily with the ones who thought it was too +long.</p> + +<p>“Where must I cut it?” she asked eagerly.</p> + +<p>“Cut out all the letters!” suggested Lilian.</p> + +<p>“How could she? It is all letters,” asked +Billie, whose chair was becoming a burden as she +felt she must get into the discussion.</p> + +<p>“Cut ’em, anyhow. Letters in fiction are no +good.”</p> + +<p>“Humph! How about the early English +novelists?” asked Molly.</p> + +<p>“Dead! Dead! All of them dead!” stormed +Lilian.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Then how about Mary Roberts Rinehart and +Booth Tarkington and lots of others? Daddy +Longlegs is all letters.”</p> + +<p>“All the samey, it is a poor stunt,” insisted the +intrepid Lilian. “I call it a lazy way to get +your idea over.”</p> + +<p>“Perhaps you are right, but the point is: did +I get my idea over?”</p> + +<p>“We-ll, yes,—but they tell me editors don’t +like letter form of fiction.”</p> + +<p>“Certainly none of them have liked this,” +sighed Molly, who had devoutly hoped her little +story would sell. The money she made herself +was very delightful to receive and more delightful +to spend. A professor’s salary can as a rule +stand a good deal of supplementing.</p> + +<p>“How about the plot, now?” asked Billie, +having finished with the general impression.</p> + +<p>“Slight!”</p> + +<p>“Strong!”</p> + +<p>“Weak!”</p> + +<p>“Impossible!”</p> + +<p>“Plausible!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Original!”</p> + +<p>“Bromidic!”</p> + +<p>“Involved!” were the verdicts. The matter +was thoroughly threshed out, Billie with difficulty +keeping order. Nance was called on for +the “but” that she had been left holding.</p> + +<p>“The plot is slight but certainly original in its +way. The letters are too long, longer than a +Godmother would be apt to write, I think. The +story could be cut to three thousand words, I believe, +to its advantage.”</p> + +<p>“I have already cut out about fifteen hundred +words,” wailed Molly. “The first writing was +lots longer.”</p> + +<p>“Gee!” breathed the one eager for a hearing.</p> + +<p>“Now for the characterization! Don’t all +speak at once, but one at a time tell what you +think of it.”</p> + +<p>“Did you mean to make Polly so silly?” asked +Lilian.</p> + +<p>“I—I—perhaps!” faltered Molly.</p> + +<p>“Of course if you meant to, why then your +characterization is perfect.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Silly! Why, she is dear,” declared the girl +from Alabama. “I don’t like her having to +nurse that black man, though.”</p> + +<p>“Too many points of view!” suddenly blurted +out a member who had hitherto kept perfectly +silent, but she had been eagerly scanning a paper +whereon was written the requisites for a short +story.</p> + +<p>“But you see——” meekly began Molly.</p> + +<p>“The point of view must either be that of the +author solely or one of the characters,” asserted +the knowing one. “Why, you even let us know +how the Bedouin feels.”</p> + +<p>“Oh!” gasped the poor author. “I think you +would limit the story teller too much if you eliminated +such things as that.”</p> + +<p>“Here’s what the correspondence course +says——”</p> + +<p>“Spare us!” cried the club in a chorus.</p> + +<p>“I hate all these cut and dried rules!” cried +Billie. “It would take all the spice out of literature +if we stuck to them.”</p> + +<p>“That’s just it,” answered Lilian. “We are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span> +not making literature but trying to sell our stuff. +Persons who have arrived can write any old way. +They can start off with the climax and end up +with an introduction and their things go, but I’ll +bet you my hat that you will not find a single +story by a new writer that does not have to toe the +mark drawn by the teachers of short story writing.”</p> + +<p>“Which hat?” teased Billie. “The one you +put on for Great-aunt Gertrude? If it is that +one, I won’t bet. I wouldn’t read a short story +by a new writer for it.”</p> + +<p>“To return to my story,” pleaded Molly, “do +you think if I rewrite it, leave out the letters, +strengthen the plot a bit and make Polly a little +wiser that I might sell it?”</p> + +<p>“Sure!” encouraged Lilian.</p> + +<p>“Yes, indeed!” echoed Nance.</p> + +<p>“And the black man—please cut him out! I +can’t bear to think of him,” from the girl from +Alabama.</p> + +<p>“Dialogue,—how about it?” asked the chairman.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Pretty good, but a little stilted,” was the verdict +of several critics.</p> + +<p>“I think you are all of you simply horrid!” +exclaimed Mary Neil, who had been silent and +sullen through the whole evening. “I think it is +the best story that has been read all year and I +believe you are just jealous to tear it to pieces +this way.”</p> + +<p>“Stuff and nonsense!” said Lilian.</p> + +<p>“We do hope we haven’t hurt your feelings, +Mrs. Green,” cried the girl who was taking the +correspondence course.</p> + +<p>“Hurt my feelings! The very idea! I read +my story to get help from you and not praise. I +am going to think over what you have said and do +my best to correct the faults, if I come to the conclusion +you are right.”</p> + +<p>“You would have a hard time doing what +everybody says,” laughed Nance, “as no two +have agreed.”</p> + +<p>“Well, I can pick and choose among so many +opinions,” said Molly, putting her manuscript +back in its big envelope. “I might do as my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span> +mother did when she got the opinion of two physicians +on the diet she was to have: she simply took +from each man the advice that best suited her +taste and between the two managed to be very +well fed, and, strange to say, got well of her malady +under the composite treatment.”</p> + +<p>“Ahem!” said the girl with the burning plot, +rattling her manuscript audibly so that the hardhearted +Billie must perforce recognize her and +give her the floor.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER VI<br /> + +<small>“I HAD A LITTLE HUSBAND NO BIGGER THAN MY +THUMB”</small></h2> + + +<p>“Aunt Nance, what’s the use you ain’t got +no husband an’ baby children?” Mildred always +said use instead of reason.</p> + +<p>“Lots of reasons!” answered Nance, smiling +at her little companion. Mildred had moved +herself and all her belongings into the guest-chamber. +Her mother had at first objected, but +when she found it made Nance happy to have the +child with her, she gave her consent.</p> + +<p>“Ain’t no husbands come along wantin’ you?”</p> + +<p>“That is one of the reasons.”</p> + +<p>“I’m going to make Dodo marry you when he +gets some teeth.”</p> + +<p>“Thank you, darling! Dodo would make a +dear little husband.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Dodo wouldn’t never say nothin’ mean to +you. He’s got more disposition than any baby +in the family.”</p> + +<p>“I am sure he wouldn’t,” said Nance, trying to +count the stitches as she neatly turned the heel of +the grey sock she was knitting. Nance was always +knitting in those days.</p> + +<p>“’Cose if I kin get you a husband a little teensy +weensy bit taller than Dodo, I’ll let you know.”</p> + +<p>“Fine! But Dodo will grow.”</p> + +<p>“Maybe you’ll make out to shrink up some. +Katy kin shrink you. My muvver said Katy +kin shrink up anything. She done shrinked up +Dodo’s little shirts jes’ big enough for my dolly. +I’s jes’ crazy ’bout Katy. I’m gonter ask her kin +she shrink you up no bigger’n Dodo an’ then +won’t you be cunning? You can look jes’ like +you look now only teensy weensy little. Your +little feet’ll be so long, not great big ones like +mine, an’ your little hands will be ’bout as big as +my little fingers an’—an’—you kin knit little bits +of baby socks an’ I kin take you out ridin’ in my +little doll-baby carriage, all tucked in nice.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p> + +<p>“But then I’ll be too little to marry Dodo. +You won’t trust your doll to Dodo, and if I’m so +teensy maybe he might break me.”</p> + +<p>“Well, then, I guess Katy’ll have to stretch +you some. She done stretched the shirt mos’ a +mile.”</p> + +<p>“What do you say to taking a little walk?”</p> + +<p>“I say: ‘Glory be!’ That’s what Kizzie, our +cook, says when she’s happy.”</p> + +<p>“Shall we take Dodo out in his carriage?”</p> + +<p>“If I can put my dolly in, too!”</p> + +<p>Dodo was awake and pleased to be included in +this outing, if gurglings and splutterings were an +indication of happiness. He and the doll were +tucked safely in. Katy, who had been longing +for the time to come when she could scrub the +nursery, was delighted to be relieved of her +charge for the time being.</p> + +<p>“Where shall we walk?” asked Nance.</p> + +<p>“Down by the lake! My dolly ain’t never +seed the lake yet. They’s a little blue boat down +there what my papa, the ’fessor, done say he +gonter set sail in some day. He say he gonter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span> +go way out in the middle of the lake where th’ +ain’t no little girls with curls to come tickle his +nose in the morning. My papa is kind and good, +but he sho’ do hate to have his nose tickled with +curls early in the morning.”</p> + +<p>The lake! How many memories it brought +back to Nance! The blue boat might be the +same one in which Judy Kean had her memorable +midnight jaunt, or was it a canoe? Nance smiled +at the picture that arose in her mind’s eye. It +was their Junior year and Judy had gone off in a +fit of jealousy and rage, and when she came to +herself she was out in the middle of the lake while +Molly and Nance rowed frantically after her. +What a time they had covering their tracks to +keep Judy from being found out and perhaps +even expelled! Nance laughed aloud.</p> + +<p>The sun was warm on that day in late March, +almost like a southern sun. Dodo, lazy baby, +had slipped from his sitting posture and lay flat +on his back. He had the same characteristics as +Mildred’s doll baby: the moment he lay down his +eyes closed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Oh, what a sleepy husband I have got!” +cried Nance. “Let’s camp out here, darling. I +brought my knitting and while my little husband +sleeps——”</p> + +<p>“And my doll baby, too!”</p> + +<p>“You can play in that nice clean sand. Don’t +go too close to the water.”</p> + +<p>There was a stretch of beach at that side of +the lake where a small pier had been built for +a boat-landing. The sand was fine and +white, a most delectable medium for houses +or pies, whatever the young sculptor wished to +create.</p> + +<p>Nance seated herself on a nice warm rock while +her little companion busied herself collecting +pebbles for the castle she contemplated building. +The sock grew under the girl’s skillful fingers +while her thoughts were miles away from the +poor soldier whose foot it was destined to cover. +Dodo snoozed peacefully and no doubt the doll +did, too.</p> + +<p>“Look! Look! Aunt Nance, I’ve done found +some kitty flowers!” cried Mildred, rushing to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span> +Nance with a switch of willow catkins she had +found growing near the water’s edge.</p> + +<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘I had a little pussy<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Her coat was silver grey.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">She lived down in the meadow,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">She never ran away.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘Her name was always Pussy,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">She never was a cat.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">‘Cause she was a Pussy-Willow.<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Now what do you think of that?’”<br /></span> +</div></div></div> + +<p>sang Nance. “Now let me teach you that nice +verse so you can say it to your father.”</p> + +<p>Mildred obediently learned the poetry in so +short a time that her teacher marveled at her +cleverness and good memory.</p> + +<p>“Now, darling, you mustn’t go quite so close +to the water again. Aunt Nance will gather a +big armful of the pussy-willows to take back to +Mother, but you might get your little tootsies wet +if you go too close to the edge. Then I’ll have +to put you in the carriage with my husband and +run home every step of the way.”</p> + +<p>Mildred trotted off with assurances of caution. +Nance settled herself to her knitting and her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span> +thoughts. What a boon this universal knitting +has become to women who want to think and be +busy at the same time! The girl’s thoughts were +centered on herself. What was she to do with +her life? The desire to teach had left her with +the years she had spent nursing her father and +mother. United States was on the verge of war—any +moment it might be declared. That would +mean the women of the land would be in demand +just as they had been in Europe. There +would be work to do, but what was her share to +be?</p> + +<p>This little breathing time with Molly was very +sweet, but it could not go on forever. The time +would come when she must take up life again. +Her unruly thoughts would dwell on how different +things would have been had Andy McLean +not shown himself so unreasonable. She might +have gone to the front with him. There was +work in the hospitals in France for others besides +trained nurses, lots of work! Cooking, cleaning, +sewing, peeling potatoes, scrubbing floors—nothing +was too menial for her. It would have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span> +sweet to work near Andy, shoulder to shoulder in +spirit even if he would happen to be the surgeon +in charge and she a poor scrub girl. She might +have been taking care of some of the war orphans. +Minding little babies was her long suit, it seemed. +A big tear gathered and spilled on the toe of the +sock that was being so neatly finished off.</p> + +<p>A shrill scream broke on the still air.</p> + +<p>“I’m a-sinkin’! I’m a-sinkin’!”</p> + +<p>“Mildred!” cried Nance, jumping to her feet.</p> + +<p>“Never mind, nurse, I’ll go after her,” said a +stern voice from behind her. “You had better +look after your other charge,” in a tone which +made no attempt to veil its sarcasm.</p> + +<p>Dodo had awakened and was sitting up in the +carriage reaching for the willow catkins. His +position was precarious, as one more inch might +have sent him headlong in the sand.</p> + +<p>Nance dropped her knitting and grabbed the +venturesome baby while the stern voice materialized +into a tall grey figure with sandy hair who +ran towards the water’s edge, skinning out of his +coat and vest as he ran and in some miraculous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span> +way also divesting himself of his shoes. His hat +he had already hurled at Nance’s feet.</p> + +<p>Mildred had walked out on the little pier and +decided that she would get in the pretty blue boat +that her father considered such a safe refuge +from tickling curls. It was bobbing about most +invitingly in easy stepping distance.</p> + +<p>“Won’t Aunt Nance be ’stonished?” the child +had said to herself. “She’s gonter holler out: +‘M-i-i-l-dred! Where you Mi—ldred baby?’ +an’ I gonter lay low an’ keep on a-sayin’ +nothin’.”</p> + +<p>She put out her little foot and set it firmly on +the bow of the boat that was almost grazing the +edge of the landing.</p> + +<p>“My legs is a-gettin’ mos’ long enough to step +up to the moon an’ stars,” she boasted.</p> + +<p>But how strangely boats behaved! This one +did not stay still as she had expected but ran +away from her. Her legs had not grown nearly +so long as she had thought and they refused to +grow another bit. The boat got farther and +farther away and the horrid little pier seemed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span> +be moving, too, and in the opposite direction. +The time came when Mildred must choose between +land and water. She decided to stay on +shore and with a mighty effort jerked her little +foot from the unsteady blue boat. Three years +going on four is not a period of great equilibrium. +Fate took matters out of Mildred’s hands +and kersplash! she went in the cold waters of the +lake. It was not very deep so close to the shore, +but neither was the little girl so very tall. By +standing on her tiptoes she might have managed +to keep her inquisitive nose out of the water, +but the naughty blue boat came swinging back +to her rescue and she clutched first the painter +and then the side of the boat, screaming lustily +as she clung.</p> + +<p>The grey figure with the sandy hair ran lightly +along the pier and with one swoop gathered the +child up into his arms. He might have saved +himself the trouble of taking off his coat and +shoes, but he had seen the child as she fell in the +water and did not know what would be required +of him as life saver. Mildred was sobbing dolefully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span> +as she buried her wet curls in the neck of +her rescuer.</p> + +<p>“Your nurse should have looked after you,” he +muttered.</p> + +<p>“She had her husband to ’tend to,” said Mildred, +“an’ I was a-keepin’ keer of myself. ’Sides +she ain’t my nurse but my ’loved aunty.”</p> + +<p>“Oh! And who may you be?”</p> + +<p>“I’m Mildred Carbuncle Green.” The family +name of Molly’s mother, which was Carmichael, +was thus perverted by this scion of the race.</p> + +<p>“And your aunt’s name?” asked the young +man as he picked up his discarded coat and +wrapped it around his burden.</p> + +<p>“She’s Aunt Nance——”</p> + +<p>“Nance Oldham!” and he almost dropped little +Mildred. “And you say she was busy with +her husband?”</p> + +<p>“Yessir! He keeps her busy mos’ of the +time.”</p> + +<p>The rescue and this conversation had taken but +a moment. In the meantime, poor Nance had +shoved her little husband back in the carriage and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span> +was rapidly wheeling him towards the scene of +disaster.</p> + +<p>She had recognized Andy McLean in the tall +grey figure and sandy hair. The moment he had +spoken to her so sternly she had known it was he. +At that moment she envied no creature in the +world so much as an ostrich. If she could only +bury her head in the sand. Why should Fate +be so cruel to her? Why should Andy McLean +come back on her horizon at that moment when +she was neglecting her duty? But then, she reflected, +if he had not come back at that psychological +moment either Mildred would have +drowned or Dodo broken his neck. She could +not have rescued both of them at once. Indeed, +both of them might have been killed! The fact +that the water was shallow and Mildred could +have walked out of it was no comfort to Nance, +nor did it allay her suffering and self-reproaches +in the least to know that almost every baby that +has grown to manhood has at one time or another +fallen out of his carriage or bed, down the steps +or even out of the window.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p> + +<p>Andy McLean, too, was going through some +uncomfortable moments as he held the dripping +child close in his arms and made his way across +the beach to Nance. There had never been a +moment since he and Nance had parted that he +had not regretted his hasty words; but what good +were regrets? Nance could not have cared for +him or she would have felt that at her father’s +death he was the person to whom she must turn +instead of that Dr. Flint. As far as he could see, +there was no reason under Heaven why Nance +should not have married him immediately. He +knew nothing of her mother’s determination to +give up her public life nor of her decision to remain +at home for Nance to nurse. He had not +yet learned of Mrs. Oldham’s death, as he had +arrived at Wellington only the evening before, +and Mrs. McLean, with a wisdom sometimes +granted mothers, had not mentioned Nance’s +name to him, much less the fact that she was +even then visiting the Greens.</p> + +<p>“Married! and so engrossed with her husband +that she let little children entrusted to her care<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span> +fall in the water and almost fall out of baby carriages! +But where is the—the—cad?” was what +Andy was thinking as he approached the frantic +Nance, who was pushing the carriage as for dear +life through the heavy sand.</p> + +<p>“Mildred! Mildred! You promised not to +go near the water’s edge!”</p> + +<p>“I never went near it but jes’ ran out on the +little wooden street. I wasn’t goin’ to be +naughty. I knowed I might get my feet wet +down by the edge so I walked on the planks. I +never done nothin’ nor nothin’! ’Twas the bad +little blue boat what wobbled.”</p> + +<p>Nance and Andy both laughed at the amusing +child. The laugh made matters easier for them.</p> + +<p>Brown eyes looked into blue and then such a +blush o’erspread their countenances that a day’s +fishing under a summer sun could not have accomplished.</p> + +<p>“You had better put her in the carriage—it +is warm there and I can carry Dodo.”</p> + +<p>“No, I will keep her wrapped in my coat. +That will be better.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p> + +<p>“But you—you might be cold.”</p> + +<p>“Not at all! I never catch cold,” shortly.</p> + +<p>Nance remembered otherwise, but there was +nothing to do but turn and wheel the baby back +to the house on the campus.</p> + +<p>“I—you must think—I know I was careless +to let such an accident happen to my +charges. I have no excuse—I was just thinking!”</p> + +<p>“About your husband, I fancy!”</p> + +<p>Again Nance’s cheeks were crimson, remembering +only too well what her thoughts had been +as she sat in the sand knitting.</p> + +<p>“I——”</p> + +<p>“Mildred told me about him,” said Andy +grimly.</p> + +<p>“Did she?” laughed Nance, thinking that +Andy was speaking of Dodo, of course. “He is +a darling husband.”</p> + +<p>“Humph!” They walked on in silence, Andy +taking great strides with Mildred clasped closely +in his arms, while Nance wheeled the baby carriage, +almost running to keep up.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I don’t know what to call you,” said Andy +at last.</p> + +<p>“Call me? Why, call me Nance! Why not? +My name is still Nance no matter what has happened.”</p> + +<p>“I—I—perhaps he wouldn’t like it.”</p> + +<p>“Who?”</p> + +<p>“Your husband! Is it Flint?”</p> + +<p>“Andy McLean, you are a fool! There is no +other word for you!” and Nance grabbed Dodo +from his carriage and ran up the steps, thankful +that they had arrived at the Square Deal.</p> + +<p>“If not Flint, who?” muttered Andy under +his breath. “I am going to stay here until I find +out.”</p> + +<p>Molly was not at home to receive her wet +daughter. Nance and Katy rubbed her down +and dressed her while Andy waited miserably in +the library. Why had his mother not warned +him that Nance Oldham was in Wellington? +They had had a long talk and she had told him +news of all their old friends. Molly and Edwin +had been mentioned again and again but the fact<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span> +that they had a guest had been kept dark. He +had never talked to his mother about his break +with Nance. A certain reticence in his make-up +withheld him. Many times he had longed to put +his head in her lap and tell her all about it.</p> + +<p>A great intimacy existed between Mrs. McLean +and this only child, but instead of his being like +a daughter to her, as is the case sometimes +with a woman and an only child when that child +happens to be a son, this worthy mother had adjusted +herself more into the relationship of an +elder brother to Andy. There were few if any +subjects they could not discuss together, but +somehow he could not bring himself to tell her +of Nance. She had known they were engaged—that +was easy to tell, and she knew the engagement +was no more—that was all. Mrs. McLean +bided her time.</p> + +<p>“They are young yet,” she had said to her +husband. “Some misunderstanding has come up, +but if they are really meant for one another it +will be explained away. If they can’t forgive, +then they are not suited for mating.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p> + +<p>The good woman had been delighted beyond +measure that Nance should be in Wellington +while her son was on his farewell visit to her, and +she had devoutly prayed that they might meet by +chance, just as they had. Of course she had not +stipulated in her prayers that Andy should mistake +Nance for the Greens’ nurse and reprimand +her for carelessness; and then fish Mildred out +of the water; and get Dodo and the hated Dr. +Flint hopelessly mixed, and be called a fool for +his blunder!</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER VII<br /> + +<small>NANCE PACKS HER TRUNK</small></h2> + + +<p>Molly, coming in hurriedly from her labors +at the French War Relief rooms where she had +been engaged in making surgical dressings until +her back ached so that she had more sympathy +for the poor wounded than ever, if possible, +found young Dr. McLean cooling his heels and +drying his coat by her library fire.</p> + +<p>“Andy! I am so glad to see you!” she cried, +grasping both of his hands. “When did you +come? Did you know Nance Oldham is with +me?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, I have seen her,” grimly.</p> + +<p>“Oh, then you know of her trouble?”</p> + +<p>“Trouble! I shouldn’t call it that. She evidently +does not consider it in that light.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Andy McLean, how can you say such a +thing?”</p> + +<p>“Well, I formed my opinions from the evidence +of my own eyes. In fact, she told me with +her own lips that she was contented; if not in so +many words, at least she gave me that impression.”</p> + +<p>“Resigned, of course! That is Nance’s way, +but she is very sad and lonesome for all that.”</p> + +<p>“Lonesome! Ye Gods, how many does she +want?”</p> + +<p>“Excuse me, Andy, but you are talking like a +goose,” declared Molly, irritated in spite of herself.</p> + +<p>“Thank you, madam,” he said, bowing low. +“Your guest has just called me a fool and now +you call me a goose. I bid you good-by.”</p> + +<p>“Good-by, indeed! Andy McLean, sit down +here and let me send for your father. I believe +my soul you are in a fever or something.” Molly +pushed him down in a chair near the fire. +“Why, Andy, your coat is damp! Where have +you been?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p> + +<p>She drew a chair by him and seated herself, +looking anxiously into his flushed face. Andy +laughed in a hard tone.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps you are right, but don’t send for Father. +I got my coat wet in a perfectly sane way, +but perhaps you had better find out about that +from Mrs. Fl—Nance—I mean.”</p> + +<p>Andy balked at that name of Mrs. Flint and +then, besides, Nance had called him a fool when +he had hinted at the doctor’s being the happy +man. At this juncture little Mildred came running +into the library.</p> + +<p>“Mumsy! Mumsy! Is you heard ’bout me +an’ the blue boat?”</p> + +<p>“No, darling! But what makes your curls so +wet?”</p> + +<p>“That was that baddest blue boat. It +wouldn’t stay still ’til I got in—it jes’ moved and +moved—an’ the little wooden street, it moved an’ +moved an’ I went kerblim! kersplash!”</p> + +<p>“In the lake! Oh, Mildred! I know you +didn’t mind Aunt Nance. Are you cold? Did +Aunt Nance get wet? Where is Dodo?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p> + +<p>“You ’fuses me with so many ain’t’s an’ do’s +and didn’t’s.”</p> + +<p>“You tell me all about it,” said the doting +mother, trying to compose herself as she gathered +the first-born in her arms.</p> + +<p>“Well, you see, me’n’ Aunt Nance we went +a-walkin’ an’ we tooked Dodo along an’ my dolly, +an’ Aunt Nance she says that one use she ain’t +got no husband is ’cause don’t no husband want +her, an’ I done tol’ her that if Katy kin shrink her +up some that Dodo kin be her husband. You +see, Mumsy, I been a-feelin’ sorry for Aunt +Nance ever since that time I mos’ went to sleep +in her lap an’ she talked about a beau lover what +got to fightin’ with her an’ she hit him back. She +wetted my ear all up with her tears. I jes’ done +thunk somethin’!” the child exclaimed, getting +out of her mother’s lap and peering curiously into +Andy’s face. “Is you the Andy what talked so +crule to my Aunt Nance? ’Cause if you is, I’m +sorry you done pulled me out’n the lake.”</p> + +<p>“Mildred! Mildred!” admonished Molly, but +in her heart of hearts she knew that what the enfant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span> +terrible was saying to the young doctor was +no doubt of a very salutary nature. He needed +a good talking to and he was getting it.</p> + +<p>“I am the one,” said Andy meekly.</p> + +<p>“Well, when Dodo grows up to be big enough +he is goin’ to—to—cut you up in little pieces. +He’s growin’ up fast an’ bein’ a husband is +makin’ him cut his teeth early——”</p> + +<p>“Molly Brown!” interrupted Andy McLean +eagerly. “Is Nance not married?”</p> + +<p>“Married! The idea, Andy! Of course not!”</p> + +<p>“Yes, she is! She’s married to Dodo Green. +I married ’em this morning,” declared Mildred +defiantly.</p> + +<p>“Oh, oh! I see it all now!” laughed Molly +hysterically. “You were talking about her +mythical marriage while I was speaking of her +mother’s death.”</p> + +<p>“Her mother dead? I had not heard a word +of it. Strange that so important a woman as +Mrs. Oldham should have died without my seeing +it mentioned in the paper.”</p> + +<p>“But Mrs. Oldham dropped out of public life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span> +two years ago, when her husband died, in fact. +Nance had hardly rested from the long siege of +nursing her father before she began on her +mother.”</p> + +<p>Andy bowed his sandy-haired head in his hands +and groaned:</p> + +<p>“Fool! Fool! Every kind of fool and goose +you and Nance choose to call me,—fool and +knave! Bad-tempered brute! Jealous idiot! +Oh, Molly, please call Nance.”</p> + +<p>When Nance had hurled her “fool” at Andy’s +sandy head, she flew up-stairs, determined never +to speak to him again. She longed for a few +quiet moments in her own room, but Mildred +must be rubbed down and dressed before she +could seek retirement. She was sure he would +leave the house immediately. His coat was wet +and no doubt his vest and shirt, too, after having +carried the dripping child such a distance. Of +course he would not want to call on the Greens +while she was in the house. The girl bitterly regretted +having timed her visit so unfortunately. +The Greens and McLeans were very intimate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span> +and would perforce see each other often. She +hated to be a wet blanket—a skeleton at the feast. +She determined to pack her trunk and go on a +promised visit to an old college friend then living +in New York. Molly would object, she knew, +but it was surely best for all of them that she +should take herself off for a few weeks.</p> + +<p>Nance was always an orderly person and packing +a trunk with her was a very simple matter. +She began in her usual systematic way and had +already folded her dresses neatly in the trays and +was emptying the bureau drawers when Molly’s +voice was heard calling her from the lower +hall.</p> + +<p>“Nance! Oh, Nance!”</p> + +<p>She sounded quite excited. No doubt she had +just been informed of Mildred’s accident and +wanted to hear the details of it.</p> + +<p>“Coming!” called Nance, hurrying down the +steps. “Oh, Molly, what do you think of me for +taking out the children and almost drowning Mildred? +And while that was going on, little Dodo +came within an ace of tumbling out of the carriage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span> +on his precious sleepy head! You will +never trust them with me again.”</p> + +<p>“Nonsense! Mildred is old enough not to try +to get in boats alone, and as for Dodo, Aunt +Mary always said: ‘Whin chilluns grows up +’thout ever gittin’ a tumble, they is sho’ to be +idjits.’”</p> + +<p>“Well, then, my real duty was to let him tumble,” +laughed Nance. “What do you want with +me, honey? I am very busy.”</p> + +<p>“Not too busy to come in and talk with me a +little while,” insisted the wily Molly, putting her +arm around her friend’s waist and leading her to +the library door.</p> + +<p>“I do want to talk to you a moment,” agreed +Nance. “Molly, I am going away for a few +weeks.” They had reached the door, which was +ajar, and Andy, ensconced in the sleepy-hollow +chair dear to the professor’s bones, could plainly +hear the conversation.</p> + +<p>“Going away! You are going to do no such +thing.”</p> + +<p>“I must. There is no use in asking me why—you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span> +know why—— It is too hard for me and +there is no use in pretending it is not.”</p> + +<p>“But, Nance——”</p> + +<p>“I have begun to pack and I will go to-morrow.”</p> + +<p>Instead of the hospitable protestations characteristic +of Molly, that young housewife said not a +word, but giving her friend a little push towards +the fireplace, she grabbed up Mildred and rushed +from the room, closing the door after her.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br /> + +<small>A DAMP COAT</small></h2> + + +<p>Andy undoubled himself with alacrity and +sprang from the sleepy-hollow chair. His stern +face was softened and filled with a boyish eagerness.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Nance! Can’t you forgive me?”</p> + +<p>“Excuse me, Dr. McLean, I did not know +you were still here,” and Nance turned to leave +the room.</p> + +<p>Andy with long strides reached the door first +and with his back against it held out beseeching +hands.</p> + +<p>“Yes, I’m here and am going to stay +here——”</p> + +<p>“Well, I am not! Please let me pass.” +Nance was filled with a righteous indignation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span> +against Molly at having played this trick on +her.</p> + +<p>“But, my dear, I must tell you what a fool I +have been——”</p> + +<p>“That is not necessary. I know.”</p> + +<p>Andy laughed. Nance had a laconic way of +putting things that always tickled his humor.</p> + +<p>“Now you sound like yourself, honey, but oh, +please act like yourself! The real Nance Oldham +could not be so cruel as to go off without letting +me explain—I have no excuse—there could +be none for my blind rage and jealousy—none +unless loving you too hard could be called one. +Will you listen to me?”</p> + +<p>“I shall have to unless I stop up my ears, since +you stop up the doorway.” Nance was very pale +and trembling. Two years of suffering could +not be done away with in a moment and the girl +had surely suffered.</p> + +<p>“Couldn’t we sit down and let me tell you?”</p> + +<p>“We could!”</p> + +<p>Andy eagerly directed Nance to the sofa, but +she sedately seated herself in a small isolated sewing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span> +rocker. Andy accepted the amendment and +placed his chair as near to hers as the frigid atmosphere +around her permitted.</p> + +<p>“Before I explain I must apologize. I would +have done it the very day after that awful row we +had, the very moment after it, if I had not +thought you hated me.”</p> + +<p>“And now?”</p> + +<p>“And now I am going to apologize and explain, +whether you hate me or not. I could do it +lots better if you would let me hold your hand +while I am doing it,” but Nance drew Molly’s +knitting from a bag hung on the back of the chair +and declared her hands were otherwise occupied. +Molly had reached the purling end of a sleeveless +sweater and no doubt would be glad of Nance’s +expert assistance.</p> + +<p>“Nance, there never has been any other woman +in my life but you, you and my mother. You +know perfectly well from the time I met you, +when I was at Exmoor College and you were +here at Wellington, that you were the only girl +in the world for me. I had a kind of notion in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span> +my fool brain that I was going to be the only man +in the world for you. When we were engaged I +thought I was, but when I realized that Dr. Flint +was paying you such devoted attention, at your +home constantly——”</p> + +<p>“My father’s physician!”</p> + +<p>“Yes, I know,—but, honey, you see you were +way up there in Vermont and I was down in New +York and I was hungry for you all the time, and +when your father died I thought you would pick +right up and come to me—I knew nothing of +your mother’s determination to stay with you—nothing +of her illness—nothing but that you were +staying in the same town with Flint and I must +go back to New York. You did not tell +me.”</p> + +<p>“Well, hardly, after the way you raged and +tore! I felt if you could rage that way we had +better separate.”</p> + +<p>“But, my dear, I’ll never rage that way again—I’ve +learned my lesson. Can’t you forgive +me?” Nance was silent.</p> + +<p>“I love you just as much as I always did,—more,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span> +in fact. When little Mildred Green told +me you had let her fall in the water because you +were so busy with your husband, I wanted to die +that minute. Of course I thought it was Flint. +How could I know the child was playing a game +with you? Nance, do you hate me as much as +you did that terrible day two years ago?”</p> + +<p>“Yes!” Nance’s answer was very low but +Andy heard it.</p> + +<p>“Well, then, there is no use in saying any +more,” he sprang to his feet, his face grey with +misery.</p> + +<p>“I didn’t hate you then at all—nor do I now.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, Nance, don’t tease me! Can you forgive +me?” and poor Andy sank on his knees and +bowed his head on her knees.</p> + +<p>Nance’s arms were around him in a moment. +She hugged his sandy head to her bosom with one +hand and patted his back with the other while he +gave a great sob.</p> + +<p>“Andy McLean, you are still wringing wet. +Get up from here this minute and take off that +coat and let me dry it! And your shirt is damp,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span> +too! My, what a boy! Here, sit right close to +the fire and dry that wet sleeve.”</p> + +<p>Andy meekly submitted in a daze. Nance’s +motherly attitude and sudden melting were too +much for him. The coat was hung by the fire to +dry while the young doctor stood helplessly by in +his shirt sleeves.</p> + +<p>“And now, Andy, I’m going to apologize to +you and ask you to forgive me,” declared Nance, +stoutly trying to go on with her knitting.</p> + +<p>But Andy firmly took it from her and possessed +himself of those busy hands.</p> + +<p>“I was worse than you—when you said those +hard things to me they hurt like fury—you didn’t +know how they did hurt, but I did, and I should +not have done the same thing to you. I said +worse things to you than you did to me,—at least +I tried to.”</p> + +<p>“You did pretty well,” said Andy whimsically, +pressing one of the imprisoned hands to his +lips.</p> + +<p>“Dr. Flint did want to marry me; I guess he +still does, but—but——”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p> + +<p>“But what, lassie?” Sometimes Andy +dropped into his parents’ vernacular.</p> + +<p>“I am not going to tell a man in his shirt +sleeves why I didn’t marry Dr. Flint,” said +Nance firmly. “It is too unpicturesque.”</p> + +<p>“Then I’ll put on my coat.”</p> + +<p>“No, you won’t! I wouldn’t tell a man in a +wet coat, either.”</p> + +<p>“Why not?”</p> + +<p>“Because I don’t like to lay my brown head +on a damp shoulder. Why don’t you do as I told +you and dry that shirt sleeve? Hold it close to +the fire, sir!”</p> + +<p>“I won’t do it unless you tell me why you +didn’t marry Dr. Flint.”</p> + +<p>“Well, then, to keep you from catching your +death of cold, I will tell you, but remember I +have saved your life. It was—it was because—because +he didn’t have sandy hair and a bad temper,” +and Nance was enfolded in the despised +shirt sleeves and found a very nice dry spot on +which to lay her brown head.</p> + +<p>The sun had set and twilight was upon them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span> +The front door opened to admit the master of the +house, but Molly was in ambush ready to catch +him to keep him out of the library. Kizzie had +started in to mend the fire but Molly stopped +her.</p> + +<p>“Never mind the fire, Kizzie. It is all right +for such a warm evening. Give us tea in the +den.”</p> + +<p>“Why all of this mystery?” asked Edwin +Green as he followed his wife back to the den, +going on tiptoe as she demanded.</p> + +<p>“Andy and Nance are in there.”</p> + +<p>“Andy McLean! Fine! I want to see him. +Won’t he be here to tea? I’ll go in and speak to +him.”</p> + +<p>“You’ll do no such thing! Edwin Green, you +may be—in fact, are, a grand lecturer on English, +but you have no practical sense. Don’t you know +you might break in just at the wrong moment +and Andy may get off to France without their +making it up?”</p> + +<p>“Making up what? Who making up: the Allies +and the central powers?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Oh, Edwin, you know I mean Nance and +Andy!”</p> + +<p>“What are they making up? If it is a row, +let’s go help them.”</p> + +<p>“Not a soul shall go in that room until they +come out, unless it is over my dead body.”</p> + +<p>“Well, well! I’d rather stay in this room with +your live body than go in there over your dead +one,” and the professor pulled his wife down on +the sofa by him, “especially if you will give me +some tea,” as Kizzie came in grinning with the +tea tray.</p> + +<p>“They’s co’tin’ a-goin’ on in yander, boss. +The fiah is low an’ the lights ain’t lit, but Miss +Molly she guard that do’ like a cat do a mouse +hole. Cose Miss Nance ain’t got no maw to +futher things up for her but Miss Molly is all +ready to fly off an’ git the preacher, seems +like.”</p> + +<p>“I can’t remember that things were made easy +for me this way when I was addressing my wife,” +complained Edwin as he stirred his tea with his +arm around his wife, a combination that could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span> +not have been made had his arm not been long +and Molly still slender.</p> + +<p>“Ungrateful man! Why, Judy and Kent +took the bus from Fontainebleau to Barbizon +when they were simply dying to walk, just to +give you a chance. Have you forgotten?”</p> + +<p>“I haven’t forgotten the walk—I never will—and +if they really rode on my account, I’ll pass +on the favor to other lovers and stay out of my +library until the cows come home; that is, if you +will stay with me.”</p> + +<p>Molly told him then of the whole affair and +how Mildred had righted matters, telling Andy +just exactly the right thing to bring him to his +senses.</p> + +<p>“I am almost sure they have made up and are +engaged again,” sighed Molly ecstatically. A +romance was dear to her soul and being happily +married herself, she felt like furthering the love +affairs of all her friends.</p> + +<p>“They are either engaged or dead,” laughed +Edwin. “Such silence emanating from the library +must bode extreme calamity or extreme<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span> +bliss. If it continues much longer I think it is +my duty as a householder to break in the door +and offer congratulations or call the coroner, as +the case demands.”</p> + +<p>“It is getting late. Maybe I had better go in +and ask Andy to stay to dinner.”</p> + +<p>Molly, who had a deep-rooted objection to +noise and usually talked in a low tone, now spoke +in a loud voice as she bumped her way along the +hall, pushing chairs and rattling the hat rack and +calling out shrilly to the amused husband following +her. Strange to say, she could not remember +on which side of the door the knob was, +although she had lived several years in that house. +She fumblingly hunted it and finally opened the +door with a great rattle.</p> + +<p>Nance was seated sedately knitting and Andy +was holding his coat close to the dying flames. +The room was almost dark.</p> + +<p>“Kizzie should have lighted the lamp and attended +to the fire,” Molly said briskly. Oh, +Molly, how could you be so untruthful, blaming +things on poor Kizzie, too? (Molly’s conscience<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span> +did hurt her for dragging Kizzie in and she gave +the girl a long coveted blue hat that she had +meant to keep for second best, feeling that it +might act as a salve on her own tender, truth-loving +soul. Kizzie, quite ignorant of the cause +for this generosity, gratefully accepted the hat +and asked no questions.)</p> + +<p>“Yes, it gets dark before one realizes,” said +Nance demurely.</p> + +<p>“Ahem!” from the professor.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Andy, your coat is still wet! Mildred +told me you wrapped it around her. I’ll get you +Edwin’s smoking jacket and have your coat +dried. You must stay to dinner with us. I can +’phone your mother not to expect you at home.”</p> + +<p>Andy did not need much persuading, but accepted +the invitation with alacrity. Molly called +up Mrs. McLean to ask for the loan of her son +for dinner.</p> + +<p>“Yes!” exclaimed that wise lady at the other +end of the wire. “I have been expecting a telephone +call for the last half hour. You may keep +him but I shall wait up to see him when he gets<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span> +home. I am sur-r-e he’ll have something to tell +me. From my back window I saw Nance with +the perambulator full of babies on her way to the +lake and I sent Andy off for a walk, first putting +a flea in his ear by suggesting that the lake was +getting shallower and shallower. He has always +been that inquisitive that I was sur-r-e he would +make for that spot to find out why. I knew that +all those poor-r young folks had to do was to +meet. Keep him, Molly—and God bless you!”</p> + +<p>There was a little choking sound at the other +end that Molly understood very well. She hung +up the receiver “with a smile on her lip but a +tear in her eye.” It is all very well for a mother +to be unselfish and want her son to marry and to +be happy, but there is a tug of war going on in +her heart all the time.</p> + +<p>“I know how I will feel when Dodo gets engaged,” +Molly said to Edwin when she told him +of what Mrs. McLean had said; but that young +father went off into such shouts of laughter, +Molly had a feeling that mere man could never +understand a mother’s heart.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER IX<br /> + +<small>PLANS</small></h2> + + +<p>“I have no idea of going through dinner without +letting you and old Ed know all about us!” +said Andy as he took his place at Molly’s hospitable +board.</p> + +<p>“What about you?” asked Molly, who was +growing deceitful, her husband feared.</p> + +<p>“About Nance and me! I can’t keep it any +longer,” declared the happy young doctor. +Nance kept her eyes on her plate but her mouth +was twitching with amusement.</p> + +<p>“What about you and Nance?” solemnly +asked the professor.</p> + +<p>“Why, we’re engaged!”</p> + +<p>“No! Not really?” and Edwin grinned.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Andy! I’m so glad!” and Molly reached +a hand out to her two friends, who were perforce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span> +placed across the table from each other since +there were only four for dinner.</p> + +<p>Nance got up and kissed her hostess. “Oh, +Molly, you are too lovely! Don’t you know that +I know that Andy and I have not fooled you one +moment? Don’t I see brandy peaches on the side +table all ready for dessert, and don’t you know +that I know that those precious articles are only +brought out on highdays and holidays? Isn’t +that fruit cake I smell, that you know perfectly +well you made and put away for next Christmas +so it would be ripe and get better and better?”</p> + +<p>“Well, I had to express my feelings somehow, +and how did I know that you and Andy were going +to tell your secret this very evening? I knew +I mustn’t say a thing until you two said something, +and if I could not say anything, I could at +least feed you.”</p> + +<p>“All I can say, Andy, is that if your experience +in choosing a girl from that class of 19— is +as fortunate as mine, you will be a pretty happy +man, and by Jove, I believe you are running me +a mighty close second,” and to the astonishment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span> +of his wife, as Edwin Green was certainly a far +from demonstrative man, he actually jumped +from his seat and embraced Nance. Then Andy +felt that he must kiss Molly, and Kizzie coming +in at this juncture almost dropped the dish she +was carrying.</p> + +<p>“Sich a-carryin’s on I never seed. I’m +a-thinking you folks had better sort yo’selves,” +and the girl went off chortling.</p> + +<p>“Now tell me your plans!” demanded Molly +when they settled down to dinner. Strange to +say, they had got rather mixed up in the promiscuous +embracing that had been going on, and +Edwin and Andy had changed places. Edwin +found himself seated at Molly’s side while Andy +had greatly disarranged the table by plumping +himself down by his Nance.</p> + +<p>“We are to be married immediately,” announced +Andy stoutly.</p> + +<p>Nance gasped. The fact was they had been +so busy explaining the past and living in the +present while the fire had died so low in the library, +that the future had not been touched upon.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Of course I may start for France at any time +now, but before I go I mean to get me a war +bride. It will be pretty bad leaving her, but then +the war can’t last forever, and I have decided it +is my duty to go help, and I fancy it still is. +When Uncle Sam steps in, maybe he can finish +up things in a hurry. Then I can get back to +Nance.”</p> + +<p>“Get back to me, indeed! If you think you +are going without me, Andy McLean, you are +vastly mistaken. If it is your duty to go help, +it is my duty, too. Oh, I know I am no trained +nurse, but I can do lots of other things. Dr. +Flint says I am better than most trained +nurses——”</p> + +<p>Nance stopped short. She should not have +mentioned Dr. Flint. Only suppose it had hurt +Andy’s feelings! Not a bit of it!</p> + +<p>“Bully for Flint!” cried the accepted lover. +“Oh, Nance, would you go with me?”</p> + +<p>“I can scrub and cook and take care of babies.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t know about that,” teased Andy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p> + +<p>“But you will always be near and pull them +out of the water when I let them fall in,” suggested +Nance. “Won’t you?”</p> + +<p>“That I will! Just as near as I can get!” +and Andy hitched his chair a little closer, thereby +disarranging the table even more than he had +done before. But although Molly was a very +careful housekeeper and most particular about +the looks of her table, she cared not one whit, but +beamed on Andy as though he were the pink of +propriety instead of a naughty boy.</p> + +<p>What a change a little lovering had made in +the appearance of both Nance and Andy! The +girl’s clear skin was flushed and her eyes sparkling. +The corners of her mouth had no trace of +downward tendency now. The years of sadness +and confinement spent in nursing her father and +mother were forgotten. Nance had come into +her own—her woman’s heritage: to be beloved, to +be guarded and cherished; at the same time to +know that she was to be the companion, the helpmeet. +As for Andy,—he beamed with joy. His +face had lost the stern lines that had so distressed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span> +his mother. He looked again like the boy he was, +not like the tired, disappointed man she had +known of late.</p> + +<p>Nance had no romantic notions of what life in +France meant in that early spring of 1917. She +knew that there was no room for drones and unproductive +consumers in that war-worn country. +She knew that in marrying Andy and going with +his unit she was to face work, privations, danger, +even death; but with her eyes open she was determined +to see it through.</p> + +<p>“I would enlist in the United States army,” +Andy said to his host after dinner, as they +lounged in the den and puffed away at their comforting +pipes, “but I feel that I can be of more +good right now in France where they are crying +out for surgeons.”</p> + +<p>“It can’t be many days now before war is declared,” +sighed Edwin. “By jiminy! I hate +myself for not being able to get in the game.”</p> + +<p>“Too bad, old man! A fellow with a wife and +two children has to think of them.”</p> + +<p>“Of course! I wouldn’t let Molly know how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span> +I feel about it for any thing. I am not so young +as I was, but I am stronger now than I was as a +youth. As for my eyes—they are good enough +eyes in glasses and my bald head would be no +drawback.” Edwin always would call his +sparsely covered top “bald,” but Molly, by diligent +care, had made two blades of grass grow +where only one had grown before, and with a +microscope one could see the beginnings of a +fuzzy crop of hair, at least so the fond wife insisted.</p> + +<p>“I bet she would say go, if it were put to her,” +said Andy.</p> + +<p>“I’ll not do it, though! It wouldn’t be fair.”</p> + +<p>“Well, if it is put up to her, I bet on Molly +Brown!”</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER X<br /> + +<small>ALL THE OLD GIRLS</small></h2> + + +<p>“I’ve got a wonderful scheme, Edwin,” said +Molly when she had finally engineered her husband +out of the den and Nance in.</p> + +<p>“I’ll be bound you have. I never saw such a +Mrs. Machiavelli!—First I mustn’t go in the library +but stick to the den, and now that I had +just made myself at home in the den I must flee +to the library.”</p> + +<p>Molly laughed at her husband’s pretended discomfiture +as he settled himself to find out what +was going on at the front.</p> + +<p>“Now read the news to me while I knit. +There is no knowing how soon our own boys will +be needing sweaters. I feel that every stitch I +put in is important. Mercy, what a mess my +knitting is in! I do believe that little monkey of +a Mildred has been working on it. But she can’t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span> +purl at all! Someone else has done it. No one +has been here but Andy.”</p> + +<p>“Well, I can’t think Andy McLean would attempt +a sweater,” laughed Edwin. “Maybe +Nance is responsible.”</p> + +<p>“But Nance is a past master!”</p> + +<p>“She might have been trying a one-handed +stunt and failed. I don’t believe even Prussian +efficiency could knit and get proposed to and accept +all at the same time. Under the circumstances +I think she should be forgiven for purling +where she should have knitted and knitting where +she should have purled.”</p> + +<p>“You sound like the prayer book,” said Molly, +patiently pulling out stitches and deftly picking +up where Andy asked to hold Nance’s hand. “I +almost feel as though I were committing a sacrilege. +This sweater is like a piece of tapestry +where the lady has recorded her emotions, using +the medium she knew best. I just know dear old +Nance tried to go on with her work all the time +Andy was making love,” and Molly wiped a wee +tear off on the ball of yarn.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I tell you that sweater could tell tales if it +could speak,” teased Edwin. “Why don’t you +sew in one of your golden hairs so that the happy +soldier who finally gets it will have some inkling +of how the beautiful girl looks who made it?”</p> + +<p>“Silly! But don’t you want to hear what my +scheme is?”</p> + +<p>“Dying to!”</p> + +<p>“I am going to try to get the old Queen’s +girls, that is our ’special crowd, to come to +Nance’s wedding. Katherine and Edith Williams +are both in New York; Judy is there; Otoyo +Sen is in Boston; Margaret Wakefield is in +Washington; Jessie Lynch is in Philadelphia——”</p> + +<p>“Are there no husbands?”</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes, plenty of them, but I’m not going +to invite husbands! The babies can come if the +mothers can’t leave them, but the husbands are +not invited. Katherine Williams and Jessie +Lynch are the only ones who are still in single +blessedness.”</p> + +<p>“Are you going to have them all stay here?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span> +asked Edwin in amazement, never having quite +accustomed himself to Molly’s wholesale hospitality.</p> + +<p>“Of course! I can manage it finely. That +will be only six extra ones. Why, at Chatsworth +we had that much company any time. This +house is really almost as big as Chatsworth and +there we had our huge family to put away besides.”</p> + +<p>“All I can say is that you are a wonder, but +please don’t break yourself down over this wedding. +What does Nance say to it?”</p> + +<p>“I haven’t asked her, but I know she is dying +to see all the girls together. We have often +talked about it, and wedding or no wedding I was +going to try to get them here this next month. +Otoyo has already promised to come, you remember, +and now she can just hurry up and get here +for the wedding. She will have to bring Cho-Cho-San, +who is just a bit older than Mildred. +They can have great times together. You don’t +mind, do you, honey?”</p> + +<p>“Mind! Of course not! You know I like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span> +company. I was just afraid you were giving +yourself too large an order.”</p> + +<p>Nance, on being consulted, thought it would +be wonderful to see all the old girls again before +embarking on her great adventure, so letters +were forthwith written and sent to the six friends, +who one and all joyfully accepted. Business, +husbands, babies, society were to be left behind +for this grand reunion of the old Queen’s crowd.</p> + +<p>Otoyo Sen, now Mrs. Matsuki, whose exceedingly +regretfully but honorable husband was +gone on short journey and baby Cho-Cho-San +must stay with humble mother for the wedding. +As Molly had expected to have the child, this was +as it should be.</p> + +<p>Katherine had demanded leave from the lectures +she was delivering, and Edith had an excellent +nurse for her baby and could leave her +family easily. Margaret Wakefield had no children +and was able to cancel the many engagements +that such an important person was sure to +have, and her house was in such good running +order that her husband, the rising young congressman,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span> +would want for nothing in her absence. +Jessie Lynch had declined two luncheons, a dinner +dance, and a theatre party, besides breaking +as many more engagements in order to come to +this wedding of the old college friend. Jessie +was still unmarried although she had been the one +that the prophecy had married off first. Pretty +little Jessie had so many lovers it was hard to +choose among them.</p> + +<p>The very first reply was from Judy and she, +Judy-like, answered in person. <a href="#Frontispiece">She blew in at +nightfall with a huge suitcase</a>, many parcels and +her gay chintz knitting bag stuffed full of various +things besides knitting.</p> + +<p>“Kent was dying to come but I told him no +children and dogs were allowed,” announced that +glowing young matron as she dropped her belongings, +scattering them all over the library +floor, and rushed around kissing and hugging +everybody in the room. “I have come to help. +I know you, Molly! You always act like triplets +when there is any work on hand, and I know you, +too, Nance! Your New England conscience will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span> +make you neglect Andy rather than seem to shirk +work. I am here to sweep and dust and cook, +take care of babies, or even to flirt with Andy if +Nance does not look after him. I am going to +dress the bride; find Edwin’s collar buttons and +studs for his dress shirt; see that the best man has +the ring safe in his pocket; pay the preacher; put +in the supply of rice and old shoes—in fact,” she +sang:</p> + +<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘Oh, I am a cook and a captain bold,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">And the mate of the Nancy brig,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And a bo’sun tight, and a midshipmite,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">And the crew of the captain’s gig.’”<br /></span> +</div></div></div> + +<p>The Greens had been sitting quite sedately +around the lamp engaged in their various occupations +when Judy burst in on them. The professor +was getting up a lecture for the morrow, +Mildred was cutting out paper dolls, and Molly +and Nance had for the moment put down their +eternal knitting and were giving their attention +to whipping on lace for the modest trousseau. +But the whirlwind that came in swept aside all +sane business. Needles were hastily thrust in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span> +cloth; thimbles were mislaid; paper dolls +dropped for something livelier; and lecture preparation +abandoned. When Judy, after the +breathless announcement of having come and her +reasons for coming, began on the Nancy Bell, +Edwin sprang to his feet and, joining in the +dance that Judy was improvising, sang in a rollicking +mixture of tenor and baritone:</p> + +<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘And he shook his fist and tore his hair,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Till I really felt afraid,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For I couldn’t help thinking the man had been drinking,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">And so I simply said:<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘Oh, elderly man, it’s little I know<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Of the duties of men of the sea,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And I’ll eat my hand if I understand<br /></span> +<span class="i2">However you can be<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘At once a cook and a captain bold,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">And the mate of the Nancy brig,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And a bo’sun tight, and a midshipmite,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">And the crew of the captain’s gig.’”<br /></span> +</div></div></div> + +<p>Little Mildred clapped her hands to see her +dignified father cutting pigeon wings. She had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span> +yet to learn that dignity and Mrs. Kent Brown +could not stay in the same room.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Judy! It is good to see you,” gasped +Molly when the chorus, in which all of them +joined, had been sung over twice. “What a +Judy you are, anyhow!”</p> + +<p>“Let me take your suitcase up-stairs,” suggested +Edwin.</p> + +<p>“And I will carry your parcels,” insisted +Nance, who was happy indeed over seeing her old +college friend again.</p> + +<p>“There is not a bit of use in taking a thing +up-stairs. All of my clothes are in the knitting +bag. Those parcels are wedding presents and +the suitcase is full of all kinds of plunder. This +big bundle is a tea basket from Kent and me. +You and Andy can go to housekeeping in it. We +thought you would rather have it than silver or +cut glass, since you are going where there are no +side boards to speak of.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, Judy, how splendid! It is exactly what +I have been longing for,” cried Nance, opening +the charming Japanese basket. “Only look,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span> +plates, cups and saucers, tea pot, coffee pot, sugar +bowl, cream pitcher, spoons, knives, forks, cannisters +for coffee, tea, sugar, crackers, hard alcohol +stove, chafing dish and tea kettle! All packed +in two square feet of basket!”</p> + +<p>“A regular kitchen cabinet!” declared Molly. +“Nobody but Nance could ever get them packed +again in the right place, I am sure, Nance and +Otoyo, perhaps.”</p> + +<p>“I just know Otoyo is going to bring her one +like mine! I never thought of that when I got +it. I saw it at Vantine’s and simply fell in love +with it. I wanted it so bad myself I got it for +Nance. If Otoyo does bring one, I will exchange +mine,” said Judy generously.</p> + +<p>“Indeed no! I wouldn’t mind having two +one bit and I am certainly not going to give +up my very first wedding present,” blushed +Nance.</p> + +<p>“Here is a steamer rug from dear old Mary +Stuart. See how warm and soft it is! This is +a pocket set of Shakespeare from Jimmy Lufton! +He brought it to the train!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p> + +<p>“But how lovely! I didn’t dream of getting +any presents,” said Nance.</p> + +<p>“How did they know about Nance?” asked +Molly.</p> + +<p>“I ’phoned them! I got your letter while +Kent was at the armory so I just called up everybody +I knew and told them the news. There is +no telling what the excess calls will amount to, +but I had either to do that or burst! ’Phoning +is cheaper than bursting.</p> + +<p>“Now I bet you can’t guess what is in +this great round box,” said the effervescent +Judy.</p> + +<p>“Your wedding hat!” solemnly suggested +Edwin.</p> + +<p>“Hat your grandmother! Guess again!”</p> + +<p>“A German bomb!”</p> + +<p>“No! Cold, cold! You’ll never get it! It +is a wedding cake sent by Madeline Petit and +Judith Blount. Now what do you think of +that?”</p> + +<p>“Wonderful!” cried Molly, as she lifted the +cake from its careful packing. “Fruit cake with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span> +white icing! How on earth did they happen to +do it?”</p> + +<p>“You see I ’phoned them, too, because I always +did like little Madeline in spite of the fact +that she talks a fellow’s ear off. I am not so fond +of Judith, but I do admire her. She has spunked +up so splendidly and taken her medicine like a +man. She and Madeline are doing a thriving +business in a swell part of town with tea rooms +and all kinds of fancy cakes. Judith was the one +who suggested sending the cake, Madeline told +me. She said Judith said she knew Molly +Brown would work herself to death over the +wedding and she, for one, was going to send +something to help out Molly. She said you +were just goose enough to make the cake at +home.”</p> + +<p>“I had planned to do it,” laughed Molly. “I +was going to start to-morrow.”</p> + +<p>“This huge box is candy to eat right now—that +is Kent! I am almost afraid to eat it. He +wanted to come so bad that he might have +poisoned it for spite.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Why didn’t you let him come? Dear old +Kent!” exclaimed Molly.</p> + +<p>“Well, I knew perfectly well that it is some +job to sleep seven persons outside of one’s own +household, and it is doubly difficult when there +are two sexes. Kent is as busy as can be anyhow: +drilling day and night.”</p> + +<p>Kent Brown had taken the training at Plattsburg +and was then engaged in passing on this +training to a company of militia in New York. +He and Judy were eagerly awaiting the declaration +of war by the United States. There was no +such thing as neutrality for them. Having been +in France in that August of 1914, Judy considered +herself already at war and Kent enthusiastically +shared the sentiments of his wife. He +was prepared to leave his profession of architecture, +in which he was proving himself very successful, +and join any regiment that was likely to +see service.</p> + +<p>Judy had done exactly what the Marquis +d’Ochtè had asked her to do: she had come back +to New York and plunged into war relief work.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span> +Because of her enthusiasm and untiring energy +she had been of great assistance in recruiting +workers. Her admiring husband said that she +was what one might call a real booster. Any +campaign Judy plunged in was sure to be a +whirlwind campaign. She had her father’s capacity +for infinite work. Up to a certain period +it had evinced itself in the form of infinite play, +but now that the serious side of life had presented +itself to her, the girl was working quite +as hard as she had ever played. There was never +anything half-way about our Judy. In New +York she was canvassing for suffrage, keeping +up her painting, and with her own hands cutting +and folding enough surgical dressings to fill the +peace ship, besides rounding up many workers +for the cause. With it all she managed to be a +very satisfactory wife and housekeeper. She and +Kent were blissfully happy. There were red letter +days in their calendar when both of them +stopped working and went on some mad frolic. +They had made many friends in New York, +friends with whom they both worked and played.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span> +They had a hospitable apartment where the redoubtable +Ca’line reigned in the tiny kitchen, +Ca’line, trained by Mrs. Brown at Chatsworth +and chastened by dear old Aunt Mary until she +“knowed her place an’ kep’ it.”</p> + +<p>Isn’t it fun to see Judy again? I hope my +readers feel as glad for her to come bounding into +these pages as the Greens and Nance Oldham did +when she opened the door of the library at the +Square Deal and, upsetting everything, scattered +papers and parcels hither and yon, her vivid +personality permeating every corner of the +room.</p> + +<p>Just before Judy said good-night, she paused +and exclaimed, “I must tell you, Molly, how +much I enjoy the dear little Virginia girls you +have passed on to me. The Tucker twins and +Page Allison are just about the nicest girls I +know, and Mary Flannagan is a duck. I used to +be an awful snob about college girls,—somehow, +I thought girls who did not go to college were not +worth knowing, but I have changed my mind +since I have met these girls. They are an interesting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span> +lot and as far as I can see know as much as +we do.”</p> + +<p>“I knew you would like them. I simply fell +in love with them last spring in Charleston. +Have you met their father?”</p> + +<p>“No, but he must be some father! The girls +call him Zebedee, which appeals to me, having +always called mine Bobby.”</p> + +<p>“Zebedee? What a strange name!” said +Nance.</p> + +<p>“They say it is because nobody ever believes +he is their father and so they want to know: +‘Who is the father of Zebedee’s children?’ It +seems he is only about twenty years older than +they are and is one of those persons who never +gets on in years. They declare they are really +more mature than he is and not nearly so agile,” +laughed Judy.</p> + +<p>“I have been meaning to ask them to Wellington +and must certainly do it before they go back +to Richmond,” declared Molly, on hospitality +bent as usual.</p> + +<p>“All right, honey, but let’s get Nance safely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span> +married and the wedding feast disposed of,” insisted +Judy, who thought her brother-in-law +looked a little alarmed, fearing that Molly might +decide that this was as good a time as any to have +the Tuckers and Page Allison visit them.</p> + +<p>“Of course! I didn’t mean now but later on, +although it is a pity to put it off too long,” teased +Molly, seeing the worried look on Edwin’s face. +“I might make up two bunks on the pantry +shelves and let one of them sleep in the bath tub.”</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XI<br /> + +<small>AN INTERESTING COUPLE</small></h2> + + +<p>“I came from New York with a very interesting +couple,” said Judy the next day as she vigorously +stitched away at some of the wedding finery. +“Of course I talked to them—I always +talk to the interesting persons I meet traveling.”</p> + +<p>“So do I,” said Molly as she finished a garment +and put it aside for Kizzie to press.</p> + +<p>“I never do,” sighed Nance. “I do wish I +had some of your and Judy’s warm-heartedness.”</p> + +<p>“Nonsense! Your heart is just as warm as +any that beats,” objected Molly. “Ask Andy!”</p> + +<p>“You see, honey, Vermont is Vermont and +Kentucky is Kentucky! Persons from Kentucky +haven’t quite as hard shells as the ones +from Vermont, but when once you get below the +shell the kernel is about the same. You and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span> +Molly couldn’t be any more alike than Kentucky +beeches and Vermont pines,” said Judy, pausing +long enough in her labors to give Nance an encouraging +pat.</p> + +<p>“Yes, and pines stay green all the year +around,” said Molly. “It is much better to be +a pine than a beech.”</p> + +<p>“Well, tell us about the interesting couple,” +laughed Nance, much comforted.</p> + +<p>“They were from Alsace but were very +French in their sympathies. They looked a little +German but they spoke beautiful French except +that they did have a tendency to call Paris +‘Baree.’ They love Paris as much as I do. The +man, Misel is his name, Monsieur Jean Misel,—is +the best informed person I have seen for many +a day. He knows the war situation as few persons +do, I am sure. He seems to have been everywhere +and known everybody. He even knew my +father,—at least, knew all about him and was +greatly interested in the fact that Bobby is soon +to sail for France to help rebuild the roads. +Madame Misel is much quieter than her husband<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span> +but is very intelligent, I am sure. With all her +reserve, she never misses a trick.”</p> + +<p>“Where was this interesting couple going?” +asked Molly.</p> + +<p>“Coming right here to Wellington! They +have taken a cottage in the village and mean to +live here. He is writing and she wants to do war +work.”</p> + +<p>“How splendid!” cried Molly. “We need +workers more than I can tell you. The students +give what time they can, but a full college course +is about all a normal girl can take care of in the +way of work.”</p> + +<p>“You must call on them right off, Molly. I +will go with you and Edwin must go, too. I +know he will like Monsieur Misel.”</p> + +<p>“I’ll ask him, but Edwin is sure to want to +know why this lover of Paris is not fighting for +France.”</p> + +<p>“Ah, the poor fellow! He is quite lame—walks +with a cane and a crutch. He hinted +rather darkly that his lameness is in some way +due to the Germans, but I do not know in just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span> +what way. He was sensitive about his affliction, +so his wife told me when he left us and went in +the smoker, so naturally I did not ask him how +the Germans were responsible for it. He is a +young man, too, that is under forty, and very +handsome.”</p> + +<p>Professor Green was quite interested in what +Judy had to tell him of the Misels. He promised +to call with Molly and do all he could to make +Wellington pleasant for them. He looked forward +with pleasure to the conversations Judy assured +him he would enjoy with that highly educated +gentleman. Holding the chair of English +in a woman’s college is not bad, but there were +times when Edwin Green longed for more man +talk. He and Dr. McLean were sworn friends +and saw much of each other, but they both of +them welcomed with enthusiasm any masculine +newcomer.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if your friend could teach French, +Judy,” asked her brother-in-law. “Miss Walker +is quite put to it for the end of the term. The +French professor took French leave last week.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span> +He seemed too old to hold anything more +weighty than a pen, but he has gone to fight.”</p> + +<p>“That is the terrible part of it,” sighed Judy. +“They say all the superannuated dancing masters +and French teachers are leaving to take up +arms. It means that France is having a hard +time. Why, oh why, don’t we hurry up and get +in the game?”</p> + +<p>The call was made and Molly and her husband +were quite as enthusiastic as Judy had been over +the charms of the new neighbors. Monsieur +Misel seemed the very person to take up the labors +of the flown French professor, and Miss +Walker accordingly engaged him. Molly felt +she must have them to dinner in spite of the fact +that she was deep in the preparations for the +wedding.</p> + +<p>“I’ll have a very simple dinner and not make +company of them, just make them feel at home,” +she declared, and her husband and Nance and +Judy smiled knowingly. Molly always would +have company and there was no use in trying to +stop her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I know when I die she will feel called upon +to give me a good wake,” laughed Edwin.</p> + +<p>“Certainly, if people come hungry to your +funeral, I’ll feed them,” answered Molly.</p> + +<p>“Are our new friends, the Misels, hungry?”</p> + +<p>“Not hungry for food, but they must be +lonely so far away from their country and +friends. Anyhow, they are invited now and have +accepted, so there is no use in teasing me. You +just see that there are cigars here for Monsieur +Misel to smoke after dinner, and I’ll attend to the +rest.”</p> + +<p>How sad it was to see a man of Misel’s beauty +a hopeless cripple! He was a tall, stalwart fellow +with a military bearing which the use of a +crutch and cane could not take from him. His +lameness had not affected the comeliness of his +limbs or his erect carriage. He had very courteous +manners and it seemed to be very hard on +him not to spring from his seat when a lady entered +the room.</p> + +<p>On the evening of Molly’s informal dinner +when Nance, who was the only member of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span> +household who had not met the strangers, came +into the library, Misel stood up to be introduced, +but his wife gave a low cry of alarm and sprang +to his assistance, eagerly placing his crutch in one +hand, his cane in the other. He sank to his seat +with a smothered groan.</p> + +<p>“Jean, Jean! What am I to do with you?” +said Madame Misel irritably. “He is so imprudent,” +apologetically to Molly, who had tears in +her eyes at this exhibition of courage and weakness. +She could well understand how Monsieur +Misel’s courteous desires could get the better of +his strength.</p> + +<p>Andy McLean was present and the doctor +in him immediately became interested in the +pitiable case. He had none of the hesitation +Judy had shown in regard to questioning +the Misels concerning the cause of the lameness.</p> + +<p>“What is your trouble?” he asked bluntly. +“If you can stand without support as you did a +moment ago, I see no reason why you cannot be +cured.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p> + +<p>“In time! In time!” said Misel with patient +resignation.</p> + +<p>“He has had the best medical attention,” put +in his wife.</p> + +<p>Madame Misel usually spoke with a kind of +slow hesitation, but now her words came rapidly. +She had the air of trying to shield her husband +from farther questioning on the part of Andy. +Andy, however, was totally oblivious of this fact +and went on.</p> + +<p>“Who is his surgeon?”</p> + +<p>“The great F——, in Baree!”</p> + +<p>“What did he say?” asked Andy, impressed +by the name.</p> + +<p>“He—he—said—nerve centres—disturbed,” +answered Madame, returning to her hesitating +speech. She did not stammer at all but seemed +to pause to choose her words.</p> + +<p>“If I can be of any assistance to you, I hope +you will call on me,” said Andy kindly.</p> + +<p>In the meantime Misel sat with his hands over +his eyes as though in great pain and his wife +hovered over him solicitously.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p> + +<p>Dinner was soon announced and this time the +lame man arose very cautiously and made his way +slowly to the dining-room.</p> + +<p>“Kindly—go—in—front—of—us,” faltered +Madame, and Molly marshalled her family and +guests so that the Misels might bring up the rear. +She fully appreciated how the wife felt about +wanting to be the one to assist her poor lame +husband. If her Edwin had been so crippled +no one should have helped him but his own +wife.</p> + +<p>Molly turned to smile on the poor woman for +whom her heart was sore. She could well understand +the misery it must bring to see one most +dear having to suffer so acutely. There was a +dark place in the hall leading to the dining-room +and the hostess feared the poor lame man might +stumble there, so she stopped to warn him of a +rug. She distinctly heard Madame say to her +husband in no gentle tones but with an asperity +almost malevolent:</p> + +<p>“<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Narr! Narr!”</i></p> + +<p>Molly began assiduously to hunt in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span> +archives of her brain for the small German vocabulary +which she could call her own.</p> + +<p>“<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Narr!</i> What can <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">narr</i> mean?” the question +kept recurring to her as dinner progressed. She +visualized lists of words in a worn old blank book +used at school. “<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Narr</i>, <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Nase</i>, <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Nesse</i>, <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Nest!”</i> +She tried to remember the English on the opposite +page. How well she remembered the little +old book wherein was written the despised +German exercises. The script in itself had been +almost impossible to learn and as for mastering +the language,—she had been so half-hearted +about it that she had not been compelled to keep +it up.</p> + +<p>“<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Narr</i>, <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">nase</i>, <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">nesse</i>, <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">nest!”</i> ran through and +through and over and over in her mind. Suddenly +just as Professor Green asked her what she +would say to adjourning to the library, the list +of English words flashed on her brain.</p> + +<p>“‘Fool, nose, nephew, nest’!” she cried audibly.</p> + +<p>“What?” Edwin feared his Molly had gone +crazy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Oh—I—I—mean, yes—coffee in the library!” +and she arose from her seat in confusion.</p> + +<p>Why should that calm-looking, slow-speaking +woman call her poor lame husband a fool? +<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Narr! Narr!</i> It was certainly strange.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XII<br /> + +<small>AN OLD-TIME PARTY</small></h2> + + +<p>The first one of the old girls to arrive was +Otoyo, Mrs. Matsuki, with the little Cho-Cho-San. +Otoyo had changed not at all in the years +that had elapsed since college days. Perhaps an +added matronly dignity was hers, but this was +not much in evidence when she was with her dear +old friends. She was beautifully and elegantly +dressed. All her clothes were made of the most +exquisite fabrics. Her blouses were of the finest +and sheerest, if of linen; and the heaviest and +richest, if of silk. Her furs were the furriest and +her suits of the most approved cut and material. +Her little boots were a marvel of fit and style.</p> + +<p>“Perfect, like a Japanese puzzle!” Judy declared. +“Every little part made to fit every +other little part!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Yes, and the whole a wonderful creation like +some rare print or bit of pottery!” agreed Molly.</p> + +<p>Otoyo had adapted herself to the manners and +customs of her adopted country, wearing them +with the same grace she did the garments. She +had an English nurse for the little Cho-Cho-San +and the child was being reared as much like +American children as possible. A tiny little +thing, she was, with coal black hair and slanting +eyes. There was much mischief peeping from +those eyes around the tip-tilted nose. The mouth +was a crimson bow, ever ready to break into a +tinkling laugh. She and Mildred rushed together +as though their short lives had been spent +waiting for this opportunity. Mildred was +younger by several months but taller by several +inches than the little Japanese. What a picture +the two children made! Mildred, with her red +gold hair curling in little ringlets all over her +head, her round rosy face and wide hazel eyes, +was exactly the opposite to Cho-Cho-San, with +her straight, bobbed, ebony black hair, her oval, +olive face and almond eyes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I b’lieve I can tote you,” said Mildred, who +often used words current in Kizzie’s vernacular.</p> + +<p>“Tote! Tote! What is tote?” and the tinkling +laugh rang out like glass chimes assailed by +a sudden gust of wind.</p> + +<p>“Why I tote my dolly—an’ Mr. Murphy totes +the coal—an’—an’ Daddy totes his books to +lexures—an’—an’—”</p> + +<p>“May I tote something, also?”</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes, you can tote Dodo. He’s my baby +brother.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, I’m so ’appee! I’m so ’appee!” and the +little thing danced in glee. “My honorable +mother told me when I came for a visit to her +friends that it would be all ’appiness.” The +English nurse had left her stamp upon her charge +just as Kizzie had upon Mildred. The occasional +dropping of an h was the result. Cho-Cho-San’s +lingo was most amusing with its mixture of Cockney +and Japanese.</p> + +<p>“You’d look ’zactly like my Jap dolly if you +only had a bald spot on top,” said Mildred as she +led her new friend to the sunny nursery where she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span> +and Dodo reigned supreme with the Irish Katy +to do their bidding.</p> + +<p>“And phwat Haythen is this?” cried Katy +when she saw the little Japanese girl. “And +ain’t she the cutey?”</p> + +<p>“She’s my bes’ beloved,” announced Mildred. +“Me’n’ Cho-Cho-San is gonter be each other’s +doll babies. I’m a-gonter be her kick-up dolly +an’ she’s gonter be my Jap dolly.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, I’m so ’appee! I’m so ’appee!” was all +the tiny Haythen could say as she danced around +the nursery.</p> + +<p>“Aunt Nance done said we could be her flower +girls, too,” went on the loquacious Mildred. +“We’s all gonter get married day after another +day.”</p> + +<p>“All the doll babies going to be married!” +sang the guest. “Kick-up dolls and Japanese +dolls!”</p> + +<p>The Williams girls arrived next and close on +their heels Margaret and Jessie. I cannot bring +myself to designate the girls by their married +names any more than they could one another.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span> +Husbands were not much in evidence at that +gathering. The talk was all of the past. Of course +Andy, the soon-to-be husband, was allowed +some consideration, although the first night after +the arrival of the guests even he was debarred +and the old chums had a kimono party in the library. +The host fortunately had an engagement +that took him from home, otherwise he would +have had to spend his evening shut up in his den.</p> + +<p>The revellers opened the ball by singing +“Drink her down,” to each one in the crowd. +Molly’s old guitar was brought out and Otoyo +produced a tiny ukelele which added much to +the harmony. After the singing was finished and +every one drunk down, the words that were used +most often were: “Do you remember?” All of +the scrapes were recalled and talked over. Bits +of gossip were recounted that had never come to +light before, the noblesse oblige of the college +spirit having kept matters dark, but now that the +years had rolled by there seemed to be no longer +reason for silence.</p> + +<p>“I’d like to get into some mischief this very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span> +night!” cried Judy. “I’ve been good and pious +so long I feel like whooping life up a bit.”</p> + +<p>“I’m game,” drawled Katherine Williams.</p> + +<p>“Did I hear an aye from the eminent educator?” +questioned Judy.</p> + +<p>“That’s me!”</p> + +<p>“I’ll do whatever it is if I don’t have to walk +too far,” said lazy Jessie.</p> + +<p>“But what are you to do?” from Margaret, +in whom the spirit of adventure was not so rampant.</p> + +<p>“Listen to the Gentleman from Missouri!” +cried Judy. “Come on and we’ll show +you.”</p> + +<p>“I like very muchly to be in the vehicle of +musicians but I also like muchly to know what is +the ultimately destination,” said Otoyo softly.</p> + +<p>“She means the band wagon! She means the +band wagon!” cried Judy. “Oh, my dear little +Otoyo, if you were changed I could not bear this +sad grey world.”</p> + +<p>“Others, too, have notly changed,” said Otoyo +slyly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p> + +<p>“What are you planning, Judy honey?” +asked Molly, laughing.</p> + +<p>“I haven’t any plan—nothing but something +crazy and adventurous. I am dead tired of being +so good and proper. I have rolled bandages and +drawn threads and cut gauze until I feel like a +machine. I want to have a romantic adventure. +I’d like to put a tick-tack on Miss Walker’s window—I’d +like to burn asafetida on the teacher’s +stove, or put red pepper in the Bible so when +she opens it to read she would sneeze her head +off. I might content myself with making an +apple pie bed for my dear brother-in-law——”</p> + +<p>“Oh, please not that!” begged Molly. “My +supply of sheets is stretched to the limit.”</p> + +<p>“O. Henry would advise you to go out in the +night and await Adventure. Adventure is always +just around the corner. Step up to him +and tap him on the shoulder,” suggested Katherine.</p> + +<p>“It is very comfortable in here,” purred Jessie.</p> + +<p>“Infirm of purpose!” cried Judy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Well, I’m not infirm of purpose,” said +Molly. “I’ve been purposing all along to have +a Welsh rarebit and make some cloudbursts and +I’m still going to do it. If you Don Quixotes +want to go off and hunt trouble in the meantime, +though, you are welcome, only don’t stay too +long.”</p> + +<p>“Ain’t Molly the broad-minded guy, though? +Live and let live was always Molly. Aren’t you +coming, Nance?” And Judy sprang from her +cross-legged position on the rug ready for any +fray. “Come on, Margaret! Come on, Edith.”</p> + +<p>“Don’t you know Edith is too stuffy to do +such a thing? She’s afraid her perfectly good +husband would not approve,” teased her sister.</p> + +<p>“No such thing, but I’m not going. I mean +to help Molly. You crazy kids go get in all the +trouble you want to. Me for the house this +night!”</p> + +<p>“And Margaret? You, too, must keep the +‘home fires burning,’ I fancy.”</p> + +<p>“I am going to stir the rarebit,” announced +Margaret firmly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I’m going to pick out nuts for the cloudbursts,” +purred Jessie.</p> + +<p>“I must whip lace,” blushed Nance.</p> + +<p>“Oh, you middle-aged persons! I bite my +thumb at you!” cried Judy. “Who among you +is young enough to go hunt adventure?”</p> + +<p>“I told you I intended to go,” said Katherine, +looking rather longingly at the crowded shelves +of poetry that she was simply dying to poke in. +“No one is going to call me middle-aged.”</p> + +<p>“And I, too, will take greatly pleasure to +knock the kindling from the shoulder of Adventure,” +said little Otoyo.</p> + +<p>“She means the chip! She means the chip!” +screamed the delighted Judy. “Oh, Otoyo, I +love you in all the world next to my immediate +family!”</p> + +<p>It took but a moment to slip on great coats +over kimonos and then, heavily veiled, the three +adventuresses started forth, with admonitions +from Molly not to be gone more than half an +hour.</p> + +<p>“And please don’t get arrested!” she called<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span> +after them. “Kent says he always expects Judy +to get arrested some day. This spirit of adventure +seizes her every now and then and nothing +will stop her.”</p> + +<p>“It is well it struck her here at Wellington +instead of in New York. She can’t get into very +much mischief here,” laughed Edith.</p> + +<p>“She could in the old days,” put in Margaret, +“but now that she is not compelled to keep rules +I fancy she will not care to break them. What a +Judy she is! It must be great to have her in the +family, Molly.”</p> + +<p>“Indeed it is! She is the favorite in-law with +the whole lot of Browns. Mother adores her and +all the boys think she is just about perfect. Even +Aunt Clay can’t help liking her.”</p> + +<p>“I wonder what they will find to-night. I almost +wish I had left the lace off of this old camisole +and gone with them,” said Nance.</p> + +<p>“I think you need not hunt adventure right +now,” drawled Jessie. “Any girl who is deliberately +getting married and going to the war +zone will have enough to keep her busy for a lifetime.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span> +I don’t believe they will do more than go +to the drug store and get limeades.”</p> + +<p>“You don’t know Judy and Katherine,” said +Edith, “and little Otoyo with her determination +to knock the kindling from the shoulder of Adventure. +I wonder what Mr. Matsuki would say +if he could know that his sedate little wife is engaged +in such a harum scarum pursuit.”</p> + +<p>“Why, he would just smile and bow and look +more like an ivory Buddha than ever. Otoyo has +the charming little gentleman completely under +her thumb. She works a kind of mental jiu jitsu +on him and he just lets her have her way. The +joke of it is he thinks she is the most docile, obedient +little wife in all the world, and so she is. +She simply makes him want what she wants,” explained +Molly.</p> + +<p>Molly was busily engaged in the preparations +for the midnight feast. It would have been +simpler and easier just to have gone to the +kitchen and made the rarebit over the gas stove, +but that would not have been at all like college +days and this night must be as near a reproduction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span> +of those times as possible. Chafing dishes +must be used and dishes must be scarce or the +spell would be broken.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br /> + +<small>ADVENTURE</small></h2> + + +<p>It was after ten o’clock as the three veiled figures +glided from the square house on the campus. +The night was dark, fit for the deed they had to +do. They did not know what the deed was but +whatever it was the intrepid females were fully +prepared to do it.</p> + +<p>“First we’ll go by Prexy’s house and perchance +she may see us and then we’ll run. That +will be fun!” suggested Judy. “Nothing would +so warm my old blood as to be taken for a junior.”</p> + +<p>It so happened that a consultation was being +held at the president’s home and as they passed, +Miss Walker opened the front door and Professor +Green emerged.</p> + +<p>“Ministers and saints defend us! My +brother-in-law!” cried Judy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Who is that?” called Miss Walker as the +three girls ran swiftly out of the broad band of +light pouring from the open door.</p> + +<p>“Run for your lives!” hissed Judy.</p> + +<p>“Shall I chase them?” laughed Professor +Green. “I’d much rather not.”</p> + +<p>“No,” sighed poor Prexy. “I fancy they are +up to no harm, but it is late for girls to be out +alone. Such terrible things seem to be happening +all over the world. I’ll have to deliver a lecture +to the whole student body, I am afraid, +about late rambles and pranks.”</p> + +<p>“Those girls were veiled, so evidently whatever +they were doing they did not want to be +recognized. I’d hate to hold your job, Miss +Walker. I’d much rather be the humble professor +of English.”</p> + +<p>“Surely it is not a sinecure,” laughed the president, +“but when all is told, my girls are a pretty +good lot. Their mischief is never, at least hardly +ever, serious. How glad I am to see Judy Kean +again,—Mrs. Kent Brown! She is the same old +Judy. Such pranks as that child could play! I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span> +shall never forget when she dyed her hair purple-black.”</p> + +<p>“Judy is a great girl. I am glad we married +into the same family,” declared the professor. +“But tell me, Miss Walker, how Misel is doing. +I feel quite responsible for him since it was I who +introduced him to you.”</p> + +<p>“The students like him. He seems to be able +to impart knowledge. I am afraid he is too handsome, +however. It isn’t quite safe to have a +professor too good-looking. College girls are +very impressionable.” Then Miss Walker realized +she had made quite a break. Edwin Green +was certainly a very good-looking man but not +the type to make girls languish with love. While +M. Misel was a much more romantic figure with +his flashing eyes and lameness.</p> + +<p>“Are the girls losing their hearts to him?” +laughed Edwin. “Again I am thankful I am +what I am and not what others are.”</p> + +<p>And so the two old friends chatted in the +doorway while the three veiled figures made their +way towards the village.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p> + +<p>“We got them going that time,” panted Judy +after the run through the dark. “I bet you anything +Prexy lectures the girls to-morrow morning. +Dear Prexy!”</p> + +<p>“Let’s tick-tack the math teacher. I bet you +she’s still out of bed thinking up deviltry to make +the girls miserable with on the morrow,” suggested +Katherine.</p> + +<p>“I can make a noise very muchly like a cat. +Would not that be as gruesomely as a mathematicktack? +We might be the Musicians of +Bremen, as one reads in the beautifully fairy +story.”</p> + +<p>“Fine, Otoyo! Here’s her domicile! Cut +loose!” whispered Judy. “I’ll be the donkey +and Katherine crow like the rooster.”</p> + +<p>Crouched down under the window where a +light still burned for the much abused teacher of +mathematics, the Musicians of Bremen, all but +the dog, got ready for their song. The noise was +something shocking. Judy’s bray was so lifelike +that little Otoyo sprang aside as though in fear +of kicking hind legs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p> + +<p>A dog in the neighborhood, feeling that harmony +could be established by his voice alone, +joined in the chorus.</p> + +<p>Windows were opened on the campus! Silence +reigned supreme!</p> + +<p>“Don’t run!” whispered Judy. “Scrooge +down close to the wall.”</p> + +<p>“Who is there?” called the math teacher.</p> + +<p>Mr. Dog went on howling as though he had +been responsible for the whole infernal racket. +His timely tact seemed to satisfy the curious ones +and windows were closed, lights went out and the +campus took itself off to bed.</p> + +<p>“Once more for luck!” commanded Great +Commander Judy.</p> + +<p>“Practice makes perfect,” so this time the +Musicians of Bremen outdid themselves. Otoyo +made a most wonderful pussy; Maud Adams herself +could not have been a more realistic chanticler +than Katherine; and Judy’s donkey was so +good that one could almost see the ears wagging +as her great bray made night hideous.</p> + +<p>“Now run before they have a chance to open<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span> +their windows!” and Judy was up and off in the +darkness with the two other girls close on her +heels.</p> + +<p>“I bet you investigating will go on at a great +rate to-morrow,” gasped Katherine, as after leaving +the college grounds they came to the outskirts +of the village.</p> + +<p>“It was so funnily,” giggled Otoyo. “We +must amusement make for the smally Mildred +and Cho-Cho when the to-morrow has +come.”</p> + +<p>“I can’t believe I am a full-fledged teacher in +a model modern school in our great metropolis,” +said Katherine. “I feel just exactly like a +schoolgirl,—not even a college girl. I know I +could run a mile and there is no mischief I would +not welcome.”</p> + +<p>“I tooly!” agreed Otoyo. “It seems but a +dream that I have honorable husband and smally +babee, Cho-Cho. I feel like badly naughtily +Japanese girl in masque.”</p> + +<p>“Well, it is surely great to be a boy again just +for to-night,” declared Judy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p> + +<p>“What next?” asked Katherine.</p> + +<p>“Next will be our great adventure! This has +been only in the foothills of happenings. Soon +we will have something really great come to us,” +encouraged the captain.</p> + +<p>The village was well-lighted on the principal +street, but that the girls avoided and crept down +the side streets where all was quiet and almost +dark, except at the corners where small gas-posts +sent out feeble rays of light. They passed comfortable +homes surrounded by large yards where +the élite of Wellington lived. The élite were +evidently a well-behaved lot, as they were all +safely bestowed in bed, sleeping the sleep of the +just as our naughty girls crept in front of their +spacious mansions.</p> + +<p>Next to the great, came the near great: a row +of pleasant cottages, each one with its little garden +separated from its neighbor’s by neat whitewashed +palings. After these, they approached a +cottage set in a large yard and isolated as much +as if it were in the country. It was well back +from the street and instead of the white palings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span> +of its neighbors, it boasted a box hedge about five +feet high and at least three feet broad. Generations +of close clipping had made this hedge as +solid as a brick wall. The yard enclosed was laid +out as a formal garden with box labyrinth and +winding paths. In the rear was a summer-house +with stone pillars covered with ivy. Two stone +benches were on each side in this quaint house +where no doubt dead and gone lovers had sat and +perhaps caught rheumatism. Box bushes were +placed at the four sides of the garden and these +had been cut to represent armchairs by some +zealous gardener long since passed away. The +modern shears had but followed the lines of the +original ones and the armchairs were still there +although somewhat lopsided and hazy in drawing. +There was the sun-dial and a snub-nosed +stone Hebe who held aloft her little pitcher with +a cup in the other hand ready to serve the Gods +with imperceptible nectar.</p> + +<p>Our girls’ eyes had become accustomed to the +darkness and they peeped over the hedge (at +least Katherine and Judy did, poor little Otoyo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span> +was too short), plainly discerning the charming +ensemble of the little formal garden.</p> + +<p>“There, Adventure awaits us!” said Katherine +melodramatically.</p> + +<p>“I want muchly to see,” pleaded Otoyo. So +Judy lifted her up for a peep.</p> + +<p>“I believe that is where the Misels live,” said +Judy. “It looks quite different at night, but +I’m almost sure it is the place. Molly and I +called at dusk and we came up on the other side, +but I think it is this cottage. Isn’t it lovely? I +am so sorry for them, they do seem so friendless, +somehow. Madame is already working for the +Red Cross. Molly says she can make surgical +dressings faster than anybody she ever saw. She +takes them home and does them and brings them +back so neatly folded and tied up that they think +it is perfect foolishness to inspect them. They +are sure there will be no mistakes where such a +careful worker is on the job. M. Misel is so +lame he can hardly locomote.”</p> + +<p>“Let’s go in their garden and sit down a little +while,” suggested Katherine, who but a few moments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span> +before had declared she could run a mile. +The sedentary life as a teacher had not improved +her wind. Her spirits might have been those of +a schoolgirl but her endurance was equal only to +a full-fledged teacher in a model school.</p> + +<p>They passed through the small green turnstile +and silently crept around the labyrinth to the +summer-house. The three girls sank on one of +the cold stone benches and peered out into the +picturesque garden. Their veils were raised but +ready to be pulled down at a moment’s notice.</p> + +<p>“Ghosts might walk in such a garden,” whispered +Judy.</p> + +<p>“The bench is coldly like a ghost,” shivered +Otoyo.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br /> + +<small>AS SEEN FROM THE SUMMER-HOUSE</small></h2> + + +<p>“And now, Adventure, come forth!” commanded +Katherine in sepulchral tones.</p> + +<p>The side door of the cottage, leading to the +garden, now opened as though at Katherine’s orders, +and a broad ribbon of light fell across the +labyrinth, picking out the snub-nosed Hebe and +the sun-dial and one of the box chairs to illuminate. +A man’s figure was silhouetted in the +doorway, a figure so beautiful that the artist in +Judy gasped. He had on running togs which +exposed his clean-cut limbs and shapely shoulders. +A woman stood beside him and Judy recognized +the outline of Madame Misel. The +Greek god of a man was strange to her, although +there was something familiar about the poise of +his head on its column-like neck.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p> + +<p>The woman spoke in German in a low clear +voice. Judy and Katherine both knew German +fairly well and Otoyo had some knowledge of it. +They heard Madame Misel say distinctly:</p> + +<p>“It is wiser if you wait until midnight for the +exercises. Some of these blockheads might be +out.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, absurd!” answered the man. “There is +no one in this whole stupid place with the spirit to +be from under cover after ten. I am cramped +enough and must run and leap. Stand aside!”</p> + +<p>“Misel, himself!” gasped Judy. Where were +his crutch and cane and his lame back?</p> + +<p>The girls sat as still as the stone Hebe. It was +inky black in their corner of the summer-house +where they cowered, not afraid at all but ready to +knock the chip from the shoulder of Adventure. +Judy’s first instinct on recognizing Madame +Misel was to make herself known and explain +their presence in her garden at such a late hour, +but the realization that Misel was the man in running +togs, which usually means running, glued +her to her bench. What did it all mean?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p> + +<p>The door was shut and then Misel began a +series of exercises of which any circus actor might +have been proud. He began by leaping over the +clipped hedge of the labyrinth,—back and forth +with most surprising gyrations. It was so dark +that it was difficult to follow his every movement, +and so rapid were his leaps and bounds that he +was now here, now there before eyes could be focussed +to take in the impression. Then almost +without the girls realizing what had happened, he +had cleared the five-foot hedge and was out on +the deserted street running like a deer.</p> + +<p>“Quick, before he is back!” gasped Judy, and +the seekers for sensations were out of the garden +and through the little turnstile in not much more +time than it had taken the master of the house to +leap the hedge.</p> + +<p>Without a word they hastened back to the college +grounds. As they turned a corner, they ran +plump into Misel, who seemed to have let off +steam enough to be trotting contentedly home. +They need not have feared him. He was much +more anxious to escape from them than they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span> +from him. He turned and ran like the wind in +the opposite direction.</p> + +<p>“Gee, I wish we could have tripped him up!” +exclaimed Judy.</p> + +<p>“And I might have jiu jitsued him most neatlily,” +put in little Otoyo. “I think he is what +you might call a traitor-r-r.”</p> + +<p>“I was never more excited in my life. What +will the girls think when we tell them of what has +happened to us?” panted Katherine.</p> + +<p>“Do you realize we have run against a tremendous +thing?” said Judy soberly. “Almost international +importance! I fancy we must keep +kind of quiet about it. Of course we will tell +Molly and Edwin and the girls, but I have an +idea this thing will have to be worked up slowly +and cautiously. I bet you it will be a case of secret +service men and enemy aliens and what not. +Why should Misel have pretended to be lame? +Why should they come to live at Wellington? +Why—a million whys about the whole matter!”</p> + +<p>“One thing:—Misel thought we were college<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span> +girls on a lark and he will have no fear of our saying +we met him or anyone outside the campus at +such an hour,” said Katherine wisely.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XV<br /> + +<small>THE PROFESSOR AT A KIMONO PARTY</small></h2> + + +<p>The Welsh rarebit was just assuming its required +thickness and smoothness and the toast +was done to a turn ready to receive its libation of +cheese, when the wanderers came pattering in.</p> + +<p>“Where is Edwin?” demanded Judy.</p> + +<p>“In his den! You see this is a kimono party +and gentlemen are not admitted,” said Molly, +helping Judy off with her coat and veil. “Now +tell us all about it! Something has happened, I +can see by your eyes and hair.”</p> + +<p>“Happened! I should say it has! Something +has bounced! Call Edwin! I don’t give a hang +if we are in kimonos! I’ll be bound he does not +know a kimono from a ball gown—I can’t tell it +twice.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Otoyo and I are not dumb. We might help +out when you fall by the wayside,” laughed Katherine, +“but I, for one, don’t mind the professor.”</p> + +<p>“Nor I! Nor I!” chorused the others.</p> + +<p>“I think mine is vastly becoming,” Jessie whispered +to Margaret, who called her a vain puss.</p> + +<p>Edwin came in, rather pleased at being admitted +and being allowed to have some of the +party.</p> + +<p>“I never expected to get in on a fudge party,” +he said, contentedly settling himself by Judy, +who was bursting with news.</p> + +<p>“Now begin!” commanded Margaret, rapping +for order in much the old manner of class +president and presiding officer.</p> + +<p>“Begin at the beginning!” begged Edith.</p> + +<p>“Well, first we went by Prexy’s, just to get +the feeling of youth back in our veins. She saw +us, but we chased by.”</p> + +<p>“So it was you! I wish I had run you down,” +cried the brother-in-law.</p> + +<p>“It is a blessing you did not or a good story +would have been ruined,” said Katherine.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p> + +<p>Margaret rapped for order and Judy took up +the tale.</p> + +<p>“Then we went to call on Mattie Math. She +was burning the midnight oil, at least the 10 <span class="smcap">p. m.</span> +oil, and when we acted the Musicians of Bremen, +she threw up the sash.”</p> + +<p>“The hash? What hash?” asked Jessie, who +often arrived a bit late. Shrieks and more rappings +from Margaret.</p> + +<p>“My, how much I have missed in never being +asked to a kimono party before,” whispered the +male guest in Judy’s ear.</p> + +<p>“After we had brayed and crowed and +meouwed and a dog had barked for us——”</p> + +<p>“All together!” cried Katherine, and the musicians +gave a sample of their performance, Mrs. +Matsuki outdoing all cats by her lifelike caterwauling.</p> + +<p>“After that, we went silently down to the village.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t believe it, not silently!” asserted Edwin.</p> + +<p>“No interruptions from the minority! We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span> +went silently down to the village, veils down, +steps stealthy, eyes open and mouths shut. The +garden at the Misels’ was most inviting in its +sweetness and beauty. Of course we wanted to +go in and rest on the nice warm stone benches, so +we walked through the turnstile and seated ourselves +in the little dark summer-house, there to +await Adventure.”</p> + +<p>“Bang! Adventure comes stalkingly in!” +cried Otoyo.</p> + +<p>“Leaping was more like it!” from Katherine.</p> + +<p>“Yes! Who should come springing from the +side door, totally oblivious of us, but Misel, +stripped for running and looking like a detail +from a Greek frieze!”</p> + +<p>“Monsieur Misel! Why, Judy, you are mad! +Misel is so lame he can’t stand alone without +crutch and cane!” cried Molly.</p> + +<p>“Lame your grandmother! He is a perfect +circus actor. I have never seen a private citizen +with such control of his muscles. He actually +turned somersaults over the hedge in the labyrinth, +walked on his hands better than I can on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span> +my feet, and cleared the five-foot hedge that borders +the street with as much ease as—as—I eat +this fudge,” reaching for another piece.</p> + +<p>“But, Judy, are you sure it was he?” asked +Edwin excitedly.</p> + +<p>“Of course I am sure!” And then Judy repeated +the conversation they had overheard between +Misel and his wife. “My German is shady +when I have to use it, but I can understand very +well.”</p> + +<p>“So can I,” declared Katherine.</p> + +<p>“And while I am constructionally verily faultily, +I comprehend can,” said Otoyo, so excited +that she ran off to adverb forms as was her wont +in times of stress.</p> + +<p>“This is serious,” said Edwin solemnly. “So +serious that I feel I must do something about it +and do it immediately. What time is it, honey?” +he asked Molly.</p> + +<p>“Eleven-fifty! Why, what can you do? Not +go fight Misel—not that!”</p> + +<p>“No, not that, at least not that yet, although I +should like to break his lying crutch over his traitorous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span> +head. I must get in touch with the Secret +Service. War will be declared any day now and +Germany is getting busy even in quiet Wellington.”</p> + +<p>“You forget Exmoor College is so near,” put +in Margaret. “Our college boys will officer the +new army in part. I’ll wager anything that this +man has already begun his pacifist propaganda +here in Wellington and at Exmoor, too. Has he +been to Exmoor?”</p> + +<p>“Why, certainly! He got me to take him +over and introduce him, the beast!” stormed Edwin. +“Please pack my little grip for me, honey,” +he asked, drawing Molly to him. “I can catch +the twelve-forty to New York. Don’t give out +that I am away. We had better do a little camouflage +act of our own. I am ill, very ill! That +will do! Let it be—what shall it be?”</p> + +<p>“Mumps!” cried Edith.</p> + +<p>“Not mumps, please!” cried Jessie. “Nothing +contagious or we might catch it!”</p> + +<p>“Or worse than that, even, be quarantined!” +laughed Nance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Pretty hard on you, honey, as it would stop +the ceremony,” suggested Molly.</p> + +<p>“What do you usually have when you have +anything?” asked Margaret with her judicial +manner.</p> + +<p>“Neuralgia!”</p> + +<p>“Then neuralgia would be the natural thing to +have when you have not anything.”</p> + +<p>“Of course! Then, Molly, all day to-morrow +your poor husband is ill with neuralgia. Not +even the servants and children must come in my +darkened room. I’ll be home in the night and +wake up the next morning feeling much better,” +and Molly hurried off to pack the grip.</p> + +<p>“In time to give the bride away!” suggested +Judy.</p> + +<p>“May I tell Andy all about it?” asked Nance +shyly.</p> + +<p>“Of course! We would not be so cruel as to +make you start out with a secret from your lord +and master,” said Edwin.</p> + +<p>“It makes me so mad to think how kind Andy +was to that man, offering his medical services to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span> +him and what not. I know the brutes had a good +laugh over his gullibility. Andy told me afterwards +that he could not understand the case, and +if the man wasn’t shamming, it was the most peculiar +thing he had ever seen: the way he jumped +up out of his chair when he was so lame.”</p> + +<p>“Now I remember that very night that I heard +Madame Misel call her husband a fool on the way +into the dining-room. I had forgotten all about +it until this minute. I kept wondering what she +meant,” said Molly.</p> + +<p>“I tell you they are deep ones,” put in Katherine.</p> + +<p>“Not a bit of it!” stormed Judy. “They are +the worst of all fools because they think no one +else has any sense. Bobby, my beloved parent, +always says that is the worst kind of fool. That +the wise man, who wants to put over anything, +must go to work with the idea that all the persons +he wants the scheme to get by with have as much +and more sense than he has. Now these Huns +think they are the only pebbles on the beach and +take for granted that they are dealing with children<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span> +and fools, and as a rule they get caught up +with.”</p> + +<p>“Not before they do lots of damage, however,” +said Nance.</p> + +<p>“I hope in this instance their machinations +have not done any,” said Edwin devoutly. “Be +sure and give the Misels no inkling they are suspected. +All of you remember to be as polite as +usual to them if you happen to run across +them.”</p> + +<p>“I’ll try, but it will surely go against the +grain,” said Judy, her eyes flashing.</p> + +<p>“Prove your father’s statements, dear little +sister, and we shall let these foreigners know that +we are not the blockheads they call us.”</p> + +<p>“Also we are not the sleepily heads that must +go bedwardly at such earlyly hour,” and little +Otoyo opened her almond eyes very wide to show +that she at least would neither slumber nor sleep +until the enemies to her country and her adopted +country were safely caught up with.</p> + +<p>Molly came in with the grip packed. Some +fudge was tucked in to help out his journey and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span> +Edwin, with the warm wishes of the kimono +party, started on his patriotic travels.</p> + +<p>“Remember to let Prexy know I am almost +dead with neuralgia and do not let a soul but +Andy on to the fact that I am off on a journey. +I’ll creep in to-morrow night. Keep your eyes +open for deviltries that the Misels may be up to, +but don’t let them know you are not the dummies +they think you. They will not be classed as alien +enemies until war is formally declared, and that +will be day after to-morrow, according to the +latest news.”</p> + +<p>Nance was quietly stitching while most of the +above conversation was going on, but her +thoughts were very busy. The idea that was uppermost +in her mind was that the day United +States was to form an alliance with the nations, +she was to form one equally strong with her +Andy.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XVI<br /> + +<small>WAR RELIEF</small></h2> + + +<p>Edwin Green occasionally had an attack of +neuralgia that incapacitated him for work for at +least a day, so when Molly solemnly gave out the +news that her poor husband was suffering with +one of his spells of that painful malady, sympathy +was expressed by servants, teachers, and +students. Blinds in the invalid’s room were carefully +closed and the door locked, with the key in +Molly’s pocket. Instructions were sternly given +that nobody must disturb him. When he felt +better he would ask for what he wanted. Little +Mildred was very sad that she was not allowed to +take him his “tup of toffee.”</p> + +<p>“I weckon he’s a-gonter die, sho,” she confided +to Cho-Cho-San. “Only my mother don’t know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span> +it or she wouldn’t be a-smilin’ an’ laughin’ so +hard.”</p> + +<p>“I am going to work this morning at my war +relief, even if we are to get married to-morrow,” +declared Molly at breakfast. “If I let anything +short of death interfere I get into bad habits, and +the work simply must be done. They are crying +out for more and more dressings.”</p> + +<p>“Let’s all of us go help! We can turn out +oodlums of work if we try,” cried Judy.</p> + +<p>“Not Nance!” insisted Molly. “I know she +has a lot of little stitches to put in before to-morrow.”</p> + +<p>“If you will excuse me, I will beg off,” +blushed Nance. “Andy is coming in this morning +for a few moments, besides.”</p> + +<p>“I tell you, you must stay at home to take care +of poor dear Edwin,” laughed Judy. “It +would look terribly heartless for all of us to go +leave him.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, I forgot Edwin!” declared Molly, just +as Kizzie came in with a stack of waffles. The +girl looked at her mistress in astonishment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span> +What was coming over her Miss Molly, “fergittin’ +of the boss and then a-larfin’ about it?”</p> + +<p>“Shall I take Andy up to see him?” asked +Nance soberly.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps!”</p> + +<p>“Hadn’t we better take the kids along so their +noise won’t disturb poor dear Brother Edwin?” +suggested Judy, “Mildred and Cho-Cho and +Poilu, the puppy.” Poilu was a diminutive mongrel, +the love of Mildred’s heart.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Mother, please, please!” begged Mildred.</p> + +<p>“I’m so ’appee! I’m so ’appee!” sang Cho-Cho +as Molly smiled her consent.</p> + +<p>“They can play in the churchyard and will be +good, I am sure,” she declared.</p> + +<p>And so Nance was left to put in her finishing +stitches, to receive her lover and to take care of +the fictitious case of neuralgia.</p> + +<p>“Hot cloths on his head if he is in very great +agony,” Molly called back as the gay throng +started for the war relief rooms. “There is more +aspirin in the top drawer if he is in much pain.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span></p> + +<p>Nance had a busy morning answering the +’phone, which rang many times with inquiries for +the popular professor. Mary Neil sent a box of +candy to Molly as a kind of consolation prize and +Billie McKym sent Edwin a pot of flowers. +Lilian Swift sent a basket of fruit.</p> + +<p>“If their friends rally around them so for an +imaginary disease, what would they do if something +were really the matter?” thought Nance.</p> + +<p>M. Misel and Andy met at the front door, +Misel to inquire for the poor ill man and Andy to +catch a glimpse of his Nance. Misel had walked +slowly and painfully across the campus from his +class room. Nance, from the window, had +watched him approaching and she could but admire +his patience as he made his crippled way.</p> + +<p>“It must be worse to have to pretend to be +lame than to be lame,” she said to herself. “I +wonder if Andy is still fooled.”</p> + +<p>The two men came into the library together, +Andy showing great solicitude for the disabled +foreigner. Misel was so extremely polite and +seemed so distressed at Edwin’s illness that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span> +Nance could hardly believe that Judy and the +girls could be right in the discovery they had +made the night before. His manner was perfect, +so respectful, so kindly and courteous.</p> + +<p>“I believe I am to wish you joy, Dr. McLean,—and +I do so with all my heart.” Andy grinned +his appreciation. “My wife and I were quite +charmed by Miss Oldham. I hear you are to go +to the front to assist poor stricken France. I +admire the courage of your fiancée to contemplate +going with you.”</p> + +<p>“It would take more for me to stay away,” +whispered Nance softly.</p> + +<p>“Ah, it is the spirit of the women which is what +the Germans have to fight!”</p> + +<p>“Is not the spirit of the German women quite +as courageous as ours?” asked Nance, looking at +Misel keenly.</p> + +<p>“Ah! <cite>Wonderschön!”</cite> his eyes glowed. Suddenly +the fact that he had dropped into German +seemed to embarrass him. “That is—that is the +word for the German women, just as ‘wonderful’ +is the one for the Americans.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Tell me about Edwin,” interrupted Andy, as +though he meant to put Misel at his ease again. +“Is he very ill?”</p> + +<p>“Oh, very!”</p> + +<p>“Can’t I go up to see him?”</p> + +<p>“Molly said he was not to be disturbed. These +headaches just wear themselves out. He will be +all right to-night.”</p> + +<p>“But there is something to be done before it +wears Edwin out as well as itself,” insisted the +young doctor.</p> + +<p>“Molly says not!” Nance shook her head at +Andy as much as to tell him he was talking too +much, and that young man subsided until Misel +had gone. Then Nance revealed to her lover the +whole nefarious plot.</p> + +<p>“I had my doubts about that man from the +first. I could not see how anyone as lame as he +was could have jumped up so briskly. The +beast! How could you be so polite to him?”</p> + +<p>“Camouflage! Fighting the devil with fire!”</p> + +<p>“I am glad old Ed took matters in hand so +promptly. I tell you these college professors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span> +show up pretty well in these times! Wilson and +Green forever!”</p> + +<p>In the meantime the industrious war relief +workers were hard at it. The be-aproned and +be-kerchiefed ladies of Wellington held their +séances in the basement of the little church. It +was astonishing how large was their output, but +busy fingers had been steadily at work ever since +word had come from France that wounded men +were dying for lack of surgical dressings, and +that word had come very soon after the breaking +out of the World War.</p> + +<p>Women with earnest faces were bending over +the long tables, some rolling bandages; some tearing +cotton cloth; some pulling threads for careful +cutting of gauze, later to be deftly folded in the +prescribed shape. In one corner, cotton batting +was being fluffed up for the making of fracture +pillows. Huge baskets were being emptied by +one group as they stuffed the pillows, while +others were being filled by the fluffers, as Judy +called the women whose duty it was to pick the +cotton. Much sneezing went on in this corner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span> +and he who wonders why, might try once fluffing +unrefined cotton.</p> + +<p>“Let me make the tampons!” begged Jessie.</p> + +<p>“I know why! Because they look like powder +puffs,” teased Edith.</p> + +<p>The house party was received with enthusiasm +by the Wellington workers. There always seems +to be more work than can be accomplished and +then workers come and by hook or crook the task +is completed. All of our girls had done some +war relief work, so it was easy to set them to their +stints. Pretty Jessie could make tampons that +were so soft and so regular that they really did +look like powder puffs. Katherine could pick +cotton as fast as Mother Carey can chickens and +her advent caused an increase of sneezing. Edith +stuffed fracture pillows just to show that she +could go faster than her sister. Margaret rolled +bandages with a precision equal to her parliamentary +ruling when she was presiding officer. +Otoyo and Judy and Molly folded the gauze into +the neat little six-inch squares. This is the most +difficult part of the work, requiring such accuracy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span> +that only the expert should choose that table. +The edges must come just together, no threads +must be left on the gauze, the corners must be +turned under exactly enough and the finished articles +stacked in even piles.</p> + +<p>Madame Misel came in with the work she had +taken home to finish. Never were such neat, +wonderful dressings as hers. In the short time +she had been at Wellington she had accomplished +the work of two women, bringing in great stacks +of the accurately-made dressings.</p> + +<p>It was difficult for the girls to treat her with +the courtesy they knew it was policy to employ. +Behind that calm mask they could now detect the +lying spy. Her expression was as demure as +ever and she spoke with the same hesitation that +they felt was assumed, just as her husband’s halting +gait was. Why they should have taken up +that particular disguise, Molly and her friends +were at a loss to know.</p> + +<p>Madame Misel was almost a beautiful woman. +Animation would have made her quite beautiful, +animation and better dressing. Her hair was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span> +parted in the middle and brushed as slick as glass, +coiled in a tight knob at exactly the wrong angle. +She habitually wore an old-fashioned basque of a +bygone cut buttoned up close to the neck with a +narrow band of white collar, which but accentuated +the severity of her garb. Her shoes were +broad and ugly with no heels, her skirt skimpy +and badly hung.</p> + +<p>Judy studied the countenance of the foreigner +as she bent over her work. The nimble fingers +moved very rapidly as she folded the gauze.</p> + +<p>“Gee, I’d like to sketch her!” Judy whispered +to Molly. “A mixture of Mona Lisa and +the Unknown Woman and plain repressed +devil!”</p> + +<p>She whipped out her sketch book, which was +never far from her, and with a few strokes had +Madame Misel’s pose, then with a skill that was +quite wonderful had suggested her features. The +model moved uneasily as though conscious of +scrutiny, but before she looked up Judy had +closed her book and was demurely folding gauze. +Madame arose and walked away, standing by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span> +table where Margaret was rolling bandages. +Judy again whipped out her book and made a +rapid impression of the unstylish figure in its flat +shoes and tight basque.</p> + +<p>Just then little Mildred and Cho-Cho came +screaming from the churchyard where they had +been playing happily. Mildred had in her arms +the poor little much-petted puppy. Blood was +streaming from the creature’s leg and he was giving +forth pathetic wails.</p> + +<p>“A big dog done bitted him all up!” cried +Mildred.</p> + +<p>“Greatly dog ’ave ’urt little puppee!” said +Cho-Cho-San.</p> + +<p>“First aid to the injured!” exclaimed Judy, +as she took the bleeding canine in her arms. The +pile of beautifully made dressings Madame Misel +had just brought in was on the corner of the long +table. Without a by-your-leave, Judy snatched +up one from the top and bound it around the poor +gory leg. “There, you poor little precious! +You may be part French poodle, anyhow, and +surely a wound is a wound.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p> + +<p>Madame Misel put out a hand as though to +stay her, but before she could say anything Judy +had the dressing wrapped around the puppy’s +little leg.</p> + +<p>“Too bad to take one so perfectly made, but I +just grabbed the one closest to hand. Now, Mildred, +you and Cho-Cho can be Red Cross nurses +and little Poilu can be your wounded warrior. +Take him out and nurse him carefully. It isn’t +much of a place and no doubt with good care he +will be all well by to-morrow.”</p> + +<p>“I—think—it—would be—advisable to—apply—iodine +to the wound—is it—not so, Madame +Brown? I shall be pleased to—go to—my—house—and—procure +some,” faltered Madame +Misel.</p> + +<p>“I don’t think it is really necessary,” insisted +Molly. “We shall be going home presently and +I can put some on then. You are very kind.” +Enemy alien or not, Madame Misel was certainly +very thoughtful to want to take the trouble for +the pet. Molly, ever ready to see the good in +persons, had a feeling that this quiet, pleasant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span> +woman could not be shamming. Perhaps Misel +was not what he should be, but not this wife, who +was so untiring in her labors of mercy.</p> + +<p>When they started home, the roly-poly Poilu +seemed to have recovered entirely. He did not +even limp, so he was spared the ordeal of having +the stinging iodine poured on the wounded leg. +It was nothing more than a scratch anyhow, Judy +declared.</p> + +<p>At midnight Edwin returned, letting himself +quietly in the front door. Molly was waiting for +him, eaten up with curiosity about what had +transpired. He had been closeted with the Secret +Service officials, who considered the matter +of the gravest importance. Two of the cleverest +and most cautious of the detective force were put +on the job.</p> + +<p>“They were no doubt on the train with me,” +he said, “but I have no idea what they look like +or what disguise they themselves will employ. At +least a dozen persons got off the train at Wellington +Station and all of them or none of them may +have been Sherlock Holmeses.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I hope your neuralgia is better,” laughed +Molly.</p> + +<p>“Well, the joke of it is, I really did have neuralgia +all day, not severe enough to keep me from +enjoying a very good luncheon with your brother +Kent and Jimmie Lufton at the Press Club, but +quite bad enough to keep you from having told +a lie.”</p> + +<p>“Poor dear! I am so sorry for you to have +suffered at all, but it is certainly considerate of +you to be instrumental in saving my soul. And +now, since to-morrow is the wedding day, we had +better get all the sleep we can.”</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XVII<br /> + +<small>TILL DEATH DOTH US PART</small></h2> + + +<p>The small home wedding that Nance and +Molly had originally planned grew to be quite +large. Little by little it seemed impossible to get +married without first one person and then the +other. Andy had many friends at Exmoor and +Wellington; Dr. and Mrs. McLean knew half +the country and had a long list to be invited; +Nance wanted the whole faculty and some of the +girls who were favorites of Molly’s; Kent Brown +arrived from New York bringing with him Mr. +Matsuki, frankly delighted to be included in so +honorable an assemblage.</p> + +<p>“Surely they can’t all of them sleep here,” said +Edwin to his wife as he put on his wedding garments.</p> + +<p>“They can, but they won’t,” she answered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span> +laughing at his woeful expression. “The house +party breaks up after the ceremony. Do I look +all right?”</p> + +<p>“Beautiful!”</p> + +<p>“I mean my dress!”</p> + +<p>“But I mean you! I don’t know anything +about your dress except that it is blue as it should +be.”</p> + +<p>“Can you find your collar buttons and is your +tie all right?” asked the anxious housewife as she +accepted with very good grace the embrace Edwin +felt was necessary to his happiness just then.</p> + +<p>“Yes! Everything O. K.! I am sorry for +the bride because you are so lovely, honey. +Nance is a pretty girl but I am afraid nobody will +see her because of the matron of honor.”</p> + +<p>“Such a goose! Now I must go look after the +flower girls. Katy has them coralled in the +nursery where they can’t get dirty. They are +the sweetest looking creatures you ever saw in +your life. Dodo looks like a beautiful cabbage +rose himself, his cheeks are so rosy. I wish +Mother could see him.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Why doesn’t she come on to the wedding?”</p> + +<p>“Sue needs her in Kentucky. The only trouble +about Mother is that there is only one of her. +I need her more than anything right now. If she +were here she would take hold of this wedding +breakfast and I would know it would come off +right,” sighed Molly, who, true to her character, +had planned to do enough for two persons. +“Thank goodness, Judy is here!”</p> + +<p>The ceremony was to be at twelve and then a +wedding breakfast served. This meant Molly +was to be very busy. The girls were helping, but +at the same time they were more or less flustered +trying to get themselves dressed all in one room. +They had determined to make this a gay light +wedding as to clothes at least. There was a feeling +of excitement in every breast, excitement +mingled with sadness. Was not this the most momentous +day in the life of every true American? +War was declared! Perhaps had they realized +just what war meant, those girls could not have +donned those gay, bright garments. Would they +have had the courage to wish their friend God-speed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span> +so cheerily? I believe they would. They +were of the stuff of the mothers of men. On that +second of April, 1917, every woman in the United +States must have felt somewhat as Molly Brown’s +college friends felt. It was a feeling of excitement, +awe, exhilaration and dread combined.</p> + +<p>Nance was gowned in white with a wonderful +lace veil Otoyo had brought as her present. It +was as filmy as the clouds that rest on Fujiyama, +the sacred mountain of Otoyo’s country.</p> + +<p>“Only suppose she had brought a tea basket +like mine! What would that have looked like on +your head?” giggled Judy, who was in a +strangely hysterical state. She was one girl who +very well knew what the war was to mean. Had +she not been on the outskirts of war in 1914 when +she was stranded in Paris? Had she not seen the +soldiers marching off bidding farewell to their +nearest and dearest,—sometimes a final farewell? +Kent had spent all the time he could in training +camps since they had been opened to citizens of +the United States, and now he was confident of +receiving a commission. Perhaps it would mean<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span> +that her husband would be in the trenches in a +short time. She wanted him to want to go, was +proud of him for wanting to,—but oh, the agony +of it all!</p> + +<p>Almost time for the ceremony now! Molly +made her final tour of inspection. Edwin, Kent +and Mr. Matsuki were safe in the den where they +eagerly discussed politics. Dr. and Mrs. McLean +arrived, holding Andy between them as +though they might lose him before it was time.</p> + +<p>“I meant to help you, Molly, child, but my +hea-r-r-t is so joompy I am afraid it will be best +for me to compose meself,” said the poor mother. +“Don’t let Andy know!”</p> + +<p>Molly kissed the dear lady and asked Katherine +to stay near her. Katherine’s dressing was +always a simple matter, as her gowns consisted of +shirt-waists and skirts in various materials to +suit various occasions. She declared she could +dress in the dark and look just as well as +though she had had cheval glasses and a blaze of +light.</p> + +<p>The other girls were ready and came down to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span> +the parlors to help receive the guests. Nance +was lovely and looked as fresh and sweet as a +white violet as she sat in her room sedately +awaiting the hour. A visit to the nursery disclosed +the children piously standing with backs +to the window and arms held well away from +their fluffy skirts, as charming flower girls as one +could find.</p> + +<p>“I’m so ’appee! I’m so ’appee! I’m Mildred’s +Japanese dollee! She’s my kick-up dollee!” +sang the little Cho-Cho-San. “All I +want is bald spot, and all she wants is stick up +hair!”</p> + +<p>“Ain’t we your little comforts, Muvver?” +asked Mildred.</p> + +<p>“Indeed you are, my darling! Now when +Judy calls, you come running so you can go +down the stairs in front of Aunt Nance. Judy +will have your wreaths all ready. Where is +Katy?”</p> + +<p>“She’s peeking at the comply.”</p> + +<p>“Well, you kiddies be good and don’t get +your dresses mussed. It is almost time now.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span> +Don’t wake Dodo.” Of course Dodo had gone +to sleep, since there was nothing more important +on hand just then. Molly hurried off to the +kitchen to see that the wedding breakfast was +coming on as she had planned. Mrs. Murphy +had hobbled up to help Kizzie, and Mrs. McLean +had sent over her two maids.</p> + +<p>“All they need is a boss,” sighed poor Molly. +“If I only could be two places at one time!”</p> + +<p>But whose familiar figure was that seen +through the scullery door? The maids were all +in a broad grin and Kizzie, as she expressed it, +“was fittin’ to bust.”</p> + +<p>“Mother! Mother! Where on earth did you +come from?” and Molly had that dear lady +clasped in her arms. “What are you doing in +the back? Come on and hurry and get dressed! +It is almost time!” Molly felt like little Cho-Cho +when she cried out: “I’m so ’appee! I’m so +’appee!”</p> + +<p>“I just this minute arrived and have no idea +of dressing!” cried that dear lady when she could +speak.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Of course you needn’t dress! You are lovely +as you are—your hair is a bit mussed—and——”</p> + +<p>“You mussed it but it will do very well for the +part I am to play. I have no idea of appearing. +I mean to serve this breakfast.”</p> + +<p>“But, Mother, I couldn’t let you!”</p> + +<p>“Nonsense! That is what I hurried on for. +Why, child, when I realized that you were having +a house party and a wedding and going to serve a +great breakfast, I simply jumped on the train +with a hand-bag and flew to you. You always +have behaved as though you were triplets. Now +run along and don’t tell a soul I am here. I can +be honored later on; now I want a big apron and +room to operate. Kizzie has already told me +what the breakfast is to be and you need not +think about it. Run along!”</p> + +<p>“Well, one more hug and I am gone. Aren’t +you even going to peek at the comply, as Mildred +says?”</p> + +<p>“Oh, I’ll see the ceremony, never fear; but fly, +Molly! The guests are coming.”</p> + +<p>Molly felt as though she really could fly. Her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span> +mother’s arrival had relieved her of all fear about +the wedding breakfast. It would be obliged to +go off without a hitch now. Dear, dear Mother! +How like her to come quietly slipping in the back +way just in the nick of time!</p> + +<p>One could have heard a pin drop in the old +square house on the campus as the first strains of +the wedding march arose and the rustle of skirts +on the stairway announced the approach of the +wedding procession. Andy was shaking and +shivering in the hall, tightly clutching his father’s +arm. He had declared that Dr. McLean must +be his best man and would hear of no other. Of +course he was just as scared as the groom always +is, at least, all proper grooms.</p> + +<p>At Judy’s signal the little flower girls came +dancing from the nursery, their fluffy skirts flying. +The wreaths and garlands were handed +them and they marched down the stairs feeling +much more important than Nance herself.</p> + +<p>“Heavens!” thought Molly as she followed +them with Nance, “what on earth is the matter +with Mildred’s hair?” It was standing up in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span> +most peculiar way. Instead of the curls that +Katy had so carefully made, her ringlets had +been brushed out and Molly realized that at least +four inches of her daughter’s hair had been cut +off. “And Cho-Cho-San! What has happened +to her?” In the middle of the child’s head was a +bare spot at least three inches in diameter. It +looked as though it had been shaved.</p> + +<p>Whatever the matter was, it affected the +flower girls not in the least. With many tosses +of those shorn heads they marched into the parlor, +scattering their posies as they had been told. +When Otoyo saw the bald spot on the head of her +offspring she almost fainted and had to hold on +to the ready arm of honorable husband. Cho-Cho-San +had clipped Mildred’s hair to make it +stand up like a kick-up dolly, and Mildred had +stolen her father’s safety razor and converted her +little friend into a veritable Japanese dolly.</p> + +<p>Nothing but the solemnity of the occasion kept +Molly from hysterics. The little wretches must +have got busy after she made her visit to the +nursery. Evidently they were doing what Mildred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span> +called “playing true.” Cho-Cho was a +Japanese dolly and Mildred was a kick-up. The +little visitor did look exactly like one of those fascinating +Japanese dolls, and Molly could but +smile in spite of her distress. She was afraid to +catch Judy’s eye as she stepped back to let Andy +take his place by Nance’s side.</p> + +<p>Never had the wedding ceremony seemed so +impressive as on that second of April. Every +mind was filled with the importance of the step +that the country was taking, and with the prayer +that Andy and Nance would prosper, was +breathed the thought that the United States +might come out victorious.</p> + +<p>Nance was to go with Andy’s unit in the capacity +of interpreter. She was not a brilliant +French scholar but was thorough in her knowledge +of that as of everything she had undertaken. +She frankly declared that she had been separated +from Andy long enough and she intended to follow +him to the ends of the earth if need be. It +was that wonderful fact that made Andy’s “I +will!” so strong and clear. His tremblings left<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span> +him and he stood by his dear girl like the soldier +of the Red Cross that he was. Nothing was impossible +or too hard if Nance was to be with him.</p> + +<p>Mrs. McLean’s good, honest face was like an +angel’s as she gazed on her new daughter-in-law. +No jealousy was depicted there—nothing but +adoration, gratitude that the girl was to make her +Andy happy. Poor Dr. McLean was sobbing +like a baby and his good wife had to put her arms +around him to comfort him.</p> + +<p>All over! “Whom God hath joined together +let no man put asunder.” Andy clasped his +Nance with the look of: “I dare anyone to try!”</p> + +<p>Otoyo and Molly held a whispered consultation +over their imaginative offspring and decided +that nothing was to be said or done to the +culprits on that day of days,—the reckoning +must be deferred.</p> + +<p>Those infants were greatly astonished, somewhat +relieved and secretly chagrined that their +prank was not noticed. They had expected to be +even more important than the bride in their rôles +of Japanese and kick-up dolls.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I weckon nobody don’t love us ’nough to +spank us even,” pouted Mildred.</p> + +<p>“Japanese babee gets not spank-ed—but honorable +mother frowns on Cho-Cho when she +loves her most after naughtiness—but now—but +now—she smiles, but not with love,” was the wail +of the companion in crime and misery.</p> + +<p>The efficient helmsman in the kitchen steered +the wedding breakfast to safety. The affair +went off with such expedition that the housekeepers +present marveled at Molly’s cleverness.</p> + +<p>“She must have trained her servants wonderfully +well,” whispered one.</p> + +<p>“I remember the joke they got off on Molly +in college,” laughed Miss Walker. “It was that +she came of a family of famous cooks.”</p> + +<p>“It is not only the cooking now,” said Mrs. +Fern, Edwin’s cousin and the mother of the perfect +Alice. “It is the way it is served and the +orderliness of the waitresses. I wonder that +Molly can be with her guests while it is being +done unless she has had a caterer come up from +New York. I simply have to be in the pantry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span> +myself when my daughters entertain on a large +scale. That is, unless I can hire someone to come +take charge, and Wellington does not boast such +a person. Alice is very particular but not willing +to do much herself,—not able, in fact,” she added +lamely, a little afraid of having criticized her perfect +daughter in public.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Fern was very fond of Molly and admired +her greatly in spite of the fact that she +could not help bearing her a tiny secret grudge +for marrying Edwin Green. That good lady +had in her heart of hearts hoped that Alice was +to bear off the professional prize. Perfect persons +are not always very pleasant to live with and +Alice Fern was no exception to the rule. Mrs. +Fern wished no harm to Edwin but she would +have been glad to shift her burden of perfectness +to other shoulders.</p> + +<p>“We are just asking ourselves how you do it, +my dear,” she said as Molly came up to see that +all was going well with her guests.</p> + +<p>“Do it! I’ll tell you a secret that I was not +to divulge but I am simply bursting with it:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span> +Mother is in the pantry! She came in the back +way, without my even knowing she had left Kentucky, +and now she is directing operations. She +refuses to appear until the party is over.”</p> + +<p>“Ah, that is the reason for that glow in your +eyes!” exclaimed Miss Walker. “I used to say +when you were a college girl that I could tell by +your expression when the western mail had +brought you a letter from Kentucky.”</p> + +<p>“I didn’t know it showed so,” blushed Molly, +“but it does make me feel warm all over when I +know my mother is near.”</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XVIII<br /> + +<small>THE PUNISHMENT OF MILDRED</small></h2> + + +<p>The last rice thrown and the bridal party +gone! Molly and Judy all that was left of the +gay girls! The old crowd once more dispersed! +I wonder if they will ever come together again. +It had been a perfect time, and Molly, although +dead tired, was very happy that she had been +able to gather them in under her roof. All that +worried her now was the fact that Mildred was +to be punished. How, she was not certain.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Brown, no longer in her apron but now +the most honored of all, was ensconced on the +sofa with Dodo in her arms and Mildred snuggled +up close to her side. The child’s eyes were +big and sad. Her little cropped head was drooping +and her mouth trembling. Even Granny<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span> +was not noticing her naughtiness. Evidently nobody +loved her!</p> + +<p>Kent was seated on the floor, his head against +his mother’s knee, where, without exerting himself, +he could see Judy’s animated face and +bright fluffy hair. Perhaps the time was soon +coming when he would have to be far away from +these beloved women. He was sure of his commission +now and was ready for his country’s call, +but oh, it was hard to be uprooted from the pleasant +spot where love had planted him! Ah, well! +The war could not last forever and maybe there +was a good time coming for all of them. It was +hard to leave Judy, but it would be harder to take +her with him if duty sent him to France. He did +not criticize Andy McLean in the least. He +knew his own business and Nance wanted to go +with him but he, Kent Brown, had no idea of +exposing his Judy to any more horrors of war. +The taste both of them had had of it was enough.</p> + +<p>The little group around the fire was very quiet. +Dormouse Dodo went off into his usual soporific +state. Judy was knitting rapidly, and the click<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span> +of her needles was all that broke the stillness. +Judy always declared she did not mind knitting +if she could just make her needles click. Molly +was too tired to knit, too tired to do anything. If +only she had settled matters with her first born! +Her conscience told her it must be done and done +soon. If only something would happen to keep +her from having to do it, whatever it was to be. +She actually prayed for strength to take the matter +up and also that she would not have to take +it up.</p> + +<p>Suddenly on the twilight calm of the library +there arose a broken-hearted wail! Mildred had +broken out into an abandon of grief. Her wails +rent the air.</p> + +<p>“Gee whilikins! I thought the Germans had +come,” exclaimed Kent, jumping to his feet.</p> + +<p>“My darling, what is it?” asked Mrs. Brown +as Mildred clutched her around the neck.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Granny, Granny! My muvver hates +me!”</p> + +<p>“Oh, Molly! What have you done to this +angel?” asked the grandmother almost sternly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Nothing! I declare!”</p> + +<p>“That’s jes’ it! She ain’t done nuffin! That +shows she hates me. Kizzie done say, ‘Who de +Lord loveneth he chases,’ an’ I done did the wussest +thing I could do an’ my muvver she ain’t so +much as said: ‘Why, Mildred!’ I wants to git +spanked! I wants to git spanked!”</p> + +<p>“Why, darling, what have you done?” asked +Mrs. Brown, trying to control her risibles.</p> + +<p>“I done shave-pated, number-eighted my little +Haythen friend. Kizzie called Cho-Cho:</p> + +<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘Shave pate, number eight<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Hit yo’ haid aginst the gate.’<br /></span> +</div></div></div> + +<p>“It sho did hurt Cho-Cho’s feelings. And Cho-Cho, +she slish-slashed my hair off so’s I’d look +cute. Nobody ain’t told us we look cute—and +nobody ain’t spanked us nor nothin’—and nobody +don’t love us.” This tirade came out between +sobs.</p> + +<p>Kent and Judy roared with laughter but +Molly and her mother tried to look sad and +mournful.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Molly, I’m astonished! Why don’t you +spank your kid? I never heard of such an inhuman +parent,” teased Kent.</p> + +<p>Molly was very happy indeed. The miracle +had come! Her prayer was answered. She did +not have to punish Mildred. Mildred was punished.</p> + +<p>“You wouldn’t have treated yo’ dear little +children so mean, would you, Granny?”</p> + +<p>“You bet she wouldn’t have,” insisted Kent. +“Why, if I had shave-pated, number-eighted +my little Haythen friends, your granny would +have torn me limb from limb and beaten me black +and blue.”</p> + +<p>“Sho nuf?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, indeed, and if my little Haythen friend +had chopped off all my pretty curls, I am sure +her mother would have thrown her in the fire and +poked holes in her with a red hot poker.”</p> + +<p>“Jes’ ’cause they loved you so much?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, just because they loved us so much.”</p> + +<p>“Me’n’ Cho-Cho wisht we could git throwed in +the fire,” sighed the repentant Mildred. “But,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span> +Uncle Kent,” and she got up and put her little +mouth close to his ear, “don’t you think I made +a mighty cunning little Japanese dolly out’n my +Haythen friend?”</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XIX<br /> + +<small>A DEATH</small></h2> + + +<p>“Aunt Judy, my Poilu is tellible sick! He +can’t open up his mouf mo’n ’bout a minute far. +Won’t you please, ma’m, punch it open wif the +button hook so’s I kin poke some breafkast down +him?”</p> + +<p>Mildred had the little puppy clasped in her +arms and he did seem to be very miserable. His +eyes were partly closed and his teeth were tightly +clamped together.</p> + +<p>“I weckon that big ol’ dog what eated a piece +out’n him done made him so sick.”</p> + +<p>“But, honey, that was a week ago, and if it +had been going to make him sick it would surely +have affected him long ago. It was nothing but +a scratch, and don’t you remember Aunt Judy +bound it up so tight it only bled a moment?”</p> + +<p>Judy and Kent had remained at Wellington<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span> +for a visit. Kent was so soon to join his regiment +that he felt he could not tear himself away from +his mother and sister, so they had lingered on +after the other guests had departed. The bride +and groom had also returned after a flying visit +to Nance’s old home and were now with the McLeans, +Nance declaring that Andy’s mother +must have all she could of her son before he was +to sail for France.</p> + +<p>Judy took the puppy in her lap and smoothed +his silky sides. The little fellow opened his eyes +and gave her a grateful glance. Mildred did +squeeze a little too tight when a fellow felt as sick +as poor little Poilu did.</p> + +<p>“Maybe we had better get the doctor for him,” +suggested Judy. “There come Andy and Aunt +Nance now, across the campus! Call them, Mildred! +Andy is not too proud to doctor a dog.”</p> + +<p>Mildred delightedly ran to the door and waved +her arms frantically. “Hi there, brideangroom! +brideangroom! Somebody’s mighty sick in this +here house. Better hurry up or they might go +deaded!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p> + +<p>Andy and Nance quickened their pace and +hastened into the house.</p> + +<p>“Who is it?” they cried anxiously.</p> + +<p>“It’s my littlest brudder!”</p> + +<p>“Dodo! What is the matter with my little +husband?” asked Nance anxiously.</p> + +<p>“’Tain’t Dodo! He ain’t my littlest brudder. +I’se got anudder brudder. Ain’t you knowed +about him?”</p> + +<p>Nance and Andy were much mystified, but +they followed the amusing little creature into the +library. Nance thought perhaps the big-hearted +Molly had adopted a French orphan,—Molly +was quite capable of doing it.</p> + +<p>“There’s my brudder!” and Mildred pointed +to the suffering puppy. “Ain’t it too bad he’s +got a tail?”</p> + +<p>Andy laughed as he lifted the poor little Poilu +to his own knees.</p> + +<p>“What is the matter with him, Andy?” was +Judy’s anxious query.</p> + +<p>“It looks like the last stages of tetanus.” The +patient was even then in a violent convulsion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span> +Andy mercifully laid his handkerchief over the +little fellow’s head, dreading that Mildred should +see his suffering.</p> + +<p>“I’d put him out of his misery but he will be +gone in a moment anyhow,” he said sadly. “Has +he been hurt?”</p> + +<p>“A week ago he got bitten by a dog, but it +was a mere scratch and did not amount to a row +of pins, so Molly and I decided.”</p> + +<p>“Did you put anything on the wound?”</p> + +<p>“Nothing but a surgical dressing down at the +war relief rooms. I remember it was one of the +beautifully made dressings Madame Misel had +just brought in——”</p> + +<p>Andy sprang up, a wild light in his eye. The +puppy had breathed its last so he handed it over +to Judy without more ado.</p> + +<p>“Where is Molly?”</p> + +<p>“She has gone down in the village to pack +supplies at the war relief rooms. There were lots +of things to get off, so she went quite early. I +am to follow a little later, just as soon as Kent +finishes primping. What is the matter?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p> + +<p>“There may be much the matter. You and +Kent come as fast as you can,” and Andy and +Nance hurried off without any more explanation.</p> + +<p>The news was broken to Mildred that her pet +was no more and her bruised heart was much +comforted with promises of a funeral later on +when Kizzie got time to make arrangements. +Kent and Judy caught up with Andy and Nance +before they reached the old church where the war +work was carried on.</p> + +<p>“What under Heaven is the matter?” panted +Judy.</p> + +<p>“It may be nothing, but I must investigate. +Let’s go in as quietly as possible. Does Madame +Misel still work on the surgical dressings?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, indeed! And such beautiful work as +she does! Molly insists that she must have a +great deal of good in her to give so much time to +this work. Sometimes I think I must have +dreamed that they spoke as they did that night +in the garden. Why should pro-Germans and +spies choose this particular spot, anyhow?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p> + +<p>The workroom was filled with very busy ladies +when our young couples entered. Molly was tying +up dressings, after carefully inspecting and +counting them. An order had come for many +bandages and other dressings and all hands were +at work trying to get them off. Madame Misel +was deftly arranging the rolled bandages in +pyramids and then tying them with strings made +of the selvedge torn from the cotton. Nothing +goes to waste in this war work. Madame’s +countenance was as calm as ever as she bent over +her work, but when she saw the two men enter, +Judy noticed a sudden alertness in her glance +and a tiny spot of red on her usually white cheek. +As she pulled the selvedge string, she must have +given it an unusual tug for it broke and the +tightly-rolled bandages flew hither and yon over +the floor.</p> + +<p>“Humph! There is no telling how many +germs got picked up in that scatteration,” muttered +Andy as he stooped and gathered the bandages.</p> + +<p>“The—bandage—does—not—touch the—wound,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span> +said Madame, evidently forgetting +she was speaking to a surgeon.</p> + +<p>“No?” said Andy shortly.</p> + +<p>“Molly,” he said, “I must speak with you a +moment.”</p> + +<p>“Well, Andy dear, I am awfully busy. You +come home to luncheon with me, you and Nance, +and then you can speak all you’ve a mind +to.”</p> + +<p>“I must speak now,” whispered Andy +sternly.</p> + +<p>“Heavens! Is anything the matter?” asked +Molly.</p> + +<p>“I am not sure,” and Andy drew her towards +the vestry at the back of the church. “Tell me, +Molly, have you packed all the dressings that +that Misel woman has made?”</p> + +<p>“Why, no, not all of them! Why?”</p> + +<p>“Have you mixed them with the others?”</p> + +<p>“No! They are so beautifully folded that I +do not have to inspect them, and so I have put +them in boxes to themselves. She is the best +worker I ever saw.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Molly, I shall have to ask you not to get this +shipment off to-day.”</p> + +<p>“But, Andy, it is most important! The poor +wounded are bleeding to death and the ship sails +in two days. We must get them off this evening +if they are to catch that boat. What is your reason?”</p> + +<p>And then Andy told her of the puppy’s death. +He said the fact that his first aid had come from +those very rooms, and that tetanus, or lock-jaw, +had set in on a perfectly healthy puppy when he +had a mere scratch from another dog, made him +suspicious that tetanus germs were on some of +the bandages.</p> + +<p>“Why, Andy, that is ridiculous! Poor Madame +Misel may be in sympathy with Germany +in spite of all she says, she and her husband, but +she could not do such a vile thing as that.” +Molly could not help feeling impatient and indignant +with her old friend. “Only look at her +sweet face and all thought of such infamy will +leave your mind.”</p> + +<p>Andy did glance towards Madame Misel and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span> +the look of venomous hatred that he surprised +on her face was shocking. The young physician +laughed grimly. “Molly, you are no judge of +persons unless they happen to be angels. You +think wings are getting ready to sprout even +from our enemies.”</p> + +<p>“Perhaps they are! Who knows?”</p> + +<p>“You may be right, but in the meantime, +please don’t let any of these dressings get off. I +must see those Secret Service men. Where are +they?”</p> + +<p>“Edwin knows, I believe, but he has not told +me.”</p> + +<p>Molly was irritated beyond endurance. How +was she to let these women know that the shipment +must be held up? It was all of it so absurd. +The women had done the work and now these +men must come poking their fingers into the pie +that they had had none of the work of making. +The idea of accusing Madame Misel of such a +crime! Judy, too, seemed to be doubting the +stranger, and Nance, of course, would be aiding +and abetting Andy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I shall have to ask you to be very quiet, not +to give this creature an inkling of our suspicions,” +commanded Andy sternly. “That is +very important.”</p> + +<p>“Well, naturally, I’ll hardly be so rude as to +let her think anyone is so unkind as to doubt +her,” and Molly’s lip trembled.</p> + +<p>“Molly, dear Molly, don’t hate me so. I can’t +help seeing that something is wrong and if I have +the slightest suspicion, I must surely probe to the +bottom. You must see that.”</p> + +<p>“Of course I do, Andy, but I just can’t bear +to have anybody abused, especially a woman who +makes such lovely dressings,” and Molly tried to +smile at her friend.</p> + +<p>“Well, I’ll depend upon you to stop the work +of getting them off and still not let the woman +know she is under suspicion. Just go on packing +but do not make the shipment.”</p> + +<p>“I hate to resort to such subterfuge, but I’ll +do my best,” sighed Molly.</p> + +<p>“Wouldn’t it be better to bring one criminal +to justice than to kill thousands of poor wounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span> +men by dressing their wounds with tetanus +germs?”</p> + +<p>“Of course, only—but—you see——”</p> + +<p>“Yes, I see that your heart is so tender and +you are so honest yourself you think all the world +must be like you.”</p> + +<p>Molly went sadly back to her packing, all the +joy and zest gone out of her work. How could +nice men like Andy and Kent think such things +about a poor defenseless woman? No doubt she +did have a sneaking sympathy for Germany. +Was not that natural? Had she and her countrymen +not been under German rule long enough +to consider the kaiser as their rightful ruler? Because +her husband chose to pretend to be lame +was no reason why everybody should think Madame +Misel capable of such a dastardly thing as +putting tetanus germs on the bandages of poor +wounded soldiers. That was something no +woman, no matter how bad, could do,—and +surely this woman was not bad, not really bad. +Molly Brown was so constituted that one had to +be proven to be bad before she could believe evil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span> +of him or her, and then, as a rule, she would find +some excuse for the sinner if not for the sin.</p> + +<p>Nance and Judy stayed on to help in the work, +while Andy and Kent went to find the Secret +Service agents. While the task of making bandages, +etc., went rapidly forward, the detectives +quietly ransacked the cottage occupied by the +Misels. This was the first opportunity they had +had of going over the house. The occupants had +never before left it alone. Much of dire importance +was discovered. Among other things a +small laboratory where no doubt all kinds of evil +germs were incubated. The search was made +very rapidly, as they were anxious to leave things +in such order that the owners would not suspect +that they were under surveillance.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XX<br /> + +<small>GERMS</small></h2> + + +<p>As the two quietly-dressed, intelligent looking +men were in the act of going through a desk, they +saw from the window the slow and painful approach +of M. Misel. Without a word they let +themselves out of a back window, left open for +emergencies, and before the master had opened +the front door the detectives were over the back +fence and out of sight. They were desirous of +catching more than the Misels in their net and +did not want to act too quickly.</p> + +<p>Had they peeped through the window, they +would have seen Misel with an impatient gesture +sling his crutch in one direction, his cane in another.</p> + +<p>“Lena!” he called, in anything but a gentle +tone. “Lena!” And then with muttered +curses, when he found his wife to be absent, he +settled himself to look over the bunch of mail he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span> +had just obtained at the post-office. One letter +he examined very critically before opening. It +was an inoffensive enough looking envelope, addressed +on a typewriter and with a postmark from +New York. It had the appearance of a circular +or advertisement of some sort, being made of +cheap, greyish-white paper, the kind of letter one +would wait until last to open in a pile of mail, being +sure it was of no especial interest or importance. +Misel seemed to find it very interesting, +however. It was the one he chose from all the +letters and papers, and as he examined it, he +scowled darkly.</p> + +<p>“Lena!” he called as Madame Misel hurriedly +entered the cottage, “Lena, some fool has +been meddling with my mail!”</p> + +<p>“Perhaps not such a big fool as you are!” she +answered tartly.</p> + +<p>“Look! The envelope has been opened before. +Of course it is the letter from Fritz von +Lestes, the one we have been awaiting.” He tore +it open and read aloud: “‘The paint which you +have ordered will be delivered immediately. Am<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span> +sorry there should have been any delay. I am +sending a light grey, as agreed upon.’ Umm—I +don’t see how they could make much out of +that.”</p> + +<p>“Let me see the letter.—Of course they can +make much out of it as there is no address,—you +men bungle things so! Why should a man who +is in the paint business write a letter with no address +and sign his name so illegibly that no one +could make it out? He should have had a letter +head and a business envelope.”</p> + +<p>“And speaking of bungling,—why did you go +and leave the house with no one in it? Can’t you +see that is imprudent?”</p> + +<p>“Mrs. Green came for me and I had no excuse.—Besides, +I am sure if I am by when the +dressings are handed in that no one will inspect +my work. I have been packing all morning and +have seen to it that my labor has not been in +vain.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, peerless woman!” he said sarcastically.</p> + +<p>Madame Misel said nothing but busied herself +over the luncheon. Suddenly she gave a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span> +cry, half distress, half indignation. Misel hastened +to her.</p> + +<p>“What is it?”</p> + +<p>“Look! This back window is not quite closed! +Did you open it?”</p> + +<p>“No! I have not been here in the kitchen.”</p> + +<p>“Then someone has been in the house,” she +announced in a dead tone.</p> + +<p>“Are you sure?”</p> + +<p>“Of course! I left the windows locked, stupid! +Look about and see if all is in order.”</p> + +<p>The detectives had worked as neatly as detectives +can work, but the Misels found several +traces of them. In one room a chair had been +moved; in another a drawer had not been shut as +close as Madame was confident she had left it; +papers had been turned over in the desk, Misel +was sure, although none were missing.</p> + +<p>“Someone has been in the laboratory, too! +Look at this crucible! I always place them so,—and +this has been turned.”</p> + +<p>The pair faced each other with despair on their +countenances.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p> + +<p>“What now?” they gasped.</p> + +<p>“We must make a flitting this very night!” +exclaimed the woman. “Thank goodness, nobody +dreams that you are not crippled nor that +I am anything but the homely hausfrau I appear. +The dressings will be off this very afternoon, too, +so my work is completed in that line, at least. If +you could boast as much, no doubt you would not +mind leaving. I told you to begin the teaching +at Exmoor sooner.”</p> + +<p>“The youths were not ripe for it. I have begun +in a way, but not much has been accomplished. +Perhaps the person who has been here +is just some prying neighbor and we are not +really being watched. Go out and see if you can +discover anything!”</p> + +<p>When Madame Misel peeped through the windows +of the old church she saw enough to make +her turn pale. Andy McLean was there with +two strange men and Professor and Mrs. Green. +Molly was weeping bitter tears as she untied the +carefully packed surgical dressings. Madame +saw at a glance that it was her work that was being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span> +examined by the men. She did not stop to +make sure what they found on her beautifully +made dressings, but turned and fled towards the +cottage that she called home.</p> + +<p>“Why is she weeping?” she asked herself, and +there was woman enough in her to know that +Molly wept because one of her own sex had +proved faithless.</p> + +<p>Blinds were pulled down in the cottage with +the lovely old garden, and the activities that ensued +could only be equaled by a circus breaking +up to leave town. Madame Misel moved with a +quiet precision that showed she was an adept at +making a quick get-away. Misel worked with a +fury of impatience. He went through his desk, +scattering papers hither and yon and burning +everything of no value. Other documents he +stowed carefully away in his breast pocket. The +laboratory was dismantled and small, mysterious-looking +vials packed in boxes and placed in +the huge suit-case that seemed to hold most of +their belongings.</p> + +<p>A letter was written to the landlord informing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span> +him that his tenants had been called out of Wellington +by the illness of a fictitious sister. A +month’s rent was enclosed. Another letter was +written to the postmaster asking that mail be forwarded +to an entirely imaginary address. The +work proceeded rapidly. The cottage was always +in apple-pie order, as Madame Misel was +certainly an excellent housekeeper.</p> + +<p>“You must write to the president of the college,” +commanded Madame.</p> + +<p>“Naturally! Must I use the same sister?”</p> + +<p>“Of course! Why two lies when one will suffice?”</p> + +<p>A letter to Miss Walker was dispatched forthwith.</p> + +<p>“And now for our disguises,—or rather the +time has come to discard our disguises!” cried +Madame almost joyfully. “I hate to appear as +such a frump!”</p> + +<p>Misel’s disguise was composed principally of +cane and crutch, but at his wife’s instigation he +shaved his mustache. With the help of a checked +suit and red necktie and a brown derby hat a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span> +trifle too small for him, the pathetic and interesting +teacher of the French language was transformed +into the type of man one sees hanging +around a race track. With a clever brush Madame +put a quirk in his eyebrows that completed +the portrait. Then a bit of court plaster was +stuck on one of the perfect teeth which gave the +handsome Misel a sinister look and suggested to +the beholder former battles and fisticuffs in which +he had been struck in the mouth.</p> + +<p>“Even your dying sister will not recognize +you!” exclaimed his wife.</p> + +<p>Madame’s transformation was even more +startling than her husband’s. First she shook out +her smoothly brushed hair and with the help of +curling tongs soon had a wave that the finest hair +dresser in New York could not have exceeded. +She piled her abundant hair up in curls and +twists and coils, pulling out puffs over her ears. +Then with pencil and rouge pot and powder puff +she went to work on her countenance. A raging +beauty was the outcome, but rather fast and loud +looking. A lavender suit lined and slashed with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span> +corn-colored silk was then donned, with many +rings and bracelets. The flat-heeled shoes were +packed away in the suit-case with the sober costume, +and high-heeled French boots were fitted +on in their stead. A plentiful sprinkling of musk +was added so that the nostrils were assailed as +soon as the eyes.</p> + +<p>“Tough sports!” would have been the verdict +of anyone meeting the Misels. They had decided +on the night train to New York. The cottage +was carefully locked, the key enclosed in the letter +to the landlord, which they posted on their +way to the station. Everything was going +smoothly. The station was empty when the pair +stepped upon the platform and in a moment the +New York train came steaming around the +curve.</p> + +<p>“Thank God, we are getting away unnoticed!” +gasped Misel.</p> + +<p>“Thank God if you choose, but it would be +more to the point if you thanked me. I can’t see +that anyone has helped you but me.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, well! Have it your own way!” said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span> +the spurious bookmaker as they boarded the +train.</p> + +<p>“Someone got left,” he laughed as they took +their seats in the chair car. “I saw a man and +woman running down the road just as we got +aboard. I am glad they got left. Whoever it is +might have recognized us.”</p> + +<p>“Nonsense! Didn’t I tell you your own dying +sister would not know you?” and Madame +Misel smoothed her lavender draperies and +jangled her many bracelets and rings, peeping in +the mirror meantime to adjust her large beplumed +hat. There was a commotion in the end +of the Pullman and she heard a familiar voice. +In the mirror she espied a familiar face, and under +the heavily laid on rouge, the woman paled +and the hand that adjusted her hat shook. Misel +buried his face in the evening paper some traveler +had left in his seat, while the innocent cause of +their perturbation found a seat with the help of +the porter.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XXI<br /> + +<small>HER FATHER’S OWN DAUGHTER</small></h2> + + +<p>“I don’t see why you take it so hard, Molly +darling,” said Judy as Molly told her of the detectives’ +findings and of the perfidy they had unearthed.</p> + +<p>“Why, I fancy I am grieving that such wickedness +can be in this world,” sighed Molly. “I +liked Madame Misel so much.”</p> + +<p>“Well, I never did like her,” declared Judy.</p> + +<p>Molly smiled, well remembering Judy’s enthusiasm +on arriving at Wellington and telling +of the interesting couple she had met on the train.</p> + +<p>“I know what you are thinking about—of +course I said they were interesting, but I never +did like the woman much—she was too catty for +me.”</p> + +<p>This conversation was interrupted by the loud<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span> +ringing of the telephone bell, which proved to be +a long distance call for Judy from Mr. Kean in +New York. His marching orders had come and +he was to sail for France in a few days, and for +the first time on record he could not take his little +wife with him. Building roads and bridges in +war time was very different from times of peace, +and France at that time was no place for delicate +little ladies.</p> + +<p>“You had better come right up to New York +on the next train,” was his ringing command. +“Your mother needs you and I must see you, +too.”</p> + +<p>“All right, Bobby! Meet me at the Pennsylvania +Station. I’ll take the 12.45—I am not going +to let Kent come. He must be with his +mother one more day,—his mother and Molly. +So long! Be sure and meet me!”</p> + +<p>Then such a scrambling ensued! Kent must +be persuaded he was neither wanted nor needed, +a few things hurled into a bag, her sketch book +tucked in her jacket pocket, and Judy was off +like a whirlwind. She and Kent ran all the way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span> +to the station only to see the train pulling out as +they stepped upon the platform.</p> + +<p>“I can get it! Keep the old bag!” cried that +young woman as she sprinted down the track, +her young husband running lightly by her side, +laughing in spite of himself. If you have never +run after a train and caught it you cannot realize +the triumphant feeling Judy had as she grasped +the rail and swung herself up on the rear coach. +Fortunately it was not a vestibule train or she +would have been shut out. Kent slung the bag +up after her and then stood in the middle of the +track until his Judy was lost in the darkness.</p> + +<p>“What a girl she is!” he laughed to himself. +“What a dear girl!”</p> + +<p>The dear girl was rescued by a rather indignant +brakeman and led through the empty coach +that happened to be hitched on to the train and +finally installed in the chair car, after many explanations +and excuses had been made to train +conductor and then Pullman conductor.</p> + +<p>Young women have no business on night trains +with no tickets—certainly no business in boarding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span> +those trains from the rear, thereby risking +their own necks and making the railroads liable +to damage suits.</p> + +<p>“But you see my father telephoned me from +New York,” she confided to the train conductor, +a grizzled looking old fellow with a decidedly +military bearing. “He is going to France next +week and he simply had to see me.—Perhaps you +know my father,” she added with a certain assurance +that everybody connected with railroads +ought to know Bobby.</p> + +<p>“More than likely!” was the grim reply. The +conductor had no idea of being cajoled into good +humor by this daring girl.</p> + +<p>“He is Mr. Robert Kean,—Bobby!”</p> + +<p>The conductor was suddenly a changed creature.</p> + +<p>“Know him! I should say I did! Bless my +soul, if you don’t look like him—same eyes—same +mouth! Ha, ha! See Bob Kean missing a +train! Not much!” and the erstwhile stern captain +of the train now grasped Judy’s hand. +“Come on, I’ll see that you get a chair, Miss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span> +Kean. I’m certainly pleased to make your acquaintance.”</p> + +<p>“I’m not Miss Kean any more,—I’m Mrs. +Kent Brown now.—It was my husband who +pitched me and my luggage on the back end of +the train.”</p> + +<p>“Married! By jiminy! I can’t believe Bob +Kean has a married daughter! And your husband +aided and abetted you in jumping on the +back of fast trains, did he?” and the once grim +captain laughed aloud. “Well, I’m glad you +got a game husband. I don’t know what your +father would have done with a ’fraid cat.”</p> + +<p>Judy’s entrance in the Pullman caused some +commotion. The old conductor was laughing +heartily and the brakeman was in a much pleasanter +frame of mind as he handed over Judy’s +bag to the grinning porter. There were about +eight persons in the chair car as Judy entered +and Judy-like, she immediately became intensely +interested in them.</p> + +<p>Of course, the spot of color made by a flashy +dame in lavender attracted her attention first,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span> +and then her companion in loud checks cried out +to be noticed. What a couple! Race track written +all over both of them! Even from three seats +off Judy could smell the musk on the woman. +The man’s face was hidden by the newspaper and +the woman seemed to be engaged in rapt contemplation +of her beauty in the narrow little mirror +by her chair. To Judy’s disappointment the +gaudy dame whirled her chair around so she +could not see her face.</p> + +<p>“I bet she’s a peacherino!” she said to herself.</p> + +<p>There were other persons in the train that +proved interesting, too: among them a mother +and child who appealed to Judy’s artistic sense; +a G. A. R. veteran who was sure he had been in +worse battles than the Marne; an ancient lady +from Louisiana who made our young artist wild +to paint her white hair and patrician nose. Opposite +Judy’s chair was a young man, (or was he +a young man?) At least he was not an old man! +There were a few tiny lines around his twinkling +bright blue eyes, but his movements were as alert +as a college athlete’s, and his mouth, though very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span> +firm, had the saucy expression of a street boy. +Judy was sure she had seen his face before. The +way his hair grew on his forehead in a so-called +widow’s peak reminded her vaguely of someone,—the +cleft chin she was sure she had known +somewhere. He was interested in her, too, she +could plainly see. He had a pleasant, dependable +expression, the kind of look one felt meant +that in time of trouble he would be a good person +to call on. He was making himself generally +useful to the madonna-like mother and child; he +had assisted the ancient lady from Louisiana to +get up and sit down several times since Judy had +so unceremoniously boarded the car.</p> + +<p>“I wish I knew where I had known him. His +face is as familiar to me as my own.”</p> + +<p>She felt in her jacket pocket for her sketch +book. She must get an impression of the mother +and child, and the old lady was destined to be +sketched in, too. She longed to do the youngish-oldish +person opposite, but he was too close for +her to permit herself such a familiarity. She +turned over the leaves of her book and suddenly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span> +came upon the page given up to the Tucker twins +and their friend Page Allison. What delightful +girls they were! Suddenly she could place the +resemblance seen in the gentleman across the +aisle. Of course his forehead and widow’s peak +were the same that Dum Tucker owned, and his +cleft chin was the identical one belonging to Dee +Tucker. Could he be their father?</p> + +<p>She remembered what the girls had told her of +their delightful father. He was a newspaper +man in Richmond, Virginia, and according to the +twins was just about the most wonderful person +in the world. Page Allison, too, had given him +praise, although not quite so wildly unstinted as +his daughters.</p> + +<p>“I think I’ll drop something and let him pick +it up for me and get in a conversation with him,” +Judy laughed to herself. “He is such a squire +of dames, he is sure to pick it up.”</p> + +<p>She turned the pages of her sketch book until +she came to the quick impressions she had made +of Madame Misel at the war relief rooms.</p> + +<p>“The wretch!” was her inward comment, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span> +her thoughts went back to the last days at Wellington. +She looked up; her eye was again +chained by the gaudy lavender spot and she suddenly +became conscious that she could see the +woman’s face in the large mirror at the end of the +Pullman. Her eyes were down as she perused +the pages of a magazine.</p> + +<p>Another familiar face! Where under Heaven +had she seen just that chin and nose? Her eyes +fell again on the open sketch book. Why, it is +Madame Misel—no other! With quick strokes +she copied the sketch and then cleverly added the +beplumed hat, fluffy collar and fashionably cut +coat. The woman stood up for a moment to get +something from the pocket of her great coat, +hanging on the hook at one side, and then Judy +took in her general contours standing, and added +some draperies to the full length figure she had +also obtained of Madame Misel in the work +room. High heels were put on the flat, unstylish +shoes. The straight severe dress and basque were +transformed into the fashionable, if gaudy, creation. +Judy was careful not to erase any of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span> +original lines and all of the new parts she +sketched in in dots and dashes.</p> + +<p>The gentleman opposite was plainly interested +in what she was doing and it evidently required +all his self-control to keep from asking to be allowed +to see.</p> + +<p>“They are the Misels and they are running +away!” flashed into Judy’s mind. “It is up to +me to stop them—but how? The gent in checks +is undoubtedly Misel. They can’t fool me; I remember +his ears too well and the way his hands +held things.”</p> + +<p>She glanced across the aisle and her eyes met +the bright blue ones belonging to the widow’s +peak and cleft chin.</p> + +<p>“What would Bobby do in this case?” she +asked herself.</p> + +<p>“Use the sense God gave him and get help if +he couldn’t cope with a thing single-handed,” she +answered herself.</p> + +<p>She accordingly let her sketch book slide from +her lap, rubber and pencil hopping gaily after it.</p> + +<p>“Oh, thank you so much!” she exclaimed as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span> +the squire of dames immediately dived for the belongings +and restored them to her. “I would +not loose my sketch book for worlds.”</p> + +<p>“I should say not! I have a daughter who is +very much interested in art,—in fact, she is +studying in New York now,—her specialty is +sculpture, though.”</p> + +<p>“Yes, I know her! She is Dum Tucker!”</p> + +<p>“You know my Dum! How wonderful! +And how did you know she was—I was her father?”</p> + +<p>“By your widow’s peak! I also know you are +Dee’s father by your chin.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Tucker changed his seat, taking the one +by Judy.</p> + +<p>“By Jove! You artists are a clever lot. You +would make a great detective, Mrs. Brown. You +must excuse me for knowing your name, but I +heard you tell the captain what it was,—Mrs. +Kent Brown. My girls have written me how +kind you have been to them and I have been dying +to make myself known to you, but was waiting +for some kind of opening wedge.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p> + +<p>“And I, too, Mr. Tucker, have been wondering +where I had seen you, when I found your +girls’ pictures in my little book. See! Here they +are!”</p> + +<p>“And little Page, too!” He exclaimed eagerly +scanning the sketches. “You are wonderfully +clever at a likeness.”</p> + +<p>“Do you think so? I—Mr. Tucker—I deliberately +scraped up an acquaintance with you because +I want you to do something for me,” and +Judy looked frankly into the honest eyes of her +new acquaintance.</p> + +<p>“Why, Mrs. Brown, you know I am at your +service.”</p> + +<p>“I was sure of you somehow, even if I had +not been almost certain you were related in some +way to Dum and Dee Tucker. My little sketch +book told me that and it told me something else, +too, but I must begin at the beginning.”</p> + +<p>Judy, whispering, began with her meeting of +the Misels, of her interesting the Greens at Wellington, +of Misel’s substituting in French at the +college and of Madame’s work in the war relief.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span> +Jeffrey Tucker’s eyes flashed as the newspaper +man in him scented a rousing good story. +When Judy got to the part where she and her +friends went out in the night to hunt for adventure +and found it in the manly shape of Misel +taking strenuous exercise for a cripple, he +beamed with joy and felt in his pocket for a pencil. +Judy rapidly told him of the puppy’s +wounded leg and of the tetanus germs as well as +ground glass being found in the dressings. He +set his square jaw and looked as though he could +eat the kaiser and all his crew at one mouthful.</p> + +<p>“And now I have come to the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">dénouement!”</i> +gasped Judy, excitement making her breathless. +“If I could recognize you by your likeness to my +sketches, I fancy I could also recognize Madame +Misel by sketches of herself. I got two of her +this morning at the war relief. The detectives +did not arrest them, as they want to get others +in their dragnet, but in some way the spies must +have caught on to the fact that they were under +suspicion, as they sneaked away.”</p> + +<p>“Are you sure?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Sure as shooting! In fact they are on this +train.”</p> + +<p>“No!” excitedly.</p> + +<p>“Now, Mr. Tucker, you must compose yourself +if we mean to catch the creatures!”</p> + +<p>“Certainly!” and the eager man sank back in +his seat and tried to look as though he were having +a mild conversation with the attractive young +woman who had jumped on the back of the moving +train.</p> + +<p>“Now that is better! Keep that nonchalant +expression for what I am going to tell you——”</p> + +<p>“All right, fire away!”</p> + +<p>“They are on this coach, just three seats +down.—Good boy, not to jump out of your skin! +Now I am going to show you my sketch of the +woman before and after. See, there is no doubt +about her! You walk to the smoker and on the +way back get a good look at her face and I bet +you will be convinced.”</p> + +<p>Jeffrey Tucker did as he was bid, giving Madame +Misel such a casual look that he aroused +no suspicion in her mind.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Gee! This is great! I’d rather bag some of +these spies than do big hunting in the African +Jungle. Now, most wise of all female detectives, +what do you advise? We must act +quickly.”</p> + +<p>“I think you should take the conductors, both +train and Pullman, into your confidence, and +then send telegrams to New York to have the +spies met with the proper reception. You can +telegraph Bobby, I mean my father, if you think +it best, and he can get in cahoots with the Secret +Service people in New York. Bobby is the kind +of man who doesn’t let things go wrong. When +he bores a hole in the mountain it comes out on +the opposite side just exactly where he meant it +to,—when he swings a bridge across a river it +stays swung,—there is no giving way of supports +and undermining from washings,—Bobby +knows. If you telegraph him, he’ll have detectives +there all right and they will have the necessary +warrants and handcuffs, too.”</p> + +<p>“Well then, Bobby it is!” and Jeffrey Tucker +quickly took Mr. Kean’s address. Next the conductors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span> +were interviewed, and those good Americans +quickly complied with any and every request. +A long and explicit telegram was written +to the gentleman who did not let mistakes happen, +another one sent to the chief of police, in +case Mr. Kean should not be at home to receive +the telegram, (Jeffrey Tucker being the kind of +man who did not let mistakes occur, either,) and +then there was nothing to do but sit quietly in the +Pullman and wait for the train to steam into +New York.</p> + +<p>It seemed to Judy to be hours and hours, although +the time certainly passed pleasantly with +the friends she made on the train. She and Mr. +Tucker talked to everybody except the two +sporty looking individuals, and they would have +had the audacity to talk with them if they had +been given the slightest encouragement. But the +Misels kept their backs studiously turned to their +fellow travelers and did not court sociability.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XXII<br /> + +<small>THE ARREST</small></h2> + + +<p>“Suppose they get off at Manhattan Junction +and go to the Hudson Terminal instead of the +big Pennsylvania Station!” panted Judy, her +eyes shining with excitement and her fluffy hair +standing on end as though an electric shock had +gone through her system.</p> + +<p>“Who is giving the game away now?” teased +her new friend. “I thought of that and warned +the chief when I telegraphed him. If they do +get off there, I’ll get off, too, and you can go on +to the other station where your father will meet +you.”</p> + +<p>“Not much I will! I’m going to keep my eye +on that lavender spot until I see those wrists with +something on them besides gold bracelets. You +see, I feel responsible for this pair, having been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span> +the one to introduce them to Wellington society. +If they get off at Manhattan Junction, so do I. +Bobby will understand! He would have no use +for me if I didn’t see it through.”</p> + +<p>“I believe you are a real patriot, Mrs. Brown.”</p> + +<p>“Of course I am! But one thing sure I am +not going to give my husband to the cause, and +my father, and then let these mean spies go Scot-free. +Now my dear friend and sister-in-law +Molly,—Mrs. Edwin Green,—is so good that she +can’t believe anyone can be bad. She is just as +patriotic as I am but she can’t believe in the perfidy +of Germany and the Germans. I truly believe +she would not have the heart to nab these +wretches even if she could not deny their guilt. +Molly is an angel herself and I fancy maybe her +angelic qualities do rub off some even on the +worst characters. She may have helped this Madame +Misel some, who knows? But I am going +to help her even more by letting her get a taste +of real punishment.”</p> + +<p>“And I am going to do my best to help you +help her,” laughed Mr. Tucker. “We are nearing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span> +Manhattan Junction now and I do not see +our friends making ready to get off.”</p> + +<p>The pair sat quietly while the train stopped for +a moment for passengers to change for the downtown +station. Judy and Mr. Tucker were on the +alert to leave the train if they saw the slightest +movement on the part of the Misels, but the latter +sat in evident certainty of their disguise not +having been penetrated.</p> + +<p>“Now the curtain is to go up in a moment!” +cried Judy. “I have never been in such a stew +of expectation!”</p> + +<p>The train had entered its under-water tunnel +and in what seemed hardly a minute they found +themselves in the Pennsylvania Station. Jeffrey +Tucker, true to his nature, must assist the old +lady from Louisiana and the mother and child, +but this time he assisted them by calling the porter +and, with a generous tip, put them in his +hands. He had other and more urgent fish to +fry.</p> + +<p>“There’s Bobby!” cried Judy. “They have +let him through the gates!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p> + +<p>So they had, and others, also. Mr. Robert +Kean was eagerly scanning the windows of the +coaches as they slowly passed in review. By his +side were several alert looking men in plain +clothes and near them were some brass-buttoned +policemen.</p> + +<p>“You go out first,” whispered Mr. Tucker to +the impatient Judy, who looked like a hunting +dog straining at the leash. “I’ll bring up the +rear in case of a bolt.”</p> + +<p>The Misels got up quickly and without any +delay moved towards the door. They seemed +perfectly unconcerned, the woman patting her +curls and hat into shape and Misel actually having +the hardihood to cast an ogling glance at +Judy. That young woman returned his admiring +look with a saucy toss of her head, entering +into the game with her usual vim.</p> + +<p>One hug for Bobby and a whisper in his +ear:</p> + +<p>“The handsome dame in lavender and the lout +in checks!”</p> + +<p>He in turn handed the information on to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span> +plain clothes men, who were ready with their +bracelets not made of gold.</p> + +<p>The arrest was made so quietly that the +mother and child who were in the midst of it +never did know what was going on, and the old +lady from Louisiana took her serene way right +by the handcuffed Madame Misel without knowing +that that lady had had an addition made to +her bangles. Misel was inclined to give some little +trouble. When he realized they were trapped, +he started back into the chair car, but was met +in a head on collision by Jeffrey Tucker, who had +a few football tricks left over from his not so far +distant youth.</p> + +<p>“Get out of my way! You fool!” cried the +enraged Misel.</p> + +<p>“Softly, my friend! The exit is the other +way,” purred the redoubtable Mr. Tucker, at the +same time putting up his guard, seeing the foreigner +was about to spring upon him. “Madame +has gone out by the door behind you.”</p> + +<p>Bang! Misel’s fist shot out, but Jeffrey +Tucker was a match for any ordinary boxer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span> +having practiced that manly art to keep up with +his daughters who always put on the gloves to +settle any difficulty, and, as they expressed it, to +let off steam when the family atmosphere got too +thick. He dodged the blow, holding his guard +ready for the next.</p> + +<p>Before the furious creature could recover himself +after having given the empty air such a drubbing, +the detectives approached him from the +rear and in a twinkling he was overcome.</p> + +<p>“What does this mean?” he asked, attempting +an air of dignity.</p> + +<p>“You shall have to come and find out!” was +the laconic reply deigned him by the grim policeman +who had him in charge.</p> + +<p>“Mr. Kean, I am sorry to tell you, but your +daughter will have to come to the police court to +tell what she knows of these persons,” said the +leader of the plain clothes men.</p> + +<p>“I’m not sorry! I want to see it through!” +cried Judy.</p> + +<p>“And so, we are to thank you for this indignity,” +hissed Madame.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Thank me or the picturesque garden by your +cottage—whichever you choose. It is a stirring +thing to creep in that lovely garden on a romantic +night and suddenly to see a poor lame man who +has won the sympathy of the community, come +springing out in running togs and have him beat +Douglas Fairbanks and George Walsh in his +jumping. Then to have the gentle, courteous +Madame Misel boldly state that Wellington is +composed of blockheads,—all in perfect German, +too, which was a strange language for such good +Frenchmen to employ in the bosom of the +family.”</p> + +<p>“Judy, I wouldn’t say any more!” said her +father, but his eye was twinkling as he tucked his +daughter’s hand under his arm.</p> + +<p>Mr. Tucker and Mr. Kean met as long lost +friends. They were what Judy called soul +brothers from the first. The old train conductor +stopped to exchange greetings with his one-time +acquaintance. He was loud in his praise of the +young lady who had scared them all to death by +jumping on the rear end of the moving train.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span> +He said nothing of the scolding he had given her +before he found out she was Bob Kean’s daughter.</p> + +<p>The sketch book was convincing evidence that +the sporty couple were no other than Monsieur +and Madame Misel. Judy told her story well to +the chief, showing the clever sketches taken before +and after.</p> + +<p>While they were at the police court, a long distance +message was received from Wellington +with the news that the flitting of the spies had +been discovered by the detectives sent there on +the case.</p> + +<p>“It would have been too late if you had not +been so wide awake,” the chief informed Judy.</p> + +<p>“And I could have done nothing if Mr. Tucker +had not taken hold,” declared Judy.</p> + +<p>“Why, my dear Mrs. Brown, you would have +found some other way, I am sure. You do not +come of a breed that lets accidents happen.”</p> + +<p>The Misels turned out to be pure Prussian, +with not one drop of the blood of Alsace in their +veins. Their name was Mitzel and they had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span> +many crimes to answer for. They had been on +the stage prior to the war and the man was a +noted acrobat and prestidigitator; the woman +had traveled with her husband and assisted him +in his work on the stage, being the hypnotized +lady, the Herodian mystery, the disappearing +spirit, the person who got tied up in the chest and +had a sword run through her,—anything, in fact, +that is usually required of the assistant in such a +business. They were employed to act as spies +and to disseminate all the German propaganda in +their power.</p> + +<p>Misel, or Mitzel, was to have insinuated an +anti-draft spirit at Exmoor, the male college +near Wellington. Also to influence the girls at +Wellington, who in their turn were to influence +their brothers and sweethearts.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Bobby! Only suppose we had not gone +out that night in search of adventure!” cried +Judy, when she was safe under her mother’s +wing.</p> + +<p>“Why don’t you just suppose you had never +been born?” boomed the delighted Bobby.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span> +“When you were once born you were sure to be +out hunting adventure. You are made that way, +eh, Mother?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, I am afraid she is,” sighed that tiny +lady. “You and Judy are exactly alike.”</p> + +<p>“Do you mind?” asked her big husband humbly.</p> + +<p>“No, I would not have either one of you different. +But I fancy Kent and I are in for lives +of anxiety.”</p> + +<p>“Well, he likes us the way we are, too,” declared +Judy, blushing.</p> + +<p>“Well, I have two things to say:” declared +Mr. Kean, giving a mighty yawn, “I am glad I +let you have a Parisian education if with it you +can make clever enough sketches to catch these +German spies; and the other is, that it is high +time we were all of us in bed.”</p> + +<p>Madame Mitzel, before she was sentenced to +the imprisonment that she so richly deserved, +requested an interview with Judy, which +was granted, although Judy was most reluctant.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I can’t bear to see her again! She looked +like a snake caught in a net.”</p> + +<p>“I—want—you—to tell—Mrs. Green—that—I—am +sorry for—her to—know—about me—That +is all! If—I could—have—had a woman—like +that—to—be—my friend—in my—youth—I +would have—been different.” She spoke in +the faltering manner she had used at Wellington, +one she employed in speaking English, and then +she plunged into voluble German, so rapid that +Judy could hardly follow her:</p> + +<p>“But you! You have outwitted me and I +cannot but admire you for it, but I hate you with +all my heart.”</p> + +<p>“That is all right! I’d rather have your hate +than your love! I’ll tell Molly, though.”</p> + +<p>Before we leave the Misels, or Mitzels, for +good, I must tell you that the shipment of paint +arrived at Wellington as the mysterious dealer +had informed Monsieur Jean Misel it would. +One of the Secret Service men remained in Wellington +to receive it. It was light grey, as was +promised; at least, it was marked light grey on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span> +the outside of the six large cans. On opening +these cans, which I can assure you the detective +did with the utmost caution, many things besides +paint were disclosed,—in fact, there was no paint +there at all. He found various chemicals, necessary +for the making of the modern bomb; poisons +of all sorts, and innocent looking little vials containing +deadly germs. Those six cans if let loose +on the unsuspecting community would have +caused as much damage as the imps in Pandora’s +box.</p> + +<p>Even Molly had to confess that the Misels +were not very good persons, and when her husband +gave her to understand that her own little +Mildred and Dodo might have been poisoned by +polluted water had the foreigners accomplished +all they no doubt intended to with some of those +bottled germs, the young mother came to the conclusion +that they were not only not very good but +they were extremely wicked, and perhaps just +imprisonment was too mild a punishment to be +meted out to them.</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XXIII<br /> + +<small>THEY ALSO SERVE</small></h2> + + +<p>There was a very serious meeting of students +of Wellington being held in the library of the +Square Deal. Twenty of the leading spirits of +the student body had asked Mrs. Edwin Green +to let them confer with her on a most important +matter.</p> + +<p>The college authorities had announced that the +H. C. of L. had affected Wellington just as it +had every person and every institution, and students’ +board would have to be raised for the ensuing +year. This came as a blow to the majority +of girls. Going to college is an expensive matter +at best, and while there are many rich girls gathered +in those institutions, the majority come from +homes of moderate incomes and many from actual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span> +poverty. It will never be known how many +sacrifices had been made to educate some of those +Wellington girls, and the H. C. of L. had affected +their families just as much as it had the +institution; and the news that the following year +college expenses would increase had caused much +consternation in the student body.</p> + +<p>“We won’t stand for it!” said one tense little +girl from Indiana, who had been working her +way through three years of college by doing all +kinds of odd jobs, which reminded Molly of her +own strenuous student days.</p> + +<p>“It’s harder on you than me, Mary Culbertson,” +said a sturdy sophomore. “You haven’t +but one more year. At least I haven’t wasted as +much time in this old joint as you have.”</p> + +<p>“But, my dear, please don’t look upon it as +wasted time,” begged Molly.</p> + +<p>“Well, I came for a degree and if I don’t get +it, I consider I have wasted two years. I might +just as well have taken a job at home. A teacher’s +place was open for me then and now it may +be filled for good. A degree will give one a better<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span> +salary, but two years of college won’t get you +anywhere.”</p> + +<p>“I am sure some scheme can be worked to +keep down the expenses,” insisted Molly.</p> + +<p>“We can’t live on less food!” bluntly declared +Lilian Swift.</p> + +<p>“Nor plainer!” from a discontented one.</p> + +<p>“It might be plainer without being less nourishing,” +suggested Molly. “How about your +doing some light housekeeping on your own hook +and not trying to board with the college?”</p> + +<p>“But I am sure the college authorities do not +make money on the girls as it is,” said Billie McKym, +who had come to the meeting from truly +altruistic motives, as expenses made no difference +to her personally. “If a great body of girls +cannot be fed on the amount charged now, I am +certain a girl could not live on less if she went in +for herself.”</p> + +<p>Billie, with all her wealth, had a good keen eye +for business and understood the management of +money rather better than any poor girl at Wellington.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I reckon you are right,” said Molly sadly. +“Would you girls mind if I ask my husband to +come in and talk it over with you?”</p> + +<p>“No!” in chorus. “Bring him in!”</p> + +<p>“Not that knowing how to read Chaucer in +old English will make him wise as how to live on +nothing a year,” whispered one.</p> + +<p>Professor Green was in the den with his cousin, +old Major Fern, who had motored in from the +country to have a chat with his favorite kinsman. +Molly entered, smiling at the clouds of tobacco +smoke which almost obscured the two gentlemen.</p> + +<p>“Edwin, I know the Major will excuse you +for a moment. I need you badly.”</p> + +<p>“Of course, my dear! But I hope it is nothing +serious that is beclouding your fair brow,” +said the old gentleman with the courteous manner +of his generation.</p> + +<p>“Yes, it is serious in a way,” and Molly told +her husband and his cousin what was the problem +the girls had brought to her to solve.</p> + +<p>“Of course, I can’t blame the college authorities,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span> +she sighed. “It is hard to feed people as +it is, and with expenses going up, up, I know +they will have to raise the board. But on the +other hand, there are many girls who simply cannot +pay more than they are already paying. I +feel for them, as I was one of them when I was at +college. If the board had been raised one nickel +I should have had to stop. I almost had to as it +was. If it had not been for Edwin’s fondness +for apples, I should have been degreeless to this +day.”</p> + +<p>“Adam and I!” laughed the professor. “But +what do you want me to do, Molly? I am yours +to command.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t know exactly! I thought you might +talk to the girls and we might keep on thinking +and praying until some solution is reached.”</p> + +<p>“I have a proposition to make that might interest +your college friends,” said Major Fern. +“They may scorn it, but on the other hand they +may like the idea. Let me talk to them.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, how lovely! I knew there would be a +way,” cried the optimistic Molly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Wait until you hear it first,” smiled the old +gentleman.</p> + +<p>Molly led the way to the library, where the +twenty girls were having a hot discussion on +ways and means. She introduced Major Fern, +who took his seat among them and beamed on +them with kindly eyes.</p> + +<p>“Ahem!” he began. “I am not much of a +public speaker but I am going to put a plan before +you and see how it strikes you. I understand +that you are making a kick because of the +raising of board for the ensuing year——”</p> + +<p>“We are!”</p> + +<p>“Well, you know that everything is going +up?”</p> + +<p>“Everything but prayer!” from the discontented +one.</p> + +<p>“Even that may be going up, too,” he answered +solemnly. “Now listen: Perhaps you +know that I am rich,—not so rich as some, but +richer than I have any right to be or any reason +for being——”</p> + +<p>Here Mary Culbertson tossed her proud little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span> +head as much as to let him know that charity was +not what she wanted. Major Fern saw her and +smiled his approval.</p> + +<p>“I have no idea of offering any of my ill-gotten +gold to you.—I know how you would hate that. +In fact, I haven’t any gold to offer. I am rich +only in land and about as poor as they make ’em +in other things. I am really land poor, having +much more land than I have any use for or can +till. I can’t get labor to keep up my farms. I +have been thinking of selling an especially fertile +farm about four miles from Wellington, but I +don’t want to lose money on it, and if I sell at this +time I am sure to. This farm comprises about +two hundred acres of as good land as one can find +in these parts, and that is saying a great deal. +And now I am coming to my scheme——”</p> + +<p>The old gentleman paused while the girls +waited in breathless eagerness.</p> + +<p>“I will let you have this farm if you will work +it for me,—have it for as long as you need it. +You don’t know what can be done in the way of +intensive farming if one can get the labor. You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span> +could raise enough potatoes to run your mess for +the winter; enough tomatoes and beans to can, +and what’s more you can can them right on the +spot.”</p> + +<p>“Hurrah! Hurrah!” shouted Billie McKym. +“The problem is solved or I’m a Boche.”</p> + +<p>“Are you willing to undertake it?” asked the +Major.</p> + +<p>“Of course we are willing!” cried Lilian.</p> + +<p>“The ones who live far can take the first part +of the summer, and the last, just before college +opens, and the ones who are close can fill in during +the midsummer,” said Molly, immediately +grasping the possibility of the plan.</p> + +<p>“Well, I’ll leave it to you young ladies to +work up, and when you care to, I’ll take you over +the place. There is a good house and well and +plenty of fruit,—apples to feed to the hogs——”</p> + +<p>“That suits me!” declared Edwin, who had +been quiet while his cousin was unfolding the +plan. “I see no reason, seriously, why this idea +should not be wonderfully successful,—not only +should it bring you back to college and keep you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span> +for the same, or even less, money than you have +hitherto had to pay, but it will at the same time +help materially in the food situation that the +country is going to have to face.”</p> + +<p>“Will you be one of that committee that must +take hold of this thing?” asked Billie.</p> + +<p>“If the student body so wishes!”</p> + +<p>“Well, we so wish!” came from twenty +throats.</p> + +<p>“You and Mrs. Green,—she is already one of +us. As for you, Major Fern, we hardly know +how to thank you for what you have done,” said +the president of the juniors.</p> + +<p>“Don’t thank me! I have done nothing! Instead +of selling a farm at a loss when I can’t get +labor to work it, I am going to ask some beautiful +young ladies to work it for me.”</p> + +<p>“We might drink him down,” whispered a +timid girl.</p> + +<p>“Of course! Drink him down!”</p> + +<p>And without more ado the twenty girls, with +Molly chiming in and Edwin holding down a +second, sang:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span></p> + +<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0a">“Here’s to Major Fern! Drink him down!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Here’s to Major Fern! Drink him down!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Here’s to Major Fern! Here’s to Major Fern!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Drink him down! Drink him down! Drink him down!”<br /></span> +</div></div></div> + +<p>“Fine! That beats a wreath of bay,” beamed +the dear old gentleman. “And now I’ll take +myself off. I forgot to say I’ll have the land +turned under for you and give the use of a team +whenever you need it.”</p> + +<p>He was gone. The girls, who only a few moments +before had felt so depressed, were now +filled with hope and animation. Degrees were +to be had, after all. Of course it meant work, +but that would be fun.</p> + +<p>“Oh, gee! I’m happy!” cried Mary Culbertson. +“But we must get busy in a hurry.”</p> + +<p>“First we must see Prexy and get her to coöperate,” +suggested Molly.</p> + +<p>“Sure! Let’s do it in order, and find out if +we do our part if the college authorities will do +theirs. I dote on digging potatoes, myself,” +said Lilian.</p> + +<p>Committees were formed immediately; one to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span> +see Prexy; one to go view their estate; another to +look into housing conditions; another to canvas +the student body and find out who would and +who wouldn’t, who preferred to plant and who to +reap.</p> + +<p>Billie McKym was wild with enthusiasm. +“Do you realize, Molly, that I won’t have to +spend a summer in Newport, after all? I can +put it up to my relations that I am needed in +these parts. I mean to ask for a larger allowance, +though, as I can help out some on the sly. +I am thinking about buying some Close-to-Nature +houses and presenting them to the agricultural +club. We shall have to have overalls, too,—and +farming implements.—I think I’ll make +Grandmother and Uncle come across in good +shape.”</p> + +<p>Prexy, Miss Walker, was not only willing to +coöperate but delighted that the students were +finding a way out of the difficulty. It was a +deep grief to her, this raising of prices, and she +knew only too well how many girls would be cut +out of their degrees by this necessary step.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p> + +<p>Many interviews with Major Fern had to be +arranged and many meetings of committees had +to be held, but finally everything was under way +for the agricultural club’s work on the farm so +kindly donated by its delighted owner.</p> + +<p>“By Jove, I begin to feel that I’m helping to +win the war!” he declared. “I have been hating +myself for a useless hulk of a veteran who was +too old to fight and too old-fashioned to suggest +to others how to fight, but if I can be the means +of keeping a lot of girls at college I think I am +doing pretty well; especially if by so doing, those +girls will grow food enough for themselves. +Every potato is equal to a hand grenade and +every bean to a bullet.”</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>CHAPTER XXIV<br /> + +<small>THE TRENCHES</small></h2> + + +<p>Molly and Edwin found themselves deeper in +this agricultural scheme than they had at first +bargained for. If it was to be done at all, it +must be well done and quickly. There must be +order and system. Suddenly they awoke to the +realization that if it was to be well done and +quickly done, it was up to them, the Greens, to +do it.</p> + +<p>“I am afraid, my dear, that you must be the +chaperone and I must turn farmer. This is a +stupendous undertaking and for the good name +of Wellington we must see it through.”</p> + +<p>“It will mean work all summer for you, when +you so need a holiday, you poor old fellow.”</p> + +<p>“I need no more holiday than you do. You +haven’t been idle one minute this whole college<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span> +year. I have a feeling that this summer we have +no business with holidays anyhow. The world is +too busy, too upset for any of us, who are able, to +lay off. I mean to dig and delve here at home +and do all the good I can.”</p> + +<p>“I think we ought to rent the Orchard Home +for the summer, don’t you?” asked Molly, turning +her head away so her husband could not see +what it cost her to make that suggestion.</p> + +<p>“Why, Molly honey, I can’t bear to think of +it. It is hard enough on you not to be able to go +to Kentucky for vacation, but I don’t think you +should have to think of strangers as being among +your apple trees.”</p> + +<p>“It won’t be bad, not nearly so bad as you +think. At least, the little brown bungalow won’t +be quite so lonesome as it would be empty all the +year, and we might buy tons of seed with the rent +money or even take care of some war orphans.”</p> + +<p>“I guess you are right,—you usually are. I’ll +write to a real estate agent in Louisville immediately +and put it on the market for the summer. +I hate to do it, though. Not that it will make so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span> +much difference to me. Wherever you are is my +Orchard Home, honey!”</p> + +<p>The Major’s farm was dubbed “The +Trenches” by the members of the agricultural +club. It was a suitable name, for these girls felt +that they were in the war almost as much as the +soldier boys themselves.</p> + +<p>Early in May Molly moved to the old farmhouse +to superintend arrangements for the many +girls later to be housed there. It was decided to +run the place more or less as a military camp is +run, with squads detailed for various duties.</p> + +<p>“Only our trench digging will be in the potato +fields and our drilling in the bean patch,” Billie +declared.</p> + +<p>Billie was in a state of ecstasy from the first. +She was General Molly’s aide-de-camp, giving +time, money, and thought to the undertaking.</p> + +<p>“It is so splendid really to be helping! I +wanted to do something to help the Government +and now I believe I am going to. I should like +best to shoulder a gun and take a crack at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span> +Huns, but since that cannot be, I’ll shoulder a +pick and take a crack at the soil.”</p> + +<p>Billie, whose post-graduate studies at Wellington +were not very important, had cut and +gone to The Trenches with Molly. They had +installed themselves in a corner of the rambling +old farmhouse and were as busy as bees getting +ready for the thirty girls who were to land on +them the last week in May. Katy and the two +children were with them, but Kizzie had been +left in Wellington to look after the master, +who was up to his neck in work for the finals at +college.</p> + +<p>The students at Wellington had been canvassed +from A to Z, and with a deal of clerical +work, all of the ones who were to join the agricultural +club had been enrolled and their time of +service settled on and arranged for. Billie had +donated six Close-to-Nature houses which were +to be set up on the grassy lawn of the old farm. +The cots she had wheedled out or her uncle. +Farming implements, such as hoes, rakes, spades, +gasoline ploughs and cultivators she had, as she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span> +expressed it, “blasted out of Grandmother McKym.”</p> + +<p>“They don’t understand me in the least, my +uncle and my grandmother, but they love me, I +really believe, and I fancy they always hope I’ll +come to my senses and marry in ‘the set’ some of +these days. They are really dears,” Billie explained +to Molly as they helped to unload the +wagons that had just arrived laden with the tents +and implements.</p> + +<p>“I think they are certainly very generous,” +declared Molly, pulling out a bundle of rakes.</p> + +<p>From the beginning these girls had determined +not to be dependent upon the merely masculine +to fetch and carry for them, and Molly and Billie +had pitched in with a will to do without men if +need be.</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes, generous enough! They are glad +when I let them off with nothing more troublesome +than writing checks. I believe Uncle Donald +was scared stiff that I might insist on his coming +down here to help dig. And as for Grandmother,—she +would rather ante up thousands of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span> +dollars than have to drag her silk skirts around in +the wet grass here at The Trenches. They don’t +see for an instant that I am kind of patriotic in +helping this way. They think I am just a faddist. +Maybe I am, but somehow I feel that I have +ideals! Do you think I am just a silly goose to +think so?”</p> + +<p>“No, indeed! I know you have ideals,—I +should hate to think you didn’t,—very high +ideals,” said Molly, as together they wheeled the +barrow laden with hoes and rakes out to the tool +house. “I reckon your uncle and grandmother +have them, too, only perhaps they are not so open +about them.”</p> + +<p>“Oh yes, they have them. Uncle Donald loves +to talk about them, but Grandmother isn’t so +keen on expressing herself. Sometimes I think +his ideals are mostly literary and hers sartorial. +He is a great reader of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">belles lettres</i> and Grandmother +has an instinct for clothes that is truly remarkable.”</p> + +<p>“You have it, too.”</p> + +<p>“Well, I do like ’em, but I like to dress other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span> +persons better than I do myself. If I had been +poor, I’d have gone into the business. I may do +it yet, but now until this war is over it seems to +me it doesn’t make a bit of difference how anyone +is dressed—anybody but Mother Earth. The +soil dressed with a good fertilizer is more important +than silk raiment.”</p> + +<p>“How about literature?” laughed Molly, her +friend’s enthusiasm amusing her and at the same +time pleasing her. “Do you think writing +should stop as well as dressing?”</p> + +<p>“Oh, of course scribblers will scribble and +anyone who has a message to deliver will have to +spout it out, war time or not, but they may not +think they are so all-fired important. A letter +from the most ignorant soldier at the front will +have more real stuff in it than all of the vaporings +of the poet who only imagines gunfire.”</p> + +<p>“And here far from the strife——”</p> + +<p>“Here we will make sonnets with hoe and +rake!”</p> + +<p>“Our lines made by the gasoline plough shall +be beautiful and harmonious!” suggested Molly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p> + +<p>“Our onion patch shall be worthy to be put +into verse along with Eugene Field’s Onion +Tart,” said Billie, going Molly one better.</p> + +<p>“Our potato field shall be as full of solid refreshment +as Charles Dudley Warner’s five feet +of classics. Only smell the newly-ploughed +earth! Isn’t it delicious?”</p> + +<p>The wagons were unloaded, the farming implements +piled neatly in the tool house and the +Close-to-Nature houses dotted about the lawn +ready for the stupendous task of being put up. +The girls were waiting for Katy, whom they had +dubbed “the powerful Katrinka,” to come help +them with that job. Katy was in her element. +She had been born and raised in the country, and +now that she was once more where things were +growing, where she could help them grow, she +was as happy an Irish girl as there was in all the +land. Nothing was too difficult for her to do and +her great strength helped Molly and Billie out of +many a quagmire of work that seemed too heavy +for them to accomplish without masculine aid.</p> + +<p>“And now Oi’m ready for to help put oop the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span> +little play houses,” she said as she joined Molly +and Billie.</p> + +<p>“That’s fine,” said her mistress, “but before +we begin, just let’s smell the ploughed ground a +little. Don’t you love it, Katy?”</p> + +<p>“Sure! And it beats the perfumery that +comes in a bottle, to my moind,” said the girl, +sniffing delightedly.</p> + +<p>“I don’t see why they don’t bottle the smell of +new ploughed earth just as they have new mown +hay,” laughed Billie. “I know two who would +want to buy it.”</p> + +<p>“Deed and Oi’d buy a gallon of sooch smells!”</p> + +<p>“Do you know Masefield’s ‘Everlasting +Mercy,’ Billie? You and Katy listen while I tell +you the part about ploughing and then we’ll put +up the tent houses.”</p> + +<p>Very charming was the picture made by this +group of girls. So Edwin Green thought as he +walked silently across the lawn of the old farm. +Katy, the sturdy Irish girl, was not without picturesque +lines. Her look was somewhat that of +Bastien Lepage’s peasant Jeanne d’Arc as she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span> +stood in rapt reverie while her beloved mistress +gave voice to those wonderful lines of England’s +greatest modern poet. Billie looked very down-to-date +in her khaki overalls and stubby shoes, +while Molly was very Mollyesque in the blue +linen blouse that was the only true Molly Brown +blue.</p> + +<p>She did not hear her husband as he stepped +lightly across the green spring grass and he motioned +to Billie not to let her know he was there. +He stood silently, with bared head while she recited. +Molly’s voice had always appealed to Edwin, +in fact it had been the first thing that had +attracted him—and when Molly recited poetry!</p> + +<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘The past was faded like a dream;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There came the jingling of a team,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">A ploughman’s voice, a clink of chain,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Slow hoofs, and harness under strain.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Up the slow slope a team came bowing,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Old Callow at his autumn ploughing,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Old Callow stooped above the hales,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ploughing the stubble into wales.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">His grave eyes looking straight ahead,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Shearing a long straight furrow red;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">His plough-foot high to give it earth<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To bring new food for men to birth.<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘O wet red swathe of earth laid bare,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">O truth, O strength, O gleaming share,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">O patient eyes that watch the goal,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">O ploughman of the sinner’s soul.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">O Jesus, drive the coulter deep<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To plough my living man from sleep.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘Slow up the hill the plough team plod,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Old Callow at the task of God,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Helped by man’s wit, helped by the brute,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Turning a stubborn clay to fruit,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">His eye forever on some sign<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To help him plough a perfect line.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="star">*******</span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘I kneeled there in the muddy fallow,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I knew that Christ was there with Callow,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That Christ was standing there with me,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That Christ had taught me what to be,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That I should plough, and as I ploughed<br /></span> +<span class="i0">My Savior Christ would sing aloud,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And as I drove the clods apart<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Christ would be ploughing in my heart,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Through rest-harrow and bitter roots,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Through all my bad life’s rotten fruits.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘O Christ, who holds the open gate,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">O Christ, who drives the furrow straight,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">O Christ, the plough, O Christ, the laughter<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Of holy white birds flying after,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Lo, all my heart’s field red and torn,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And thou wilt bring the young green corn,<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span> +<span class="i0">The young green corn divinely springing,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The young green corn forever singing;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And when the field is fresh and fair<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Thy blessèd feet shall glitter there,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And we will walk the weeded field,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And tell the golden harvest’s yield,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The corn that makes the holy bread<br /></span> +<span class="i0">By which the soul of man is fed,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The holy bread, the food unpriced,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Thy everlasting mercy, Christ.’”<br /></span> +</div></div></div> + +<p>Katy wiped her eyes and Billie winked away +the tears that would gather. Molly turned and +saw Edwin standing only a few feet from her.</p> + +<p>“Oh, Edwin, I didn’t know you were there. +I declare I haven’t been spouting poetry ever +since we got here! We have done a lot and were +going now to put up the tent houses, but you +aren’t to help. I’ll give you some tea and let you +rest up after your tramp. We weren’t expecting +you until Saturday——”</p> + +<p>“And don’t want me now?”</p> + +<p>“Want you! Why, Edwin Green, B. A., +M. A., P. H. D.! You know I always want +you,” and then Billie and Katy thought it was +time to leave the married lovers alone for a while.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span></p> + +<p>“I want to help put up the houses, though,” +insisted Edwin as he and Molly wended their +way to a pretty little arbor covered by a crimson +rambler that gave promise, if one might judge +from the many buds, of being a glorious sight +later in the season.</p> + +<p>“But we can do it later by our lonesomes. You +don’t know how many things we can do without +the help of men, especially when one of us is as +powerful as Katy and one as spunky as Billie.”</p> + +<p>“And how about you?” and he pinched her rosy +cheek.</p> + +<p>“Oh, I’m not much force, I am afraid, but I +have the bump of stickativeness which is sometimes +as good as strength and takes the place of +cleverness.”</p> + +<p>“Do you really think you girls could run this +farm without the help of a man?”</p> + +<p>“Of course we could, once the heavy ploughing +is done, and Katy says she could have done +that, too, if we had wanted her to. Do you want +to go off on a trip somewhere and let us try to +run it without you?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span></p> + +<p>Edwin looked searchingly into Molly’s blue +eyes. His gaze was long and earnest and in his +brown eyes Molly read a kind of sadness she had +never seen there before.</p> + +<p>“Edwin, dearest, what is it?”</p> + +<p>“Molly, it isn’t anything unless you want it +to be.”</p> + +<p>“Tell me!”</p> + +<p>“Would you think it right or wrong if I +should try to get into the service, military service, +I mean?—I have taken an examination and am +physically fit.—I won’t apply to go into training +at Fort Myer unless you approve.—It rests entirely +with you, honey.”</p> + +<p>“You must go if you think it right.” Molly +spoke without a tremor, although it did seem to +her for a moment as though her heart would +burst. How could a heart get so big all of a sudden? +And then it seemed to her she was sounding +cold and unemotional when Edwin wanted something +else. “I—I—want you to go! I think it +is right for men just like you to go—men with +brains and the power of taking hold and leading—I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span> +wouldn’t have you stay behind for me for +anything on earth. I—I—am proud of you and +want you to do exactly what you think is right, +and—and—I think you are right—just as right +as can be—and—and—I love you more than +ever.”</p> + +<p>It seemed to both Edwin and Molly that at +no time since their walk in the forest of Fontainebleau +when the eternal question had been settled +between them had any moment been so filled with +love and understanding as now when he folded +her in his arms. His Molly! His own, brave, +true Molly! Her Edwin! Her honorable, +courageous Edwin!</p> + +<p>“I thought that I could content myself by +digging and delving, but somehow I have been +feeling lately that if you would consent, it was up +to me to do something else. I don’t feel critical +in the least towards the men of my age who are +not going to the war,—not the younger ones, +either, if they do not feel called upon,—but somehow +when one has been called as I have, I think +he should answer. I don’t know why a staid college<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span> +professor should think it is his vocation, but +I do think it, and, oh, dearest, it is good of you +to take it this way!”</p> + +<p>“I could take it no other way. Is not my +mother giving God-speed to her sons? Is not +Judy encouraging Kent? Is not Nance not only +sending Andy but going with him? Who am I +that I should say you shall and you shan’t do +things for your country?”</p> + +<p>“But you see, dear girl, there are the children +to take care of in case—in case—in case I should—should—well—stump +my toe.”</p> + +<p>“I can take care of them as my mother did +of all of us. My father died when I was a tiny +child and still my mother raised me. But don’t +stump your toe. Pick up your feet when you +walk—and—and——”</p> + +<p>Here Molly came very near shedding the tears +that she felt must be shed sooner or later, but she +was determined that it should be later and that +her soldier boy should not see them. She jumped +up and offered to race him to the house where +Katy was laying the tea table on the porch.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p> + +<p>Edwin knew Molly too well not to understand +that this gaiety was nothing but camouflage to +conceal emotions that she was too brave to show.</p> + +<p>“What will your mother think?”</p> + +<p>“She will think that I have married well,” was +her gay rejoinder.</p> + +<p>“And what does my Mildred think when I +tell her her daddy is going to be a soldier?” he +asked as he held the little girl close in his arms.</p> + +<p>Mildred had been busy with a tiny hoe and +shovel on a patch of ground given over to her +tender ministrations. Her hands were very +grubby and her face not much better, but Edwin +seemed not to mind the general griminess of his +daughter.</p> + +<p>“Oh, I say bully for Daddy! An’ I bet if +Dodo’ll wake up, he’d say he was a-goin’, too. +Boys is so rombustious.”</p> + +<p class="star2">******</p> + +<p>And now we must leave Molly Brown and +her College Friends at the momentous hour when +their country is plunged in a great and righteous +war. What the future holds for them is as much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span> +a mystery as what it holds for any of us. One +thing is sure: Molly is doing her duty,—doing it +cheerfully and bravely. Around her are college +girls and more college girls, each one doing her +bit. And so the fields are ploughed, the crops +are planted and gathered. Fruit and vegetables +are preserved and canned. The men and boys +are training for the trenches, but the women and +girls are in training, too.</p> + +<p>Molly often thinks of that moment when she +stood sniffing the up-turned mould, with her husband +standing near listening to her as she recited +the lines from Masefield; and now as the days +multiply she finds comfort in Masefield’s ending +to “The Everlasting Mercy”:</p> + +<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0b">“‘How swift the summer goes,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Forget-me-not, pink, rose.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The young grass when I started<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And now the hay is carted,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And now my song is ended,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And all the summer spended;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The blackbird’s second brood<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Routs beech leaves in the wood;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The pink and rose have speeded,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Forget-me-not has seeded.<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span> +<span class="i0">Only the winds that blew,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The rain that makes things new,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The earth that hides things old,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And blessings manifold.’”<br /></span> +</div></div></div> + + +<p class="center r4">THE END</p> +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span></p> +<p> </p> + + +<div class="ads"> +<div class="figleft"> +<img src="images/ad01.png" width="117" height="169" alt="The Girl Scouts Canoe Trip" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="adtitle1">The<br /> +Girl Scouts<br /> +Series<br /></p> + +<p class="adauthor">BY EDITH LAVELL</p> + + +<p>A new copyright series of Girl Scouts stories by +an author of wide experience in Scouts’ craft, as +Director of Girl Scouts of Philadelphia.</p> + +<p class="center"><small>Clothbound, with Attractive Color Designs.</small></p> + +<p class="center">PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH.</p> + +<hr class="l3"/> + +<ul class="lsoff"><li>THE GIRL SCOUTS AT MISS ALLEN’S SCHOOL</li> +<li>THE GIRL SCOUTS AT CAMP</li> +<li>THE GIRL SCOUTS’ GOOD TURN</li> +<li>THE GIRL SCOUTS’ CANOE TRIP</li> +<li>THE GIRL SCOUTS’ RIVALS</li> +<li>THE GIRL SCOUTS ON THE RANCH</li> +<li>THE GIRL SCOUTS’ VACATION ADVENTURES</li> +<li>THE GIRL SCOUTS’ MOTOR TRIP</li></ul> + +<hr class="l4"/> + +<p class="center"><small>For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by +the Publishers.</small></p> + +<p class="center"><big>A. L. BURT COMPANY</big></p> +<p>114-120 East 23rd Street, <span class="rght">New York</span></p> + +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span></p> + + +<div class="figleft"> +<img src="images/ad02.png" width="131" height="174" alt="Marjorie Dean Highschool Freshman" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="adtitle1">Marjorie Dean<br /> +High School<br /> +Series</p> + +<p class="adauthor">BY PAULINE LESTER</p> + +<p><small>Author of the Famous Marjorie Dean College Series</small></p> + + +<p>These are clean, wholesome stories that will be of great +interest to all girls of high school age.</p> + +<p class="center"><small>All Cloth Bound Copyright Titles</small></p> + +<p class="center">PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH</p> + +<hr class="l3"/> + +<ul class="lsoff"><li>MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL FRESHMAN</li> +<li>MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL SOPHOMORE</li> +<li>MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL JUNIOR</li> +<li>MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR</li></ul> + + +<hr class="l4"/> + +<p class="center"><small>For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by +the Publishers.</small></p> + +<p class="center"><big>A. L. BURT COMPANY</big></p> +<p>114-120 East 23rd Street, <span class="rght">New York</span></p> + +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p> + + +<div class="figleft"> +<img src="images/ad03.png" width="120" height="169" alt="Marjorie Dean College Sophomore" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="adtitle1">Marjorie Dean<br /> +College<br /> +Series</p> + +<p class="adauthor">BY PAULINE LESTER.</p> + +<p><small>Author of the Famous Marjorie Dean High School Series.</small></p> + + +<p>Those who have read the Marjorie Dean High +School Series will be eager to read this new series, +as Marjorie Dean continues to be the heroine in +these stories.</p> + +<p class="center"><small>All Clothbound. Copyright Titles.</small></p> + +<p class="center">PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH.</p> + +<hr class="l3"/> + +<ul class="lsoff"> +<li>MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE FRESHMAN</li> +<li>MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE SOPHOMORE</li> +<li>MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE JUNIOR</li> +<li>MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE SENIOR</li></ul> + +<hr class="l4"/> + +<p class="center"><small>For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by +the Publishers.</small></p> + +<p class="center"><big>A. L. BURT COMPANY</big></p> +<p>114-120 East 23rd Street, <span class="rght">New York</span></p> + +<hr class="l1"/> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p> + + +<div class="figleft"> +<img src="images/ad04.png" width="128" height="176" alt="The Campfire Girls in the Maine Woods" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="adtitle2">The Camp Fire<br /> +Girls Series</p> + +<p class="center">By HILDEGARD G. FREY</p> +<hr class="l5"/> + +<p>A Series of Outdoor Stories for +Girls 12 to 16 Years.</p> + +<p class="center">All Cloth Bound Copyright Titles</p> + +<p class="center">PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH</p> +<hr class="l5"/> + +<ul class="lsoff"> +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS IN THE MAINE WOODS; +or, The Winnebagos go Camping.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT SCHOOL; or, The +Wohelo Weavers.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT ONOWAY HOUSE; or, +The Magic Garden.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS GO MOTORING; or, Along +the Road That Leads the Way.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS’ LARKS AND PRANKS; or, +The House of the Open Door.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS ON ELLEN’S ISLE; or, The +Trail of the Seven Cedars.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS ON THE OPEN ROAD; +or, Glorify Work.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS DO THEIR BIT; or, Over +the Top with the Winnebagos.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS SOLVE A MYSTERY; or, +The Christmas Adventure at Carver House.</li> + +<li>THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT CAMP KEEWAYDIN; +or, Down Paddles.</li> +</ul> + + +<hr class="l4"/> + +<p class="center"><small>For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by +the Publishers.</small></p> + +<p class="center"><big>A. L. BURT COMPANY</big></p> +<p>114-120 East 23rd Street, <span class="rght">New York</span></p> +</div> +<p> </p> + +<div class="tnote"> +<p><b>Transcriber’s note:</b></p> +<p>A few minor printer’s errors have been corrected. +Otherwise the original has been preserved, including inconsistent +spelling and hyphenation.</p> +</div> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" /> +<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLY BROWN'S COLLEGE FRIENDS***</p> +<p>******* This file should be named 36733-h.txt or 36733-h.zip *******</p> +<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br /> +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/6/7/3/36733">http://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/7/3/36733</a></p> +<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed.</p> + +<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Molly Brown's College Friends + + +Author: Nell Speed + + + +Release Date: July 14, 2011 [eBook #36733] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLY BROWN'S COLLEGE FRIENDS*** + + +E-text prepared by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan, eagkw, +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustration. + See 36733-h.htm or 36733-h.zip: + (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36733/36733-h/36733-h.htm) + or + (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36733/36733-h.zip) + + + + + +[Illustration: She blew in at nightfall with a huge suit-case. +(_Frontis_) (_Molly Brown's College Friends_)] + + +MOLLY BROWN'S COLLEGE FRIENDS + +by + +NELL SPEED + +Author of +"The Tucker Twins Series," "The Carter +Girls Series," etc. + + + + + + + +[Illustration] + +A. L. Burt Company +Publishers New York +Printed in U. S. A. + +Copyright, 1921 +By +Hurst & Company + +Printed in the U. S. A. + + + + +Contents + + + I. NANCE OLDHAM 7 + + II. BY THE FIRELIGHT 21 + + III. THE WOULD-BE'S 37 + + IV. FAIRY GODMOTHERS WANTED 43 + + V. THE CRITICS 67 + + VI. "I HAD A LITTLE HUSBAND NO BIGGER THAN MY THUMB" 75 + + VII. NANCE PACKS HER TRUNK 93 + + VIII. A DAMP COAT 102 + + IX. PLANS 115 + + X. ALL THE OLD GIRLS 122 + + XI. AN INTERESTING COUPLE 139 + + XII. AN OLD-TIME PARTY 150 + + XIII. ADVENTURE 162 + + XIV. AS SEEN FROM THE SUMMER-HOUSE 172 + + XV. THE PROFESSOR AT A KIMONO PARTY 177 + + XVI. WAR RELIEF 187 + + XVII. TILL DEATH DOTH US PART 201 + + XVIII. THE PUNISHMENT OF MILDRED 216 + + XIX. A DEATH 222 + + XX. GERMS 234 + + XXI. HER FATHER'S OWN DAUGHTER 244 + + XXII. THE ARREST 260 + + XXIII. THEY ALSO SERVE 272 + + XXIV. THE TRENCHES 284 + + + + +Molly Brown's College Friends + + + + +CHAPTER I + +NANCE OLDHAM + + +"I am so afraid Nance will be changed," sighed Molly as she put the +finishing touches to the room her old friend was to occupy. + +"I'll wager anything she is the same old Nance Oldham," insisted +Professor Green, obediently mounting the ladder to hang the last snowy +curtain at the broad, deep window in the guest chamber overlooking the +campus. "I think she is the kind of girl who will always be the same. +Is that straight?" + +"A little bit lower at this end--there! What a comfort you are, Edwin!" +and Molly viewed the effect approvingly. + +"Pretty good general houseworker, eh?" and the dignified professor of +English at Wellington College ran nimbly down the ladder and hugged his +wife. She submitted with very good grace to his embraces in spite of the +fact that the fresh bureau scarves and table covers with which she was +preparing to decorate her old friend's room were included in the +demonstration of affection. + +Professor Edwin Green always declared that he never expected to catch +up on all the years he had loved Molly Brown and had been forced to let +"concealment like a worm in the bud feed on his damask cheek." He and +Molly had been married almost four years on that day in March when he +was assisting in the imposing rite of hanging curtains in the guest +chamber, and she was still as wonderful to him as she had been on that +day they had walked through the Forest of Fontainebleau and he had +confessed his love. She was the same charming girl who had lingered too +long in the cloisters and been locked in to be rescued by him on her +first day at college, now so many years ago. + +Indeed, Molly Brown has changed very little since last we saw her. +Little Mildred is walking and talking and singing little tunes and +saying Mother Goose rhymes. She even knows her letters upside down and +no other way, having learned them from blocks, presumably standing on +her curly head as she acquired the knowledge. + +There is another baby in the nursery now: little Dodo, whose real name +is George, a remarkably satisfactory infant who sleeps when he should +and wakes in a good humor, taking the proper nourishment at the proper +hours and going back to sleep. Molly had learned the great secret of +young motherhood from her first born: not to take parenthood too +solemnly and seriously, and to realize that Mother Nature is the very +best mother of all and babies thrive most when left as much as possible +to her all-wise and tender care. + +Nance Oldham, Molly's old friend and roommate at college, was coming at +last to make her long promised visit to the Greens. Little wonder that +Molly feared she would be changed! Nance's path in life had not been +strewn with roses. No doubt my readers will remember that Mrs. Oldham, +her mother, was a clever woman, lecturer, suffrage agitator, anything +but a homemaker. When Nance finished college she had gone back to +Vermont and dutifully kept house for her neglected father, although her +secret ambition was to teach. Mr. Oldham had been so happy in having a +home of his own that Nance had felt fully repaid for her sacrifice. Her +mother, too, had at last realized the delights of home, when someone +else had the trouble of keeping it, and had spent much more time with +her family than she had for many years. + +A lingering illness had attacked Mr. Oldham and after two years of +tender nursing on the part of his daughter and futile ineffectual +attempts at tenderness on the part of his wife, the poor man had passed +away. Then it was that Nance's friends had felt that her career might +begin, but Mrs. Oldham had suddenly decided that she could not live +without the husband who had been ever patient with her vagaries and she +had gone into a slow decline. More nursing and self-denial for the +patient Nance! + +She was an orphan now and although she was in reality little more than +a girl she felt old and settled, that the little youth she had ever had, +had left her years ago. Molly had written her immediately on hearing of +Mrs. Oldham's death, declaring that she and her Edwin were ready and +eager for the long-deferred visit. "I say 'visit,'" wrote Molly, "but I +want you to make your home with us. Little Mildred calls you Aunt Nance +and Dodo will call you the same as soon as he can talk." + +The guest chamber was now in perfect order. The fresh curtains hung as +straight as a learned professor of English could hang them, the bureau +scarf and table cover were smooth and spotless, and on the window sill +blossomed a pot of sweet violets sent by Mrs. McLean from her own +greenhouse. + +"I wonder about Nance and Andy McLean," said Molly, as she and her +husband were walking to the station to meet their guest. + +"Wonder what about them?" + +"Wonder if they will ever marry!" + +"Pooh! I fancy it was just a schoolgirl affair. They don't often amount +to much." + +"Schoolgirl affairs can be right serious, as you of all others should +know!" + +"Thank goodness, some of them!" said Edwin devoutly. + +"I reckon Nance will be in deep mourning," sighed Molly. "I hate +mourning,--I mean long veils and crepe trimmings." + +"So do I,--a relic of barbarism!" + +"I'll give up my literary club for a while. I know Nance will not feel +like seeing a lot of young people." + +Professor Green said nothing but he felt it was rather hard on +Wellington that any of its pleasures should be curtailed because of the +death of a lady in Vermont. But Molly must do what she thought best. He +hoped their guest would not put too long a face on life and would not +prove inconsolable. + +The long train stopped at the little station at Wellington and Molly +and her husband eagerly scanned the few passengers who alighted from the +Pullman. One lady in a long crepe veil got an embrace from the impulsive +Molly but she turned out to be an utter stranger and not the beloved +Nance. + +"She didn't come!" cried Molly. + +"Oh yes, she did, but she came on a day coach," and there was Nance +hugging Molly and shaking hands with Professor Green at the same time. + +That gentleman was viewing his wife's old friend with great +satisfaction. Instead of the long crepe veil and the lugubrious +black-clothed figure, here was a slight young woman in a neat brown suit +and furs, with a close brown velvet toque and a chic little dotted brown +veil. + +"Nance! I was expecting----" + +"Of course you were expecting to find me swathed in black. I am doing +what Mother asked me to do. She hated mourning and so did Father and I +am a fright in black and it would have meant a new outfit, which I can +ill afford, and so----" + +"And so you are a sensible girl," said Professor Green approvingly, as +he took possession of her traveling bag and trunk check. + +"Oh, Nance, you are not changed one bit!" cried Molly. + +"You are changed a lot," said the truthful Nance, "but you are more +beautiful. In fact, you never were really beautiful before, but now, +now----" + +"Oh, spare my blushes!" cried Molly, who did not spare herself but +blushed and blushed and blushed again. + +Nance was the same little brown-eyed person with the same honest look +out of those eyes. In repose her mouth did have a slight droop at the +corners but otherwise she might have been a college girl still, so +youthful were her lines and so clear and rosy her healthy skin. Her hair +was as Molly had always remembered it, smooth and glossy with much +brushing and every lock in place. + +"Are you tired, honey? If you are, we can go home in the bus," suggested +Molly. "Look what a fine motor bus we have now! Do you remember the old +yellow one with the lame horses?" + +"Do I? And also that I met you right at this station when we were both +freshmen and we rode up in that bus together. Oh, Molly, it is wonderful +to be here with you! No, I'm not tired, so let's walk." + +The professor was due for lectures and the girls left him without +reluctance. Even husbands were superfluous when such old friends met +after being separated for so many years. There was so much to talk +about, so many loose threads to catch up, so much belated news that had +not seemed important enough to write. + +"I'm dying to see the children." + +"They are lovely! There is Mildred now waving to us from your window. I +wonder what she is doing in there. I do hope she has not got into +mischief," said Molly uneasily. + +The guest chamber was still spotless and Molly breathed a sigh of +relief. She had had visions of the irrepressible Mildred's making dolly +sheets of the bureau scarf or of putting her black kitten to sleep in +the snowy bed. The chubby imp was standing with her back to the window, +her hands behind her. Her golden curls made a halo around her charming +face, her brown eyes were soft and dreamy and her rosebud mouth looked +as though butter would not melt in it. + +"Come, darling, and speak to Aunt Nance," said Molly. + +"Ain't no Aunt Nance!" + +"Mildred!" + +"Never mind, Molly! Don't force her. She and I will end by being +sweethearts, I am sure," said Nance laughing. + +"Never mind, Dodo will be your sweetheart now," declared Molly, going +through all the agony of motherhood when the offspring refuses to be +polite. "You may go to Katy, Mildred," in a tone as severe as she could +make it. + +Mildred sidled around, carefully keeping her back to her mother. + +"What have you in your hand, darling?" + +"Fings!" + +"What things?" + +"I been a-tuttin'." + +"Scissors! Oh, Mildred, you know how afraid your mother is for you to +play with scissors! What am I to do with you?" + +Mildred made a sudden resolution. Why not throw herself on the mercy of +this new aunt for protection. She darted by her mother and sprang into +the ready arms of Nance. + +"I been a-tuttin' a bunch of vi'lets for my Aunt Nance--an' I been +a-fwingin' her curtains all pretty for her." + +In one hand she had tightly clasped a huge pair of shears and in the +other the violets which she had ruthlessly culled from the pot sent by +Mrs. McLean. + +"Oh, Mildred, see what you have done," agonized Molly. "Mrs. McLean sent +them to you, Nance. I am so sorry they are spoiled." + +"But they are not," declared Nance, trying to keep down the blush that +would come at the knowledge that Andy McLean's mother had shown her +this attention. "We can put this dear little bunch in water, and I am +sure there are many more buds to bloom. Let's see, Mildred." + +"'Deed they is! I wouldn't cut no li'l baby buds off for nothin' or +nothin'. 'Tain't no bad Milly in this house." + +"But the curtains!" wailed poor Molly when she viewed the neat fringes +that her daughter had so carefully slashed with the great shears. + +"Now don't worry about that," insisted Nance. "Mildred and I are going +to cut them off and hem them up. Aren't we, Mildred? Very short curtains +are all the style now, anyhow." + +"Yes!" exclaimed the wily Mildred eagerly, "the windows likes to show +they silk stockings, jes' like the ladies." + +"Oh, you darling!" cried Nance, sinking down and holding the child in +her arms, while Molly rescued the long and dangerous shears. + +"Now, Muvver, you needn't to worry no mo', Aunt Nance an' I is done +made up an' I done forgive her an' all." + +"But how about you! Who has forgiven you?" + +"Me! I done forgive myself 'long with Aunt Nance. I say right easy way +down inside me: 'Milly, 'scuse me!' An' then way down inside me say mos' +politeful: 'You's 'scusable, darlin' chil'.'" + +"Molly, how can you resist her?" asked Nance. + +"Well, I don't reckon I can," said Molly, whimsically. "But you won't do +it any more, will you, Mildred?" + +"No'm, never in my world--cross my heart an' wish I may die--bake a +puddin' bake a pie did you ever tell a lie yes you did you know you did +you broke yo' mammy's teapot lid." + +"Some of Kizzie's nonsense!" laughed Molly, remembering in her childhood +saying exactly the same thing. + +And so Nance Oldham was received into the home of the Edwin Greens. +Already she had won the approval of the master by appearing in colors +and not swathed in black (men always do hate mourning). Mildred had +decided to love and honor and make her obey. Little Dodo soon accepted +her lap as an especially nice place to spend his few waking moments, and +Molly's love and welcome were assured from the beginning of time. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +BY THE FIRELIGHT + + +The only home Nance Oldham had ever known she had made herself after +she left college. Her childhood and girlhood had been spent in boarding +houses with her patient father, while her brilliant mother made +occasional hurried and preoccupied visits to them. There had been a +time when Nance had felt bitterly towards her mother because she was +not as other mothers were, but the realization had finally come to her +that her mother could no more be as other mothers than other mothers +could be as Mrs. Oldham was. She had decided that instead of her +mother's being a mistake, that she, Nance, was the mistake. She should +never have been born; but now that she was born she intended to make +the best of it. The fact that she had never had a home made a home +just that much more precious and desirable in her eyes. + +What a lovely home this square old brick house on the campus made! +Nance remembered well in her college days that it was not such a very +attractive place, rather bleak, in fact. It needed a mistress, the soul +of a house; and now in place of the blank uncurtained windows of old +days, Molly's genial hospitality and kindness seemed to look out from +every pane of glass. The college girls named Mrs. Edwin Green "The Fairy +Godmother of Wellington." She was called into consultation on every +occasion. The President of Wellington wondered if it were not incumbent +upon her to offer Molly a salary for her services. + +"I don't know what we would do without her. I believe the college would +simply go to pieces without Mrs. Edwin Green." + +The students, old and young, rich and poor, flocked to the brick house +which they dubbed "The Square Deal." There Molly administered advice +and love and sympathy with absolute impartiality, also with perfect +unconsciousness that she was the guiding star of the student body. + +"She is the only really truly democratic person I ever knew,--of +course, besides O. Henry, and I didn't exactly know him," Billie McKym +declared. "She and O. Henry simply don't regard money one way or the +other in their judgment of persons. Now most social workers think of the +rich as necessary evils in the way of pocketbooks and such. They really +take no interest in anyone who does not need financial or moral help, +but Molly and O. Henry are just as good to the rich as the poor." + +Billie was back at Wellington taking extra courses that she wasn't +certain what she was to do with, but she felt anything was preferable to +coming out into society in New York, which was the inevitable sequence +the moment she was through with college. + +Billie rather resented the guest at the Square Deal as did many of +Molly's youthful friends. + +"There's never any seeing Molly alone now," she grumbled. + +"Never!" agreed Mary Neil, a red-headed junior who had what she termed +a "mash" on Mrs. Green. Molly, being totally unaware of this, was ever +causing the poor girl to turn green with jealousy. + +"To think of her stopping the 'Would-be's' just because Miss Oldham's +mother died, and she didn't even think enough of her to put on +mourning," asserted Lilian Swift as she peeped in the mirror over the +mantel to adjust her own very becoming black and white hat, worn as +second mourning for a great-aunt who had left her a legacy. + +These girls were assembled in the library at the Greens', waiting to see +their friend. That evening the "Would-be Authors' Club" was to have met, +but Molly, their president, had felt it best to postpone it because of +Nance's recent bereavement. The "Would-be Authors" was now a flourishing +organization with a waiting list that almost stretched around the +campus. They met together for mutual benefit and encouragement and +sometimes for discouragement. The only requisite for membership was to +scribble at fiction. On coming into this club it was necessary to pledge +oneself to take a criticism like a man. No matter how severe a drubbing +your story called forth, you must smile and smile. + +"Girls, I'm so sorry to keep you waiting, but Mildred had got +chewing-gum in her hair and I simply had to get it out before her whole +wig stuck together," said Molly as she came in with Dodo in her arms and +Mildred trotting after her like a veritable little colt following its +dam. "My friend, Miss Oldham, will be down in a moment." + +The girls looked at one another meaningly. + +"I want all of you to like my friend," continued Molly, as though she +could divine their thoughts. "She has had a hard time and she needs the +companionship of young people more than anyone I know." + +Molly then told them of Nance's devotion to her mother and father, of +her thwarted ambition, of her unselfishness and cleverness. + +"It seems strange for her not to wear mourning for her mother," said +Lilian. + +"Perhaps it does, but when you think of it, what you wear has nothing to +do with your feelings. It is in a way part of Nance's unselfishness +that she did not put on mourning. Her father disliked it, her mother +could not abide it, and as she said, it meant a new outfit which she +could ill afford. It is a great deal easier just to give up to grief and +exude gloom than it is to be cheerful and radiate light and happiness." + +Molly was in a measure irritated by Lilian's criticism of her beloved +Nance, but Lilian was a person who always spoke her mind no matter what +was involved, and she had a certain sturdiness and honesty of opinion +that disarmed one. + +"Well, that's all right," she answered bluntly, "but while she is being +so unselfish about her clothes, why doesn't she spunk up a bit about the +'Would-be Authors?'" + +"What about them?" + +"Why, postponing the meeting because she is in such deep grief." + +"That wasn't Nance. I am responsible for that foolishness. She only +found out about it to-day and declares she will go back to Vermont if I +dare make a single change in my way of living. I want all of you to get +messages to the club to be sure and come this evening." + +"Bully for Nance!" cried Billie McKym. + +Nance came into the room just as Billie was cheering her. + +"I'm mighty glad it's bully for me, if I'm the Nance. But why 'Bully for +Nance'?" + +"Just because you are here with Mrs. Green and can come to our literary +club this evening," said Billie with a straight face. + +"But I am no scribbler," declared Nance. + +"But you are a wonderful critic," said Molly. "Among so many scribblers +it is well to have one sane person willing to compose the audience. It +is my turn to read to-night and I want your criticism." + +"If I can come in that capacity, I am more than willing," smiled Nance +as she settled herself to her knitting. + +"I remember many times you saved me from making a bombastic goose of +myself on my college themes," laughed Molly. "What I flattered myself +was pathos, under your cool judgment turned out often to be bathos." + +Molly leaned over and gave her friend an affectionate pat. At this show +of love, Mary Neil jumped up so suddenly that she upset little Mildred, +who was sitting on the sofa by her, and without saying a word rushed +from the room. + +"What on earth!" exclaimed Molly. + +"The suddenness of Mary,--that's all," declared Billie. + +"Good title for a story!" said Lilian, getting out a note-book. + +"Oh, you scribblers!" laughed Nance. + +Little Mildred was picked up and comforted and in a short while the +visitors took their departure. + +"Molly, do you know what was the matter with that interesting looking +red-headed girl?" asked Nance as they settled to the delights of a +twilight chat, while Nance busily plied her knitting needles on the long +drab scarf that seemed to grow under her agile fingers like magic. + +"I have no idea." + +"She was jealous of me. I noticed how she looked at me when I came in +and she never said a single word while all of us were chatting. Then the +moment you gave me a little pat, she jumped up as though she had +received an electric shock and fled." + +"Absurd! I hate to think it of Mary." + +"It's true all the same. Didn't you know she was crazy about you?" + +"No, and I don't want to know it. A girl had better be beau-crazy than +have these silly cases with other girls. I am going to put a stop to it +in some way." + +"How, may I ask?" + +"I might do like Peg Woffington and put my hair up in curl papers and +appear at my very worst." + +"Well, dearie, your worst might be so much better than some person's +best that that might not work. But don't think I've got a case on you." + +"Never! We were foolish enough college girls but we never were that +foolish. I can't remember anyone in our crowd having these silly +mashes. Can you?" + +"Unless it was the affair Judy Kean had with Adele Windsor. Do you +remember when poor Judy turned up with her hair dyed a blue black?" + +"Do I?" and the friends went off into peals of laughter just as Mrs. +McLean ushered herself into the firelit room. + +"The door was open so I came right in," announced that dear woman. She +caught Nance's hands in a strong grasp and drew the girl towards her. +"I am glad to see you, my dear," she said simply. Her well-remembered +Scotch accent fell pleasingly on Nance's ear. + +"The violets were lovely. I thank you so much," faltered Nance. + +Molly wondered at the embarrassment of her friend. She had longed to +talk to Nance about Andy McLean but did not know how to begin. She +shrank from prying into her guest's affairs, but the eternal feminine +in her was on the alert for the romance she had no doubt was there. + +"And now I must tell you all about Andy," said his fond mother. "I know +you want to hear about him,--eh?" + +"Indeed we do," put in Molly quickly, while Nance tried to go on with +her knitting, but I am afraid dropped more stitches than she picked up. + +"He has resigned from the hospital staff in New York where he was doing +so splendidly and is to go to France as an ambulance surgeon." + +"Oh!" came involuntarily from Nance. + +"Splendid!" cried Molly. + +"It is what he should do," declared his Spartan mother. "His father and +I would not have it otherwise. Of course, the States will be at war +before the month is out and Andy might wait and enlist with his own +country, but in the meantime he is needed, and sadly needed, by my +country, mine and his father's." + +"He will come see you before he sails, will he not?" asked Molly. + +"Of course! He may spend a month with us." + +"That will be splendid indeed." + +Nance said nothing, but the flames that sprang from the wood fire lit up +a very rosy countenance. + +"I must be going now. I only ran in for a moment to bring the news of my +Andy and to see this little friend again. Come to see me, both of you," +and the doctor's wife was gone. + +"Molly! I should never have come to you!" said Nance the moment the door +closed on their visitor. Katy, the Irish nurse, had come for the baby. +Little Mildred had fallen asleep, her head in Nance's lap. + +"My darling girl! Why?" + +"I can't spoil Andy's visit to his mother. If I am here, it will be +spoiled." + +"Nance, how can you say so?" + +"Because it is the truth. He will have to see me, and he hates me." + +"He couldn't!" + +"He left me two years ago in a rage and swore it was over for good and +all; and he couldn't have said such things to me if he had not hated +me." + +"And you--do you hate him?" + +"Of course not!" and again the flickering fire showed off her blushes. + +"Did you say nothing to him but nice things?" + +"We-ll, not exactly,--but he said the things he said first." + +"Were the things he said worse than the things you said?" + +"No!" with a toss of her independent head, "I gave him back as good as +he sent." + +"You shouldn't have done it. You knew how the things he said hurt, and +with your superior knowledge of what it meant to be wounded, you were +cruel to hurt him so." + +"But he should have known! That kind of philosophy is above me. Suppose +the Allies conducted their warfare under those principles, what would +become of us? Germany hit first and France and Belgium knew how it hurt, +and so they should not have hit back. There is a big hole in your +reasoning, honey." + +"But that is not the same. Germany and France didn't love one another, +while you and Andy----" + +"Well, it is all over now!" and Nance composed herself and tried to go +on with her knitting. Molly thought in her heart perhaps it was not so +"over" as Nance thought. + +"Why did you and Andy quarrel?" + +"I had promised when Father no longer needed me that I +would--would--marry him. How could I tell that Mother would want to +come live with me when poor Father was gone? Andy came as soon as he +learned of Father's death and seemed to think I could pick right up +and marry him, and when I objected to such unseemly haste he said I +had been flirting with him. The idea of such a thing! He got it into +his head that Dr. Flint, the physician who had been with us through +poor Father's long illness, was the cause of my holding back." + +"A young doctor?" + +"Ye-es!" + +"Was he--was he--attentive?" + +"Perhaps--well, yes--he did propose to me but I had no idea of +accepting him. Andy should have known me well enough to realize that I +couldn't be so low as to jilt him. When Andy came, Mother had just told +me that she never expected to leave me again. I never did have a chance +to tell this to him, he was so angry and so jealous. He wanted me to +marry him immediately and leave Vermont,--and how could I when Mother +was home, sick and miserable and reproaching herself for having been +away from Father so much?" + +"Did your mother not know of your engagement to Andy?" + +"No-o! You see, poor Mother was not--was not the kind of mother one +confided in much. Afterwards, when I nursed her through all those +months, she was so softened if I had had anything to confide I should +have done so, but then there was nothing left to confide." + +"Poor old Nance!" said Molly lovingly. + +"Well, I'm not sorry for myself a bit. No doubt I might have gone +whining to Andy and made him take back all the things he said, but I am +no whiner. It was a good thing we found out in time we could say such +things to each other!" + +"Maybe it was a good thing to find out in time how it hurt to say such +things and have such things said to one, and then it would never happen +again," said the hopeful Molly. + +Nance divined that Molly was thinking how best she could bring these two +estranged lovers together, and determined to frustrate any matchmaking +plans the young matron might be hatching. + +"Promise me, Molly, you will not say a thing to Andy or to anyone. It is +something that is hopelessly mixed up and my pride would never recover +if Andy should know that I cared." + +"You do care then?" + +"Of course I care! I never had very many friends and if I cared for Andy +enough to engage myself to him, I could not get over it ever, I am +afraid. But you have not promised yet." + +"I promise," said Molly sadly. "But if you love Andy, it does seem so +foolish----" + +"But remember you have promised!" + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE WOULD-BE'S + + +What a chattering there was as the crowd of girls gathered for the +weekly meeting of their literary club! Professor Green beat a hasty +retreat from the library. He declared that listening to schoolgirl +fiction was no treat to him. Besides there was so much to be read +concerning the war in that month of March, 1917, and little time in +which to read it. War was an obsession with Edwin Green. Waking and +sleeping it was ever with him. He regretted his being unable to enlist +as a private in the French army, so strong were his sympathies with +that struggling nation. Certain that his country would finally drop its +neutrality and come out strongly for democracy and the Allies, he could +hardly wait for the final declaration of war. He had his den, safe from +the encroachments of the "Would-be Authors' Club," and there he +ensconced himself with enough newspapers and magazines to furnish +reading matter for the whole of Wellington. + +The rules of the club were as follows: Two pieces of original fiction +must be read at each meeting. A chairman for the evening must be +appointed by the two performers. All manuscript must be written legibly +if not typewritten, so that the club need not have to wait while the +author tried to read her own writing. Criticism must be given and taken +in good humor and good faith. + +Molly, in forming this club, had endeavored to have in it only those +students who were really interested in short story writing and ambitious +to perfect themselves, but in spite of her ideals there were some +members who were in it for the fun they got out of it or for a certain +prestige they fancied they would gain from these weekly meetings at the +home of the popular wife of a popular professor. These slackers were +constantly bringing excuses for plots when their time came to read, or +trying to work off on the club old essays and theses on various subjects +not in the least related to fiction. + +"You are to read this evening, I believe, Mary," said Molly to Mary Neil +as the library filled. "You missed last time and so got put on this +week." + +"Yes--I--that is--you see, I sat up all night trying to finish a story +but couldn't get it to suit me." + +"Did you bring it?" + +"Oh no, it was too much in the rough." + +"That's too bad, Mary!" cried Lilian Swift. "There are plenty of us who +had things to read and you cut us out of the chance." + +"Surely some of you must have brought things," said Molly, trying not to +smile, knowing full well that in almost every pocket of the really and +truly "Would-be's" some gem of purest ray serene in the shape of a +manuscript was only waiting to be dived for. The self-conscious +expression on at least a dozen faces put her mind at rest in regard to +the program of the evening. + +"It seems I have the appointing of a chairman for the meeting in my +power, since the other reader has fallen out of the running," said +Molly, looking as severely as she could look at the sullen, handsome +Mary Neil, "so I appoint Billie McKym." + +Billie, a most ardent scribbler, had been drawn into the procession of +short-story fiends by her dear friend Thelma Larson, who was destined to +become famous as a writer of fiction. Billie had no great talent but she +possessed a fresh breezy line of dialogue that covered a multitude of +sins in the way of plot formation, motivation, crisis, climax and what +not. + +"Remember, Billie, the chair is not the floor," teased one of the +members. + +Billie was a great talker and although she was no pronounced success as +a writer of fiction, she was a good critic of the performance of others. + +"Just for that I'll ask you, Miss Smarty, to serve as vice, and when I +have something important to say I'll put you in the chair for keeps." + +"Oh, let Mrs. Green begin and stop squabbling," demanded a girl who had +a plot she was dying to divulge and devoutly hoped she would be called +on when their hostess got through. + +"Then begin!" and Billie rapped for order. + +Molly took her seat by the reading-lamp and opened her manuscript. +Having to read before the club was just as exciting to Molly as to the +veriest freshman. Her cheeks flushed and her hand trembled a wee bit. + +"Silly of me to get stage fright but I can't help it," she laughed. + +"How do you reckon we feel then?" drawled a little girl from Alabama, +who only the week before had been torn limb from limb by the relentless +"Would-be's." + +"This is a story that I have sent on many a journey and it always comes +back to its doting mother. I have received several personal letters +about it----" + +"Oh, wonderful!" came from several members. + +"Only think, the most encouraging thing that has happened to me yet was +once a Western magazine kept my manuscript almost three weeks," sighed +a willowy maiden. + +"Now please criticize it just as severely as you can. I want to sell it, +and something must be done to it before the editors will take it," +begged Molly, getting over her ridiculous stage fright. + +"Fire away!" said parliamentary Billie. + +"How long is it?" asked Lilian Swift. + +"About five thousand words, I think!" + +"Whew!" blew the girl who hoped to get her plot in edgewise. + +There was a general laugh and then Molly cleared her throat for action. +"First, let me tell you I saw a clipping in the _New York Times_ asking +for Fairy Godmothers for the soldiers. That was what put the idea in my +head. The title is: 'Fairy Godmothers Wanted.'" + +You could have heard a pin drop while Molly read, and occasionally one +did hear the scratching of a pencil wielded by a member who was on a +critical war-path. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +FAIRY GODMOTHERS WANTED + + +The ballroom was crowded but very quiet. The belle of the ball was the +night nurse, deftly accomplishing the many duties that fall to the share +of a night nurse. A letter must be written for a poor Gascon who had +lost his right arm; a Bedouin chief must be watered every five minutes; +a little red-headed Irishman begging for morphine to ease his pain, and +a sad Cockney lad sobbing because he was "'omesick for 'Ammersmith," +must be comforted. + +The beautiful old chateau had been converted into a hospital early in +the war and the _salle de bal_ was given over to the convalescents. The +convalescent male is a very difficult proposition, and the little nurse +sometimes felt her burden was greater than she could bear. There was so +much to do for these sick soldiers besides nurse them. One thing, she +must good-naturedly submit to being made love to in many different +languages. She could stand all but the Bedouin chief. + +"He seems so like our darkeys at home," she had whispered to the one +American who was getting well rather faster than he liked to admit. + +This American wanted to get well and be back in the trenches, but who +was to make love to the pretty night nurse in good old American when he +left the convalescent ward? + +"You promised to do something for me to-night. Don't forget! You must be +almost through with all of these fellows." + +"Ready in a minute!" She flitted down between the rows of cots, tucking +in the covers here, plumping up a pillow there. The Bedouin was watered +for the last time that night and finally closed his rolling black eyes. + +"Now, what is it?" she asked, sinking down on a stool by the American's +bed, which was placed in an alcove at one end of the great salon. "If it +is writing a letter, thank goodness, it won't have to be in the second +person singular in French. Why do you suppose they teach us such formal +French at school? I can't _tutoyer_ for the life of me." + +"Same here! _Je t'aime_'s all I know. But I don't want you to write a +letter for me. I want you to read some. But first I must know your +really truly name. I--I--like you too much just to have to call you +nurse." + +"Mary Grubb!" + +"No! Not really?" + +"Yes! I'd like to know what is the matter with my name. It is a +perfectly good name, I reckon." + +"Yes, Mary is beautiful--but--the other! Never mind, you can change it." + +"I have no desire to do so, at least not for many a day. I think Grubb +is especially nice. It suggests Sally Lunn and batter bread." + +"There now, I would know you are from the South even if your dear little +'reckons' didn't come popping out every now and then. Do you know, I +have a friend who lives in Kentucky, and when the war is over I have +been planning to go see her, but now--but now--I am afraid she won't +want to see me." + +"You mean the scars?" and she looked pityingly at the young man and put +her firm little hand on his head. "Why, they will not amount to much. +They will just make you look interesting. Your eyes will be well, I just +know they will. Look at this long scar that has given the most trouble! +It has turned to a pleasing pink and will be almost gone in a few +months. You see you are so healthy." + +"It isn't altogether the scars. If you think they are pretty, maybe she +will, too. There is something else. I want to read over all this packet +of letters before I decide something. You had better begin or that big, +black, bounding beggar over there will begin to whine for water again. +After you read the letters, maybe I will tell you the other reason why +my friend in Kentucky might not want to see me." + +He took from under his pillow a packet of little blue letters, tightly +tied with a piece of twine. + +"Here they are! These letters have meant a lot to me while I was in the +trenches. They still mean a lot to me. They were written by my Fairy +Godmother." + +"Oh! Are they love letters?" + +"No, indeed! I wouldn't ask a woman to read another woman's love +letters. I wouldn't let anyone but you read these letters, but my eyes +are too punk to read them myself and I have to--to hear them to decide +something, something very important." + +"All right! A nurse is a kind of father confessor and what one hears +professionally is sacred." + +"But, my dear, I am not thinking of you as a nurse." + +"But I am thinking of you as a patient." + +She slipped the top letter from the packet and turned it over. "So your +name is Stephen Scott!" + +"Didn't you know my name, either? How funny!" + +"I only know the names of the patients who have charts, and you are too +well to waste a chart on. We nurses call you the convalescent American. +Sure these are not love letters?" + +"Of course!" impatiently. "But if you don't want to read them to me, +just say so. Maybe you are tired. Of course you are. You look pale and +your little hand is trembling." + +"No, no! I am not tired! Let me begin." + +The _salle de bal_ of the old chateau was very quiet. The wounded +soldiers were dropping off to sleep one by one. Even the Bedouin chief +had stopped rolling his eyes and was softly snoring. In a low clear +voice she read the letters. + + MY DEAR GODSON: + + It is so wonderful to be a Godmother that I can hardly contain + myself for joy. It is through an advertisement I saw in a New York + paper, headed Fairy Godmothers Wanted, that I happen to have you and + you happen to have me. I consider our introduction quite regular as + it came through the wife of a great general. + + I wonder how you like belonging to me? I wonder if you are as alone + in the world and homeless as I am. I wonder if you are big or + little, dark or fair, old or young. I wonder all kinds of things + about you,--after all, it makes no difference, any of these things. + You are my Godson and every day I am going to pray for you and + think about you. I am going to send you presents and write you long + letters and send you newspapers. The only trouble about it is by the + time I get hold of English papers they will be weeks and weeks old. + I wonder if American magazines and papers would appeal to you. I + wonder what kind of presents you would like,--not beaded + antimacassars and not mouchoir cases surely. I will knit you a + sweater maybe, but I am not very fond of knitting. + + This business of being a Fairy Godmother is a very serious one, more + serious than being a real mother, I believe. A real mother can at + least do something towards forming the character of her child, but a + Fairy Godmother has her child presented to her and takes it as the + husband used to take his bride in the old English prayer book: "With + all her debts and scandals upon her." The worst of it is that she is + ignorant what those debts and scandals are. I don't even know what + kind of smoke to send you. Are you middle-aged and sedate and do you + smoke a corn-cob pipe? Are you young and giddy and do you live on + cigarettes? A terrible possibility has entered into my mind! Are you + one of those awful persons that uses what our darkeys call "eatin' + tobacco"? If so, I shall begin to train you immediately. + + Perhaps you want to know something about me. There is not much to + know. I am an orphan of independent means and character. Being the + first, enables me to be the second, which sounds like a riddle but + isn't. You see I have rafts and oodlums of kin, and if I did not + have an income of my own they would step in and coerce me even more + than they do. I said in the beginning that I was homeless. I am not + really that, but the trouble is I have too many homes. I must spend + the winter with Aunt Sally and the spring with Cousin Kate. Cousin + Maria and Uncle Bruce want me to take White Sulphur by storm with + them as chaperones; and so it is from one year's end to the other, + kind relations planning for me. I am bored to death with it all and + am even now preparing a bomb to throw in this camp of overzealous + kin. But I'll tell you about that later,--that is, if you want to + hear about it. I may be boring you stiff. If I am, it is an easy + matter for you to repudiate me and tell Mrs. Johnson to get you a + more agreeable Godmother. + + My numerous family does not at all approve of my being a Godmother. + They think I am too young for the responsibility and have entered + upon it too lightly. I even heard Aunt Sally whisper to Cousin + Maria: "Just like her mother!" That means in their minds that I am + headstrong and difficult. You see my mother was also of independent + means and character. Also (I whisper this) she was not a Southerner. + That is as serious in a Southerner's eyes as not being British is in + yours. They think it is very forward of me to be writing to a man + what has not been properly introduced. Uncle Bruce suggests that you + may not even be born. I tell him soldiers don't have to be born and + that the bravest soldiers that were ever known sprang up from + dragon's teeth. + + I am sending you as my first present all kinds of tobacco, even + plug. I must not let my prejudices get away with me. If my dear + Godson likes "eatin' tobacco," he shall have it. If you don't + indulge in it, give it to some soldier less dainty. For my part, I + should think the trenches would be dirty enough without adding to + them. + + I want to tell you that I like your name. I think Stephen Scott + sounds very manly and upstanding, somehow. I am hoping for a letter + from you just to give me an inkling of your tastes. Of course I know + one of the duties of a Fairy Godmother is not to worry her charge, + and I don't want to worry you but to help you. I think of you in + those damp, nasty ditches eating all kinds of food, served in all + kinds of ways. (I am sure what should be hot is cold, and what + should be cold is hot.) And when I sit down to batter-bread and + fried chicken I can hardly force it down, I do so want you to have + it instead of me. + + Your affectionate Godmother, + POLLY NELSON. + +The night nurse quietly folded up the first letter and slipped it back +in its blue envelope. She had a whimsical, amused expression on her +face. + +"What are you smiling over? Don't you think that is a nice letter?" + +"I didn't say it wasn't." + +"But you didn't say it was. I think that is a sweet letter. I tell you +it meant a lot to me. Of course, I am not the homeless Tommy she thought +I was. I fancy I have as many Aunt Sallies and Cousin Marias as she has, +but they happen to be in New England." + +"You are not an orphan, then!" + +"Oh, yes! I'm an orphan all right enough, but I am related to half of +Massachusetts and all of Boston." + +"Did you tell your Fairy Godmother that?" + +"No,--that's what makes me feel so bad. I was afraid she would stop +being my Godmother if she found out I was--well, not exactly poor, so +I--I didn't exactly lie----" + +"You didn't exactly tell the truth, either," and the night nurse curled +her pretty lip and looked disgusted. + +"Oh, please don't be angry with me, too. I know she will be. I have +simply got to tell her the truth about myself. I did let her know I am +an American. I am going to write her a letter just as soon as I can see +to do it. But go on with the next, please. You are sure it is not tiring +you too much?" + +"Sure," and the night nurse slipped out another. + + MY DEAR GODSON: + + It was very nice of you to answer my letter so promptly. I am so + glad you are an American and do not chew tobacco. You must not feel + compelled to answer all my letters because you must be very busy and + I have very little to do, so little that I am becoming very + restless. I have thrown the bomb in the camp of the enemy, my kin. + They are shattered into smithereens. I am going to enter a hospital, + take training, and just as soon as I am capable go to France with + the Red Cross nurses. I should like to go immediately but I want to + be a help not a hindrance, and they say all the untrained persons + who butt in on the war zone are a nuisance. Six months of training + should make me fit, don't you think? But how should you know? + + I am very happy at the thought of being of some use. I owe it all to + you, my dear Godson. If I had not been presented with you I should + never have thought of such a thing. Just as soon as I realized that + over in the trenches was a human being who wanted to hear from me + and whom I could help, I began to take a new interest in the war + and all the soldiers, and then I began to feel that maybe I, + insignificant little I, might be of some use to those poor soldiers, + some use besides just knitting foolish caps and mittens and sending + the _Saturday Evening Post_ and cigarettes. I only wish I could go + immediately. My training begins to-morrow. Aunt Sally and Cousin + Maria feel that it is a terrible blot on the family name. They are + sure someone will say that I am doing this because I am not a + success in society, although they say over and over that I am. I + don't know whether I am or not, all I know is that society is not a + success with me. Uncle Bruce is rather nice about it all. + + There are so many I's in this letter I am mortified. I believe + writing to a Godson in the trenches is almost like keeping a diary. + I am sending you some cards and poker chips (but you mustn't play + for money). I'd hate to think that my presents exerted a poor moral + influence on my dear Godson. Would you mind just dropping a hint as + to what kind of presents would be most acceptable? I have never been + in the habit of giving presents to men and the kinds of presents + some of my friends give would not be very appropriate, it seems to + me. Silver match boxes and cigarette holders would not be very + useful, nor would silk socks with initials embroidered on them be + much better. Do you like chocolate drops and poetry? + + Your affectionate Fairy Godmother, + POLLY NELSON. + +The night nurse laughed outright at the close of the letter and Stephen +Scott reached out for the packet from which she was extracting a third +blue envelope. + +"If you are going to make fun of them, you can stop." + +"I wasn't making fun. I was just thinking what funny presents girls do +give men." + +"Well, so they do, but my little Godmother gave me bully +presents,--cigarettes to burn, home-made molasses candy and beaten +biscuit. She had lots of imagination in the presents she sent and the +blessed child never did burden me with a work-box but sent me a gross +of safety-pins that beat all the sewing kits on earth. I don't believe +you like my Godmother much." + +"Don't you? Well, I do." + +"You should like her because somehow you remind me of her." + +"Oh! Have you seen her?" + +"Only in my mind's eye. I begged her for a picture of herself but she +has never sent it. She has promised it, though. You see I got to +answering her letters in the same spirit in which she wrote to me, only +I was not quite so frank, I am afraid. She told me everything about +herself while I told her only my thoughts. I never did tell her I was +not a homeless soldier of fortune. She thinks I am absolutely friendless +and dependent on my pay as a private for my living. Sometimes I wish I +didn't have a sou--at least I have felt that way--but now----" + +"But now what?" + +"But now I don't think it is so bad to have a little tin," and he held +one of the little stained hands in his for a moment. + +She gently withdrew it and opened a third letter. This was full of +hospital experiences and so were all that followed. The tone of them +became more intimate and friendly. The desire to serve was ever +uppermost--just to get in the War Zone and help. + +"I got awfully stuck on her, somehow," confessed the man. "She was so +sweet and so girlish--I did not say so for fear of scaring her off, but +I used to write her pretty warm ones, I am afraid." + +"Why afraid?" + +"Don't you know?" + +"How should I know?" + +"Why, honey, you must see that I am head over heels in love with you. I +oughtn't to be telling it to you when I have written my little Godmother +that as soon as the war is over I am going to find her and tell her the +same thing. But, somehow, I was loving her only on paper and in my mind; +but you--you--I love you with every bit of my heart, soul and body." He +caught her hand and all of the poor little slim blue letters slipped +from the twine and scattered over the floor. + +"Oh, the poor little letters!" she cried. "Is that all they mean to +you?" + +"Oh, honey, they meant a lot to me and still do, but they are just +letters and you are--you." + +"But how about the letters you wrote Miss Polly Nelson? Are they just +letters to her and nothing more? Don't you think it is possible that +she may have treasured your letters, especially the pretty warm ones, +and be looking forward to the end of the war with the same eagerness +that you have felt up to--say----" + +"The minute I laid eyes on you. At first I used to dream maybe you were +she, but I began to feel that she must be much--younger--somehow, than +you. You are so capable, so mature in a way. She is little more than a +child and you are a grown woman." + +"I am twenty-one--but the war ages one." + +"I don't mean you look old--I just mean you seem so sensible." + +"And Miss Nelson didn't?" + +"I don't mean that, I just mean she seemed immature. But suppose you +read the last letter. And couldn't you do it with one hand and let me +hold the other?" + +"Certainly not!" and the night nurse stooped and gathered the scattered +letters. Leaning over may have accounted for the rosy hue that +overspread her countenance. + +"You certainly read her writing mighty easily. I had a hard time at +first. I think she writes a rotten fist, although there is plenty of +character in it, dear little Godmother!" + +"Humph! Do you think so? I wouldn't tell her that if I were you--I mean +that you think her fist is rotten." + +"Of course not, but begin, please, and say--couldn't you manage with one +hand?" + +But the night nurse was adamant and drew herself up very primly and +began to read: + + MY DEAR GODSON: + + I am afraid gratitude has got the better of you. You must not feel + that because a girl in America has written you a pile of foolish + letters and sent you a few little paltry presents, you must send her + such very loverlike letters in return. I am disappointed in you, + Godson. I had an idea that you were steadier. Just suppose I were a + designing female who was going to hold you up and drag you through + the wounded-affections court? There is quite enough in your last two + letters to justify such a proceeding. It may be only your poverty + that will restrain me. In the first place, you don't know me from + Adam or rather Eve. I may be a Fairy Godmother with a crooked back + and a black cat, who prefers a broom-stick to a limousine; I may + have a hare-lip and a mean disposition; I may write vers libre and + believe in dress reform. In fact I am a pig in a poke and you are a + very foolish person to think you want to carry me off without ever + looking at me. I won't say that I don't want to see you and know + you, because I do. I have been very honest with you in my letters + because, as I told you once, it has seemed almost like keeping a + diary to write to you, and I think a person who is not honest in a + diary is as bad as the person who cheats at solitaire. When the war + is over if you want to look me up you will find me in Louisville, + Kentucky. When you do find me, I want you to be nothing but my + Godson. You may not like me a bit and I may find you + unbearable,--somehow, I don't believe I shall, though. I do hope you + will like me, too. One thing I promise--that is, not to fall in love + with anyone else until I have looked you over. And you--I fancy you + see no females to fall in love with. + + I never let myself think about your getting killed. As Fairy + Godmother I cast a spell about you to protect you. There are times + when I almost wish you could be safely wounded. Those are the times + when I doubt the efficacy of my prayers and the powers of my fairy + gifts. + + And now for the news: I am going to the front! I have worked it by + strategy. A girl I know has had all her papers made out ready to + join the Red Cross nurses, and now at the last minute her young man + has stepped in and persuaded her to marry him instead. I have + cajoled the papers from her and am leaving in a few hours. Aunt + Sally and Cousin Kate, Uncle Bruce and Cousin Maria are half + demented. They don't know how I worked it or I am sure they would + have the law on me for perjury. I am free, white, and twenty-one + now, and they could control me in no other way. Good-by, Godson! I + wonder if we will meet somewhere in France. I will write you when I + can, but I am afraid I shall not be able to send any more presents + for a while. + + Your affectionate Godmother. + +"Now don't you hate and despise me for telling you what I did just now? +You see she says she will at least not fall in love with anyone else +until she looks me over, and think what I have done! What must I do? I +am going to try not to tell you I love you any more until that other +girl knows what a blackguard I am, but you must understand all the time +that I do." + +"I understand nothing, Mr. Stephen Scott. I am simply the night nurse in +the convalescent ward and you have asked me to read some letters to you, +and I have read them; and now it is my duty to forget what is in them, +and I am going to do it,--I have done it. All I can say is that you +might give Miss Polly Nelson the chance to find someone else she likes +better than she does you before you are so quick to take for granted she +will stick to her bargain, too. If there is any jilting going on, we +Southern girls rather prefer to be the jilters than the jiltees." + +"Don't say jilting! It isn't fair. Please be good to me! I am so +miserable." + +The night nurse smiled in spite of herself and felt his pulse. + +"There now! Just as I thought! You have worked yourself up into an +abnormal pulse and I shall have to start a chart on you." + +"Abnormal nothing! How is a fellow's pulse to remain normal when you put +your dear little fingers on his wrist? But I forgot! I am not going to +make love to you until I can let my Godmother know. Maybe she has met +some grand English Tommy by this time----" And then he groaned aloud and +cried: "But I don't want her to do that, either!" + +"Blessed if I'm not in love with two girls," he thought. + +The night nurse sat quietly down to her charts after having gone the +rounds of her ward. All was quiet. The convalescent soldiers were +sleeping peacefully, dreaming of home, she hoped. Scott stirred +restlessly now and then. He could not sleep but watched the busy little +stained hand of the night nurse as it glided rapidly over the charts. +She had no light but that of a guttering candle, carefully shaded from +her patients' eyes, but Scott could see her well-poised head and fine +profile as she bent over her writing. How lovely she was! Would she ever +listen to him? How she stood up for her sex,--and still she did not +exactly repulse him. What a strange name for a girl like that to have! +Grubb! It was preposterous. Indeed, he felt it his duty to make her +change that name as soon as possible. Polly Nelson is a pretty +name--dear little Godmother! Would she despise him, too, like this other +girl? But did this other one despise him? + +The night nurse made her rounds again and then left the ward for a +moment. When she returned, she came to the American's bedside. + +"A letter has just come for you, Mr. Scott." + +"For me? Splendid! Will you read it to me?" + +"Yes, if you cannot possibly see to do it yourself." + +"I might, but I'd rather not." + +"It is in the same rotten fist of those I read you to-night." + +"My Fairy Godmother! I--I--believe I can see to read that myself." + +She handed him the letter. Her hand was trembling a little and so was +his. She brought the guttering candle and he opened his letter. + + + _Somewhere in France._ + + MY DEAR GODSON: + + I have always been so frank with you that I feel I must make a + confession. I promised you in my last letter, the one I wrote just + before I left home, that I would not fall in love with anyone until + after the war, when you were to present yourself in Louisville and + we were to view each other for the first time. Dear Godson---- I + have not kept my word. They say a man falls in love with his nurse + often because of the feeling he has for his mother. She makes it + seem as though he were a little child again. I reckon a nurse falls + in love with her patient because he seems so like a little boy. She + loves him first because of the maternal instinct. Be that as it may, + I am in love with one of my patients. I tell you this fearing you + may be wounded and you may fall in the hands of a cap and apron, and + from a feeling of noblesse oblige you may not grasp the happiness + within your reach. + + God bless you, my dear Godson! + + Always, + YOUR FAIRY GODMOTHER. + + P. S.--He is an American. + +A great tear rolled down the scarred cheek of the young soldier and +splashed on the signature. Then something happened that made him sit up +very straight in his cot and stretch out a shaking hand for the night +nurse. She was by his side in a moment. + +"Look! Look! The ink is not dry yet. See where that tear dropped! Dry +ink would not float off like that!" He turned the sheet over. It was a +chart. + +"But you--you--little Fairy Godmother! Who is he?" + +"There is only one American in my ward." + +"But you said your name was Grubb!" + +"That's my official name. Mary Grubb was the girl whose place I got with +the Red Cross. Do you know, you hurt my feelings terribly when you said +my fist was rotten?" + +And Stephen Scott, holding the little stained and roughened hand in his, +wondered that he ever could have made such a break. + +"Thank God, you are just one girl, after all!" he cried. + +But the night nurse wished that there were two of her for a while at +least: one to stay by the bedside of the convalescent American and one +to make out the charts that must be got ready for the morning rounds of +the surgeon in charge. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE CRITICS + + +"Ahem!" said Billie, rapping for order as the girls began all at once to +say what they thought of "Fairy Godmothers Wanted." The one with the +burning plot began rattling her paper in preparation of the turn she +hoped for. + +"First general impressions are in order! One at a time, please! You, +Miss Oldham, you tell us how it strikes you." + +"Pleasing on the whole, but----" + +"We'll come to the 'buts' later," was the stern mandate of the chairman +of the day. + +"You, Lilian Swift, you next!" + +"Too long!" from the blunt Lilian. + +"The idea! I think it was just sweet," from the gentle Alabamian. + +"I got kind of mixed in the middle and couldn't tell which was the nurse +and which Polly Nelson," declared one who had evidently gone off into a +cataleptic fit, no doubt dreaming of a story she meant to write some +day. + +"I never, never could love a man who had deceived me," sighed the +sentimental one with big eyes and a little mouth. + +"Personal predilections not valuable as criticism," said Billie sternly. + +Many and various were the opinions expressed. Molly diligently and +meekly took notes, agreeing heartily with the ones who thought it was +too long. + +"Where must I cut it?" she asked eagerly. + +"Cut out all the letters!" suggested Lilian. + +"How could she? It is all letters," asked Billie, whose chair was +becoming a burden as she felt she must get into the discussion. + +"Cut 'em, anyhow. Letters in fiction are no good." + +"Humph! How about the early English novelists?" asked Molly. + +"Dead! Dead! All of them dead!" stormed Lilian. + +"Then how about Mary Roberts Rinehart and Booth Tarkington and lots of +others? Daddy Longlegs is all letters." + +"All the samey, it is a poor stunt," insisted the intrepid Lilian. "I +call it a lazy way to get your idea over." + +"Perhaps you are right, but the point is: did I get my idea over?" + +"We-ll, yes,--but they tell me editors don't like letter form of +fiction." + +"Certainly none of them have liked this," sighed Molly, who had devoutly +hoped her little story would sell. The money she made herself was very +delightful to receive and more delightful to spend. A professor's salary +can as a rule stand a good deal of supplementing. + +"How about the plot, now?" asked Billie, having finished with the +general impression. + +"Slight!" + +"Strong!" + +"Weak!" + +"Impossible!" + +"Plausible!" + +"Original!" + +"Bromidic!" + +"Involved!" were the verdicts. The matter was thoroughly threshed out, +Billie with difficulty keeping order. Nance was called on for the "but" +that she had been left holding. + +"The plot is slight but certainly original in its way. The letters are +too long, longer than a Godmother would be apt to write, I think. The +story could be cut to three thousand words, I believe, to its +advantage." + +"I have already cut out about fifteen hundred words," wailed Molly. "The +first writing was lots longer." + +"Gee!" breathed the one eager for a hearing. + +"Now for the characterization! Don't all speak at once, but one at a +time tell what you think of it." + +"Did you mean to make Polly so silly?" asked Lilian. + +"I--I--perhaps!" faltered Molly. + +"Of course if you meant to, why then your characterization is perfect." + +"Silly! Why, she is dear," declared the girl from Alabama. "I don't like +her having to nurse that black man, though." + +"Too many points of view!" suddenly blurted out a member who had +hitherto kept perfectly silent, but she had been eagerly scanning a +paper whereon was written the requisites for a short story. + +"But you see----" meekly began Molly. + +"The point of view must either be that of the author solely or one of +the characters," asserted the knowing one. "Why, you even let us know +how the Bedouin feels." + +"Oh!" gasped the poor author. "I think you would limit the story teller +too much if you eliminated such things as that." + +"Here's what the correspondence course says----" + +"Spare us!" cried the club in a chorus. + +"I hate all these cut and dried rules!" cried Billie. "It would take all +the spice out of literature if we stuck to them." + +"That's just it," answered Lilian. "We are not making literature but +trying to sell our stuff. Persons who have arrived can write any old +way. They can start off with the climax and end up with an introduction +and their things go, but I'll bet you my hat that you will not find a +single story by a new writer that does not have to toe the mark drawn by +the teachers of short story writing." + +"Which hat?" teased Billie. "The one you put on for Great-aunt Gertrude? +If it is that one, I won't bet. I wouldn't read a short story by a new +writer for it." + +"To return to my story," pleaded Molly, "do you think if I rewrite it, +leave out the letters, strengthen the plot a bit and make Polly a little +wiser that I might sell it?" + +"Sure!" encouraged Lilian. + +"Yes, indeed!" echoed Nance. + +"And the black man--please cut him out! I can't bear to think of him," +from the girl from Alabama. + +"Dialogue,--how about it?" asked the chairman. + +"Pretty good, but a little stilted," was the verdict of several critics. + +"I think you are all of you simply horrid!" exclaimed Mary Neil, who had +been silent and sullen through the whole evening. "I think it is the +best story that has been read all year and I believe you are just +jealous to tear it to pieces this way." + +"Stuff and nonsense!" said Lilian. + +"We do hope we haven't hurt your feelings, Mrs. Green," cried the girl +who was taking the correspondence course. + +"Hurt my feelings! The very idea! I read my story to get help from you +and not praise. I am going to think over what you have said and do my +best to correct the faults, if I come to the conclusion you are right." + +"You would have a hard time doing what everybody says," laughed Nance, +"as no two have agreed." + +"Well, I can pick and choose among so many opinions," said Molly, +putting her manuscript back in its big envelope. "I might do as my +mother did when she got the opinion of two physicians on the diet she +was to have: she simply took from each man the advice that best suited +her taste and between the two managed to be very well fed, and, strange +to say, got well of her malady under the composite treatment." + +"Ahem!" said the girl with the burning plot, rattling her manuscript +audibly so that the hardhearted Billie must perforce recognize her and +give her the floor. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +"I HAD A LITTLE HUSBAND NO BIGGER THAN MY THUMB" + + +"Aunt Nance, what's the use you ain't got no husband an' baby children?" +Mildred always said use instead of reason. + +"Lots of reasons!" answered Nance, smiling at her little companion. +Mildred had moved herself and all her belongings into the guest-chamber. +Her mother had at first objected, but when she found it made Nance happy +to have the child with her, she gave her consent. + +"Ain't no husbands come along wantin' you?" + +"That is one of the reasons." + +"I'm going to make Dodo marry you when he gets some teeth." + +"Thank you, darling! Dodo would make a dear little husband." + +"Dodo wouldn't never say nothin' mean to you. He's got more disposition +than any baby in the family." + +"I am sure he wouldn't," said Nance, trying to count the stitches as she +neatly turned the heel of the grey sock she was knitting. Nance was +always knitting in those days. + +"'Cose if I kin get you a husband a little teensy weensy bit taller than +Dodo, I'll let you know." + +"Fine! But Dodo will grow." + +"Maybe you'll make out to shrink up some. Katy kin shrink you. My muvver +said Katy kin shrink up anything. She done shrinked up Dodo's little +shirts jes' big enough for my dolly. I's jes' crazy 'bout Katy. I'm +gonter ask her kin she shrink you up no bigger'n Dodo an' then won't you +be cunning? You can look jes' like you look now only teensy weensy +little. Your little feet'll be so long, not great big ones like mine, +an' your little hands will be 'bout as big as my little fingers +an'--an'--you kin knit little bits of baby socks an' I kin take you out +ridin' in my little doll-baby carriage, all tucked in nice." + +"But then I'll be too little to marry Dodo. You won't trust your doll to +Dodo, and if I'm so teensy maybe he might break me." + +"Well, then, I guess Katy'll have to stretch you some. She done +stretched the shirt mos' a mile." + +"What do you say to taking a little walk?" + +"I say: 'Glory be!' That's what Kizzie, our cook, says when she's +happy." + +"Shall we take Dodo out in his carriage?" + +"If I can put my dolly in, too!" + +Dodo was awake and pleased to be included in this outing, if gurglings +and splutterings were an indication of happiness. He and the doll were +tucked safely in. Katy, who had been longing for the time to come when +she could scrub the nursery, was delighted to be relieved of her charge +for the time being. + +"Where shall we walk?" asked Nance. + +"Down by the lake! My dolly ain't never seed the lake yet. They's a +little blue boat down there what my papa, the 'fessor, done say he +gonter set sail in some day. He say he gonter go way out in the middle +of the lake where th' ain't no little girls with curls to come tickle +his nose in the morning. My papa is kind and good, but he sho' do hate +to have his nose tickled with curls early in the morning." + +The lake! How many memories it brought back to Nance! The blue boat +might be the same one in which Judy Kean had her memorable midnight +jaunt, or was it a canoe? Nance smiled at the picture that arose in her +mind's eye. It was their Junior year and Judy had gone off in a fit of +jealousy and rage, and when she came to herself she was out in the +middle of the lake while Molly and Nance rowed frantically after her. +What a time they had covering their tracks to keep Judy from being found +out and perhaps even expelled! Nance laughed aloud. + +The sun was warm on that day in late March, almost like a southern sun. +Dodo, lazy baby, had slipped from his sitting posture and lay flat on +his back. He had the same characteristics as Mildred's doll baby: the +moment he lay down his eyes closed. + +"Oh, what a sleepy husband I have got!" cried Nance. "Let's camp out +here, darling. I brought my knitting and while my little husband +sleeps----" + +"And my doll baby, too!" + +"You can play in that nice clean sand. Don't go too close to the water." + +There was a stretch of beach at that side of the lake where a small pier +had been built for a boat-landing. The sand was fine and white, a most +delectable medium for houses or pies, whatever the young sculptor wished +to create. + +Nance seated herself on a nice warm rock while her little companion +busied herself collecting pebbles for the castle she contemplated +building. The sock grew under the girl's skillful fingers while her +thoughts were miles away from the poor soldier whose foot it was +destined to cover. Dodo snoozed peacefully and no doubt the doll did, +too. + +"Look! Look! Aunt Nance, I've done found some kitty flowers!" cried +Mildred, rushing to Nance with a switch of willow catkins she had found +growing near the water's edge. + + "'I had a little pussy + Her coat was silver grey. + She lived down in the meadow, + She never ran away. + + "'Her name was always Pussy, + She never was a cat. + 'Cause she was a Pussy-Willow. + Now what do you think of that?'" + +sang Nance. "Now let me teach you that nice verse so you can say it to +your father." + +Mildred obediently learned the poetry in so short a time that her +teacher marveled at her cleverness and good memory. + +"Now, darling, you mustn't go quite so close to the water again. Aunt +Nance will gather a big armful of the pussy-willows to take back to +Mother, but you might get your little tootsies wet if you go too close +to the edge. Then I'll have to put you in the carriage with my husband +and run home every step of the way." + +Mildred trotted off with assurances of caution. Nance settled herself to +her knitting and her thoughts. What a boon this universal knitting has +become to women who want to think and be busy at the same time! The +girl's thoughts were centered on herself. What was she to do with her +life? The desire to teach had left her with the years she had spent +nursing her father and mother. United States was on the verge of +war--any moment it might be declared. That would mean the women of the +land would be in demand just as they had been in Europe. There would be +work to do, but what was her share to be? + +This little breathing time with Molly was very sweet, but it could not +go on forever. The time would come when she must take up life again. Her +unruly thoughts would dwell on how different things would have been had +Andy McLean not shown himself so unreasonable. She might have gone to +the front with him. There was work in the hospitals in France for others +besides trained nurses, lots of work! Cooking, cleaning, sewing, peeling +potatoes, scrubbing floors--nothing was too menial for her. It would +have been sweet to work near Andy, shoulder to shoulder in spirit even +if he would happen to be the surgeon in charge and she a poor scrub +girl. She might have been taking care of some of the war orphans. +Minding little babies was her long suit, it seemed. A big tear gathered +and spilled on the toe of the sock that was being so neatly finished +off. + +A shrill scream broke on the still air. + +"I'm a-sinkin'! I'm a-sinkin'!" + +"Mildred!" cried Nance, jumping to her feet. + +"Never mind, nurse, I'll go after her," said a stern voice from behind +her. "You had better look after your other charge," in a tone which made +no attempt to veil its sarcasm. + +Dodo had awakened and was sitting up in the carriage reaching for the +willow catkins. His position was precarious, as one more inch might have +sent him headlong in the sand. + +Nance dropped her knitting and grabbed the venturesome baby while the +stern voice materialized into a tall grey figure with sandy hair who ran +towards the water's edge, skinning out of his coat and vest as he ran +and in some miraculous way also divesting himself of his shoes. His hat +he had already hurled at Nance's feet. + +Mildred had walked out on the little pier and decided that she would get +in the pretty blue boat that her father considered such a safe refuge +from tickling curls. It was bobbing about most invitingly in easy +stepping distance. + +"Won't Aunt Nance be 'stonished?" the child had said to herself. "She's +gonter holler out: 'M-i-i-l-dred! Where you Mi--ldred baby?' an' I +gonter lay low an' keep on a-sayin' nothin'." + +She put out her little foot and set it firmly on the bow of the boat +that was almost grazing the edge of the landing. + +"My legs is a-gettin' mos' long enough to step up to the moon an' +stars," she boasted. + +But how strangely boats behaved! This one did not stay still as she had +expected but ran away from her. Her legs had not grown nearly so long +as she had thought and they refused to grow another bit. The boat +got farther and farther away and the horrid little pier seemed to be +moving, too, and in the opposite direction. The time came when Mildred +must choose between land and water. She decided to stay on shore and +with a mighty effort jerked her little foot from the unsteady blue boat. +Three years going on four is not a period of great equilibrium. Fate +took matters out of Mildred's hands and kersplash! she went in the cold +waters of the lake. It was not very deep so close to the shore, but +neither was the little girl so very tall. By standing on her tiptoes she +might have managed to keep her inquisitive nose out of the water, but +the naughty blue boat came swinging back to her rescue and she clutched +first the painter and then the side of the boat, screaming lustily as +she clung. + +The grey figure with the sandy hair ran lightly along the pier and with +one swoop gathered the child up into his arms. He might have saved +himself the trouble of taking off his coat and shoes, but he had seen +the child as she fell in the water and did not know what would be +required of him as life saver. Mildred was sobbing dolefully as she +buried her wet curls in the neck of her rescuer. + +"Your nurse should have looked after you," he muttered. + +"She had her husband to 'tend to," said Mildred, "an' I was a-keepin' +keer of myself. 'Sides she ain't my nurse but my 'loved aunty." + +"Oh! And who may you be?" + +"I'm Mildred Carbuncle Green." The family name of Molly's mother, which +was Carmichael, was thus perverted by this scion of the race. + +"And your aunt's name?" asked the young man as he picked up his +discarded coat and wrapped it around his burden. + +"She's Aunt Nance----" + +"Nance Oldham!" and he almost dropped little Mildred. "And you say she +was busy with her husband?" + +"Yessir! He keeps her busy mos' of the time." + +The rescue and this conversation had taken but a moment. In the +meantime, poor Nance had shoved her little husband back in the carriage +and was rapidly wheeling him towards the scene of disaster. + +She had recognized Andy McLean in the tall grey figure and sandy hair. +The moment he had spoken to her so sternly she had known it was he. At +that moment she envied no creature in the world so much as an ostrich. +If she could only bury her head in the sand. Why should Fate be so cruel +to her? Why should Andy McLean come back on her horizon at that moment +when she was neglecting her duty? But then, she reflected, if he had not +come back at that psychological moment either Mildred would have drowned +or Dodo broken his neck. She could not have rescued both of them at +once. Indeed, both of them might have been killed! The fact that the +water was shallow and Mildred could have walked out of it was no comfort +to Nance, nor did it allay her suffering and self-reproaches in the +least to know that almost every baby that has grown to manhood has at +one time or another fallen out of his carriage or bed, down the steps or +even out of the window. + +Andy McLean, too, was going through some uncomfortable moments as he +held the dripping child close in his arms and made his way across the +beach to Nance. There had never been a moment since he and Nance had +parted that he had not regretted his hasty words; but what good were +regrets? Nance could not have cared for him or she would have felt that +at her father's death he was the person to whom she must turn instead of +that Dr. Flint. As far as he could see, there was no reason under Heaven +why Nance should not have married him immediately. He knew nothing +of her mother's determination to give up her public life nor of her +decision to remain at home for Nance to nurse. He had not yet learned of +Mrs. Oldham's death, as he had arrived at Wellington only the evening +before, and Mrs. McLean, with a wisdom sometimes granted mothers, had +not mentioned Nance's name to him, much less the fact that she was even +then visiting the Greens. + +"Married! and so engrossed with her husband that she let little children +entrusted to her care fall in the water and almost fall out of baby +carriages! But where is the--the--cad?" was what Andy was thinking as he +approached the frantic Nance, who was pushing the carriage as for dear +life through the heavy sand. + +"Mildred! Mildred! You promised not to go near the water's edge!" + +"I never went near it but jes' ran out on the little wooden street. I +wasn't goin' to be naughty. I knowed I might get my feet wet down by the +edge so I walked on the planks. I never done nothin' nor nothin'! 'Twas +the bad little blue boat what wobbled." + +Nance and Andy both laughed at the amusing child. The laugh made matters +easier for them. + +Brown eyes looked into blue and then such a blush o'erspread their +countenances that a day's fishing under a summer sun could not have +accomplished. + +"You had better put her in the carriage--it is warm there and I can +carry Dodo." + +"No, I will keep her wrapped in my coat. That will be better." + +"But you--you might be cold." + +"Not at all! I never catch cold," shortly. + +Nance remembered otherwise, but there was nothing to do but turn and +wheel the baby back to the house on the campus. + +"I--you must think--I know I was careless to let such an accident happen +to my charges. I have no excuse--I was just thinking!" + +"About your husband, I fancy!" + +Again Nance's cheeks were crimson, remembering only too well what her +thoughts had been as she sat in the sand knitting. + +"I----" + +"Mildred told me about him," said Andy grimly. + +"Did she?" laughed Nance, thinking that Andy was speaking of Dodo, of +course. "He is a darling husband." + +"Humph!" They walked on in silence, Andy taking great strides with +Mildred clasped closely in his arms, while Nance wheeled the baby +carriage, almost running to keep up. + +"I don't know what to call you," said Andy at last. + +"Call me? Why, call me Nance! Why not? My name is still Nance no matter +what has happened." + +"I--I--perhaps he wouldn't like it." + +"Who?" + +"Your husband! Is it Flint?" + +"Andy McLean, you are a fool! There is no other word for you!" and Nance +grabbed Dodo from his carriage and ran up the steps, thankful that they +had arrived at the Square Deal. + +"If not Flint, who?" muttered Andy under his breath. "I am going to stay +here until I find out." + +Molly was not at home to receive her wet daughter. Nance and Katy rubbed +her down and dressed her while Andy waited miserably in the library. Why +had his mother not warned him that Nance Oldham was in Wellington? They +had had a long talk and she had told him news of all their old friends. +Molly and Edwin had been mentioned again and again but the fact that +they had a guest had been kept dark. He had never talked to his mother +about his break with Nance. A certain reticence in his make-up withheld +him. Many times he had longed to put his head in her lap and tell her +all about it. + +A great intimacy existed between Mrs. McLean and this only child, but +instead of his being like a daughter to her, as is the case sometimes +with a woman and an only child when that child happens to be a son, this +worthy mother had adjusted herself more into the relationship of an +elder brother to Andy. There were few if any subjects they could not +discuss together, but somehow he could not bring himself to tell her of +Nance. She had known they were engaged--that was easy to tell, and she +knew the engagement was no more--that was all. Mrs. McLean bided her +time. + +"They are young yet," she had said to her husband. "Some +misunderstanding has come up, but if they are really meant for one +another it will be explained away. If they can't forgive, then they +are not suited for mating." + +The good woman had been delighted beyond measure that Nance should be in +Wellington while her son was on his farewell visit to her, and she had +devoutly prayed that they might meet by chance, just as they had. Of +course she had not stipulated in her prayers that Andy should mistake +Nance for the Greens' nurse and reprimand her for carelessness; and then +fish Mildred out of the water; and get Dodo and the hated Dr. Flint +hopelessly mixed, and be called a fool for his blunder! + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +NANCE PACKS HER TRUNK + + +Molly, coming in hurriedly from her labors at the French War Relief +rooms where she had been engaged in making surgical dressings until her +back ached so that she had more sympathy for the poor wounded than ever, +if possible, found young Dr. McLean cooling his heels and drying his +coat by her library fire. + +"Andy! I am so glad to see you!" she cried, grasping both of his hands. +"When did you come? Did you know Nance Oldham is with me?" + +"Yes, I have seen her," grimly. + +"Oh, then you know of her trouble?" + +"Trouble! I shouldn't call it that. She evidently does not consider it +in that light." + +"Andy McLean, how can you say such a thing?" + +"Well, I formed my opinions from the evidence of my own eyes. In fact, +she told me with her own lips that she was contented; if not in so many +words, at least she gave me that impression." + +"Resigned, of course! That is Nance's way, but she is very sad and +lonesome for all that." + +"Lonesome! Ye Gods, how many does she want?" + +"Excuse me, Andy, but you are talking like a goose," declared Molly, +irritated in spite of herself. + +"Thank you, madam," he said, bowing low. "Your guest has just called me +a fool and now you call me a goose. I bid you good-by." + +"Good-by, indeed! Andy McLean, sit down here and let me send for your +father. I believe my soul you are in a fever or something." Molly pushed +him down in a chair near the fire. "Why, Andy, your coat is damp! Where +have you been?" + +She drew a chair by him and seated herself, looking anxiously into his +flushed face. Andy laughed in a hard tone. + +"Perhaps you are right, but don't send for Father. I got my coat wet in +a perfectly sane way, but perhaps you had better find out about that +from Mrs. Fl--Nance--I mean." + +Andy balked at that name of Mrs. Flint and then, besides, Nance had +called him a fool when he had hinted at the doctor's being the happy +man. At this juncture little Mildred came running into the library. + +"Mumsy! Mumsy! Is you heard 'bout me an' the blue boat?" + +"No, darling! But what makes your curls so wet?" + +"That was that baddest blue boat. It wouldn't stay still 'til I got +in--it jes' moved and moved--an' the little wooden street, it moved an' +moved an' I went kerblim! kersplash!" + +"In the lake! Oh, Mildred! I know you didn't mind Aunt Nance. Are you +cold? Did Aunt Nance get wet? Where is Dodo?" + +"You 'fuses me with so many ain't's an' do's and didn't's." + +"You tell me all about it," said the doting mother, trying to compose +herself as she gathered the first-born in her arms. + +"Well, you see, me'n' Aunt Nance we went a-walkin' an' we tooked Dodo +along an' my dolly, an' Aunt Nance she says that one use she ain't got +no husband is 'cause don't no husband want her, an' I done tol' her that +if Katy kin shrink her up some that Dodo kin be her husband. You see, +Mumsy, I been a-feelin' sorry for Aunt Nance ever since that time I mos' +went to sleep in her lap an' she talked about a beau lover what got to +fightin' with her an' she hit him back. She wetted my ear all up with +her tears. I jes' done thunk somethin'!" the child exclaimed, getting +out of her mother's lap and peering curiously into Andy's face. "Is you +the Andy what talked so crule to my Aunt Nance? 'Cause if you is, I'm +sorry you done pulled me out'n the lake." + +"Mildred! Mildred!" admonished Molly, but in her heart of hearts she +knew that what the enfant terrible was saying to the young doctor was +no doubt of a very salutary nature. He needed a good talking to and he +was getting it. + +"I am the one," said Andy meekly. + +"Well, when Dodo grows up to be big enough he is goin' to--to--cut you +up in little pieces. He's growin' up fast an' bein' a husband is makin' +him cut his teeth early----" + +"Molly Brown!" interrupted Andy McLean eagerly. "Is Nance not married?" + +"Married! The idea, Andy! Of course not!" + +"Yes, she is! She's married to Dodo Green. I married 'em this morning," +declared Mildred defiantly. + +"Oh, oh! I see it all now!" laughed Molly hysterically. "You were +talking about her mythical marriage while I was speaking of her mother's +death." + +"Her mother dead? I had not heard a word of it. Strange that so +important a woman as Mrs. Oldham should have died without my seeing it +mentioned in the paper." + +"But Mrs. Oldham dropped out of public life two years ago, when her +husband died, in fact. Nance had hardly rested from the long siege of +nursing her father before she began on her mother." + +Andy bowed his sandy-haired head in his hands and groaned: + +"Fool! Fool! Every kind of fool and goose you and Nance choose to call +me,--fool and knave! Bad-tempered brute! Jealous idiot! Oh, Molly, +please call Nance." + +When Nance had hurled her "fool" at Andy's sandy head, she flew +up-stairs, determined never to speak to him again. She longed for a few +quiet moments in her own room, but Mildred must be rubbed down and +dressed before she could seek retirement. She was sure he would leave +the house immediately. His coat was wet and no doubt his vest and shirt, +too, after having carried the dripping child such a distance. Of course +he would not want to call on the Greens while she was in the house. The +girl bitterly regretted having timed her visit so unfortunately. The +Greens and McLeans were very intimate, and would perforce see each +other often. She hated to be a wet blanket--a skeleton at the feast. She +determined to pack her trunk and go on a promised visit to an old +college friend then living in New York. Molly would object, she knew, +but it was surely best for all of them that she should take herself off +for a few weeks. + +Nance was always an orderly person and packing a trunk with her was a +very simple matter. She began in her usual systematic way and had +already folded her dresses neatly in the trays and was emptying the +bureau drawers when Molly's voice was heard calling her from the lower +hall. + +"Nance! Oh, Nance!" + +She sounded quite excited. No doubt she had just been informed of +Mildred's accident and wanted to hear the details of it. + +"Coming!" called Nance, hurrying down the steps. "Oh, Molly, what do you +think of me for taking out the children and almost drowning Mildred? And +while that was going on, little Dodo came within an ace of tumbling out +of the carriage on his precious sleepy head! You will never trust them +with me again." + +"Nonsense! Mildred is old enough not to try to get in boats alone, and +as for Dodo, Aunt Mary always said: 'Whin chilluns grows up 'thout ever +gittin' a tumble, they is sho' to be idjits.'" + +"Well, then, my real duty was to let him tumble," laughed Nance. "What +do you want with me, honey? I am very busy." + +"Not too busy to come in and talk with me a little while," insisted the +wily Molly, putting her arm around her friend's waist and leading her to +the library door. + +"I do want to talk to you a moment," agreed Nance. "Molly, I am going +away for a few weeks." They had reached the door, which was ajar, and +Andy, ensconced in the sleepy-hollow chair dear to the professor's +bones, could plainly hear the conversation. + +"Going away! You are going to do no such thing." + +"I must. There is no use in asking me why--you know why---- It is too +hard for me and there is no use in pretending it is not." + +"But, Nance----" + +"I have begun to pack and I will go to-morrow." + +Instead of the hospitable protestations characteristic of Molly, that +young housewife said not a word, but giving her friend a little push +towards the fireplace, she grabbed up Mildred and rushed from the room, +closing the door after her. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +A DAMP COAT + + +Andy undoubled himself with alacrity and sprang from the sleepy-hollow +chair. His stern face was softened and filled with a boyish eagerness. + +"Oh, Nance! Can't you forgive me?" + +"Excuse me, Dr. McLean, I did not know you were still here," and Nance +turned to leave the room. + +Andy with long strides reached the door first and with his back against +it held out beseeching hands. + +"Yes, I'm here and am going to stay here----" + +"Well, I am not! Please let me pass." Nance was filled with a righteous +indignation against Molly at having played this trick on her. + +"But, my dear, I must tell you what a fool I have been----" + +"That is not necessary. I know." + +Andy laughed. Nance had a laconic way of putting things that always +tickled his humor. + +"Now you sound like yourself, honey, but oh, please act like yourself! +The real Nance Oldham could not be so cruel as to go off without letting +me explain--I have no excuse--there could be none for my blind rage and +jealousy--none unless loving you too hard could be called one. Will you +listen to me?" + +"I shall have to unless I stop up my ears, since you stop up the +doorway." Nance was very pale and trembling. Two years of suffering +could not be done away with in a moment and the girl had surely +suffered. + +"Couldn't we sit down and let me tell you?" + +"We could!" + +Andy eagerly directed Nance to the sofa, but she sedately seated herself +in a small isolated sewing rocker. Andy accepted the amendment and +placed his chair as near to hers as the frigid atmosphere around her +permitted. + +"Before I explain I must apologize. I would have done it the very day +after that awful row we had, the very moment after it, if I had not +thought you hated me." + +"And now?" + +"And now I am going to apologize and explain, whether you hate me or +not. I could do it lots better if you would let me hold your hand while +I am doing it," but Nance drew Molly's knitting from a bag hung on the +back of the chair and declared her hands were otherwise occupied. Molly +had reached the purling end of a sleeveless sweater and no doubt would +be glad of Nance's expert assistance. + +"Nance, there never has been any other woman in my life but you, you and +my mother. You know perfectly well from the time I met you, when I was +at Exmoor College and you were here at Wellington, that you were the +only girl in the world for me. I had a kind of notion in my fool brain +that I was going to be the only man in the world for you. When we were +engaged I thought I was, but when I realized that Dr. Flint was paying +you such devoted attention, at your home constantly----" + +"My father's physician!" + +"Yes, I know,--but, honey, you see you were way up there in Vermont and +I was down in New York and I was hungry for you all the time, and when +your father died I thought you would pick right up and come to me--I +knew nothing of your mother's determination to stay with you--nothing of +her illness--nothing but that you were staying in the same town with +Flint and I must go back to New York. You did not tell me." + +"Well, hardly, after the way you raged and tore! I felt if you could +rage that way we had better separate." + +"But, my dear, I'll never rage that way again--I've learned my lesson. +Can't you forgive me?" Nance was silent. + +"I love you just as much as I always did,--more, in fact. When little +Mildred Green told me you had let her fall in the water because you were +so busy with your husband, I wanted to die that minute. Of course I +thought it was Flint. How could I know the child was playing a game with +you? Nance, do you hate me as much as you did that terrible day two +years ago?" + +"Yes!" Nance's answer was very low but Andy heard it. + +"Well, then, there is no use in saying any more," he sprang to his feet, +his face grey with misery. + +"I didn't hate you then at all--nor do I now." + +"Oh, Nance, don't tease me! Can you forgive me?" and poor Andy sank on +his knees and bowed his head on her knees. + +Nance's arms were around him in a moment. She hugged his sandy head to +her bosom with one hand and patted his back with the other while he gave +a great sob. + +"Andy McLean, you are still wringing wet. Get up from here this minute +and take off that coat and let me dry it! And your shirt is damp, too! +My, what a boy! Here, sit right close to the fire and dry that wet +sleeve." + +Andy meekly submitted in a daze. Nance's motherly attitude and sudden +melting were too much for him. The coat was hung by the fire to dry +while the young doctor stood helplessly by in his shirt sleeves. + +"And now, Andy, I'm going to apologize to you and ask you to forgive +me," declared Nance, stoutly trying to go on with her knitting. + +But Andy firmly took it from her and possessed himself of those busy +hands. + +"I was worse than you--when you said those hard things to me they hurt +like fury--you didn't know how they did hurt, but I did, and I should +not have done the same thing to you. I said worse things to you than you +did to me,--at least I tried to." + +"You did pretty well," said Andy whimsically, pressing one of the +imprisoned hands to his lips. + +"Dr. Flint did want to marry me; I guess he still does, but--but----" + +"But what, lassie?" Sometimes Andy dropped into his parents' vernacular. + +"I am not going to tell a man in his shirt sleeves why I didn't marry +Dr. Flint," said Nance firmly. "It is too unpicturesque." + +"Then I'll put on my coat." + +"No, you won't! I wouldn't tell a man in a wet coat, either." + +"Why not?" + +"Because I don't like to lay my brown head on a damp shoulder. Why don't +you do as I told you and dry that shirt sleeve? Hold it close to the +fire, sir!" + +"I won't do it unless you tell me why you didn't marry Dr. Flint." + +"Well, then, to keep you from catching your death of cold, I will +tell you, but remember I have saved your life. It was--it was +because--because he didn't have sandy hair and a bad temper," and Nance +was enfolded in the despised shirt sleeves and found a very nice dry +spot on which to lay her brown head. + +The sun had set and twilight was upon them. The front door opened to +admit the master of the house, but Molly was in ambush ready to catch +him to keep him out of the library. Kizzie had started in to mend the +fire but Molly stopped her. + +"Never mind the fire, Kizzie. It is all right for such a warm evening. +Give us tea in the den." + +"Why all of this mystery?" asked Edwin Green as he followed his wife +back to the den, going on tiptoe as she demanded. + +"Andy and Nance are in there." + +"Andy McLean! Fine! I want to see him. Won't he be here to tea? I'll go +in and speak to him." + +"You'll do no such thing! Edwin Green, you may be--in fact, are, a grand +lecturer on English, but you have no practical sense. Don't you know you +might break in just at the wrong moment and Andy may get off to France +without their making it up?" + +"Making up what? Who making up: the Allies and the central powers?" + +"Oh, Edwin, you know I mean Nance and Andy!" + +"What are they making up? If it is a row, let's go help them." + +"Not a soul shall go in that room until they come out, unless it is over +my dead body." + +"Well, well! I'd rather stay in this room with your live body than go in +there over your dead one," and the professor pulled his wife down on the +sofa by him, "especially if you will give me some tea," as Kizzie came +in grinning with the tea tray. + +"They's co'tin' a-goin' on in yander, boss. The fiah is low an' the +lights ain't lit, but Miss Molly she guard that do' like a cat do a +mouse hole. Cose Miss Nance ain't got no maw to futher things up for her +but Miss Molly is all ready to fly off an' git the preacher, seems +like." + +"I can't remember that things were made easy for me this way when I was +addressing my wife," complained Edwin as he stirred his tea with his arm +around his wife, a combination that could not have been made had his +arm not been long and Molly still slender. + +"Ungrateful man! Why, Judy and Kent took the bus from Fontainebleau to +Barbizon when they were simply dying to walk, just to give you a chance. +Have you forgotten?" + +"I haven't forgotten the walk--I never will--and if they really rode on +my account, I'll pass on the favor to other lovers and stay out of my +library until the cows come home; that is, if you will stay with me." + +Molly told him then of the whole affair and how Mildred had righted +matters, telling Andy just exactly the right thing to bring him to his +senses. + +"I am almost sure they have made up and are engaged again," sighed Molly +ecstatically. A romance was dear to her soul and being happily married +herself, she felt like furthering the love affairs of all her friends. + +"They are either engaged or dead," laughed Edwin. "Such silence +emanating from the library must bode extreme calamity or extreme +bliss. If it continues much longer I think it is my duty as a +householder to break in the door and offer congratulations or call the +coroner, as the case demands." + +"It is getting late. Maybe I had better go in and ask Andy to stay to +dinner." + +Molly, who had a deep-rooted objection to noise and usually talked in a +low tone, now spoke in a loud voice as she bumped her way along the +hall, pushing chairs and rattling the hat rack and calling out shrilly +to the amused husband following her. Strange to say, she could not +remember on which side of the door the knob was, although she had lived +several years in that house. She fumblingly hunted it and finally opened +the door with a great rattle. + +Nance was seated sedately knitting and Andy was holding his coat close +to the dying flames. The room was almost dark. + +"Kizzie should have lighted the lamp and attended to the fire," Molly +said briskly. Oh, Molly, how could you be so untruthful, blaming things +on poor Kizzie, too? (Molly's conscience did hurt her for dragging +Kizzie in and she gave the girl a long coveted blue hat that she had +meant to keep for second best, feeling that it might act as a salve on +her own tender, truth-loving soul. Kizzie, quite ignorant of the cause +for this generosity, gratefully accepted the hat and asked no +questions.) + +"Yes, it gets dark before one realizes," said Nance demurely. + +"Ahem!" from the professor. + +"Oh, Andy, your coat is still wet! Mildred told me you wrapped it around +her. I'll get you Edwin's smoking jacket and have your coat dried. You +must stay to dinner with us. I can 'phone your mother not to expect you +at home." + +Andy did not need much persuading, but accepted the invitation with +alacrity. Molly called up Mrs. McLean to ask for the loan of her son for +dinner. + +"Yes!" exclaimed that wise lady at the other end of the wire. "I have +been expecting a telephone call for the last half hour. You may keep him +but I shall wait up to see him when he gets home. I am sur-r-e he'll +have something to tell me. From my back window I saw Nance with the +perambulator full of babies on her way to the lake and I sent Andy off +for a walk, first putting a flea in his ear by suggesting that the lake +was getting shallower and shallower. He has always been that inquisitive +that I was sur-r-e he would make for that spot to find out why. I knew +that all those poor-r young folks had to do was to meet. Keep him, +Molly--and God bless you!" + +There was a little choking sound at the other end that Molly understood +very well. She hung up the receiver "with a smile on her lip but a tear +in her eye." It is all very well for a mother to be unselfish and want +her son to marry and to be happy, but there is a tug of war going on in +her heart all the time. + +"I know how I will feel when Dodo gets engaged," Molly said to Edwin +when she told him of what Mrs. McLean had said; but that young father +went off into such shouts of laughter, Molly had a feeling that mere man +could never understand a mother's heart. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +PLANS + + +"I have no idea of going through dinner without letting you and old Ed +know all about us!" said Andy as he took his place at Molly's hospitable +board. + +"What about you?" asked Molly, who was growing deceitful, her husband +feared. + +"About Nance and me! I can't keep it any longer," declared the happy +young doctor. Nance kept her eyes on her plate but her mouth was +twitching with amusement. + +"What about you and Nance?" solemnly asked the professor. + +"Why, we're engaged!" + +"No! Not really?" and Edwin grinned. + +"Oh, Andy! I'm so glad!" and Molly reached a hand out to her two +friends, who were perforce placed across the table from each other +since there were only four for dinner. + +Nance got up and kissed her hostess. "Oh, Molly, you are too lovely! +Don't you know that I know that Andy and I have not fooled you one +moment? Don't I see brandy peaches on the side table all ready for +dessert, and don't you know that I know that those precious articles are +only brought out on highdays and holidays? Isn't that fruit cake I +smell, that you know perfectly well you made and put away for next +Christmas so it would be ripe and get better and better?" + +"Well, I had to express my feelings somehow, and how did I know that you +and Andy were going to tell your secret this very evening? I knew I +mustn't say a thing until you two said something, and if I could not say +anything, I could at least feed you." + +"All I can say, Andy, is that if your experience in choosing a girl from +that class of 19-- is as fortunate as mine, you will be a pretty happy +man, and by Jove, I believe you are running me a mighty close second," +and to the astonishment of his wife, as Edwin Green was certainly a far +from demonstrative man, he actually jumped from his seat and embraced +Nance. Then Andy felt that he must kiss Molly, and Kizzie coming in at +this juncture almost dropped the dish she was carrying. + +"Sich a-carryin's on I never seed. I'm a-thinking you folks had better +sort yo'selves," and the girl went off chortling. + +"Now tell me your plans!" demanded Molly when they settled down to +dinner. Strange to say, they had got rather mixed up in the promiscuous +embracing that had been going on, and Edwin and Andy had changed places. +Edwin found himself seated at Molly's side while Andy had greatly +disarranged the table by plumping himself down by his Nance. + +"We are to be married immediately," announced Andy stoutly. + +Nance gasped. The fact was they had been so busy explaining the past and +living in the present while the fire had died so low in the library, +that the future had not been touched upon. + +"Of course I may start for France at any time now, but before I go I +mean to get me a war bride. It will be pretty bad leaving her, but then +the war can't last forever, and I have decided it is my duty to go help, +and I fancy it still is. When Uncle Sam steps in, maybe he can finish up +things in a hurry. Then I can get back to Nance." + +"Get back to me, indeed! If you think you are going without me, Andy +McLean, you are vastly mistaken. If it is your duty to go help, it is my +duty, too. Oh, I know I am no trained nurse, but I can do lots of other +things. Dr. Flint says I am better than most trained nurses----" + +Nance stopped short. She should not have mentioned Dr. Flint. Only +suppose it had hurt Andy's feelings! Not a bit of it! + +"Bully for Flint!" cried the accepted lover. "Oh, Nance, would you go +with me?" + +"I can scrub and cook and take care of babies." + +"I don't know about that," teased Andy. + +"But you will always be near and pull them out of the water when I let +them fall in," suggested Nance. "Won't you?" + +"That I will! Just as near as I can get!" and Andy hitched his chair a +little closer, thereby disarranging the table even more than he had done +before. But although Molly was a very careful housekeeper and most +particular about the looks of her table, she cared not one whit, but +beamed on Andy as though he were the pink of propriety instead of a +naughty boy. + +What a change a little lovering had made in the appearance of both Nance +and Andy! The girl's clear skin was flushed and her eyes sparkling. The +corners of her mouth had no trace of downward tendency now. The years of +sadness and confinement spent in nursing her father and mother were +forgotten. Nance had come into her own--her woman's heritage: to be +beloved, to be guarded and cherished; at the same time to know that she +was to be the companion, the helpmeet. As for Andy,--he beamed with +joy. His face had lost the stern lines that had so distressed his +mother. He looked again like the boy he was, not like the tired, +disappointed man she had known of late. + +Nance had no romantic notions of what life in France meant in that +early spring of 1917. She knew that there was no room for drones and +unproductive consumers in that war-worn country. She knew that in +marrying Andy and going with his unit she was to face work, privations, +danger, even death; but with her eyes open she was determined to see it +through. + +"I would enlist in the United States army," Andy said to his host after +dinner, as they lounged in the den and puffed away at their comforting +pipes, "but I feel that I can be of more good right now in France where +they are crying out for surgeons." + +"It can't be many days now before war is declared," sighed Edwin. "By +jiminy! I hate myself for not being able to get in the game." + +"Too bad, old man! A fellow with a wife and two children has to think of +them." + +"Of course! I wouldn't let Molly know how I feel about it for any +thing. I am not so young as I was, but I am stronger now than I was as a +youth. As for my eyes--they are good enough eyes in glasses and my bald +head would be no drawback." Edwin always would call his sparsely covered +top "bald," but Molly, by diligent care, had made two blades of grass +grow where only one had grown before, and with a microscope one could +see the beginnings of a fuzzy crop of hair, at least so the fond wife +insisted. + +"I bet she would say go, if it were put to her," said Andy. + +"I'll not do it, though! It wouldn't be fair." + +"Well, if it is put up to her, I bet on Molly Brown!" + + + + +CHAPTER X + +ALL THE OLD GIRLS + + +"I've got a wonderful scheme, Edwin," said Molly when she had finally +engineered her husband out of the den and Nance in. + +"I'll be bound you have. I never saw such a Mrs. Machiavelli!--First I +mustn't go in the library but stick to the den, and now that I had just +made myself at home in the den I must flee to the library." + +Molly laughed at her husband's pretended discomfiture as he settled +himself to find out what was going on at the front. + +"Now read the news to me while I knit. There is no knowing how soon our +own boys will be needing sweaters. I feel that every stitch I put in is +important. Mercy, what a mess my knitting is in! I do believe that +little monkey of a Mildred has been working on it. But she can't purl +at all! Someone else has done it. No one has been here but Andy." + +"Well, I can't think Andy McLean would attempt a sweater," laughed +Edwin. "Maybe Nance is responsible." + +"But Nance is a past master!" + +"She might have been trying a one-handed stunt and failed. I don't +believe even Prussian efficiency could knit and get proposed to and +accept all at the same time. Under the circumstances I think she should +be forgiven for purling where she should have knitted and knitting where +she should have purled." + +"You sound like the prayer book," said Molly, patiently pulling out +stitches and deftly picking up where Andy asked to hold Nance's hand. "I +almost feel as though I were committing a sacrilege. This sweater is +like a piece of tapestry where the lady has recorded her emotions, using +the medium she knew best. I just know dear old Nance tried to go on with +her work all the time Andy was making love," and Molly wiped a wee tear +off on the ball of yarn. + +"I tell you that sweater could tell tales if it could speak," teased +Edwin. "Why don't you sew in one of your golden hairs so that the happy +soldier who finally gets it will have some inkling of how the beautiful +girl looks who made it?" + +"Silly! But don't you want to hear what my scheme is?" + +"Dying to!" + +"I am going to try to get the old Queen's girls, that is our 'special +crowd, to come to Nance's wedding. Katherine and Edith Williams are both +in New York; Judy is there; Otoyo Sen is in Boston; Margaret Wakefield +is in Washington; Jessie Lynch is in Philadelphia----" + +"Are there no husbands?" + +"Oh, yes, plenty of them, but I'm not going to invite husbands! The +babies can come if the mothers can't leave them, but the husbands are +not invited. Katherine Williams and Jessie Lynch are the only ones who +are still in single blessedness." + +"Are you going to have them all stay here?" asked Edwin in amazement, +never having quite accustomed himself to Molly's wholesale hospitality. + +"Of course! I can manage it finely. That will be only six extra ones. +Why, at Chatsworth we had that much company any time. This house is +really almost as big as Chatsworth and there we had our huge family to +put away besides." + +"All I can say is that you are a wonder, but please don't break yourself +down over this wedding. What does Nance say to it?" + +"I haven't asked her, but I know she is dying to see all the girls +together. We have often talked about it, and wedding or no wedding I was +going to try to get them here this next month. Otoyo has already +promised to come, you remember, and now she can just hurry up and get +here for the wedding. She will have to bring Cho-Cho-San, who is just a +bit older than Mildred. They can have great times together. You don't +mind, do you, honey?" + +"Mind! Of course not! You know I like company. I was just afraid you +were giving yourself too large an order." + +Nance, on being consulted, thought it would be wonderful to see all the +old girls again before embarking on her great adventure, so letters were +forthwith written and sent to the six friends, who one and all joyfully +accepted. Business, husbands, babies, society were to be left behind for +this grand reunion of the old Queen's crowd. + +Otoyo Sen, now Mrs. Matsuki, whose exceedingly regretfully but honorable +husband was gone on short journey and baby Cho-Cho-San must stay with +humble mother for the wedding. As Molly had expected to have the child, +this was as it should be. + +Katherine had demanded leave from the lectures she was delivering, and +Edith had an excellent nurse for her baby and could leave her family +easily. Margaret Wakefield had no children and was able to cancel the +many engagements that such an important person was sure to have, and her +house was in such good running order that her husband, the rising young +congressman, would want for nothing in her absence. Jessie Lynch had +declined two luncheons, a dinner dance, and a theatre party, besides +breaking as many more engagements in order to come to this wedding of +the old college friend. Jessie was still unmarried although she had been +the one that the prophecy had married off first. Pretty little Jessie +had so many lovers it was hard to choose among them. + +The very first reply was from Judy and she, Judy-like, answered in +person. She blew in at nightfall with a huge suitcase, many parcels and +her gay chintz knitting bag stuffed full of various things besides +knitting. + +"Kent was dying to come but I told him no children and dogs were +allowed," announced that glowing young matron as she dropped her +belongings, scattering them all over the library floor, and rushed +around kissing and hugging everybody in the room. "I have come to help. +I know you, Molly! You always act like triplets when there is any work +on hand, and I know you, too, Nance! Your New England conscience will +make you neglect Andy rather than seem to shirk work. I am here to sweep +and dust and cook, take care of babies, or even to flirt with Andy if +Nance does not look after him. I am going to dress the bride; find +Edwin's collar buttons and studs for his dress shirt; see that the best +man has the ring safe in his pocket; pay the preacher; put in the supply +of rice and old shoes--in fact," she sang: + + "'Oh, I am a cook and a captain bold, + And the mate of the Nancy brig, + And a bo'sun tight, and a midshipmite, + And the crew of the captain's gig.'" + +The Greens had been sitting quite sedately around the lamp engaged in +their various occupations when Judy burst in on them. The professor was +getting up a lecture for the morrow, Mildred was cutting out paper +dolls, and Molly and Nance had for the moment put down their eternal +knitting and were giving their attention to whipping on lace for the +modest trousseau. But the whirlwind that came in swept aside all sane +business. Needles were hastily thrust in cloth; thimbles were mislaid; +paper dolls dropped for something livelier; and lecture preparation +abandoned. When Judy, after the breathless announcement of having come +and her reasons for coming, began on the Nancy Bell, Edwin sprang to his +feet and, joining in the dance that Judy was improvising, sang in a +rollicking mixture of tenor and baritone: + + "'And he shook his fist and tore his hair, + Till I really felt afraid, + For I couldn't help thinking the man had been drinking, + And so I simply said: + + "'Oh, elderly man, it's little I know + Of the duties of men of the sea, + And I'll eat my hand if I understand + However you can be + + "'At once a cook and a captain bold, + And the mate of the Nancy brig, + And a bo'sun tight, and a midshipmite, + And the crew of the captain's gig.'" + +Little Mildred clapped her hands to see her dignified father cutting +pigeon wings. She had yet to learn that dignity and Mrs. Kent Brown +could not stay in the same room. + +"Oh, Judy! It is good to see you," gasped Molly when the chorus, in +which all of them joined, had been sung over twice. "What a Judy you +are, anyhow!" + +"Let me take your suitcase up-stairs," suggested Edwin. + +"And I will carry your parcels," insisted Nance, who was happy indeed +over seeing her old college friend again. + +"There is not a bit of use in taking a thing up-stairs. All of my +clothes are in the knitting bag. Those parcels are wedding presents and +the suitcase is full of all kinds of plunder. This big bundle is a tea +basket from Kent and me. You and Andy can go to housekeeping in it. We +thought you would rather have it than silver or cut glass, since you are +going where there are no side boards to speak of." + +"Oh, Judy, how splendid! It is exactly what I have been longing for," +cried Nance, opening the charming Japanese basket. "Only look, plates, +cups and saucers, tea pot, coffee pot, sugar bowl, cream pitcher, +spoons, knives, forks, cannisters for coffee, tea, sugar, crackers, hard +alcohol stove, chafing dish and tea kettle! All packed in two square +feet of basket!" + +"A regular kitchen cabinet!" declared Molly. "Nobody but Nance could +ever get them packed again in the right place, I am sure, Nance and +Otoyo, perhaps." + +"I just know Otoyo is going to bring her one like mine! I never thought +of that when I got it. I saw it at Vantine's and simply fell in love +with it. I wanted it so bad myself I got it for Nance. If Otoyo does +bring one, I will exchange mine," said Judy generously. + +"Indeed no! I wouldn't mind having two one bit and I am certainly not +going to give up my very first wedding present," blushed Nance. + +"Here is a steamer rug from dear old Mary Stuart. See how warm and soft +it is! This is a pocket set of Shakespeare from Jimmy Lufton! He brought +it to the train!" + +"But how lovely! I didn't dream of getting any presents," said Nance. + +"How did they know about Nance?" asked Molly. + +"I 'phoned them! I got your letter while Kent was at the armory so I +just called up everybody I knew and told them the news. There is no +telling what the excess calls will amount to, but I had either to do +that or burst! 'Phoning is cheaper than bursting. + +"Now I bet you can't guess what is in this great round box," said the +effervescent Judy. + +"Your wedding hat!" solemnly suggested Edwin. + +"Hat your grandmother! Guess again!" + +"A German bomb!" + +"No! Cold, cold! You'll never get it! It is a wedding cake sent by +Madeline Petit and Judith Blount. Now what do you think of that?" + +"Wonderful!" cried Molly, as she lifted the cake from its careful +packing. "Fruit cake with white icing! How on earth did they happen to +do it?" + +"You see I 'phoned them, too, because I always did like little Madeline +in spite of the fact that she talks a fellow's ear off. I am not so fond +of Judith, but I do admire her. She has spunked up so splendidly and +taken her medicine like a man. She and Madeline are doing a thriving +business in a swell part of town with tea rooms and all kinds of fancy +cakes. Judith was the one who suggested sending the cake, Madeline told +me. She said Judith said she knew Molly Brown would work herself to +death over the wedding and she, for one, was going to send something to +help out Molly. She said you were just goose enough to make the cake at +home." + +"I had planned to do it," laughed Molly. "I was going to start +to-morrow." + +"This huge box is candy to eat right now--that is Kent! I am almost +afraid to eat it. He wanted to come so bad that he might have poisoned +it for spite." + +"Why didn't you let him come? Dear old Kent!" exclaimed Molly. + +"Well, I knew perfectly well that it is some job to sleep seven persons +outside of one's own household, and it is doubly difficult when there +are two sexes. Kent is as busy as can be anyhow: drilling day and +night." + +Kent Brown had taken the training at Plattsburg and was then engaged in +passing on this training to a company of militia in New York. He and +Judy were eagerly awaiting the declaration of war by the United States. +There was no such thing as neutrality for them. Having been in France in +that August of 1914, Judy considered herself already at war and Kent +enthusiastically shared the sentiments of his wife. He was prepared to +leave his profession of architecture, in which he was proving himself +very successful, and join any regiment that was likely to see service. + +Judy had done exactly what the Marquis d'Ochte had asked her to do: she +had come back to New York and plunged into war relief work. Because of +her enthusiasm and untiring energy she had been of great assistance in +recruiting workers. Her admiring husband said that she was what one +might call a real booster. Any campaign Judy plunged in was sure to be a +whirlwind campaign. She had her father's capacity for infinite work. Up +to a certain period it had evinced itself in the form of infinite play, +but now that the serious side of life had presented itself to her, the +girl was working quite as hard as she had ever played. There was never +anything half-way about our Judy. In New York she was canvassing for +suffrage, keeping up her painting, and with her own hands cutting and +folding enough surgical dressings to fill the peace ship, besides +rounding up many workers for the cause. With it all she managed to be a +very satisfactory wife and housekeeper. She and Kent were blissfully +happy. There were red letter days in their calendar when both of them +stopped working and went on some mad frolic. They had made many friends +in New York, friends with whom they both worked and played. They had a +hospitable apartment where the redoubtable Ca'line reigned in the tiny +kitchen, Ca'line, trained by Mrs. Brown at Chatsworth and chastened by +dear old Aunt Mary until she "knowed her place an' kep' it." + +Isn't it fun to see Judy again? I hope my readers feel as glad for her +to come bounding into these pages as the Greens and Nance Oldham did +when she opened the door of the library at the Square Deal and, +upsetting everything, scattered papers and parcels hither and yon, her +vivid personality permeating every corner of the room. + +Just before Judy said good-night, she paused and exclaimed, "I must tell +you, Molly, how much I enjoy the dear little Virginia girls you have +passed on to me. The Tucker twins and Page Allison are just about the +nicest girls I know, and Mary Flannagan is a duck. I used to be an awful +snob about college girls,--somehow, I thought girls who did not go to +college were not worth knowing, but I have changed my mind since I have +met these girls. They are an interesting lot and as far as I can see +know as much as we do." + +"I knew you would like them. I simply fell in love with them last spring +in Charleston. Have you met their father?" + +"No, but he must be some father! The girls call him Zebedee, which +appeals to me, having always called mine Bobby." + +"Zebedee? What a strange name!" said Nance. + +"They say it is because nobody ever believes he is their father and so +they want to know: 'Who is the father of Zebedee's children?' It seems +he is only about twenty years older than they are and is one of those +persons who never gets on in years. They declare they are really more +mature than he is and not nearly so agile," laughed Judy. + +"I have been meaning to ask them to Wellington and must certainly do it +before they go back to Richmond," declared Molly, on hospitality bent as +usual. + +"All right, honey, but let's get Nance safely married and the wedding +feast disposed of," insisted Judy, who thought her brother-in-law looked +a little alarmed, fearing that Molly might decide that this was as good +a time as any to have the Tuckers and Page Allison visit them. + +"Of course! I didn't mean now but later on, although it is a pity to put +it off too long," teased Molly, seeing the worried look on Edwin's face. +"I might make up two bunks on the pantry shelves and let one of them +sleep in the bath tub." + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +AN INTERESTING COUPLE + + +"I came from New York with a very interesting couple," said Judy the +next day as she vigorously stitched away at some of the wedding finery. +"Of course I talked to them--I always talk to the interesting persons I +meet traveling." + +"So do I," said Molly as she finished a garment and put it aside for +Kizzie to press. + +"I never do," sighed Nance. "I do wish I had some of your and Judy's +warm-heartedness." + +"Nonsense! Your heart is just as warm as any that beats," objected +Molly. "Ask Andy!" + +"You see, honey, Vermont is Vermont and Kentucky is Kentucky! Persons +from Kentucky haven't quite as hard shells as the ones from Vermont, but +when once you get below the shell the kernel is about the same. You and +Molly couldn't be any more alike than Kentucky beeches and Vermont +pines," said Judy, pausing long enough in her labors to give Nance an +encouraging pat. + +"Yes, and pines stay green all the year around," said Molly. "It is much +better to be a pine than a beech." + +"Well, tell us about the interesting couple," laughed Nance, much +comforted. + +"They were from Alsace but were very French in their sympathies. They +looked a little German but they spoke beautiful French except that they +did have a tendency to call Paris 'Baree.' They love Paris as much as I +do. The man, Misel is his name, Monsieur Jean Misel,--is the best +informed person I have seen for many a day. He knows the war situation +as few persons do, I am sure. He seems to have been everywhere and known +everybody. He even knew my father,--at least, knew all about him and was +greatly interested in the fact that Bobby is soon to sail for France to +help rebuild the roads. Madame Misel is much quieter than her husband +but is very intelligent, I am sure. With all her reserve, she never +misses a trick." + +"Where was this interesting couple going?" asked Molly. + +"Coming right here to Wellington! They have taken a cottage in the +village and mean to live here. He is writing and she wants to do war +work." + +"How splendid!" cried Molly. "We need workers more than I can tell you. +The students give what time they can, but a full college course is about +all a normal girl can take care of in the way of work." + +"You must call on them right off, Molly. I will go with you and Edwin +must go, too. I know he will like Monsieur Misel." + +"I'll ask him, but Edwin is sure to want to know why this lover of Paris +is not fighting for France." + +"Ah, the poor fellow! He is quite lame--walks with a cane and a crutch. +He hinted rather darkly that his lameness is in some way due to the +Germans, but I do not know in just what way. He was sensitive about his +affliction, so his wife told me when he left us and went in the smoker, +so naturally I did not ask him how the Germans were responsible for it. +He is a young man, too, that is under forty, and very handsome." + +Professor Green was quite interested in what Judy had to tell him of the +Misels. He promised to call with Molly and do all he could to make +Wellington pleasant for them. He looked forward with pleasure to the +conversations Judy assured him he would enjoy with that highly educated +gentleman. Holding the chair of English in a woman's college is not bad, +but there were times when Edwin Green longed for more man talk. He and +Dr. McLean were sworn friends and saw much of each other, but they both +of them welcomed with enthusiasm any masculine newcomer. + +"I wonder if your friend could teach French, Judy," asked her +brother-in-law. "Miss Walker is quite put to it for the end of the term. +The French professor took French leave last week. He seemed too old to +hold anything more weighty than a pen, but he has gone to fight." + +"That is the terrible part of it," sighed Judy. "They say all the +superannuated dancing masters and French teachers are leaving to take up +arms. It means that France is having a hard time. Why, oh why, don't we +hurry up and get in the game?" + +The call was made and Molly and her husband were quite as enthusiastic +as Judy had been over the charms of the new neighbors. Monsieur Misel +seemed the very person to take up the labors of the flown French +professor, and Miss Walker accordingly engaged him. Molly felt she must +have them to dinner in spite of the fact that she was deep in the +preparations for the wedding. + +"I'll have a very simple dinner and not make company of them, just make +them feel at home," she declared, and her husband and Nance and Judy +smiled knowingly. Molly always would have company and there was no use +in trying to stop her. + +"I know when I die she will feel called upon to give me a good wake," +laughed Edwin. + +"Certainly, if people come hungry to your funeral, I'll feed them," +answered Molly. + +"Are our new friends, the Misels, hungry?" + +"Not hungry for food, but they must be lonely so far away from their +country and friends. Anyhow, they are invited now and have accepted, so +there is no use in teasing me. You just see that there are cigars here +for Monsieur Misel to smoke after dinner, and I'll attend to the rest." + +How sad it was to see a man of Misel's beauty a hopeless cripple! He was +a tall, stalwart fellow with a military bearing which the use of a +crutch and cane could not take from him. His lameness had not affected +the comeliness of his limbs or his erect carriage. He had very courteous +manners and it seemed to be very hard on him not to spring from his seat +when a lady entered the room. + +On the evening of Molly's informal dinner when Nance, who was the only +member of the household who had not met the strangers, came into the +library, Misel stood up to be introduced, but his wife gave a low cry of +alarm and sprang to his assistance, eagerly placing his crutch in one +hand, his cane in the other. He sank to his seat with a smothered groan. + +"Jean, Jean! What am I to do with you?" said Madame Misel irritably. "He +is so imprudent," apologetically to Molly, who had tears in her eyes at +this exhibition of courage and weakness. She could well understand how +Monsieur Misel's courteous desires could get the better of his strength. + +Andy McLean was present and the doctor in him immediately became +interested in the pitiable case. He had none of the hesitation Judy had +shown in regard to questioning the Misels concerning the cause of the +lameness. + +"What is your trouble?" he asked bluntly. "If you can stand without +support as you did a moment ago, I see no reason why you cannot be +cured." + +"In time! In time!" said Misel with patient resignation. + +"He has had the best medical attention," put in his wife. + +Madame Misel usually spoke with a kind of slow hesitation, but now her +words came rapidly. She had the air of trying to shield her husband from +farther questioning on the part of Andy. Andy, however, was totally +oblivious of this fact and went on. + +"Who is his surgeon?" + +"The great F----, in Baree!" + +"What did he say?" asked Andy, impressed by the name. + +"He--he--said--nerve centres--disturbed," answered Madame, returning to +her hesitating speech. She did not stammer at all but seemed to pause to +choose her words. + +"If I can be of any assistance to you, I hope you will call on me," said +Andy kindly. + +In the meantime Misel sat with his hands over his eyes as though in +great pain and his wife hovered over him solicitously. + +Dinner was soon announced and this time the lame man arose very +cautiously and made his way slowly to the dining-room. + +"Kindly--go--in--front--of--us," faltered Madame, and Molly marshalled +her family and guests so that the Misels might bring up the rear. She +fully appreciated how the wife felt about wanting to be the one to +assist her poor lame husband. If her Edwin had been so crippled no one +should have helped him but his own wife. + +Molly turned to smile on the poor woman for whom her heart was sore. She +could well understand the misery it must bring to see one most dear +having to suffer so acutely. There was a dark place in the hall leading +to the dining-room and the hostess feared the poor lame man might +stumble there, so she stopped to warn him of a rug. She distinctly heard +Madame say to her husband in no gentle tones but with an asperity almost +malevolent: + +"_Narr! Narr!_" + +Molly began assiduously to hunt in the archives of her brain for the +small German vocabulary which she could call her own. + +"_Narr!_ What can _narr_ mean?" the question kept recurring to her as +dinner progressed. She visualized lists of words in a worn old blank +book used at school. "_Narr_, _Nase_, _Nesse_, _Nest_!" She tried to +remember the English on the opposite page. How well she remembered the +little old book wherein was written the despised German exercises. The +script in itself had been almost impossible to learn and as for +mastering the language,--she had been so half-hearted about it that she +had not been compelled to keep it up. + +"_Narr_, _nase_, _nesse_, _nest_!" ran through and through and over and +over in her mind. Suddenly just as Professor Green asked her what she +would say to adjourning to the library, the list of English words +flashed on her brain. + +"'Fool, nose, nephew, nest'!" she cried audibly. + +"What?" Edwin feared his Molly had gone crazy. + +"Oh--I--I--mean, yes--coffee in the library!" and she arose from her +seat in confusion. + +Why should that calm-looking, slow-speaking woman call her poor lame +husband a fool? _Narr! Narr!_ It was certainly strange. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +AN OLD-TIME PARTY + + +The first one of the old girls to arrive was Otoyo, Mrs. Matsuki, with +the little Cho-Cho-San. Otoyo had changed not at all in the years that +had elapsed since college days. Perhaps an added matronly dignity was +hers, but this was not much in evidence when she was with her dear old +friends. She was beautifully and elegantly dressed. All her clothes were +made of the most exquisite fabrics. Her blouses were of the finest and +sheerest, if of linen; and the heaviest and richest, if of silk. Her +furs were the furriest and her suits of the most approved cut and +material. Her little boots were a marvel of fit and style. + +"Perfect, like a Japanese puzzle!" Judy declared. "Every little part +made to fit every other little part!" + +"Yes, and the whole a wonderful creation like some rare print or bit of +pottery!" agreed Molly. + +Otoyo had adapted herself to the manners and customs of her adopted +country, wearing them with the same grace she did the garments. She had +an English nurse for the little Cho-Cho-San and the child was being +reared as much like American children as possible. A tiny little thing, +she was, with coal black hair and slanting eyes. There was much mischief +peeping from those eyes around the tip-tilted nose. The mouth was a +crimson bow, ever ready to break into a tinkling laugh. She and Mildred +rushed together as though their short lives had been spent waiting for +this opportunity. Mildred was younger by several months but taller by +several inches than the little Japanese. What a picture the two children +made! Mildred, with her red gold hair curling in little ringlets all +over her head, her round rosy face and wide hazel eyes, was exactly the +opposite to Cho-Cho-San, with her straight, bobbed, ebony black hair, +her oval, olive face and almond eyes. + +"I b'lieve I can tote you," said Mildred, who often used words current +in Kizzie's vernacular. + +"Tote! Tote! What is tote?" and the tinkling laugh rang out like glass +chimes assailed by a sudden gust of wind. + +"Why I tote my dolly--an' Mr. Murphy totes the coal--an'--an' Daddy +totes his books to lexures--an'--an'--" + +"May I tote something, also?" + +"Oh, yes, you can tote Dodo. He's my baby brother." + +"Oh, I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee!" and the little thing danced in glee. +"My honorable mother told me when I came for a visit to her friends that +it would be all 'appiness." The English nurse had left her stamp upon +her charge just as Kizzie had upon Mildred. The occasional dropping of +an h was the result. Cho-Cho-San's lingo was most amusing with its +mixture of Cockney and Japanese. + +"You'd look 'zactly like my Jap dolly if you only had a bald spot on +top," said Mildred as she led her new friend to the sunny nursery where +she and Dodo reigned supreme with the Irish Katy to do their bidding. + +"And phwat Haythen is this?" cried Katy when she saw the little Japanese +girl. "And ain't she the cutey?" + +"She's my bes' beloved," announced Mildred. "Me'n' Cho-Cho-San is gonter +be each other's doll babies. I'm a-gonter be her kick-up dolly an' she's +gonter be my Jap dolly." + +"Oh, I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee!" was all the tiny Haythen could say +as she danced around the nursery. + +"Aunt Nance done said we could be her flower girls, too," went on the +loquacious Mildred. "We's all gonter get married day after another day." + +"All the doll babies going to be married!" sang the guest. "Kick-up +dolls and Japanese dolls!" + +The Williams girls arrived next and close on their heels Margaret and +Jessie. I cannot bring myself to designate the girls by their married +names any more than they could one another. Husbands were not much in +evidence at that gathering. The talk was all of the past. Of course +Andy, the soon-to-be husband, was allowed some consideration, although +the first night after the arrival of the guests even he was debarred and +the old chums had a kimono party in the library. The host fortunately +had an engagement that took him from home, otherwise he would have had +to spend his evening shut up in his den. + +The revellers opened the ball by singing "Drink her down," to each one +in the crowd. Molly's old guitar was brought out and Otoyo produced a +tiny ukelele which added much to the harmony. After the singing was +finished and every one drunk down, the words that were used most often +were: "Do you remember?" All of the scrapes were recalled and talked +over. Bits of gossip were recounted that had never come to light before, +the noblesse oblige of the college spirit having kept matters dark, but +now that the years had rolled by there seemed to be no longer reason for +silence. + +"I'd like to get into some mischief this very night!" cried Judy. "I've +been good and pious so long I feel like whooping life up a bit." + +"I'm game," drawled Katherine Williams. + +"Did I hear an aye from the eminent educator?" questioned Judy. + +"That's me!" + +"I'll do whatever it is if I don't have to walk too far," said lazy +Jessie. + +"But what are you to do?" from Margaret, in whom the spirit of adventure +was not so rampant. + +"Listen to the Gentleman from Missouri!" cried Judy. "Come on and we'll +show you." + +"I like very muchly to be in the vehicle of musicians but I also like +muchly to know what is the ultimately destination," said Otoyo softly. + +"She means the band wagon! She means the band wagon!" cried Judy. "Oh, +my dear little Otoyo, if you were changed I could not bear this sad grey +world." + +"Others, too, have notly changed," said Otoyo slyly. + +"What are you planning, Judy honey?" asked Molly, laughing. + +"I haven't any plan--nothing but something crazy and adventurous. I am +dead tired of being so good and proper. I have rolled bandages and drawn +threads and cut gauze until I feel like a machine. I want to have a +romantic adventure. I'd like to put a tick-tack on Miss Walker's +window--I'd like to burn asafetida on the teacher's stove, or put red +pepper in the Bible so when she opens it to read she would sneeze her +head off. I might content myself with making an apple pie bed for my +dear brother-in-law----" + +"Oh, please not that!" begged Molly. "My supply of sheets is stretched +to the limit." + +"O. Henry would advise you to go out in the night and await Adventure. +Adventure is always just around the corner. Step up to him and tap him +on the shoulder," suggested Katherine. + +"It is very comfortable in here," purred Jessie. + +"Infirm of purpose!" cried Judy. + +"Well, I'm not infirm of purpose," said Molly. "I've been purposing all +along to have a Welsh rarebit and make some cloudbursts and I'm still +going to do it. If you Don Quixotes want to go off and hunt trouble in +the meantime, though, you are welcome, only don't stay too long." + +"Ain't Molly the broad-minded guy, though? Live and let live was always +Molly. Aren't you coming, Nance?" And Judy sprang from her cross-legged +position on the rug ready for any fray. "Come on, Margaret! Come on, +Edith." + +"Don't you know Edith is too stuffy to do such a thing? She's afraid her +perfectly good husband would not approve," teased her sister. + +"No such thing, but I'm not going. I mean to help Molly. You crazy kids +go get in all the trouble you want to. Me for the house this night!" + +"And Margaret? You, too, must keep the 'home fires burning,' I fancy." + +"I am going to stir the rarebit," announced Margaret firmly. + +"I'm going to pick out nuts for the cloudbursts," purred Jessie. + +"I must whip lace," blushed Nance. + +"Oh, you middle-aged persons! I bite my thumb at you!" cried Judy. "Who +among you is young enough to go hunt adventure?" + +"I told you I intended to go," said Katherine, looking rather longingly +at the crowded shelves of poetry that she was simply dying to poke in. +"No one is going to call me middle-aged." + +"And I, too, will take greatly pleasure to knock the kindling from the +shoulder of Adventure," said little Otoyo. + +"She means the chip! She means the chip!" screamed the delighted Judy. +"Oh, Otoyo, I love you in all the world next to my immediate family!" + +It took but a moment to slip on great coats over kimonos and then, +heavily veiled, the three adventuresses started forth, with admonitions +from Molly not to be gone more than half an hour. + +"And please don't get arrested!" she called after them. "Kent says he +always expects Judy to get arrested some day. This spirit of adventure +seizes her every now and then and nothing will stop her." + +"It is well it struck her here at Wellington instead of in New York. She +can't get into very much mischief here," laughed Edith. + +"She could in the old days," put in Margaret, "but now that she is not +compelled to keep rules I fancy she will not care to break them. What a +Judy she is! It must be great to have her in the family, Molly." + +"Indeed it is! She is the favorite in-law with the whole lot of Browns. +Mother adores her and all the boys think she is just about perfect. Even +Aunt Clay can't help liking her." + +"I wonder what they will find to-night. I almost wish I had left the +lace off of this old camisole and gone with them," said Nance. + +"I think you need not hunt adventure right now," drawled Jessie. "Any +girl who is deliberately getting married and going to the war zone will +have enough to keep her busy for a lifetime. I don't believe they will +do more than go to the drug store and get limeades." + +"You don't know Judy and Katherine," said Edith, "and little Otoyo with +her determination to knock the kindling from the shoulder of Adventure. +I wonder what Mr. Matsuki would say if he could know that his sedate +little wife is engaged in such a harum scarum pursuit." + +"Why, he would just smile and bow and look more like an ivory Buddha +than ever. Otoyo has the charming little gentleman completely under her +thumb. She works a kind of mental jiu jitsu on him and he just lets her +have her way. The joke of it is he thinks she is the most docile, +obedient little wife in all the world, and so she is. She simply makes +him want what she wants," explained Molly. + +Molly was busily engaged in the preparations for the midnight feast. It +would have been simpler and easier just to have gone to the kitchen and +made the rarebit over the gas stove, but that would not have been at all +like college days and this night must be as near a reproduction of +those times as possible. Chafing dishes must be used and dishes must be +scarce or the spell would be broken. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +ADVENTURE + + +It was after ten o'clock as the three veiled figures glided from the +square house on the campus. The night was dark, fit for the deed they +had to do. They did not know what the deed was but whatever it was the +intrepid females were fully prepared to do it. + +"First we'll go by Prexy's house and perchance she may see us and then +we'll run. That will be fun!" suggested Judy. "Nothing would so warm my +old blood as to be taken for a junior." + +It so happened that a consultation was being held at the president's +home and as they passed, Miss Walker opened the front door and Professor +Green emerged. + +"Ministers and saints defend us! My brother-in-law!" cried Judy. + +"Who is that?" called Miss Walker as the three girls ran swiftly out of +the broad band of light pouring from the open door. + +"Run for your lives!" hissed Judy. + +"Shall I chase them?" laughed Professor Green. "I'd much rather not." + +"No," sighed poor Prexy. "I fancy they are up to no harm, but it is late +for girls to be out alone. Such terrible things seem to be happening all +over the world. I'll have to deliver a lecture to the whole student +body, I am afraid, about late rambles and pranks." + +"Those girls were veiled, so evidently whatever they were doing they did +not want to be recognized. I'd hate to hold your job, Miss Walker. I'd +much rather be the humble professor of English." + +"Surely it is not a sinecure," laughed the president, "but when all is +told, my girls are a pretty good lot. Their mischief is never, at least +hardly ever, serious. How glad I am to see Judy Kean again,--Mrs. Kent +Brown! She is the same old Judy. Such pranks as that child could play! +I shall never forget when she dyed her hair purple-black." + +"Judy is a great girl. I am glad we married into the same family," +declared the professor. "But tell me, Miss Walker, how Misel is doing. +I feel quite responsible for him since it was I who introduced him to +you." + +"The students like him. He seems to be able to impart knowledge. I am +afraid he is too handsome, however. It isn't quite safe to have a +professor too good-looking. College girls are very impressionable." +Then Miss Walker realized she had made quite a break. Edwin Green +was certainly a very good-looking man but not the type to make girls +languish with love. While M. Misel was a much more romantic figure with +his flashing eyes and lameness. + +"Are the girls losing their hearts to him?" laughed Edwin. "Again I am +thankful I am what I am and not what others are." + +And so the two old friends chatted in the doorway while the three veiled +figures made their way towards the village. + +"We got them going that time," panted Judy after the run through the +dark. "I bet you anything Prexy lectures the girls to-morrow morning. +Dear Prexy!" + +"Let's tick-tack the math teacher. I bet you she's still out of bed +thinking up deviltry to make the girls miserable with on the morrow," +suggested Katherine. + +"I can make a noise very muchly like a cat. Would not that be as +gruesomely as a mathematicktack? We might be the Musicians of Bremen, as +one reads in the beautifully fairy story." + +"Fine, Otoyo! Here's her domicile! Cut loose!" whispered Judy. "I'll be +the donkey and Katherine crow like the rooster." + +Crouched down under the window where a light still burned for the much +abused teacher of mathematics, the Musicians of Bremen, all but the dog, +got ready for their song. The noise was something shocking. Judy's bray +was so lifelike that little Otoyo sprang aside as though in fear of +kicking hind legs. + +A dog in the neighborhood, feeling that harmony could be established by +his voice alone, joined in the chorus. + +Windows were opened on the campus! Silence reigned supreme! + +"Don't run!" whispered Judy. "Scrooge down close to the wall." + +"Who is there?" called the math teacher. + +Mr. Dog went on howling as though he had been responsible for the whole +infernal racket. His timely tact seemed to satisfy the curious ones and +windows were closed, lights went out and the campus took itself off to +bed. + +"Once more for luck!" commanded Great Commander Judy. + +"Practice makes perfect," so this time the Musicians of Bremen outdid +themselves. Otoyo made a most wonderful pussy; Maud Adams herself could +not have been a more realistic chanticler than Katherine; and Judy's +donkey was so good that one could almost see the ears wagging as her +great bray made night hideous. + +"Now run before they have a chance to open their windows!" and Judy was +up and off in the darkness with the two other girls close on her heels. + +"I bet you investigating will go on at a great rate to-morrow," gasped +Katherine, as after leaving the college grounds they came to the +outskirts of the village. + +"It was so funnily," giggled Otoyo. "We must amusement make for the +smally Mildred and Cho-Cho when the to-morrow has come." + +"I can't believe I am a full-fledged teacher in a model modern school in +our great metropolis," said Katherine. "I feel just exactly like a +schoolgirl,--not even a college girl. I know I could run a mile and +there is no mischief I would not welcome." + +"I tooly!" agreed Otoyo. "It seems but a dream that I have honorable +husband and smally babee, Cho-Cho. I feel like badly naughtily Japanese +girl in masque." + +"Well, it is surely great to be a boy again just for to-night," declared +Judy. + +"What next?" asked Katherine. + +"Next will be our great adventure! This has been only in the foothills +of happenings. Soon we will have something really great come to us," +encouraged the captain. + +The village was well-lighted on the principal street, but that the girls +avoided and crept down the side streets where all was quiet and almost +dark, except at the corners where small gas-posts sent out feeble rays +of light. They passed comfortable homes surrounded by large yards where +the elite of Wellington lived. The elite were evidently a well-behaved +lot, as they were all safely bestowed in bed, sleeping the sleep of the +just as our naughty girls crept in front of their spacious mansions. + +Next to the great, came the near great: a row of pleasant cottages, +each one with its little garden separated from its neighbor's by neat +whitewashed palings. After these, they approached a cottage set in a +large yard and isolated as much as if it were in the country. It was +well back from the street and instead of the white palings of its +neighbors, it boasted a box hedge about five feet high and at least +three feet broad. Generations of close clipping had made this hedge as +solid as a brick wall. The yard enclosed was laid out as a formal garden +with box labyrinth and winding paths. In the rear was a summer-house +with stone pillars covered with ivy. Two stone benches were on each side +in this quaint house where no doubt dead and gone lovers had sat and +perhaps caught rheumatism. Box bushes were placed at the four sides of +the garden and these had been cut to represent armchairs by some zealous +gardener long since passed away. The modern shears had but followed the +lines of the original ones and the armchairs were still there although +somewhat lopsided and hazy in drawing. There was the sun-dial and a +snub-nosed stone Hebe who held aloft her little pitcher with a cup in +the other hand ready to serve the Gods with imperceptible nectar. + +Our girls' eyes had become accustomed to the darkness and they peeped +over the hedge (at least Katherine and Judy did, poor little Otoyo was +too short), plainly discerning the charming ensemble of the little +formal garden. + +"There, Adventure awaits us!" said Katherine melodramatically. + +"I want muchly to see," pleaded Otoyo. So Judy lifted her up for a peep. + +"I believe that is where the Misels live," said Judy. "It looks quite +different at night, but I'm almost sure it is the place. Molly and I +called at dusk and we came up on the other side, but I think it is this +cottage. Isn't it lovely? I am so sorry for them, they do seem so +friendless, somehow. Madame is already working for the Red Cross. Molly +says she can make surgical dressings faster than anybody she ever saw. +She takes them home and does them and brings them back so neatly folded +and tied up that they think it is perfect foolishness to inspect them. +They are sure there will be no mistakes where such a careful worker is +on the job. M. Misel is so lame he can hardly locomote." + +"Let's go in their garden and sit down a little while," suggested +Katherine, who but a few moments before had declared she could run a +mile. The sedentary life as a teacher had not improved her wind. Her +spirits might have been those of a schoolgirl but her endurance was +equal only to a full-fledged teacher in a model school. + +They passed through the small green turnstile and silently crept around +the labyrinth to the summer-house. The three girls sank on one of the +cold stone benches and peered out into the picturesque garden. Their +veils were raised but ready to be pulled down at a moment's notice. + +"Ghosts might walk in such a garden," whispered Judy. + +"The bench is coldly like a ghost," shivered Otoyo. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +AS SEEN FROM THE SUMMER-HOUSE + + +"And now, Adventure, come forth!" commanded Katherine in sepulchral +tones. + +The side door of the cottage, leading to the garden, now opened as +though at Katherine's orders, and a broad ribbon of light fell across +the labyrinth, picking out the snub-nosed Hebe and the sun-dial and one +of the box chairs to illuminate. A man's figure was silhouetted in the +doorway, a figure so beautiful that the artist in Judy gasped. He had on +running togs which exposed his clean-cut limbs and shapely shoulders. A +woman stood beside him and Judy recognized the outline of Madame Misel. +The Greek god of a man was strange to her, although there was something +familiar about the poise of his head on its column-like neck. + +The woman spoke in German in a low clear voice. Judy and Katherine both +knew German fairly well and Otoyo had some knowledge of it. They heard +Madame Misel say distinctly: + +"It is wiser if you wait until midnight for the exercises. Some of these +blockheads might be out." + +"Oh, absurd!" answered the man. "There is no one in this whole stupid +place with the spirit to be from under cover after ten. I am cramped +enough and must run and leap. Stand aside!" + +"Misel, himself!" gasped Judy. Where were his crutch and cane and his +lame back? + +The girls sat as still as the stone Hebe. It was inky black in their +corner of the summer-house where they cowered, not afraid at all but +ready to knock the chip from the shoulder of Adventure. Judy's first +instinct on recognizing Madame Misel was to make herself known and +explain their presence in her garden at such a late hour, but the +realization that Misel was the man in running togs, which usually means +running, glued her to her bench. What did it all mean? + +The door was shut and then Misel began a series of exercises of which +any circus actor might have been proud. He began by leaping over the +clipped hedge of the labyrinth,--back and forth with most surprising +gyrations. It was so dark that it was difficult to follow his every +movement, and so rapid were his leaps and bounds that he was now here, +now there before eyes could be focussed to take in the impression. Then +almost without the girls realizing what had happened, he had cleared the +five-foot hedge and was out on the deserted street running like a deer. + +"Quick, before he is back!" gasped Judy, and the seekers for sensations +were out of the garden and through the little turnstile in not much more +time than it had taken the master of the house to leap the hedge. + +Without a word they hastened back to the college grounds. As they turned +a corner, they ran plump into Misel, who seemed to have let off steam +enough to be trotting contentedly home. They need not have feared him. +He was much more anxious to escape from them than they were from him. +He turned and ran like the wind in the opposite direction. + +"Gee, I wish we could have tripped him up!" exclaimed Judy. + +"And I might have jiu jitsued him most neatlily," put in little Otoyo. +"I think he is what you might call a traitor-r-r." + +"I was never more excited in my life. What will the girls think when we +tell them of what has happened to us?" panted Katherine. + +"Do you realize we have run against a tremendous thing?" said Judy +soberly. "Almost international importance! I fancy we must keep kind of +quiet about it. Of course we will tell Molly and Edwin and the girls, +but I have an idea this thing will have to be worked up slowly and +cautiously. I bet you it will be a case of secret service men and enemy +aliens and what not. Why should Misel have pretended to be lame? Why +should they come to live at Wellington? Why--a million whys about the +whole matter!" + +"One thing:--Misel thought we were college girls on a lark and he will +have no fear of our saying we met him or anyone outside the campus at +such an hour," said Katherine wisely. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +THE PROFESSOR AT A KIMONO PARTY + + +The Welsh rarebit was just assuming its required thickness and +smoothness and the toast was done to a turn ready to receive its +libation of cheese, when the wanderers came pattering in. + +"Where is Edwin?" demanded Judy. + +"In his den! You see this is a kimono party and gentlemen are not +admitted," said Molly, helping Judy off with her coat and veil. "Now +tell us all about it! Something has happened, I can see by your eyes and +hair." + +"Happened! I should say it has! Something has bounced! Call Edwin! I +don't give a hang if we are in kimonos! I'll be bound he does not know +a kimono from a ball gown--I can't tell it twice." + +"Otoyo and I are not dumb. We might help out when you fall by the +wayside," laughed Katherine, "but I, for one, don't mind the professor." + +"Nor I! Nor I!" chorused the others. + +"I think mine is vastly becoming," Jessie whispered to Margaret, who +called her a vain puss. + +Edwin came in, rather pleased at being admitted and being allowed to +have some of the party. + +"I never expected to get in on a fudge party," he said, contentedly +settling himself by Judy, who was bursting with news. + +"Now begin!" commanded Margaret, rapping for order in much the old +manner of class president and presiding officer. + +"Begin at the beginning!" begged Edith. + +"Well, first we went by Prexy's, just to get the feeling of youth back +in our veins. She saw us, but we chased by." + +"So it was you! I wish I had run you down," cried the brother-in-law. + +"It is a blessing you did not or a good story would have been ruined," +said Katherine. + +Margaret rapped for order and Judy took up the tale. + +"Then we went to call on Mattie Math. She was burning the midnight oil, +at least the 10 P. M. oil, and when we acted the Musicians of Bremen, +she threw up the sash." + +"The hash? What hash?" asked Jessie, who often arrived a bit late. +Shrieks and more rappings from Margaret. + +"My, how much I have missed in never being asked to a kimono party +before," whispered the male guest in Judy's ear. + +"After we had brayed and crowed and meouwed and a dog had barked for +us----" + +"All together!" cried Katherine, and the musicians gave a sample of +their performance, Mrs. Matsuki outdoing all cats by her lifelike +caterwauling. + +"After that, we went silently down to the village." + +"I don't believe it, not silently!" asserted Edwin. + +"No interruptions from the minority! We went silently down to the +village, veils down, steps stealthy, eyes open and mouths shut. The +garden at the Misels' was most inviting in its sweetness and beauty. Of +course we wanted to go in and rest on the nice warm stone benches, so we +walked through the turnstile and seated ourselves in the little dark +summer-house, there to await Adventure." + +"Bang! Adventure comes stalkingly in!" cried Otoyo. + +"Leaping was more like it!" from Katherine. + +"Yes! Who should come springing from the side door, totally oblivious of +us, but Misel, stripped for running and looking like a detail from a +Greek frieze!" + +"Monsieur Misel! Why, Judy, you are mad! Misel is so lame he can't stand +alone without crutch and cane!" cried Molly. + +"Lame your grandmother! He is a perfect circus actor. I have never seen +a private citizen with such control of his muscles. He actually turned +somersaults over the hedge in the labyrinth, walked on his hands better +than I can on my feet, and cleared the five-foot hedge that borders the +street with as much ease as--as--I eat this fudge," reaching for another +piece. + +"But, Judy, are you sure it was he?" asked Edwin excitedly. + +"Of course I am sure!" And then Judy repeated the conversation they had +overheard between Misel and his wife. "My German is shady when I have to +use it, but I can understand very well." + +"So can I," declared Katherine. + +"And while I am constructionally verily faultily, I comprehend can," +said Otoyo, so excited that she ran off to adverb forms as was her wont +in times of stress. + +"This is serious," said Edwin solemnly. "So serious that I feel I must +do something about it and do it immediately. What time is it, honey?" he +asked Molly. + +"Eleven-fifty! Why, what can you do? Not go fight Misel--not that!" + +"No, not that, at least not that yet, although I should like to break +his lying crutch over his traitorous head. I must get in touch with the +Secret Service. War will be declared any day now and Germany is getting +busy even in quiet Wellington." + +"You forget Exmoor College is so near," put in Margaret. "Our college +boys will officer the new army in part. I'll wager anything that this +man has already begun his pacifist propaganda here in Wellington and at +Exmoor, too. Has he been to Exmoor?" + +"Why, certainly! He got me to take him over and introduce him, the +beast!" stormed Edwin. "Please pack my little grip for me, honey," he +asked, drawing Molly to him. "I can catch the twelve-forty to New York. +Don't give out that I am away. We had better do a little camouflage act +of our own. I am ill, very ill! That will do! Let it be--what shall it +be?" + +"Mumps!" cried Edith. + +"Not mumps, please!" cried Jessie. "Nothing contagious or we might catch +it!" + +"Or worse than that, even, be quarantined!" laughed Nance. + +"Pretty hard on you, honey, as it would stop the ceremony," suggested +Molly. + +"What do you usually have when you have anything?" asked Margaret with +her judicial manner. + +"Neuralgia!" + +"Then neuralgia would be the natural thing to have when you have not +anything." + +"Of course! Then, Molly, all day to-morrow your poor husband is ill with +neuralgia. Not even the servants and children must come in my darkened +room. I'll be home in the night and wake up the next morning feeling +much better," and Molly hurried off to pack the grip. + +"In time to give the bride away!" suggested Judy. + +"May I tell Andy all about it?" asked Nance shyly. + +"Of course! We would not be so cruel as to make you start out with a +secret from your lord and master," said Edwin. + +"It makes me so mad to think how kind Andy was to that man, offering his +medical services to him and what not. I know the brutes had a good +laugh over his gullibility. Andy told me afterwards that he could not +understand the case, and if the man wasn't shamming, it was the most +peculiar thing he had ever seen: the way he jumped up out of his chair +when he was so lame." + +"Now I remember that very night that I heard Madame Misel call her +husband a fool on the way into the dining-room. I had forgotten all +about it until this minute. I kept wondering what she meant," said +Molly. + +"I tell you they are deep ones," put in Katherine. + +"Not a bit of it!" stormed Judy. "They are the worst of all fools +because they think no one else has any sense. Bobby, my beloved parent, +always says that is the worst kind of fool. That the wise man, who wants +to put over anything, must go to work with the idea that all the persons +he wants the scheme to get by with have as much and more sense than he +has. Now these Huns think they are the only pebbles on the beach and +take for granted that they are dealing with children and fools, and as +a rule they get caught up with." + +"Not before they do lots of damage, however," said Nance. + +"I hope in this instance their machinations have not done any," said +Edwin devoutly. "Be sure and give the Misels no inkling they are +suspected. All of you remember to be as polite as usual to them if you +happen to run across them." + +"I'll try, but it will surely go against the grain," said Judy, her eyes +flashing. + +"Prove your father's statements, dear little sister, and we shall let +these foreigners know that we are not the blockheads they call us." + +"Also we are not the sleepily heads that must go bedwardly at such +earlyly hour," and little Otoyo opened her almond eyes very wide to show +that she at least would neither slumber nor sleep until the enemies to +her country and her adopted country were safely caught up with. + +Molly came in with the grip packed. Some fudge was tucked in to help out +his journey and Edwin, with the warm wishes of the kimono party, +started on his patriotic travels. + +"Remember to let Prexy know I am almost dead with neuralgia and do not +let a soul but Andy on to the fact that I am off on a journey. I'll +creep in to-morrow night. Keep your eyes open for deviltries that the +Misels may be up to, but don't let them know you are not the dummies +they think you. They will not be classed as alien enemies until war is +formally declared, and that will be day after to-morrow, according to +the latest news." + +Nance was quietly stitching while most of the above conversation was +going on, but her thoughts were very busy. The idea that was uppermost +in her mind was that the day United States was to form an alliance with +the nations, she was to form one equally strong with her Andy. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +WAR RELIEF + + +Edwin Green occasionally had an attack of neuralgia that incapacitated +him for work for at least a day, so when Molly solemnly gave out the +news that her poor husband was suffering with one of his spells of +that painful malady, sympathy was expressed by servants, teachers, and +students. Blinds in the invalid's room were carefully closed and the +door locked, with the key in Molly's pocket. Instructions were sternly +given that nobody must disturb him. When he felt better he would ask for +what he wanted. Little Mildred was very sad that she was not allowed to +take him his "tup of toffee." + +"I weckon he's a-gonter die, sho," she confided to Cho-Cho-San. "Only my +mother don't know it or she wouldn't be a-smilin' an' laughin' so +hard." + +"I am going to work this morning at my war relief, even if we are to get +married to-morrow," declared Molly at breakfast. "If I let anything +short of death interfere I get into bad habits, and the work simply must +be done. They are crying out for more and more dressings." + +"Let's all of us go help! We can turn out oodlums of work if we try," +cried Judy. + +"Not Nance!" insisted Molly. "I know she has a lot of little stitches to +put in before to-morrow." + +"If you will excuse me, I will beg off," blushed Nance. "Andy is coming +in this morning for a few moments, besides." + +"I tell you, you must stay at home to take care of poor dear Edwin," +laughed Judy. "It would look terribly heartless for all of us to go +leave him." + +"Oh, I forgot Edwin!" declared Molly, just as Kizzie came in with a +stack of waffles. The girl looked at her mistress in astonishment. What +was coming over her Miss Molly, "fergittin' of the boss and then +a-larfin' about it?" + +"Shall I take Andy up to see him?" asked Nance soberly. + +"Perhaps!" + +"Hadn't we better take the kids along so their noise won't disturb poor +dear Brother Edwin?" suggested Judy, "Mildred and Cho-Cho and Poilu, the +puppy." Poilu was a diminutive mongrel, the love of Mildred's heart. + +"Oh, Mother, please, please!" begged Mildred. + +"I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee!" sang Cho-Cho as Molly smiled her +consent. + +"They can play in the churchyard and will be good, I am sure," she +declared. + +And so Nance was left to put in her finishing stitches, to receive her +lover and to take care of the fictitious case of neuralgia. + +"Hot cloths on his head if he is in very great agony," Molly called back +as the gay throng started for the war relief rooms. "There is more +aspirin in the top drawer if he is in much pain." + +Nance had a busy morning answering the 'phone, which rang many times +with inquiries for the popular professor. Mary Neil sent a box of candy +to Molly as a kind of consolation prize and Billie McKym sent Edwin a +pot of flowers. Lilian Swift sent a basket of fruit. + +"If their friends rally around them so for an imaginary disease, what +would they do if something were really the matter?" thought Nance. + +M. Misel and Andy met at the front door, Misel to inquire for the poor +ill man and Andy to catch a glimpse of his Nance. Misel had walked +slowly and painfully across the campus from his class room. Nance, from +the window, had watched him approaching and she could but admire his +patience as he made his crippled way. + +"It must be worse to have to pretend to be lame than to be lame," she +said to herself. "I wonder if Andy is still fooled." + +The two men came into the library together, Andy showing great +solicitude for the disabled foreigner. Misel was so extremely polite and +seemed so distressed at Edwin's illness that Nance could hardly believe +that Judy and the girls could be right in the discovery they had made +the night before. His manner was perfect, so respectful, so kindly and +courteous. + +"I believe I am to wish you joy, Dr. McLean,--and I do so with all my +heart." Andy grinned his appreciation. "My wife and I were quite charmed +by Miss Oldham. I hear you are to go to the front to assist poor +stricken France. I admire the courage of your fiancee to contemplate +going with you." + +"It would take more for me to stay away," whispered Nance softly. + +"Ah, it is the spirit of the women which is what the Germans have to +fight!" + +"Is not the spirit of the German women quite as courageous as ours?" +asked Nance, looking at Misel keenly. + +"Ah! _Wonderschoen!_" his eyes glowed. Suddenly the fact that he had +dropped into German seemed to embarrass him. "That is--that is the +word for the German women, just as 'wonderful' is the one for the +Americans." + +"Tell me about Edwin," interrupted Andy, as though he meant to put Misel +at his ease again. "Is he very ill?" + +"Oh, very!" + +"Can't I go up to see him?" + +"Molly said he was not to be disturbed. These headaches just wear +themselves out. He will be all right to-night." + +"But there is something to be done before it wears Edwin out as well as +itself," insisted the young doctor. + +"Molly says not!" Nance shook her head at Andy as much as to tell him he +was talking too much, and that young man subsided until Misel had gone. +Then Nance revealed to her lover the whole nefarious plot. + +"I had my doubts about that man from the first. I could not see how +anyone as lame as he was could have jumped up so briskly. The beast! How +could you be so polite to him?" + +"Camouflage! Fighting the devil with fire!" + +"I am glad old Ed took matters in hand so promptly. I tell you these +college professors show up pretty well in these times! Wilson and Green +forever!" + +In the meantime the industrious war relief workers were hard at it. The +be-aproned and be-kerchiefed ladies of Wellington held their seances in +the basement of the little church. It was astonishing how large was +their output, but busy fingers had been steadily at work ever since word +had come from France that wounded men were dying for lack of surgical +dressings, and that word had come very soon after the breaking out of +the World War. + +Women with earnest faces were bending over the long tables, some rolling +bandages; some tearing cotton cloth; some pulling threads for careful +cutting of gauze, later to be deftly folded in the prescribed shape. In +one corner, cotton batting was being fluffed up for the making of +fracture pillows. Huge baskets were being emptied by one group as they +stuffed the pillows, while others were being filled by the fluffers, +as Judy called the women whose duty it was to pick the cotton. Much +sneezing went on in this corner and he who wonders why, might try once +fluffing unrefined cotton. + +"Let me make the tampons!" begged Jessie. + +"I know why! Because they look like powder puffs," teased Edith. + +The house party was received with enthusiasm by the Wellington workers. +There always seems to be more work than can be accomplished and then +workers come and by hook or crook the task is completed. All of our +girls had done some war relief work, so it was easy to set them to +their stints. Pretty Jessie could make tampons that were so soft and so +regular that they really did look like powder puffs. Katherine could +pick cotton as fast as Mother Carey can chickens and her advent caused +an increase of sneezing. Edith stuffed fracture pillows just to show +that she could go faster than her sister. Margaret rolled bandages with +a precision equal to her parliamentary ruling when she was presiding +officer. Otoyo and Judy and Molly folded the gauze into the neat little +six-inch squares. This is the most difficult part of the work, requiring +such accuracy that only the expert should choose that table. The edges +must come just together, no threads must be left on the gauze, the +corners must be turned under exactly enough and the finished articles +stacked in even piles. + +Madame Misel came in with the work she had taken home to finish. Never +were such neat, wonderful dressings as hers. In the short time she had +been at Wellington she had accomplished the work of two women, bringing +in great stacks of the accurately-made dressings. + +It was difficult for the girls to treat her with the courtesy they +knew it was policy to employ. Behind that calm mask they could now +detect the lying spy. Her expression was as demure as ever and she +spoke with the same hesitation that they felt was assumed, just as +her husband's halting gait was. Why they should have taken up that +particular disguise, Molly and her friends were at a loss to know. + +Madame Misel was almost a beautiful woman. Animation would have made her +quite beautiful, animation and better dressing. Her hair was parted in +the middle and brushed as slick as glass, coiled in a tight knob at +exactly the wrong angle. She habitually wore an old-fashioned basque of +a bygone cut buttoned up close to the neck with a narrow band of white +collar, which but accentuated the severity of her garb. Her shoes were +broad and ugly with no heels, her skirt skimpy and badly hung. + +Judy studied the countenance of the foreigner as she bent over her work. +The nimble fingers moved very rapidly as she folded the gauze. + +"Gee, I'd like to sketch her!" Judy whispered to Molly. "A mixture of +Mona Lisa and the Unknown Woman and plain repressed devil!" + +She whipped out her sketch book, which was never far from her, and with +a few strokes had Madame Misel's pose, then with a skill that was quite +wonderful had suggested her features. The model moved uneasily as though +conscious of scrutiny, but before she looked up Judy had closed her book +and was demurely folding gauze. Madame arose and walked away, standing +by the table where Margaret was rolling bandages. Judy again whipped +out her book and made a rapid impression of the unstylish figure in its +flat shoes and tight basque. + +Just then little Mildred and Cho-Cho came screaming from the churchyard +where they had been playing happily. Mildred had in her arms the poor +little much-petted puppy. Blood was streaming from the creature's leg +and he was giving forth pathetic wails. + +"A big dog done bitted him all up!" cried Mildred. + +"Greatly dog 'ave 'urt little puppee!" said Cho-Cho-San. + +"First aid to the injured!" exclaimed Judy, as she took the bleeding +canine in her arms. The pile of beautifully made dressings Madame Misel +had just brought in was on the corner of the long table. Without a +by-your-leave, Judy snatched up one from the top and bound it around the +poor gory leg. "There, you poor little precious! You may be part French +poodle, anyhow, and surely a wound is a wound." + +Madame Misel put out a hand as though to stay her, but before she could +say anything Judy had the dressing wrapped around the puppy's little +leg. + +"Too bad to take one so perfectly made, but I just grabbed the one +closest to hand. Now, Mildred, you and Cho-Cho can be Red Cross nurses +and little Poilu can be your wounded warrior. Take him out and nurse him +carefully. It isn't much of a place and no doubt with good care he will +be all well by to-morrow." + +"I--think--it--would be--advisable to--apply--iodine to the +wound--is it--not so, Madame Brown? I shall be pleased to--go +to--my--house--and--procure some," faltered Madame Misel. + +"I don't think it is really necessary," insisted Molly. "We shall be +going home presently and I can put some on then. You are very kind." +Enemy alien or not, Madame Misel was certainly very thoughtful to want +to take the trouble for the pet. Molly, ever ready to see the good in +persons, had a feeling that this quiet, pleasant woman could not be +shamming. Perhaps Misel was not what he should be, but not this wife, +who was so untiring in her labors of mercy. + +When they started home, the roly-poly Poilu seemed to have recovered +entirely. He did not even limp, so he was spared the ordeal of having +the stinging iodine poured on the wounded leg. It was nothing more than +a scratch anyhow, Judy declared. + +At midnight Edwin returned, letting himself quietly in the front door. +Molly was waiting for him, eaten up with curiosity about what had +transpired. He had been closeted with the Secret Service officials, who +considered the matter of the gravest importance. Two of the cleverest +and most cautious of the detective force were put on the job. + +"They were no doubt on the train with me," he said, "but I have no idea +what they look like or what disguise they themselves will employ. At +least a dozen persons got off the train at Wellington Station and all of +them or none of them may have been Sherlock Holmeses." + +"I hope your neuralgia is better," laughed Molly. + +"Well, the joke of it is, I really did have neuralgia all day, not +severe enough to keep me from enjoying a very good luncheon with your +brother Kent and Jimmie Lufton at the Press Club, but quite bad enough +to keep you from having told a lie." + +"Poor dear! I am so sorry for you to have suffered at all, but it is +certainly considerate of you to be instrumental in saving my soul. And +now, since to-morrow is the wedding day, we had better get all the sleep +we can." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +TILL DEATH DOTH US PART + + +The small home wedding that Nance and Molly had originally planned grew +to be quite large. Little by little it seemed impossible to get married +without first one person and then the other. Andy had many friends at +Exmoor and Wellington; Dr. and Mrs. McLean knew half the country and had +a long list to be invited; Nance wanted the whole faculty and some of +the girls who were favorites of Molly's; Kent Brown arrived from New +York bringing with him Mr. Matsuki, frankly delighted to be included in +so honorable an assemblage. + +"Surely they can't all of them sleep here," said Edwin to his wife as he +put on his wedding garments. + +"They can, but they won't," she answered, laughing at his woeful +expression. "The house party breaks up after the ceremony. Do I look all +right?" + +"Beautiful!" + +"I mean my dress!" + +"But I mean you! I don't know anything about your dress except that it +is blue as it should be." + +"Can you find your collar buttons and is your tie all right?" asked the +anxious housewife as she accepted with very good grace the embrace Edwin +felt was necessary to his happiness just then. + +"Yes! Everything O. K.! I am sorry for the bride because you are so +lovely, honey. Nance is a pretty girl but I am afraid nobody will see +her because of the matron of honor." + +"Such a goose! Now I must go look after the flower girls. Katy has them +coralled in the nursery where they can't get dirty. They are the +sweetest looking creatures you ever saw in your life. Dodo looks like a +beautiful cabbage rose himself, his cheeks are so rosy. I wish Mother +could see him." + +"Why doesn't she come on to the wedding?" + +"Sue needs her in Kentucky. The only trouble about Mother is that there +is only one of her. I need her more than anything right now. If she were +here she would take hold of this wedding breakfast and I would know it +would come off right," sighed Molly, who, true to her character, had +planned to do enough for two persons. "Thank goodness, Judy is here!" + +The ceremony was to be at twelve and then a wedding breakfast served. +This meant Molly was to be very busy. The girls were helping, but at the +same time they were more or less flustered trying to get themselves +dressed all in one room. They had determined to make this a gay light +wedding as to clothes at least. There was a feeling of excitement in +every breast, excitement mingled with sadness. Was not this the most +momentous day in the life of every true American? War was declared! +Perhaps had they realized just what war meant, those girls could not +have donned those gay, bright garments. Would they have had the courage +to wish their friend God-speed so cheerily? I believe they would. They +were of the stuff of the mothers of men. On that second of April, 1917, +every woman in the United States must have felt somewhat as Molly +Brown's college friends felt. It was a feeling of excitement, awe, +exhilaration and dread combined. + +Nance was gowned in white with a wonderful lace veil Otoyo had brought +as her present. It was as filmy as the clouds that rest on Fujiyama, the +sacred mountain of Otoyo's country. + +"Only suppose she had brought a tea basket like mine! What would that +have looked like on your head?" giggled Judy, who was in a strangely +hysterical state. She was one girl who very well knew what the war was +to mean. Had she not been on the outskirts of war in 1914 when she was +stranded in Paris? Had she not seen the soldiers marching off bidding +farewell to their nearest and dearest,--sometimes a final farewell? Kent +had spent all the time he could in training camps since they had been +opened to citizens of the United States, and now he was confident of +receiving a commission. Perhaps it would mean that her husband would be +in the trenches in a short time. She wanted him to want to go, was proud +of him for wanting to,--but oh, the agony of it all! + +Almost time for the ceremony now! Molly made her final tour of +inspection. Edwin, Kent and Mr. Matsuki were safe in the den where they +eagerly discussed politics. Dr. and Mrs. McLean arrived, holding Andy +between them as though they might lose him before it was time. + +"I meant to help you, Molly, child, but my hea-r-r-t is so joompy I am +afraid it will be best for me to compose meself," said the poor mother. +"Don't let Andy know!" + +Molly kissed the dear lady and asked Katherine to stay near her. +Katherine's dressing was always a simple matter, as her gowns consisted +of shirt-waists and skirts in various materials to suit various +occasions. She declared she could dress in the dark and look just as +well as though she had had cheval glasses and a blaze of light. + +The other girls were ready and came down to the parlors to help receive +the guests. Nance was lovely and looked as fresh and sweet as a white +violet as she sat in her room sedately awaiting the hour. A visit to the +nursery disclosed the children piously standing with backs to the window +and arms held well away from their fluffy skirts, as charming flower +girls as one could find. + +"I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee! I'm Mildred's Japanese dollee! She's my +kick-up dollee!" sang the little Cho-Cho-San. "All I want is bald spot, +and all she wants is stick up hair!" + +"Ain't we your little comforts, Muvver?" asked Mildred. + +"Indeed you are, my darling! Now when Judy calls, you come running so +you can go down the stairs in front of Aunt Nance. Judy will have your +wreaths all ready. Where is Katy?" + +"She's peeking at the comply." + +"Well, you kiddies be good and don't get your dresses mussed. It is +almost time now. Don't wake Dodo." Of course Dodo had gone to sleep, +since there was nothing more important on hand just then. Molly hurried +off to the kitchen to see that the wedding breakfast was coming on as +she had planned. Mrs. Murphy had hobbled up to help Kizzie, and Mrs. +McLean had sent over her two maids. + +"All they need is a boss," sighed poor Molly. "If I only could be two +places at one time!" + +But whose familiar figure was that seen through the scullery door? The +maids were all in a broad grin and Kizzie, as she expressed it, "was +fittin' to bust." + +"Mother! Mother! Where on earth did you come from?" and Molly had that +dear lady clasped in her arms. "What are you doing in the back? Come on +and hurry and get dressed! It is almost time!" Molly felt like little +Cho-Cho when she cried out: "I'm so 'appee! I'm so 'appee!" + +"I just this minute arrived and have no idea of dressing!" cried that +dear lady when she could speak. + +"Of course you needn't dress! You are lovely as you are--your hair is a +bit mussed--and----" + +"You mussed it but it will do very well for the part I am to play. I +have no idea of appearing. I mean to serve this breakfast." + +"But, Mother, I couldn't let you!" + +"Nonsense! That is what I hurried on for. Why, child, when I realized +that you were having a house party and a wedding and going to serve a +great breakfast, I simply jumped on the train with a hand-bag and flew +to you. You always have behaved as though you were triplets. Now run +along and don't tell a soul I am here. I can be honored later on; now I +want a big apron and room to operate. Kizzie has already told me what +the breakfast is to be and you need not think about it. Run along!" + +"Well, one more hug and I am gone. Aren't you even going to peek at the +comply, as Mildred says?" + +"Oh, I'll see the ceremony, never fear; but fly, Molly! The guests are +coming." + +Molly felt as though she really could fly. Her mother's arrival had +relieved her of all fear about the wedding breakfast. It would be +obliged to go off without a hitch now. Dear, dear Mother! How like her +to come quietly slipping in the back way just in the nick of time! + +One could have heard a pin drop in the old square house on the campus as +the first strains of the wedding march arose and the rustle of skirts on +the stairway announced the approach of the wedding procession. Andy was +shaking and shivering in the hall, tightly clutching his father's arm. +He had declared that Dr. McLean must be his best man and would hear of +no other. Of course he was just as scared as the groom always is, at +least, all proper grooms. + +At Judy's signal the little flower girls came dancing from the nursery, +their fluffy skirts flying. The wreaths and garlands were handed them +and they marched down the stairs feeling much more important than Nance +herself. + +"Heavens!" thought Molly as she followed them with Nance, "what on +earth is the matter with Mildred's hair?" It was standing up in a most +peculiar way. Instead of the curls that Katy had so carefully made, her +ringlets had been brushed out and Molly realized that at least four +inches of her daughter's hair had been cut off. "And Cho-Cho-San! What +has happened to her?" In the middle of the child's head was a bare spot +at least three inches in diameter. It looked as though it had been +shaved. + +Whatever the matter was, it affected the flower girls not in the least. +With many tosses of those shorn heads they marched into the parlor, +scattering their posies as they had been told. When Otoyo saw the bald +spot on the head of her offspring she almost fainted and had to hold on +to the ready arm of honorable husband. Cho-Cho-San had clipped Mildred's +hair to make it stand up like a kick-up dolly, and Mildred had stolen +her father's safety razor and converted her little friend into a +veritable Japanese dolly. + +Nothing but the solemnity of the occasion kept Molly from hysterics. The +little wretches must have got busy after she made her visit to the +nursery. Evidently they were doing what Mildred called "playing true." +Cho-Cho was a Japanese dolly and Mildred was a kick-up. The little +visitor did look exactly like one of those fascinating Japanese dolls, +and Molly could but smile in spite of her distress. She was afraid to +catch Judy's eye as she stepped back to let Andy take his place by +Nance's side. + +Never had the wedding ceremony seemed so impressive as on that second of +April. Every mind was filled with the importance of the step that the +country was taking, and with the prayer that Andy and Nance would +prosper, was breathed the thought that the United States might come out +victorious. + +Nance was to go with Andy's unit in the capacity of interpreter. She was +not a brilliant French scholar but was thorough in her knowledge of that +as of everything she had undertaken. She frankly declared that she had +been separated from Andy long enough and she intended to follow him to +the ends of the earth if need be. It was that wonderful fact that made +Andy's "I will!" so strong and clear. His tremblings left him and he +stood by his dear girl like the soldier of the Red Cross that he was. +Nothing was impossible or too hard if Nance was to be with him. + +Mrs. McLean's good, honest face was like an angel's as she gazed on +her new daughter-in-law. No jealousy was depicted there--nothing but +adoration, gratitude that the girl was to make her Andy happy. Poor Dr. +McLean was sobbing like a baby and his good wife had to put her arms +around him to comfort him. + +All over! "Whom God hath joined together let no man put asunder." Andy +clasped his Nance with the look of: "I dare anyone to try!" + +Otoyo and Molly held a whispered consultation over their imaginative +offspring and decided that nothing was to be said or done to the +culprits on that day of days,--the reckoning must be deferred. + +Those infants were greatly astonished, somewhat relieved and secretly +chagrined that their prank was not noticed. They had expected to be even +more important than the bride in their roles of Japanese and kick-up +dolls. + +"I weckon nobody don't love us 'nough to spank us even," pouted Mildred. + +"Japanese babee gets not spank-ed--but honorable mother frowns on +Cho-Cho when she loves her most after naughtiness--but now--but now--she +smiles, but not with love," was the wail of the companion in crime and +misery. + +The efficient helmsman in the kitchen steered the wedding breakfast to +safety. The affair went off with such expedition that the housekeepers +present marveled at Molly's cleverness. + +"She must have trained her servants wonderfully well," whispered one. + +"I remember the joke they got off on Molly in college," laughed Miss +Walker. "It was that she came of a family of famous cooks." + +"It is not only the cooking now," said Mrs. Fern, Edwin's cousin and the +mother of the perfect Alice. "It is the way it is served and the +orderliness of the waitresses. I wonder that Molly can be with her +guests while it is being done unless she has had a caterer come up from +New York. I simply have to be in the pantry myself when my daughters +entertain on a large scale. That is, unless I can hire someone to come +take charge, and Wellington does not boast such a person. Alice is very +particular but not willing to do much herself,--not able, in fact," she +added lamely, a little afraid of having criticized her perfect daughter +in public. + +Mrs. Fern was very fond of Molly and admired her greatly in spite of +the fact that she could not help bearing her a tiny secret grudge for +marrying Edwin Green. That good lady had in her heart of hearts hoped +that Alice was to bear off the professional prize. Perfect persons are +not always very pleasant to live with and Alice Fern was no exception to +the rule. Mrs. Fern wished no harm to Edwin but she would have been glad +to shift her burden of perfectness to other shoulders. + +"We are just asking ourselves how you do it, my dear," she said as Molly +came up to see that all was going well with her guests. + +"Do it! I'll tell you a secret that I was not to divulge but I am simply +bursting with it: Mother is in the pantry! She came in the back way, +without my even knowing she had left Kentucky, and now she is directing +operations. She refuses to appear until the party is over." + +"Ah, that is the reason for that glow in your eyes!" exclaimed Miss +Walker. "I used to say when you were a college girl that I could tell by +your expression when the western mail had brought you a letter from +Kentucky." + +"I didn't know it showed so," blushed Molly, "but it does make me feel +warm all over when I know my mother is near." + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +THE PUNISHMENT OF MILDRED + + +The last rice thrown and the bridal party gone! Molly and Judy all that +was left of the gay girls! The old crowd once more dispersed! I wonder +if they will ever come together again. It had been a perfect time, and +Molly, although dead tired, was very happy that she had been able to +gather them in under her roof. All that worried her now was the fact +that Mildred was to be punished. How, she was not certain. + +Mrs. Brown, no longer in her apron but now the most honored of all, was +ensconced on the sofa with Dodo in her arms and Mildred snuggled up +close to her side. The child's eyes were big and sad. Her little cropped +head was drooping and her mouth trembling. Even Granny was not noticing +her naughtiness. Evidently nobody loved her! + +Kent was seated on the floor, his head against his mother's knee, where, +without exerting himself, he could see Judy's animated face and bright +fluffy hair. Perhaps the time was soon coming when he would have to be +far away from these beloved women. He was sure of his commission now and +was ready for his country's call, but oh, it was hard to be uprooted +from the pleasant spot where love had planted him! Ah, well! The war +could not last forever and maybe there was a good time coming for all of +them. It was hard to leave Judy, but it would be harder to take her with +him if duty sent him to France. He did not criticize Andy McLean in the +least. He knew his own business and Nance wanted to go with him but he, +Kent Brown, had no idea of exposing his Judy to any more horrors of war. +The taste both of them had had of it was enough. + +The little group around the fire was very quiet. Dormouse Dodo went +off into his usual soporific state. Judy was knitting rapidly, and the +click of her needles was all that broke the stillness. Judy always +declared she did not mind knitting if she could just make her needles +click. Molly was too tired to knit, too tired to do anything. If only +she had settled matters with her first born! Her conscience told her it +must be done and done soon. If only something would happen to keep her +from having to do it, whatever it was to be. She actually prayed for +strength to take the matter up and also that she would not have to take +it up. + +Suddenly on the twilight calm of the library there arose a +broken-hearted wail! Mildred had broken out into an abandon of grief. +Her wails rent the air. + +"Gee whilikins! I thought the Germans had come," exclaimed Kent, jumping +to his feet. + +"My darling, what is it?" asked Mrs. Brown as Mildred clutched her +around the neck. + +"Oh, Granny, Granny! My muvver hates me!" + +"Oh, Molly! What have you done to this angel?" asked the grandmother +almost sternly. + +"Nothing! I declare!" + +"That's jes' it! She ain't done nuffin! That shows she hates me. Kizzie +done say, 'Who de Lord loveneth he chases,' an' I done did the wussest +thing I could do an' my muvver she ain't so much as said: 'Why, +Mildred!' I wants to git spanked! I wants to git spanked!" + +"Why, darling, what have you done?" asked Mrs. Brown, trying to control +her risibles. + +"I done shave-pated, number-eighted my little Haythen friend. Kizzie +called Cho-Cho: + + "'Shave pate, number eight + Hit yo' haid aginst the gate.' + +"It sho did hurt Cho-Cho's feelings. And Cho-Cho, she slish-slashed my +hair off so's I'd look cute. Nobody ain't told us we look cute--and +nobody ain't spanked us nor nothin'--and nobody don't love us." This +tirade came out between sobs. + +Kent and Judy roared with laughter but Molly and her mother tried to +look sad and mournful. + +"Molly, I'm astonished! Why don't you spank your kid? I never heard of +such an inhuman parent," teased Kent. + +Molly was very happy indeed. The miracle had come! Her prayer was +answered. She did not have to punish Mildred. Mildred was punished. + +"You wouldn't have treated yo' dear little children so mean, would you, +Granny?" + +"You bet she wouldn't have," insisted Kent. "Why, if I had shave-pated, +number-eighted my little Haythen friends, your granny would have torn me +limb from limb and beaten me black and blue." + +"Sho nuf?" + +"Yes, indeed, and if my little Haythen friend had chopped off all my +pretty curls, I am sure her mother would have thrown her in the fire and +poked holes in her with a red hot poker." + +"Jes' 'cause they loved you so much?" + +"Yes, just because they loved us so much." + +"Me'n' Cho-Cho wisht we could git throwed in the fire," sighed the +repentant Mildred. "But, Uncle Kent," and she got up and put her little +mouth close to his ear, "don't you think I made a mighty cunning little +Japanese dolly out'n my Haythen friend?" + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +A DEATH + + +"Aunt Judy, my Poilu is tellible sick! He can't open up his mouf mo'n +'bout a minute far. Won't you please, ma'm, punch it open wif the button +hook so's I kin poke some breafkast down him?" + +Mildred had the little puppy clasped in her arms and he did seem to be +very miserable. His eyes were partly closed and his teeth were tightly +clamped together. + +"I weckon that big ol' dog what eated a piece out'n him done made him so +sick." + +"But, honey, that was a week ago, and if it had been going to make him +sick it would surely have affected him long ago. It was nothing but a +scratch, and don't you remember Aunt Judy bound it up so tight it only +bled a moment?" + +Judy and Kent had remained at Wellington for a visit. Kent was so soon +to join his regiment that he felt he could not tear himself away from +his mother and sister, so they had lingered on after the other guests +had departed. The bride and groom had also returned after a flying visit +to Nance's old home and were now with the McLeans, Nance declaring that +Andy's mother must have all she could of her son before he was to sail +for France. + +Judy took the puppy in her lap and smoothed his silky sides. The little +fellow opened his eyes and gave her a grateful glance. Mildred did +squeeze a little too tight when a fellow felt as sick as poor little +Poilu did. + +"Maybe we had better get the doctor for him," suggested Judy. "There +come Andy and Aunt Nance now, across the campus! Call them, Mildred! +Andy is not too proud to doctor a dog." + +Mildred delightedly ran to the door and waved her arms frantically. "Hi +there, brideangroom! brideangroom! Somebody's mighty sick in this here +house. Better hurry up or they might go deaded!" + +Andy and Nance quickened their pace and hastened into the house. + +"Who is it?" they cried anxiously. + +"It's my littlest brudder!" + +"Dodo! What is the matter with my little husband?" asked Nance +anxiously. + +"'Tain't Dodo! He ain't my littlest brudder. I'se got anudder brudder. +Ain't you knowed about him?" + +Nance and Andy were much mystified, but they followed the amusing little +creature into the library. Nance thought perhaps the big-hearted Molly +had adopted a French orphan,--Molly was quite capable of doing it. + +"There's my brudder!" and Mildred pointed to the suffering puppy. "Ain't +it too bad he's got a tail?" + +Andy laughed as he lifted the poor little Poilu to his own knees. + +"What is the matter with him, Andy?" was Judy's anxious query. + +"It looks like the last stages of tetanus." The patient was even then in +a violent convulsion. Andy mercifully laid his handkerchief over the +little fellow's head, dreading that Mildred should see his suffering. + +"I'd put him out of his misery but he will be gone in a moment anyhow," +he said sadly. "Has he been hurt?" + +"A week ago he got bitten by a dog, but it was a mere scratch and did +not amount to a row of pins, so Molly and I decided." + +"Did you put anything on the wound?" + +"Nothing but a surgical dressing down at the war relief rooms. I +remember it was one of the beautifully made dressings Madame Misel had +just brought in----" + +Andy sprang up, a wild light in his eye. The puppy had breathed its last +so he handed it over to Judy without more ado. + +"Where is Molly?" + +"She has gone down in the village to pack supplies at the war relief +rooms. There were lots of things to get off, so she went quite early. I +am to follow a little later, just as soon as Kent finishes primping. +What is the matter?" + +"There may be much the matter. You and Kent come as fast as you can," +and Andy and Nance hurried off without any more explanation. + +The news was broken to Mildred that her pet was no more and her bruised +heart was much comforted with promises of a funeral later on when Kizzie +got time to make arrangements. Kent and Judy caught up with Andy and +Nance before they reached the old church where the war work was carried +on. + +"What under Heaven is the matter?" panted Judy. + +"It may be nothing, but I must investigate. Let's go in as quietly as +possible. Does Madame Misel still work on the surgical dressings?" + +"Yes, indeed! And such beautiful work as she does! Molly insists that +she must have a great deal of good in her to give so much time to this +work. Sometimes I think I must have dreamed that they spoke as they did +that night in the garden. Why should pro-Germans and spies choose this +particular spot, anyhow?" + +The workroom was filled with very busy ladies when our young couples +entered. Molly was tying up dressings, after carefully inspecting and +counting them. An order had come for many bandages and other dressings +and all hands were at work trying to get them off. Madame Misel was +deftly arranging the rolled bandages in pyramids and then tying them +with strings made of the selvedge torn from the cotton. Nothing goes to +waste in this war work. Madame's countenance was as calm as ever as she +bent over her work, but when she saw the two men enter, Judy noticed a +sudden alertness in her glance and a tiny spot of red on her usually +white cheek. As she pulled the selvedge string, she must have given it +an unusual tug for it broke and the tightly-rolled bandages flew hither +and yon over the floor. + +"Humph! There is no telling how many germs got picked up in that +scatteration," muttered Andy as he stooped and gathered the bandages. + +"The--bandage--does--not--touch the--wound," said Madame, evidently +forgetting she was speaking to a surgeon. + +"No?" said Andy shortly. + +"Molly," he said, "I must speak with you a moment." + +"Well, Andy dear, I am awfully busy. You come home to luncheon with me, +you and Nance, and then you can speak all you've a mind to." + +"I must speak now," whispered Andy sternly. + +"Heavens! Is anything the matter?" asked Molly. + +"I am not sure," and Andy drew her towards the vestry at the back of the +church. "Tell me, Molly, have you packed all the dressings that that +Misel woman has made?" + +"Why, no, not all of them! Why?" + +"Have you mixed them with the others?" + +"No! They are so beautifully folded that I do not have to inspect them, +and so I have put them in boxes to themselves. She is the best worker I +ever saw." + +"Molly, I shall have to ask you not to get this shipment off to-day." + +"But, Andy, it is most important! The poor wounded are bleeding to death +and the ship sails in two days. We must get them off this evening if +they are to catch that boat. What is your reason?" + +And then Andy told her of the puppy's death. He said the fact that his +first aid had come from those very rooms, and that tetanus, or lock-jaw, +had set in on a perfectly healthy puppy when he had a mere scratch from +another dog, made him suspicious that tetanus germs were on some of the +bandages. + +"Why, Andy, that is ridiculous! Poor Madame Misel may be in sympathy +with Germany in spite of all she says, she and her husband, but she +could not do such a vile thing as that." Molly could not help feeling +impatient and indignant with her old friend. "Only look at her sweet +face and all thought of such infamy will leave your mind." + +Andy did glance towards Madame Misel and the look of venomous hatred +that he surprised on her face was shocking. The young physician laughed +grimly. "Molly, you are no judge of persons unless they happen to be +angels. You think wings are getting ready to sprout even from our +enemies." + +"Perhaps they are! Who knows?" + +"You may be right, but in the meantime, please don't let any of these +dressings get off. I must see those Secret Service men. Where are they?" + +"Edwin knows, I believe, but he has not told me." + +Molly was irritated beyond endurance. How was she to let these women +know that the shipment must be held up? It was all of it so absurd. The +women had done the work and now these men must come poking their fingers +into the pie that they had had none of the work of making. The idea of +accusing Madame Misel of such a crime! Judy, too, seemed to be doubting +the stranger, and Nance, of course, would be aiding and abetting Andy. + +"I shall have to ask you to be very quiet, not to give this creature an +inkling of our suspicions," commanded Andy sternly. "That is very +important." + +"Well, naturally, I'll hardly be so rude as to let her think anyone is +so unkind as to doubt her," and Molly's lip trembled. + +"Molly, dear Molly, don't hate me so. I can't help seeing that something +is wrong and if I have the slightest suspicion, I must surely probe to +the bottom. You must see that." + +"Of course I do, Andy, but I just can't bear to have anybody abused, +especially a woman who makes such lovely dressings," and Molly tried to +smile at her friend. + +"Well, I'll depend upon you to stop the work of getting them off and +still not let the woman know she is under suspicion. Just go on packing +but do not make the shipment." + +"I hate to resort to such subterfuge, but I'll do my best," sighed +Molly. + +"Wouldn't it be better to bring one criminal to justice than to kill +thousands of poor wounded men by dressing their wounds with tetanus +germs?" + +"Of course, only--but--you see----" + +"Yes, I see that your heart is so tender and you are so honest yourself +you think all the world must be like you." + +Molly went sadly back to her packing, all the joy and zest gone out of +her work. How could nice men like Andy and Kent think such things about +a poor defenseless woman? No doubt she did have a sneaking sympathy for +Germany. Was not that natural? Had she and her countrymen not been under +German rule long enough to consider the kaiser as their rightful ruler? +Because her husband chose to pretend to be lame was no reason why +everybody should think Madame Misel capable of such a dastardly thing as +putting tetanus germs on the bandages of poor wounded soldiers. That was +something no woman, no matter how bad, could do,--and surely this woman +was not bad, not really bad. Molly Brown was so constituted that one had +to be proven to be bad before she could believe evil of him or her, and +then, as a rule, she would find some excuse for the sinner if not for +the sin. + +Nance and Judy stayed on to help in the work, while Andy and Kent went +to find the Secret Service agents. While the task of making bandages, +etc., went rapidly forward, the detectives quietly ransacked the cottage +occupied by the Misels. This was the first opportunity they had had of +going over the house. The occupants had never before left it alone. Much +of dire importance was discovered. Among other things a small laboratory +where no doubt all kinds of evil germs were incubated. The search was +made very rapidly, as they were anxious to leave things in such order +that the owners would not suspect that they were under surveillance. + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +GERMS + + +As the two quietly-dressed, intelligent looking men were in the act of +going through a desk, they saw from the window the slow and painful +approach of M. Misel. Without a word they let themselves out of a back +window, left open for emergencies, and before the master had opened the +front door the detectives were over the back fence and out of sight. +They were desirous of catching more than the Misels in their net and did +not want to act too quickly. + +Had they peeped through the window, they would have seen Misel with an +impatient gesture sling his crutch in one direction, his cane in +another. + +"Lena!" he called, in anything but a gentle tone. "Lena!" And then with +muttered curses, when he found his wife to be absent, he settled himself +to look over the bunch of mail he had just obtained at the post-office. +One letter he examined very critically before opening. It was an +inoffensive enough looking envelope, addressed on a typewriter and with +a postmark from New York. It had the appearance of a circular or +advertisement of some sort, being made of cheap, greyish-white paper, +the kind of letter one would wait until last to open in a pile of mail, +being sure it was of no especial interest or importance. Misel seemed to +find it very interesting, however. It was the one he chose from all the +letters and papers, and as he examined it, he scowled darkly. + +"Lena!" he called as Madame Misel hurriedly entered the cottage, "Lena, +some fool has been meddling with my mail!" + +"Perhaps not such a big fool as you are!" she answered tartly. + +"Look! The envelope has been opened before. Of course it is the letter +from Fritz von Lestes, the one we have been awaiting." He tore it open +and read aloud: "'The paint which you have ordered will be delivered +immediately. Am sorry there should have been any delay. I am sending a +light grey, as agreed upon.' Umm--I don't see how they could make much +out of that." + +"Let me see the letter.--Of course they can make much out of it as there +is no address,--you men bungle things so! Why should a man who is in the +paint business write a letter with no address and sign his name so +illegibly that no one could make it out? He should have had a letter +head and a business envelope." + +"And speaking of bungling,--why did you go and leave the house with no +one in it? Can't you see that is imprudent?" + +"Mrs. Green came for me and I had no excuse.--Besides, I am sure if I am +by when the dressings are handed in that no one will inspect my work. I +have been packing all morning and have seen to it that my labor has not +been in vain." + +"Oh, peerless woman!" he said sarcastically. + +Madame Misel said nothing but busied herself over the luncheon. Suddenly +she gave a little cry, half distress, half indignation. Misel hastened +to her. + +"What is it?" + +"Look! This back window is not quite closed! Did you open it?" + +"No! I have not been here in the kitchen." + +"Then someone has been in the house," she announced in a dead tone. + +"Are you sure?" + +"Of course! I left the windows locked, stupid! Look about and see if all +is in order." + +The detectives had worked as neatly as detectives can work, but the +Misels found several traces of them. In one room a chair had been moved; +in another a drawer had not been shut as close as Madame was confident +she had left it; papers had been turned over in the desk, Misel was +sure, although none were missing. + +"Someone has been in the laboratory, too! Look at this crucible! I +always place them so,--and this has been turned." + +The pair faced each other with despair on their countenances. + +"What now?" they gasped. + +"We must make a flitting this very night!" exclaimed the woman. "Thank +goodness, nobody dreams that you are not crippled nor that I am anything +but the homely hausfrau I appear. The dressings will be off this very +afternoon, too, so my work is completed in that line, at least. If you +could boast as much, no doubt you would not mind leaving. I told you to +begin the teaching at Exmoor sooner." + +"The youths were not ripe for it. I have begun in a way, but not much +has been accomplished. Perhaps the person who has been here is just some +prying neighbor and we are not really being watched. Go out and see if +you can discover anything!" + +When Madame Misel peeped through the windows of the old church she saw +enough to make her turn pale. Andy McLean was there with two strange men +and Professor and Mrs. Green. Molly was weeping bitter tears as she +untied the carefully packed surgical dressings. Madame saw at a glance +that it was her work that was being examined by the men. She did not +stop to make sure what they found on her beautifully made dressings, but +turned and fled towards the cottage that she called home. + +"Why is she weeping?" she asked herself, and there was woman enough in +her to know that Molly wept because one of her own sex had proved +faithless. + +Blinds were pulled down in the cottage with the lovely old garden, and +the activities that ensued could only be equaled by a circus breaking up +to leave town. Madame Misel moved with a quiet precision that showed she +was an adept at making a quick get-away. Misel worked with a fury of +impatience. He went through his desk, scattering papers hither and yon +and burning everything of no value. Other documents he stowed carefully +away in his breast pocket. The laboratory was dismantled and small, +mysterious-looking vials packed in boxes and placed in the huge +suit-case that seemed to hold most of their belongings. + +A letter was written to the landlord informing him that his tenants had +been called out of Wellington by the illness of a fictitious sister. A +month's rent was enclosed. Another letter was written to the postmaster +asking that mail be forwarded to an entirely imaginary address. The work +proceeded rapidly. The cottage was always in apple-pie order, as Madame +Misel was certainly an excellent housekeeper. + +"You must write to the president of the college," commanded Madame. + +"Naturally! Must I use the same sister?" + +"Of course! Why two lies when one will suffice?" + +A letter to Miss Walker was dispatched forthwith. + +"And now for our disguises,--or rather the time has come to discard our +disguises!" cried Madame almost joyfully. "I hate to appear as such a +frump!" + +Misel's disguise was composed principally of cane and crutch, but at his +wife's instigation he shaved his mustache. With the help of a checked +suit and red necktie and a brown derby hat a trifle too small for +him, the pathetic and interesting teacher of the French language was +transformed into the type of man one sees hanging around a race track. +With a clever brush Madame put a quirk in his eyebrows that completed +the portrait. Then a bit of court plaster was stuck on one of the +perfect teeth which gave the handsome Misel a sinister look and +suggested to the beholder former battles and fisticuffs in which he +had been struck in the mouth. + +"Even your dying sister will not recognize you!" exclaimed his wife. + +Madame's transformation was even more startling than her husband's. +First she shook out her smoothly brushed hair and with the help of +curling tongs soon had a wave that the finest hair dresser in New York +could not have exceeded. She piled her abundant hair up in curls and +twists and coils, pulling out puffs over her ears. Then with pencil and +rouge pot and powder puff she went to work on her countenance. A raging +beauty was the outcome, but rather fast and loud looking. A lavender +suit lined and slashed with corn-colored silk was then donned, with +many rings and bracelets. The flat-heeled shoes were packed away in the +suit-case with the sober costume, and high-heeled French boots were +fitted on in their stead. A plentiful sprinkling of musk was added so +that the nostrils were assailed as soon as the eyes. + +"Tough sports!" would have been the verdict of anyone meeting the +Misels. They had decided on the night train to New York. The cottage was +carefully locked, the key enclosed in the letter to the landlord, which +they posted on their way to the station. Everything was going smoothly. +The station was empty when the pair stepped upon the platform and in a +moment the New York train came steaming around the curve. + +"Thank God, we are getting away unnoticed!" gasped Misel. + +"Thank God if you choose, but it would be more to the point if you +thanked me. I can't see that anyone has helped you but me." + +"Oh, well! Have it your own way!" said the spurious bookmaker as they +boarded the train. + +"Someone got left," he laughed as they took their seats in the chair +car. "I saw a man and woman running down the road just as we got aboard. +I am glad they got left. Whoever it is might have recognized us." + +"Nonsense! Didn't I tell you your own dying sister would not know you?" +and Madame Misel smoothed her lavender draperies and jangled her many +bracelets and rings, peeping in the mirror meantime to adjust her large +beplumed hat. There was a commotion in the end of the Pullman and she +heard a familiar voice. In the mirror she espied a familiar face, and +under the heavily laid on rouge, the woman paled and the hand that +adjusted her hat shook. Misel buried his face in the evening paper some +traveler had left in his seat, while the innocent cause of their +perturbation found a seat with the help of the porter. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +HER FATHER'S OWN DAUGHTER + + +"I don't see why you take it so hard, Molly darling," said Judy as Molly +told her of the detectives' findings and of the perfidy they had +unearthed. + +"Why, I fancy I am grieving that such wickedness can be in this world," +sighed Molly. "I liked Madame Misel so much." + +"Well, I never did like her," declared Judy. + +Molly smiled, well remembering Judy's enthusiasm on arriving at +Wellington and telling of the interesting couple she had met on the +train. + +"I know what you are thinking about--of course I said they were +interesting, but I never did like the woman much--she was too catty for +me." + +This conversation was interrupted by the loud ringing of the telephone +bell, which proved to be a long distance call for Judy from Mr. Kean in +New York. His marching orders had come and he was to sail for France in +a few days, and for the first time on record he could not take his +little wife with him. Building roads and bridges in war time was very +different from times of peace, and France at that time was no place for +delicate little ladies. + +"You had better come right up to New York on the next train," was his +ringing command. "Your mother needs you and I must see you, too." + +"All right, Bobby! Meet me at the Pennsylvania Station. I'll take the +12.45--I am not going to let Kent come. He must be with his mother one +more day,--his mother and Molly. So long! Be sure and meet me!" + +Then such a scrambling ensued! Kent must be persuaded he was neither +wanted nor needed, a few things hurled into a bag, her sketch book +tucked in her jacket pocket, and Judy was off like a whirlwind. She and +Kent ran all the way to the station only to see the train pulling out +as they stepped upon the platform. + +"I can get it! Keep the old bag!" cried that young woman as she sprinted +down the track, her young husband running lightly by her side, laughing +in spite of himself. If you have never run after a train and caught it +you cannot realize the triumphant feeling Judy had as she grasped the +rail and swung herself up on the rear coach. Fortunately it was not a +vestibule train or she would have been shut out. Kent slung the bag up +after her and then stood in the middle of the track until his Judy was +lost in the darkness. + +"What a girl she is!" he laughed to himself. "What a dear girl!" + +The dear girl was rescued by a rather indignant brakeman and led through +the empty coach that happened to be hitched on to the train and finally +installed in the chair car, after many explanations and excuses had been +made to train conductor and then Pullman conductor. + +Young women have no business on night trains with no tickets--certainly +no business in boarding those trains from the rear, thereby risking +their own necks and making the railroads liable to damage suits. + +"But you see my father telephoned me from New York," she confided to the +train conductor, a grizzled looking old fellow with a decidedly military +bearing. "He is going to France next week and he simply had to see +me.--Perhaps you know my father," she added with a certain assurance +that everybody connected with railroads ought to know Bobby. + +"More than likely!" was the grim reply. The conductor had no idea of +being cajoled into good humor by this daring girl. + +"He is Mr. Robert Kean,--Bobby!" + +The conductor was suddenly a changed creature. + +"Know him! I should say I did! Bless my soul, if you don't look like +him--same eyes--same mouth! Ha, ha! See Bob Kean missing a train! Not +much!" and the erstwhile stern captain of the train now grasped Judy's +hand. "Come on, I'll see that you get a chair, Miss Kean. I'm certainly +pleased to make your acquaintance." + +"I'm not Miss Kean any more,--I'm Mrs. Kent Brown now.--It was my +husband who pitched me and my luggage on the back end of the train." + +"Married! By jiminy! I can't believe Bob Kean has a married daughter! +And your husband aided and abetted you in jumping on the back of fast +trains, did he?" and the once grim captain laughed aloud. "Well, I'm +glad you got a game husband. I don't know what your father would have +done with a 'fraid cat." + +Judy's entrance in the Pullman caused some commotion. The old conductor +was laughing heartily and the brakeman was in a much pleasanter frame of +mind as he handed over Judy's bag to the grinning porter. There were +about eight persons in the chair car as Judy entered and Judy-like, she +immediately became intensely interested in them. + +Of course, the spot of color made by a flashy dame in lavender attracted +her attention first, and then her companion in loud checks cried out to +be noticed. What a couple! Race track written all over both of them! +Even from three seats off Judy could smell the musk on the woman. The +man's face was hidden by the newspaper and the woman seemed to be +engaged in rapt contemplation of her beauty in the narrow little mirror +by her chair. To Judy's disappointment the gaudy dame whirled her chair +around so she could not see her face. + +"I bet she's a peacherino!" she said to herself. + +There were other persons in the train that proved interesting, too: +among them a mother and child who appealed to Judy's artistic sense; a +G. A. R. veteran who was sure he had been in worse battles than the +Marne; an ancient lady from Louisiana who made our young artist wild to +paint her white hair and patrician nose. Opposite Judy's chair was a +young man, (or was he a young man?) At least he was not an old man! +There were a few tiny lines around his twinkling bright blue eyes, but +his movements were as alert as a college athlete's, and his mouth, +though very firm, had the saucy expression of a street boy. Judy was +sure she had seen his face before. The way his hair grew on his forehead +in a so-called widow's peak reminded her vaguely of someone,--the cleft +chin she was sure she had known somewhere. He was interested in her, +too, she could plainly see. He had a pleasant, dependable expression, +the kind of look one felt meant that in time of trouble he would be a +good person to call on. He was making himself generally useful to the +madonna-like mother and child; he had assisted the ancient lady from +Louisiana to get up and sit down several times since Judy had so +unceremoniously boarded the car. + +"I wish I knew where I had known him. His face is as familiar to me as +my own." + +She felt in her jacket pocket for her sketch book. She must get an +impression of the mother and child, and the old lady was destined to be +sketched in, too. She longed to do the youngish-oldish person opposite, +but he was too close for her to permit herself such a familiarity. She +turned over the leaves of her book and suddenly came upon the page +given up to the Tucker twins and their friend Page Allison. What +delightful girls they were! Suddenly she could place the resemblance +seen in the gentleman across the aisle. Of course his forehead and +widow's peak were the same that Dum Tucker owned, and his cleft chin was +the identical one belonging to Dee Tucker. Could he be their father? + +She remembered what the girls had told her of their delightful father. +He was a newspaper man in Richmond, Virginia, and according to the twins +was just about the most wonderful person in the world. Page Allison, +too, had given him praise, although not quite so wildly unstinted as his +daughters. + +"I think I'll drop something and let him pick it up for me and get in a +conversation with him," Judy laughed to herself. "He is such a squire of +dames, he is sure to pick it up." + +She turned the pages of her sketch book until she came to the quick +impressions she had made of Madame Misel at the war relief rooms. + +"The wretch!" was her inward comment, and her thoughts went back to the +last days at Wellington. She looked up; her eye was again chained by the +gaudy lavender spot and she suddenly became conscious that she could see +the woman's face in the large mirror at the end of the Pullman. Her eyes +were down as she perused the pages of a magazine. + +Another familiar face! Where under Heaven had she seen just that chin +and nose? Her eyes fell again on the open sketch book. Why, it is Madame +Misel--no other! With quick strokes she copied the sketch and then +cleverly added the beplumed hat, fluffy collar and fashionably cut coat. +The woman stood up for a moment to get something from the pocket of her +great coat, hanging on the hook at one side, and then Judy took in her +general contours standing, and added some draperies to the full length +figure she had also obtained of Madame Misel in the work room. High +heels were put on the flat, unstylish shoes. The straight severe dress +and basque were transformed into the fashionable, if gaudy, creation. +Judy was careful not to erase any of the original lines and all of the +new parts she sketched in in dots and dashes. + +The gentleman opposite was plainly interested in what she was doing and +it evidently required all his self-control to keep from asking to be +allowed to see. + +"They are the Misels and they are running away!" flashed into Judy's +mind. "It is up to me to stop them--but how? The gent in checks is +undoubtedly Misel. They can't fool me; I remember his ears too well and +the way his hands held things." + +She glanced across the aisle and her eyes met the bright blue ones +belonging to the widow's peak and cleft chin. + +"What would Bobby do in this case?" she asked herself. + +"Use the sense God gave him and get help if he couldn't cope with a +thing single-handed," she answered herself. + +She accordingly let her sketch book slide from her lap, rubber and +pencil hopping gaily after it. + +"Oh, thank you so much!" she exclaimed as the squire of dames +immediately dived for the belongings and restored them to her. "I would +not loose my sketch book for worlds." + +"I should say not! I have a daughter who is very much interested in +art,--in fact, she is studying in New York now,--her specialty is +sculpture, though." + +"Yes, I know her! She is Dum Tucker!" + +"You know my Dum! How wonderful! And how did you know she was--I was her +father?" + +"By your widow's peak! I also know you are Dee's father by your chin." + +Mr. Tucker changed his seat, taking the one by Judy. + +"By Jove! You artists are a clever lot. You would make a great +detective, Mrs. Brown. You must excuse me for knowing your name, but I +heard you tell the captain what it was,--Mrs. Kent Brown. My girls have +written me how kind you have been to them and I have been dying to make +myself known to you, but was waiting for some kind of opening wedge." + +"And I, too, Mr. Tucker, have been wondering where I had seen you, when +I found your girls' pictures in my little book. See! Here they are!" + +"And little Page, too!" He exclaimed eagerly scanning the sketches. "You +are wonderfully clever at a likeness." + +"Do you think so? I--Mr. Tucker--I deliberately scraped up an +acquaintance with you because I want you to do something for me," and +Judy looked frankly into the honest eyes of her new acquaintance. + +"Why, Mrs. Brown, you know I am at your service." + +"I was sure of you somehow, even if I had not been almost certain you +were related in some way to Dum and Dee Tucker. My little sketch book +told me that and it told me something else, too, but I must begin at the +beginning." + +Judy, whispering, began with her meeting of the Misels, of her +interesting the Greens at Wellington, of Misel's substituting in French +at the college and of Madame's work in the war relief. Jeffrey Tucker's +eyes flashed as the newspaper man in him scented a rousing good story. +When Judy got to the part where she and her friends went out in the +night to hunt for adventure and found it in the manly shape of Misel +taking strenuous exercise for a cripple, he beamed with joy and felt in +his pocket for a pencil. Judy rapidly told him of the puppy's wounded +leg and of the tetanus germs as well as ground glass being found in the +dressings. He set his square jaw and looked as though he could eat the +kaiser and all his crew at one mouthful. + +"And now I have come to the _denouement_!" gasped Judy, excitement +making her breathless. "If I could recognize you by your likeness to my +sketches, I fancy I could also recognize Madame Misel by sketches of +herself. I got two of her this morning at the war relief. The detectives +did not arrest them, as they want to get others in their dragnet, but in +some way the spies must have caught on to the fact that they were under +suspicion, as they sneaked away." + +"Are you sure?" + +"Sure as shooting! In fact they are on this train." + +"No!" excitedly. + +"Now, Mr. Tucker, you must compose yourself if we mean to catch the +creatures!" + +"Certainly!" and the eager man sank back in his seat and tried to look +as though he were having a mild conversation with the attractive young +woman who had jumped on the back of the moving train. + +"Now that is better! Keep that nonchalant expression for what I am going +to tell you----" + +"All right, fire away!" + +"They are on this coach, just three seats down.--Good boy, not to jump +out of your skin! Now I am going to show you my sketch of the woman +before and after. See, there is no doubt about her! You walk to the +smoker and on the way back get a good look at her face and I bet you +will be convinced." + +Jeffrey Tucker did as he was bid, giving Madame Misel such a casual look +that he aroused no suspicion in her mind. + +"Gee! This is great! I'd rather bag some of these spies than do big +hunting in the African Jungle. Now, most wise of all female detectives, +what do you advise? We must act quickly." + +"I think you should take the conductors, both train and Pullman, into +your confidence, and then send telegrams to New York to have the spies +met with the proper reception. You can telegraph Bobby, I mean my +father, if you think it best, and he can get in cahoots with the Secret +Service people in New York. Bobby is the kind of man who doesn't let +things go wrong. When he bores a hole in the mountain it comes out on +the opposite side just exactly where he meant it to,--when he swings a +bridge across a river it stays swung,--there is no giving way of +supports and undermining from washings,--Bobby knows. If you telegraph +him, he'll have detectives there all right and they will have the +necessary warrants and handcuffs, too." + +"Well then, Bobby it is!" and Jeffrey Tucker quickly took Mr. Kean's +address. Next the conductors were interviewed, and those good Americans +quickly complied with any and every request. A long and explicit +telegram was written to the gentleman who did not let mistakes happen, +another one sent to the chief of police, in case Mr. Kean should not be +at home to receive the telegram, (Jeffrey Tucker being the kind of man +who did not let mistakes occur, either,) and then there was nothing to +do but sit quietly in the Pullman and wait for the train to steam into +New York. + +It seemed to Judy to be hours and hours, although the time certainly +passed pleasantly with the friends she made on the train. She and Mr. +Tucker talked to everybody except the two sporty looking individuals, +and they would have had the audacity to talk with them if they had been +given the slightest encouragement. But the Misels kept their backs +studiously turned to their fellow travelers and did not court +sociability. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +THE ARREST + + +"Suppose they get off at Manhattan Junction and go to the Hudson +Terminal instead of the big Pennsylvania Station!" panted Judy, her eyes +shining with excitement and her fluffy hair standing on end as though an +electric shock had gone through her system. + +"Who is giving the game away now?" teased her new friend. "I thought of +that and warned the chief when I telegraphed him. If they do get off +there, I'll get off, too, and you can go on to the other station where +your father will meet you." + +"Not much I will! I'm going to keep my eye on that lavender spot until I +see those wrists with something on them besides gold bracelets. You see, +I feel responsible for this pair, having been the one to introduce them +to Wellington society. If they get off at Manhattan Junction, so do I. +Bobby will understand! He would have no use for me if I didn't see it +through." + +"I believe you are a real patriot, Mrs. Brown." + +"Of course I am! But one thing sure I am not going to give my husband to +the cause, and my father, and then let these mean spies go Scot-free. +Now my dear friend and sister-in-law Molly,--Mrs. Edwin Green,--is so +good that she can't believe anyone can be bad. She is just as patriotic +as I am but she can't believe in the perfidy of Germany and the Germans. +I truly believe she would not have the heart to nab these wretches even +if she could not deny their guilt. Molly is an angel herself and I fancy +maybe her angelic qualities do rub off some even on the worst +characters. She may have helped this Madame Misel some, who knows? But I +am going to help her even more by letting her get a taste of real +punishment." + +"And I am going to do my best to help you help her," laughed Mr. Tucker. +"We are nearing Manhattan Junction now and I do not see our friends +making ready to get off." + +The pair sat quietly while the train stopped for a moment for passengers +to change for the downtown station. Judy and Mr. Tucker were on the +alert to leave the train if they saw the slightest movement on the part +of the Misels, but the latter sat in evident certainty of their disguise +not having been penetrated. + +"Now the curtain is to go up in a moment!" cried Judy. "I have never +been in such a stew of expectation!" + +The train had entered its under-water tunnel and in what seemed hardly +a minute they found themselves in the Pennsylvania Station. Jeffrey +Tucker, true to his nature, must assist the old lady from Louisiana and +the mother and child, but this time he assisted them by calling the +porter and, with a generous tip, put them in his hands. He had other and +more urgent fish to fry. + +"There's Bobby!" cried Judy. "They have let him through the gates!" + +So they had, and others, also. Mr. Robert Kean was eagerly scanning the +windows of the coaches as they slowly passed in review. By his side were +several alert looking men in plain clothes and near them were some +brass-buttoned policemen. + +"You go out first," whispered Mr. Tucker to the impatient Judy, who +looked like a hunting dog straining at the leash. "I'll bring up the +rear in case of a bolt." + +The Misels got up quickly and without any delay moved towards the door. +They seemed perfectly unconcerned, the woman patting her curls and hat +into shape and Misel actually having the hardihood to cast an ogling +glance at Judy. That young woman returned his admiring look with a saucy +toss of her head, entering into the game with her usual vim. + +One hug for Bobby and a whisper in his ear: + +"The handsome dame in lavender and the lout in checks!" + +He in turn handed the information on to the plain clothes men, who were +ready with their bracelets not made of gold. + +The arrest was made so quietly that the mother and child who were in the +midst of it never did know what was going on, and the old lady from +Louisiana took her serene way right by the handcuffed Madame Misel +without knowing that that lady had had an addition made to her bangles. +Misel was inclined to give some little trouble. When he realized they +were trapped, he started back into the chair car, but was met in a head +on collision by Jeffrey Tucker, who had a few football tricks left over +from his not so far distant youth. + +"Get out of my way! You fool!" cried the enraged Misel. + +"Softly, my friend! The exit is the other way," purred the redoubtable +Mr. Tucker, at the same time putting up his guard, seeing the foreigner +was about to spring upon him. "Madame has gone out by the door behind +you." + +Bang! Misel's fist shot out, but Jeffrey Tucker was a match for any +ordinary boxer, having practiced that manly art to keep up with his +daughters who always put on the gloves to settle any difficulty, and, as +they expressed it, to let off steam when the family atmosphere got too +thick. He dodged the blow, holding his guard ready for the next. + +Before the furious creature could recover himself after having given the +empty air such a drubbing, the detectives approached him from the rear +and in a twinkling he was overcome. + +"What does this mean?" he asked, attempting an air of dignity. + +"You shall have to come and find out!" was the laconic reply deigned him +by the grim policeman who had him in charge. + +"Mr. Kean, I am sorry to tell you, but your daughter will have to come +to the police court to tell what she knows of these persons," said the +leader of the plain clothes men. + +"I'm not sorry! I want to see it through!" cried Judy. + +"And so, we are to thank you for this indignity," hissed Madame. + +"Thank me or the picturesque garden by your cottage--whichever you +choose. It is a stirring thing to creep in that lovely garden on a +romantic night and suddenly to see a poor lame man who has won the +sympathy of the community, come springing out in running togs and have +him beat Douglas Fairbanks and George Walsh in his jumping. Then to have +the gentle, courteous Madame Misel boldly state that Wellington is +composed of blockheads,--all in perfect German, too, which was a strange +language for such good Frenchmen to employ in the bosom of the family." + +"Judy, I wouldn't say any more!" said her father, but his eye was +twinkling as he tucked his daughter's hand under his arm. + +Mr. Tucker and Mr. Kean met as long lost friends. They were what Judy +called soul brothers from the first. The old train conductor stopped to +exchange greetings with his one-time acquaintance. He was loud in his +praise of the young lady who had scared them all to death by jumping on +the rear end of the moving train. He said nothing of the scolding he +had given her before he found out she was Bob Kean's daughter. + +The sketch book was convincing evidence that the sporty couple were no +other than Monsieur and Madame Misel. Judy told her story well to the +chief, showing the clever sketches taken before and after. + +While they were at the police court, a long distance message was +received from Wellington with the news that the flitting of the spies +had been discovered by the detectives sent there on the case. + +"It would have been too late if you had not been so wide awake," the +chief informed Judy. + +"And I could have done nothing if Mr. Tucker had not taken hold," +declared Judy. + +"Why, my dear Mrs. Brown, you would have found some other way, I am +sure. You do not come of a breed that lets accidents happen." + +The Misels turned out to be pure Prussian, with not one drop of the +blood of Alsace in their veins. Their name was Mitzel and they had many +crimes to answer for. They had been on the stage prior to the war and +the man was a noted acrobat and prestidigitator; the woman had traveled +with her husband and assisted him in his work on the stage, being the +hypnotized lady, the Herodian mystery, the disappearing spirit, the +person who got tied up in the chest and had a sword run through +her,--anything, in fact, that is usually required of the assistant in +such a business. They were employed to act as spies and to disseminate +all the German propaganda in their power. + +Misel, or Mitzel, was to have insinuated an anti-draft spirit at Exmoor, +the male college near Wellington. Also to influence the girls at +Wellington, who in their turn were to influence their brothers and +sweethearts. + +"Oh, Bobby! Only suppose we had not gone out that night in search of +adventure!" cried Judy, when she was safe under her mother's wing. + +"Why don't you just suppose you had never been born?" boomed the +delighted Bobby. "When you were once born you were sure to be out +hunting adventure. You are made that way, eh, Mother?" + +"Yes, I am afraid she is," sighed that tiny lady. "You and Judy are +exactly alike." + +"Do you mind?" asked her big husband humbly. + +"No, I would not have either one of you different. But I fancy Kent and +I are in for lives of anxiety." + +"Well, he likes us the way we are, too," declared Judy, blushing. + +"Well, I have two things to say:" declared Mr. Kean, giving a mighty +yawn, "I am glad I let you have a Parisian education if with it you can +make clever enough sketches to catch these German spies; and the other +is, that it is high time we were all of us in bed." + +Madame Mitzel, before she was sentenced to the imprisonment that she so +richly deserved, requested an interview with Judy, which was granted, +although Judy was most reluctant. + +"I can't bear to see her again! She looked like a snake caught in a +net." + +"I--want--you--to tell--Mrs. Green--that--I--am sorry for--her +to--know--about me--That is all! If--I could--have--had a woman--like +that--to--be--my friend--in my--youth--I would have--been different." +She spoke in the faltering manner she had used at Wellington, one she +employed in speaking English, and then she plunged into voluble German, +so rapid that Judy could hardly follow her: + +"But you! You have outwitted me and I cannot but admire you for it, but +I hate you with all my heart." + +"That is all right! I'd rather have your hate than your love! I'll tell +Molly, though." + +Before we leave the Misels, or Mitzels, for good, I must tell you that +the shipment of paint arrived at Wellington as the mysterious dealer +had informed Monsieur Jean Misel it would. One of the Secret Service +men remained in Wellington to receive it. It was light grey, as was +promised; at least, it was marked light grey on the outside of the +six large cans. On opening these cans, which I can assure you the +detective did with the utmost caution, many things besides paint were +disclosed,--in fact, there was no paint there at all. He found various +chemicals, necessary for the making of the modern bomb; poisons of all +sorts, and innocent looking little vials containing deadly germs. Those +six cans if let loose on the unsuspecting community would have caused as +much damage as the imps in Pandora's box. + +Even Molly had to confess that the Misels were not very good persons, +and when her husband gave her to understand that her own little Mildred +and Dodo might have been poisoned by polluted water had the foreigners +accomplished all they no doubt intended to with some of those bottled +germs, the young mother came to the conclusion that they were not only +not very good but they were extremely wicked, and perhaps just +imprisonment was too mild a punishment to be meted out to them. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +THEY ALSO SERVE + + +There was a very serious meeting of students of Wellington being held in +the library of the Square Deal. Twenty of the leading spirits of the +student body had asked Mrs. Edwin Green to let them confer with her on a +most important matter. + +The college authorities had announced that the H. C. of L. had affected +Wellington just as it had every person and every institution, and +students' board would have to be raised for the ensuing year. This came +as a blow to the majority of girls. Going to college is an expensive +matter at best, and while there are many rich girls gathered in those +institutions, the majority come from homes of moderate incomes and many +from actual poverty. It will never be known how many sacrifices had +been made to educate some of those Wellington girls, and the H. C. of L. +had affected their families just as much as it had the institution; and +the news that the following year college expenses would increase had +caused much consternation in the student body. + +"We won't stand for it!" said one tense little girl from Indiana, who +had been working her way through three years of college by doing all +kinds of odd jobs, which reminded Molly of her own strenuous student +days. + +"It's harder on you than me, Mary Culbertson," said a sturdy sophomore. +"You haven't but one more year. At least I haven't wasted as much time +in this old joint as you have." + +"But, my dear, please don't look upon it as wasted time," begged Molly. + +"Well, I came for a degree and if I don't get it, I consider I have +wasted two years. I might just as well have taken a job at home. A +teacher's place was open for me then and now it may be filled for good. +A degree will give one a better salary, but two years of college won't +get you anywhere." + +"I am sure some scheme can be worked to keep down the expenses," +insisted Molly. + +"We can't live on less food!" bluntly declared Lilian Swift. + +"Nor plainer!" from a discontented one. + +"It might be plainer without being less nourishing," suggested Molly. +"How about your doing some light housekeeping on your own hook and not +trying to board with the college?" + +"But I am sure the college authorities do not make money on the girls +as it is," said Billie McKym, who had come to the meeting from truly +altruistic motives, as expenses made no difference to her personally. +"If a great body of girls cannot be fed on the amount charged now, I am +certain a girl could not live on less if she went in for herself." + +Billie, with all her wealth, had a good keen eye for business and +understood the management of money rather better than any poor girl at +Wellington. + +"I reckon you are right," said Molly sadly. "Would you girls mind if I +ask my husband to come in and talk it over with you?" + +"No!" in chorus. "Bring him in!" + +"Not that knowing how to read Chaucer in old English will make him wise +as how to live on nothing a year," whispered one. + +Professor Green was in the den with his cousin, old Major Fern, who had +motored in from the country to have a chat with his favorite kinsman. +Molly entered, smiling at the clouds of tobacco smoke which almost +obscured the two gentlemen. + +"Edwin, I know the Major will excuse you for a moment. I need you +badly." + +"Of course, my dear! But I hope it is nothing serious that is beclouding +your fair brow," said the old gentleman with the courteous manner of his +generation. + +"Yes, it is serious in a way," and Molly told her husband and his cousin +what was the problem the girls had brought to her to solve. + +"Of course, I can't blame the college authorities," she sighed. "It is +hard to feed people as it is, and with expenses going up, up, I know +they will have to raise the board. But on the other hand, there are many +girls who simply cannot pay more than they are already paying. I feel +for them, as I was one of them when I was at college. If the board had +been raised one nickel I should have had to stop. I almost had to as it +was. If it had not been for Edwin's fondness for apples, I should have +been degreeless to this day." + +"Adam and I!" laughed the professor. "But what do you want me to do, +Molly? I am yours to command." + +"I don't know exactly! I thought you might talk to the girls and we +might keep on thinking and praying until some solution is reached." + +"I have a proposition to make that might interest your college friends," +said Major Fern. "They may scorn it, but on the other hand they may like +the idea. Let me talk to them." + +"Oh, how lovely! I knew there would be a way," cried the optimistic +Molly. + +"Wait until you hear it first," smiled the old gentleman. + +Molly led the way to the library, where the twenty girls were having a +hot discussion on ways and means. She introduced Major Fern, who took +his seat among them and beamed on them with kindly eyes. + +"Ahem!" he began. "I am not much of a public speaker but I am going to +put a plan before you and see how it strikes you. I understand that you +are making a kick because of the raising of board for the ensuing +year----" + +"We are!" + +"Well, you know that everything is going up?" + +"Everything but prayer!" from the discontented one. + +"Even that may be going up, too," he answered solemnly. "Now listen: +Perhaps you know that I am rich,--not so rich as some, but richer than +I have any right to be or any reason for being----" + +Here Mary Culbertson tossed her proud little head as much as to let him +know that charity was not what she wanted. Major Fern saw her and smiled +his approval. + +"I have no idea of offering any of my ill-gotten gold to you.--I know +how you would hate that. In fact, I haven't any gold to offer. I am rich +only in land and about as poor as they make 'em in other things. I am +really land poor, having much more land than I have any use for or can +till. I can't get labor to keep up my farms. I have been thinking of +selling an especially fertile farm about four miles from Wellington, but +I don't want to lose money on it, and if I sell at this time I am sure +to. This farm comprises about two hundred acres of as good land as one +can find in these parts, and that is saying a great deal. And now I am +coming to my scheme----" + +The old gentleman paused while the girls waited in breathless eagerness. + +"I will let you have this farm if you will work it for me,--have it for +as long as you need it. You don't know what can be done in the way of +intensive farming if one can get the labor. You could raise enough +potatoes to run your mess for the winter; enough tomatoes and beans to +can, and what's more you can can them right on the spot." + +"Hurrah! Hurrah!" shouted Billie McKym. "The problem is solved or I'm a +Boche." + +"Are you willing to undertake it?" asked the Major. + +"Of course we are willing!" cried Lilian. + +"The ones who live far can take the first part of the summer, and the +last, just before college opens, and the ones who are close can fill in +during the midsummer," said Molly, immediately grasping the possibility +of the plan. + +"Well, I'll leave it to you young ladies to work up, and when you care +to, I'll take you over the place. There is a good house and well and +plenty of fruit,--apples to feed to the hogs----" + +"That suits me!" declared Edwin, who had been quiet while his cousin was +unfolding the plan. "I see no reason, seriously, why this idea should +not be wonderfully successful,--not only should it bring you back to +college and keep you for the same, or even less, money than you have +hitherto had to pay, but it will at the same time help materially in the +food situation that the country is going to have to face." + +"Will you be one of that committee that must take hold of this thing?" +asked Billie. + +"If the student body so wishes!" + +"Well, we so wish!" came from twenty throats. + +"You and Mrs. Green,--she is already one of us. As for you, Major Fern, +we hardly know how to thank you for what you have done," said the +president of the juniors. + +"Don't thank me! I have done nothing! Instead of selling a farm at a +loss when I can't get labor to work it, I am going to ask some beautiful +young ladies to work it for me." + +"We might drink him down," whispered a timid girl. + +"Of course! Drink him down!" + +And without more ado the twenty girls, with Molly chiming in and Edwin +holding down a second, sang: + + "Here's to Major Fern! Drink him down! + Here's to Major Fern! Drink him down! + Here's to Major Fern! Here's to Major Fern! + Drink him down! Drink him down! Drink him down!" + +"Fine! That beats a wreath of bay," beamed the dear old gentleman. "And +now I'll take myself off. I forgot to say I'll have the land turned +under for you and give the use of a team whenever you need it." + +He was gone. The girls, who only a few moments before had felt so +depressed, were now filled with hope and animation. Degrees were to be +had, after all. Of course it meant work, but that would be fun. + +"Oh, gee! I'm happy!" cried Mary Culbertson. "But we must get busy in a +hurry." + +"First we must see Prexy and get her to cooperate," suggested Molly. + +"Sure! Let's do it in order, and find out if we do our part if the +college authorities will do theirs. I dote on digging potatoes, myself," +said Lilian. + +Committees were formed immediately; one to see Prexy; one to go view +their estate; another to look into housing conditions; another to canvas +the student body and find out who would and who wouldn't, who preferred +to plant and who to reap. + +Billie McKym was wild with enthusiasm. "Do you realize, Molly, that I +won't have to spend a summer in Newport, after all? I can put it up to +my relations that I am needed in these parts. I mean to ask for a larger +allowance, though, as I can help out some on the sly. I am thinking +about buying some Close-to-Nature houses and presenting them to the +agricultural club. We shall have to have overalls, too,--and farming +implements.--I think I'll make Grandmother and Uncle come across in good +shape." + +Prexy, Miss Walker, was not only willing to cooperate but delighted that +the students were finding a way out of the difficulty. It was a deep +grief to her, this raising of prices, and she knew only too well how +many girls would be cut out of their degrees by this necessary step. + +Many interviews with Major Fern had to be arranged and many meetings of +committees had to be held, but finally everything was under way for the +agricultural club's work on the farm so kindly donated by its delighted +owner. + +"By Jove, I begin to feel that I'm helping to win the war!" he declared. +"I have been hating myself for a useless hulk of a veteran who was too +old to fight and too old-fashioned to suggest to others how to fight, +but if I can be the means of keeping a lot of girls at college I think I +am doing pretty well; especially if by so doing, those girls will grow +food enough for themselves. Every potato is equal to a hand grenade and +every bean to a bullet." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +THE TRENCHES + + +Molly and Edwin found themselves deeper in this agricultural scheme than +they had at first bargained for. If it was to be done at all, it must be +well done and quickly. There must be order and system. Suddenly they +awoke to the realization that if it was to be well done and quickly +done, it was up to them, the Greens, to do it. + +"I am afraid, my dear, that you must be the chaperone and I must turn +farmer. This is a stupendous undertaking and for the good name of +Wellington we must see it through." + +"It will mean work all summer for you, when you so need a holiday, you +poor old fellow." + +"I need no more holiday than you do. You haven't been idle one minute +this whole college year. I have a feeling that this summer we have no +business with holidays anyhow. The world is too busy, too upset for any +of us, who are able, to lay off. I mean to dig and delve here at home +and do all the good I can." + +"I think we ought to rent the Orchard Home for the summer, don't you?" +asked Molly, turning her head away so her husband could not see what it +cost her to make that suggestion. + +"Why, Molly honey, I can't bear to think of it. It is hard enough on you +not to be able to go to Kentucky for vacation, but I don't think you +should have to think of strangers as being among your apple trees." + +"It won't be bad, not nearly so bad as you think. At least, the little +brown bungalow won't be quite so lonesome as it would be empty all the +year, and we might buy tons of seed with the rent money or even take +care of some war orphans." + +"I guess you are right,--you usually are. I'll write to a real estate +agent in Louisville immediately and put it on the market for the summer. +I hate to do it, though. Not that it will make so much difference to +me. Wherever you are is my Orchard Home, honey!" + +The Major's farm was dubbed "The Trenches" by the members of the +agricultural club. It was a suitable name, for these girls felt that +they were in the war almost as much as the soldier boys themselves. + +Early in May Molly moved to the old farmhouse to superintend +arrangements for the many girls later to be housed there. It was +decided to run the place more or less as a military camp is run, with +squads detailed for various duties. + +"Only our trench digging will be in the potato fields and our drilling +in the bean patch," Billie declared. + +Billie was in a state of ecstasy from the first. She was General Molly's +aide-de-camp, giving time, money, and thought to the undertaking. + +"It is so splendid really to be helping! I wanted to do something to +help the Government and now I believe I am going to. I should like best +to shoulder a gun and take a crack at the Huns, but since that cannot +be, I'll shoulder a pick and take a crack at the soil." + +Billie, whose post-graduate studies at Wellington were not very +important, had cut and gone to The Trenches with Molly. They had +installed themselves in a corner of the rambling old farmhouse and were +as busy as bees getting ready for the thirty girls who were to land on +them the last week in May. Katy and the two children were with them, but +Kizzie had been left in Wellington to look after the master, who was up +to his neck in work for the finals at college. + +The students at Wellington had been canvassed from A to Z, and with a +deal of clerical work, all of the ones who were to join the agricultural +club had been enrolled and their time of service settled on and arranged +for. Billie had donated six Close-to-Nature houses which were to be set +up on the grassy lawn of the old farm. The cots she had wheedled out or +her uncle. Farming implements, such as hoes, rakes, spades, gasoline +ploughs and cultivators she had, as she expressed it, "blasted out of +Grandmother McKym." + +"They don't understand me in the least, my uncle and my grandmother, but +they love me, I really believe, and I fancy they always hope I'll come +to my senses and marry in 'the set' some of these days. They are really +dears," Billie explained to Molly as they helped to unload the wagons +that had just arrived laden with the tents and implements. + +"I think they are certainly very generous," declared Molly, pulling out +a bundle of rakes. + +From the beginning these girls had determined not to be dependent upon +the merely masculine to fetch and carry for them, and Molly and Billie +had pitched in with a will to do without men if need be. + +"Oh, yes, generous enough! They are glad when I let them off with +nothing more troublesome than writing checks. I believe Uncle Donald was +scared stiff that I might insist on his coming down here to help dig. +And as for Grandmother,--she would rather ante up thousands of dollars +than have to drag her silk skirts around in the wet grass here at The +Trenches. They don't see for an instant that I am kind of patriotic in +helping this way. They think I am just a faddist. Maybe I am, but +somehow I feel that I have ideals! Do you think I am just a silly goose +to think so?" + +"No, indeed! I know you have ideals,--I should hate to think you +didn't,--very high ideals," said Molly, as together they wheeled the +barrow laden with hoes and rakes out to the tool house. "I reckon your +uncle and grandmother have them, too, only perhaps they are not so open +about them." + +"Oh yes, they have them. Uncle Donald loves to talk about them, but +Grandmother isn't so keen on expressing herself. Sometimes I think his +ideals are mostly literary and hers sartorial. He is a great reader of +_belles lettres_ and Grandmother has an instinct for clothes that is +truly remarkable." + +"You have it, too." + +"Well, I do like 'em, but I like to dress other persons better than I +do myself. If I had been poor, I'd have gone into the business. I may do +it yet, but now until this war is over it seems to me it doesn't make a +bit of difference how anyone is dressed--anybody but Mother Earth. The +soil dressed with a good fertilizer is more important than silk +raiment." + +"How about literature?" laughed Molly, her friend's enthusiasm amusing +her and at the same time pleasing her. "Do you think writing should stop +as well as dressing?" + +"Oh, of course scribblers will scribble and anyone who has a message to +deliver will have to spout it out, war time or not, but they may not +think they are so all-fired important. A letter from the most ignorant +soldier at the front will have more real stuff in it than all of the +vaporings of the poet who only imagines gunfire." + +"And here far from the strife----" + +"Here we will make sonnets with hoe and rake!" + +"Our lines made by the gasoline plough shall be beautiful and +harmonious!" suggested Molly. + +"Our onion patch shall be worthy to be put into verse along with Eugene +Field's Onion Tart," said Billie, going Molly one better. + +"Our potato field shall be as full of solid refreshment as Charles +Dudley Warner's five feet of classics. Only smell the newly-ploughed +earth! Isn't it delicious?" + +The wagons were unloaded, the farming implements piled neatly in the +tool house and the Close-to-Nature houses dotted about the lawn ready +for the stupendous task of being put up. The girls were waiting for +Katy, whom they had dubbed "the powerful Katrinka," to come help them +with that job. Katy was in her element. She had been born and raised in +the country, and now that she was once more where things were growing, +where she could help them grow, she was as happy an Irish girl as there +was in all the land. Nothing was too difficult for her to do and her +great strength helped Molly and Billie out of many a quagmire of work +that seemed too heavy for them to accomplish without masculine aid. + +"And now Oi'm ready for to help put oop the little play houses," she +said as she joined Molly and Billie. + +"That's fine," said her mistress, "but before we begin, just let's smell +the ploughed ground a little. Don't you love it, Katy?" + +"Sure! And it beats the perfumery that comes in a bottle, to my moind," +said the girl, sniffing delightedly. + +"I don't see why they don't bottle the smell of new ploughed earth just +as they have new mown hay," laughed Billie. "I know two who would want +to buy it." + +"Deed and Oi'd buy a gallon of sooch smells!" + +"Do you know Masefield's 'Everlasting Mercy,' Billie? You and Katy +listen while I tell you the part about ploughing and then we'll put up +the tent houses." + +Very charming was the picture made by this group of girls. So Edwin +Green thought as he walked silently across the lawn of the old farm. +Katy, the sturdy Irish girl, was not without picturesque lines. Her look +was somewhat that of Bastien Lepage's peasant Jeanne d'Arc as she stood +in rapt reverie while her beloved mistress gave voice to those wonderful +lines of England's greatest modern poet. Billie looked very down-to-date +in her khaki overalls and stubby shoes, while Molly was very Mollyesque +in the blue linen blouse that was the only true Molly Brown blue. + +She did not hear her husband as he stepped lightly across the green +spring grass and he motioned to Billie not to let her know he was there. +He stood silently, with bared head while she recited. Molly's voice had +always appealed to Edwin, in fact it had been the first thing that had +attracted him--and when Molly recited poetry! + + "'The past was faded like a dream; + There came the jingling of a team, + A ploughman's voice, a clink of chain, + Slow hoofs, and harness under strain. + Up the slow slope a team came bowing, + Old Callow at his autumn ploughing, + Old Callow stooped above the hales, + Ploughing the stubble into wales. + His grave eyes looking straight ahead, + Shearing a long straight furrow red; + His plough-foot high to give it earth + To bring new food for men to birth. + + "'O wet red swathe of earth laid bare, + O truth, O strength, O gleaming share, + O patient eyes that watch the goal, + O ploughman of the sinner's soul. + O Jesus, drive the coulter deep + To plough my living man from sleep. + + "'Slow up the hill the plough team plod, + Old Callow at the task of God, + Helped by man's wit, helped by the brute, + Turning a stubborn clay to fruit, + His eye forever on some sign + To help him plough a perfect line. + + * * * * * + + "'I kneeled there in the muddy fallow, + That I should plough, and as I ploughed + My Savior Christ would sing aloud, + And as I drove the clods apart + Christ would be ploughing in my heart, + Through rest-harrow and bitter roots, + Through all my bad life's rotten fruits. + + "'O Christ, who holds the open gate, + O Christ, who drives the furrow straight, + O Christ, the plough, O Christ, the laughter + Of holy white birds flying after, + Lo, all my heart's field red and torn, + And thou wilt bring the young green corn, + The young green corn divinely springing, + The young green corn forever singing; + And when the field is fresh and fair + Thy blessed feet shall glitter there, + And we will walk the weeded field, + And tell the golden harvest's yield, + The corn that makes the holy bread + By which the soul of man is fed, + The holy bread, the food unpriced, + Thy everlasting mercy, Christ.'" + +Katy wiped her eyes and Billie winked away the tears that would gather. +Molly turned and saw Edwin standing only a few feet from her. + +"Oh, Edwin, I didn't know you were there. I declare I haven't been +spouting poetry ever since we got here! We have done a lot and were +going now to put up the tent houses, but you aren't to help. I'll give +you some tea and let you rest up after your tramp. We weren't expecting +you until Saturday----" + +"And don't want me now?" + +"Want you! Why, Edwin Green, B. A., M. A., P. H. D.! You know I always +want you," and then Billie and Katy thought it was time to leave the +married lovers alone for a while. + +"I want to help put up the houses, though," insisted Edwin as he and +Molly wended their way to a pretty little arbor covered by a crimson +rambler that gave promise, if one might judge from the many buds, of +being a glorious sight later in the season. + +"But we can do it later by our lonesomes. You don't know how many things +we can do without the help of men, especially when one of us is as +powerful as Katy and one as spunky as Billie." + +"And how about you?" and he pinched her rosy cheek. + +"Oh, I'm not much force, I am afraid, but I have the bump of +stickativeness which is sometimes as good as strength and takes the +place of cleverness." + +"Do you really think you girls could run this farm without the help of a +man?" + +"Of course we could, once the heavy ploughing is done, and Katy says she +could have done that, too, if we had wanted her to. Do you want to go +off on a trip somewhere and let us try to run it without you?" + +Edwin looked searchingly into Molly's blue eyes. His gaze was long and +earnest and in his brown eyes Molly read a kind of sadness she had never +seen there before. + +"Edwin, dearest, what is it?" + +"Molly, it isn't anything unless you want it to be." + +"Tell me!" + +"Would you think it right or wrong if I should try to get into the +service, military service, I mean?--I have taken an examination and am +physically fit.--I won't apply to go into training at Fort Myer unless +you approve.--It rests entirely with you, honey." + +"You must go if you think it right." Molly spoke without a tremor, +although it did seem to her for a moment as though her heart would +burst. How could a heart get so big all of a sudden? And then it seemed +to her she was sounding cold and unemotional when Edwin wanted something +else. "I--I--want you to go! I think it is right for men just like you +to go--men with brains and the power of taking hold and leading--I +wouldn't have you stay behind for me for anything on earth. I--I--am +proud of you and want you to do exactly what you think is right, +and--and--I think you are right--just as right as can be--and--and--I +love you more than ever." + +It seemed to both Edwin and Molly that at no time since their walk in +the forest of Fontainebleau when the eternal question had been settled +between them had any moment been so filled with love and understanding +as now when he folded her in his arms. His Molly! His own, brave, true +Molly! Her Edwin! Her honorable, courageous Edwin! + +"I thought that I could content myself by digging and delving, but +somehow I have been feeling lately that if you would consent, it was up +to me to do something else. I don't feel critical in the least towards +the men of my age who are not going to the war,--not the younger ones, +either, if they do not feel called upon,--but somehow when one has been +called as I have, I think he should answer. I don't know why a staid +college professor should think it is his vocation, but I do think it, +and, oh, dearest, it is good of you to take it this way!" + +"I could take it no other way. Is not my mother giving God-speed to her +sons? Is not Judy encouraging Kent? Is not Nance not only sending Andy +but going with him? Who am I that I should say you shall and you shan't +do things for your country?" + +"But you see, dear girl, there are the children to take care of in +case--in case--in case I should--should--well--stump my toe." + +"I can take care of them as my mother did of all of us. My father died +when I was a tiny child and still my mother raised me. But don't stump +your toe. Pick up your feet when you walk--and--and----" + +Here Molly came very near shedding the tears that she felt must be shed +sooner or later, but she was determined that it should be later and that +her soldier boy should not see them. She jumped up and offered to race +him to the house where Katy was laying the tea table on the porch. + +Edwin knew Molly too well not to understand that this gaiety was nothing +but camouflage to conceal emotions that she was too brave to show. + +"What will your mother think?" + +"She will think that I have married well," was her gay rejoinder. + +"And what does my Mildred think when I tell her her daddy is going to be +a soldier?" he asked as he held the little girl close in his arms. + +Mildred had been busy with a tiny hoe and shovel on a patch of ground +given over to her tender ministrations. Her hands were very grubby and +her face not much better, but Edwin seemed not to mind the general +griminess of his daughter. + +"Oh, I say bully for Daddy! An' I bet if Dodo'll wake up, he'd say he +was a-goin', too. Boys is so rombustious." + + * * * * * + +And now we must leave Molly Brown and her College Friends at the +momentous hour when their country is plunged in a great and righteous +war. What the future holds for them is as much a mystery as what it +holds for any of us. One thing is sure: Molly is doing her duty,--doing +it cheerfully and bravely. Around her are college girls and more college +girls, each one doing her bit. And so the fields are ploughed, the crops +are planted and gathered. Fruit and vegetables are preserved and canned. +The men and boys are training for the trenches, but the women and girls +are in training, too. + +Molly often thinks of that moment when she stood sniffing the up-turned +mould, with her husband standing near listening to her as she recited +the lines from Masefield; and now as the days multiply she finds comfort +in Masefield's ending to "The Everlasting Mercy": + + "'How swift the summer goes, + Forget-me-not, pink, rose. + The young grass when I started + And now the hay is carted, + And now my song is ended, + And all the summer spended; + The blackbird's second brood + Routs beech leaves in the wood; + The pink and rose have speeded, + Forget-me-not has seeded. + Only the winds that blew, + The rain that makes things new, + The earth that hides things old, + And blessings manifold.'" + + +THE END + + + + +[Illustration] + + The + Girl Scouts + Series + +BY EDITH LAVELL + + +A new copyright series of Girl Scouts stories by an author of wide +experience in Scouts' craft, as Director of Girl Scouts of Philadelphia. + +Clothbound, with Attractive Color Designs. + +PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH. + + THE GIRL SCOUTS AT MISS ALLEN'S SCHOOL + THE GIRL SCOUTS AT CAMP + THE GIRL SCOUTS' GOOD TURN + THE GIRL SCOUTS' CANOE TRIP + THE GIRL SCOUTS' RIVALS + THE GIRL SCOUTS ON THE RANCH + THE GIRL SCOUTS' VACATION ADVENTURES + THE GIRL SCOUTS' MOTOR TRIP + +For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +Publishers + + A. L. BURT COMPANY + 114-120 EAST 23rd STREET NEW YORK + + + + +[Illustration] + + Marjorie Dean + High School + Series + +BY PAULINE LESTER + +Author of the Famous Marjorie Dean College Series + + +These are clean, wholesome stories that will be of great interest to all +girls of high school age. + + All Cloth Bound Copyright Titles + +PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH + + MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL FRESHMAN + MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL SOPHOMORE + MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL JUNIOR + MARJORIE DEAN, HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR + +For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +Publishers + + A. L. BURT COMPANY + 114-120 EAST 23rd STREET NEW YORK + + + + +[Illustration] + + Marjorie Dean + College + Series + +BY PAULINE LESTER. + +Author of the Famous Marjorie Dean High School Series. + + +Those who have read the Marjorie Dean High School Series will be eager +to read this new series, as Marjorie Dean continues to be the heroine in +these stories. + + All Clothbound. Copyright Titles. + +PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH. + + MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE FRESHMAN + MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE SOPHOMORE + MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE JUNIOR + MARJORIE DEAN, COLLEGE SENIOR + +For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +Publishers. + + A. L. BURT COMPANY + 114-120 East 23rd Street New York + + + + +[Illustration] + + The Camp Fire + Girls Series + +By HILDEGARD G. FREY + + +A Series of Outdoor Stories for Girls 12 to 16 Years. + + All Cloth Bound Copyright Titles + +PRICE, 65 CENTS EACH + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS IN THE MAINE WOODS; or, The Winnebagos go + Camping. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT SCHOOL; or, The Wohelo Weavers. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT ONOWAY HOUSE; or, The Magic Garden. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS GO MOTORING; or, Along the Road That Leads + the Way. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS' LARKS AND PRANKS; or, The House of the Open + Door. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS ON ELLEN'S ISLE; or, The Trail of the Seven + Cedars. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS ON THE OPEN ROAD; or, Glorify Work. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS DO THEIR BIT; or, Over the Top with the + Winnebagos. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS SOLVE A MYSTERY; or, The Christmas Adventure at + Carver House. + + THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS AT CAMP KEEWAYDIN; or, Down Paddles. + +For sale by booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by the +Publishers + +A. L. BURT COMPANY +114-120 EAST 23rd STREET NEW YORK + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's note: + +A few minor printer's errors have been corrected. Otherwise the +original has been preserved, including inconsistent spelling and +hyphenation. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOLLY BROWN'S COLLEGE FRIENDS*** + + +******* This file should be named 36733.txt or 36733.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/6/7/3/36733 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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