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diff --git a/4288-h/4288-h.htm b/4288-h/4288-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2895a48 --- /dev/null +++ b/4288-h/4288-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,6794 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<HTML> +<HEAD> + +<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> + +<TITLE> +The Project Gutenberg E-text of The Rich Mrs. Burgoyne, by Kathleen Norris +</TITLE> + +<STYLE TYPE="text/css"> +BODY { color: Black; + background: White; + margin-right: 10%; + margin-left: 10%; + font-family: "Times New Roman", serif; + text-align: justify } + +P {text-indent: 4% } + +P.noindent {text-indent: 0% } + +P.poem {text-indent: 0%; + margin-left: 10%; + font-size: small } + +P.letter {text-indent: 0%; + font-size: small ; + margin-left: 10% ; + margin-right: 10% } + +P.footnote {font-size: small ; + text-indent: 0% ; + margin-left: 0% ; + margin-right: 0% } + +P.transnote {font-size: small ; + text-indent: 0% ; + margin-left: 0% ; + margin-right: 0% } + +P.intro {font-size: medium ; + text-indent: -5% ; + margin-left: 5% ; + margin-right: 0% } + +P.finis { font-size: larger ; + text-align: center ; + text-indent: 0% ; + margin-left: 0% ; + margin-right: 0% } + +</STYLE> + +</HEAD> + +<BODY> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rich Mrs. Burgoyne, by Kathleen Norris + +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: The Rich Mrs. Burgoyne + +Author: Kathleen Norris + +Posting Date: July 23, 2009 [EBook #4288] +Release Date: July, 2003 +First Posted: December 30, 2001 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE *** + + + + +Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. HTML version by Al Haines. + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<BR><BR> + +<H1 ALIGN="center"> +THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE +</H1> + +<BR> + +<H2 ALIGN="center"> +KATHLEEN NORRIS +</H2> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +TO KATHLEEN MARY THOMPSON +</H3> + +<P CLASS="poem"> + Lover of books, who never fails to find<BR> + Some good in every book, your namesake sends<BR> + This book to you, knowing you always kind<BR> + To small things, timid and in need of friends.<BR> +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<P CLASS="poem"> + O friend! I know not which way I must look<BR> + For comfort, being, as I am, opprest,<BR> + To think that now our life is only drest<BR> + For show; mean handy-work of craftsman, cook,<BR> + Or groom!—We must run glittering like a brook<BR> + In the open sunshine, or we are unblest;<BR> + The wealthiest man among us is the best:<BR> + No grandeur now in nature or in book<BR> + Delights us. Rapine, avarice, expense,<BR> + This is idolatry; and these we adore:<BR> + Plain living and high thinking are no more:<BR> + The homely beauty of the good old cause<BR> + Is gone; our peace, our fearful innocence.<BR> + And pure religion breathing household laws.<BR> + —WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.<BR> +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<TABLE ALIGN="center" WIDTH="100%"> +<TR> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%"> +<A HREF="#chap01">CHAPTER I</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%"> +<A HREF="#chap02">CHAPTER II</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%"> +<A HREF="#chap03">CHAPTER III</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%"> +<A HREF="#chap04">CHAPTER IV</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%"> +<A HREF="#chap05">CHAPTER V</A> +</TD> +</TR> + +<TR> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap06">CHAPTER VI</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap07">CHAPTER VII</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap09">CHAPTER IX</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap10">CHAPTER X</A> +</TD> +</TR> + +<TR> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap11">CHAPTER XI</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap12">CHAPTER XII</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap15">CHAPTER XV</A> +</TD> +</TR> + +<TR> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> +<A HREF="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX</A> +</TD> +<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top"> </TD> +</TR> + +</TABLE> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap01"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER I +</H3> + +<P> +"Annie, what are you doing? Polishing the ramekins? Oh, that's right. +Did the extra ramekins come from Mrs. Brown? Didn't! Then as soon as +the children come back I'll send for them; I wish you'd remind me. Did +Mrs. Binney come? and Lizzie? Oh, that's good. Where are they? Down in +the cellar! Oh, did the extra ice come? Will you find out, Annie? Those +can wait. If it didn't, the mousse is ruined, that's all! No, wait, +Annie, I'll go out and see Celia myself." +</P> + +<P> +Little Mrs. George Carew, flushed and excited, crossed the pantry as +she spoke, and pushed open the swinging door that connected it with the +kitchen. She was a pretty woman, even now when her hair, already +dressed, was hidden under snugly pinned veils and her trim little +figure lost under a flying kimono. Mrs. Carew was expecting the +twenty-eight members of the Santa Paloma Bridge Club on this particular +evening, and now, at three o'clock on a beautiful April afternoon, she +was almost frantic with fatigue and nervousness. The house had been +cleaned thoroughly the day before, rugs shaken, mirrors polished, +floors oiled; the grand piano had been closed, and pushed against the +wall; the reading-table had been cleared, and wheeled out under the +turn of the stairway; the pretty drawing-room and square big entrance +hall had been emptied to make room for the seven little card-tables +that were already set up, and for the twenty-eight straight-back chairs +that Mrs. Carew had collected from the dining-room, the bedrooms, the +halls, and even the nursery, for the occasion. All this had been done +the day before, and Mrs. Carew, awakening early in the morning to +uneasy anticipations of a full day, had yet felt that the main work of +preparation was out of the way. +</P> + +<P> +But now, in mid-afternoon, nothing seemed done. There were flowers +still to arrange; there was the mild punch that Santa Paloma affected +at card parties to be finished; there was candy to be put about on the +tables, in little silver dishes; and new packs of cards, and pencils +and score-cards to be scattered about. And in the kitchen—But Mrs. +Carew's heart failed at the thought. True, her own two maids were being +helped out to-day by Mrs. Binney from the village, a tower of strength +in an emergency, and by Lizzie Binney, a worthy daughter of her mother; +but there had been so many stupid delays. And plates, and glasses, and +punch-cups, and silver, and napkins for twenty-eight meant such a lot +of counting and sorting and polishing! And somehow George and the +children must have dinner, and the Binneys and Celia and Annie must +eat, too. +</P> + +<P> +"Well," thought Mrs. Carew, with a desperate glance at the kitchen +clock, "it will all be over pretty soon, thank goodness!" +</P> + +<P> +A pleasant stir of preparation pervaded the kitchen. Mrs. Binney, +enormous, good-natured, capable, was opening crabs at one end of the +table, her sleeves rolled up, and her gingham dress, in the last stage +of age and thinness, protected by a new stiff white apron; Celia, Mrs. +Carew's cook, was sitting opposite her, dismembering two cold roasted +fowls; Lizzie Binney, as trim and pretty as her mother was shapeless +and plain, was filling silver bonbon-dishes with salted nuts. +</P> + +<P> +"How is everything going, Celia?" said Mrs. Carew, sampling a nut. +</P> + +<P> +"Fine," said Celia placidly. "He didn't bring but two bunches of +sullery, so I don't know will I have enough for the salad. They sent +the cherries. And Mrs. Binney wants you should taste the punch." +</P> + +<P> +"It's sweet now," said Mrs. Binney, as Mrs. Carew picked up the big +mixing-spoon, "but there's the ice to go in." +</P> + +<P> +"Delicious! not one bit too sweet," Mrs. Carew pronounced. "You know +that's to be passed around in the little glasses, Lizzie, while we're +playing; and a cherry and a piece of pineapple in every glass. Did +Annie find the doilies for the big trays? Yes. I got the bowl down; +Annie's going to wash it. Oh, the cakes came, didn't they? That's good. +And the cream for coffee; that ought to go right on ice. I'll telephone +for more celery." +</P> + +<P> +"There's some of these napkins so mussed, laying in the drawer," said +Lizzie, "I thought I'd put a couple of irons on and press them out." +</P> + +<P> +"If you have time, I wish you would," Mrs. Carew said, touching the +frosted top of an angel-cake with a tentative finger. "I may have to +play to-night, Celia," she went on, to her own cook, "but you girls can +manage everything, can't you? Dinner really doesn't matter—scrambled +eggs and baked potatoes, something like that, and you'll have to serve +it on the side porch." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, yes'm, we'll manage!" Celia assured her confidently. "We'll clear +up here pretty soon, and then there's nothing but the sandwiches to do." +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Carew went on her way comforted. Celia was not a fancy cook, she +reflected, passing through the darkened dining-room, where the long +table had been already set with a shining cloth, and where silver and +glass gleamed in the darkness, but Celia was reliable. And for a woman +with three children, a large house, and but one other maid, Celia was a +treasure. +</P> + +<P> +She telephoned the grocer, her eyes roving critically over the hall as +she did so. The buttercups, in a great bowl on the table, were already +dropping their varnished yellow leaves; Annie must brush those up the +very last thing. +</P> + +<P> +"So far, so good!" said Mrs. Carew, straightening the rug at the door +with a small heel and dropping wearily into a porch rocker. "There must +be one thousand things I ought to be doing," she said, resting her head +and shutting her eyes. +</P> + +<P> +It was a warm, delicious afternoon. The little California town lay +asleep under a haze of golden sunshine. The Carews' pretty house, with +its lawn and garden, was almost the last on River Street, and stood on +the slope of a hill that commanded all Santa Paloma Valley. Below it, +the wide tree-shaded street descended between other unfenced lawns and +other handsome homes. +</P> + +<P> +This was the aristocratic part of the town. The Willard Whites' immense +colonial mansion was here; and the Whites, rich, handsome, childless, +clever, and nearing the forties, were quite the most prominent people +of Santa Paloma. The Wayne Adamses, charming, extravagant young people, +lived near; and the Parker Lloyds, who were suspected of hiding rather +serious money troubles under their reckless hospitality and unfailing +gaiety, were just across the street. On River Street, too, lived +dignified, aristocratic old Mrs. Apostleman and nervous, timid Anne +Pratt and her brother Walter, whose gloomy, stately old mansion was one +of the finest in town. Up at the end of the street were the Carews, and +the shabby comfortable home of Dr. and Mrs. Brown, and the neglected +white cottage where Barry Valentine and his little son Billy and a +studious young Japanese servant led a rather shiftless existence. And +although there were other pretty streets in town, and other pleasant +well-to-do women who were members of church and club, River Street was +unquestionably THE street, and its residents unquestionably THE people +of Santa Paloma. +</P> + +<P> +Beyond these homes lay the business part of the town, the railway +station, and post-office, the library, and the women's clubhouse, with +its red geraniums, red-tiled roof, and plaster arches. +</P> + +<P> +And beyond again were blocks of business buildings, handsome and +modern, with metal-sheathed elevators, and tiled vestibules, and heavy, +plate-glass windows on the street. There was a drug store quite modern +enough to be facing upon Forty-second Street and Broadway, instead of +the tree-shaded peace of Santa Paloma's main street. At its cool and +glittering fountain indeed, a hundred drinks could be mixed of which +Broadway never even heard. And on Broadway, three thousand miles away, +the women who shopped were buying the same boxed powders, the same +bottled toilet waters, the same patented soaps and brushes and candies +that were to be found here. And in the immense grocery store nearby +there were beautifully spacious departments worthy of any great city, +devoted to rare fruits, and coffees and teas, and every pickle that +ever came in a glass bottle, and every little spiced fish that ever +came in a gay tin. A white-clad young man "demonstrated" a cake-mixer, +a blue-clad young woman "demonstrated" jelly-powders. +</P> + +<P> +Nearby were the one or two big dry-goods stores, with lovely gowns in +their windows, and milliners' shops, with French hats in their smart +Paris boxes—there was even a very tiny, very elegant little shop where +pastes and powders and shampooing were the attraction; a shop that had +a French name "et Cie" over the door. +</P> + +<P> +In short, there were modern women, and rich women, in Santa Paloma, as +these things unmistakably indicated. Where sixty years ago there had +been but a lonely outpost on a Spanish sheep-ranch, and where thirty +years after that there was only a "general store" at a crossroads, now +every luxury in the world might be had for the asking. +</P> + +<P> +All this part of the town lay northeast of the sleepy little Lobos +River, which cut Santa Paloma in two. It was a pretty river, a boiling +yellow torrent in winter, but low enough in the summer-time for the +children to wade across the shallows, and shaded all along its course +by overhanging maples, and willows, and oaktrees, and an undergrowth of +wild currant and hazel bushes and blackberry vines. Across the river +was Old Paloma, where dust from the cannery chimneys and soot from the +railway sheds powdered an ugly shabby settlement of shanties and cheap +lodging-houses. Old Paloma was peppered thick with saloons, and +flavored by them, and by the odor of frying grease, and by an ashy +waste known as the "dump." Over all other odors lay the sweet, cloying +smell of crushed grapes from the winery and the pungent odor from the +tannery of White & Company. The men, and boys, and girls of the +settlement all worked in one or another of these places, and the women +gossiped in their untidy doorways. Above the Carew house and Doctor +Brown's, opposite, River Street came perforce to an end, for it was +crossed at this point by an old-fashioned wooden fence of slender, +rounded pickets. In the middle of the fence was a wide carriage gate, +with a smaller gate for foot passengers at each side, and beyond it the +shabby, neglected garden and the tangle of pepper, and eucalyptus, and +weeping willow trees that half hid the old Holly mansion. Once this had +been the great house of the village, but now it was empty and forlorn. +Captain Holly had been dead for five or six years, and the last of the +sons and daughters had gone away into the world. The house, furnished +just as they had left it, was for sale, but the years went by, and no +buyer appeared; and meantime the garden flowers ran wild, the lawns +were dry and brown, and the fence was smothered in coarse rose vines +and rampant wild blackberry vines. Dry grass and yarrow and hollow +milkweed grew high in the gateways, and when the village children went +through them to prowl, as children love to prowl, about the neglected +house and orchard, they left long, dusty wakes in the crushed weeds. +Further up than the children usually ventured, there was an old bridge +across the Lobos, Captain Holly's private road to the mill town; but it +was boarded across now, and hundreds of chipmunks nested in it, and +whisked about it undisturbed. The great stables and barns stood empty; +the fountains were long gone dry. Only the orchard continued to bear +heavily. +</P> + +<P> +The Holly estate ran up into the hill behind it, one of the wooded +foothills that encircled all Santa Paloma, as they encircle so many +California towns. Already turning brown, and crowned with dense, low +groves of oak, and bay, and madrona trees, they shut off the world +outside; although sometimes on a still day the solemn booming of the +ocean could be heard beyond them, and a hundred times a year the +Pacific fogs came creeping over them long before dawn, and Santa Paloma +awakened in an enveloping cloud of soft mist. Here and there the slopes +of these hills were checkered with the sharp oblongs and angles of +young vineyards, and hidden by the thickening green of peach and apple +orchards. A few low, brown dairy ranch-houses were perched high on the +ridges; the red-brown moving stream of the cattle home-coming in +mid-afternoon could be seen from the village on a clear day. And over +hill and valley, on this wonderful afternoon in late spring, the most +generous sunlight in the world lay warm and golden, and across them the +shadows of high clouds—for there had been rain in the night—traveled +slowly. +</P> + +<P> +"I declare," said little Mrs. Carew lazily, "I could go to sleep!" +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap02"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER II +</H3> + +<P> +A moment later when a tall man came up the path and dropped on the top +porch step with an air of being entirely at home, Mrs. Carew was still +dreaming, half-awake and half-asleep. +</P> + +<P> +"Hello, Jeanette!" said the newcomer. "What's new with thee, coz?" +</P> + +<P> +"Don't smoke there, Barry, and get things mussy!" said Mrs. Carew in +return, smiling to soften the command, and to show Barry Valentine that +he was welcome. +</P> + +<P> +Barry was usually welcome everywhere, although not at all approved in +many cases, and criticised even by the people who liked him best. He +was a sort of fourth cousin of Mrs. Carew, who sometimes felt herself +called to the difficult task of defending him because of the distant +kinship. He was very handsome, lean, and dark, with a sleepy smile and +with eyes that all children loved; and he was clever, or, at least, +everyone believed him to be so; and he had charm—a charm of sheer +sweetness, for he never seemed to be particularly anxious to please. +Barry was very gallant, in an impersonal sort of way: he took a keen, +elder-brotherly sort of interest in every pretty girl in the village, +and liked to discuss their own love affairs with them, with a +seriousness quite paternal. He never singled any girl out for +particular attention, or escorted one unless asked, but he was +flatteringly attentive to all the middle-aged people of his +acquaintance and his big helpful hand was always ready for stumbling +old women on the church steps, or tearful waifs in the street—he +always had time to listen to other people's troubles. Barry—everyone +admitted—had his points. But after all— +</P> + +<P> +After all, he was lazy, and shiftless, and unambitious: he was content +to be assistant editor of the Mail; content to be bullied and belittled +by old Rogers; content to go on his own idle, sunny way, playing with +his small, chubby son, foraging the woods with a dozen small boys at +his heels, working patiently over a broken gopher-trap or a rusty +shotgun, for some small admirer. Worst of all, Barry had been +intemperate, years ago, and there were people who believed that his +occasional visits to San Francisco, now, were merely excuses for revels +with his old newspaper friends there. +</P> + +<P> +And yet, he had been such a brilliant, such a fiery and ambitious boy! +All Santa Paloma had taken pride in the fact that Barry Valentine, only +twenty, had been offered the editorship of the one newspaper of Plumas, +a little town some twelve miles away, and had prophesied a triumphant +progress for him, to the newspapers of San Francisco, of Chicago, of +New York! But Barry had not been long in Plumas when he suddenly +married Miss Hetty Scott of that town, and in the twelve years that had +passed since then the golden dreams for his future had vanished one by +one, until to-day found him with no one to believe in him—not even +himself. +</P> + +<P> +Hetty Scott was but seventeen when Barry met her, and already the +winner in two village contests for beauty and popularity. After their +marriage she and Barry went to San Francisco, and shrewd, little, +beautiful Hetty found herself more admired than ever, and began to talk +of the stage. After that, Santa Paloma heard only occasional rumors: +Barry had a position on a New York paper, and Hetty was studying in a +dramatic school; there was a baby; there were financial troubles, and +Barry was drinking again; then Hetty was dead, and Barry, fearing the +severe eastern winters for the delicate baby, was coming back to Santa +Paloma. So back they came, and there had been no indication since, that +the restless, ambitious Barry of years ago was not dead forever. +</P> + +<P> +"No smoking?" said Barry now, good-naturedly. "That's so; you've got +some sort of 'High Jinks' on for to-night, haven't you? I brought up +those hinges for your mixing table, Jen," he went on, "but any time +will do. I suppose the kitchen is right on the fault, as it were." +</P> + +<P> +"The kitchen DOES look earthquakey," admitted Mrs. Carew with a laugh, +"but the girls would be glad to have the extra table; so go right +ahead. I'll take you out in a second. I have been on the GO," she added +wearily, "since seven this morning: my feet are like balls of fire. You +don't know what the details are. Why, just tying up the prizes takes a +good HOUR!" +</P> + +<P> +"Anything go wrong?" asked the man sympathetically. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, no; nothing particular. But you know how a house has to LOOK! Even +the bathrooms, and our room, and the spare room—the children do get +things so mussed. It all sounds so simple; but it takes such a time." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, Annie—doesn't she do these things?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, ordinarily she does! But she was sweeping all morning, we moved +things about so last night, and there was china, and glasses to get +down, and the porches—" +</P> + +<P> +"But, Jeanette," said Barry Valentine patiently, "don't you keep this +house clean enough ordinarily without these orgies of cleaning the +minute anybody comes in? I never knew such a house for women to open +windows, and tie up curtains, and put towels over their hair, and run +around with buckets of cold suds. Why this extra fuss?" +</P> + +<P> +"Well, it's not all cleaning," said Mrs. Carew, a little annoyed. "It's +largely supper; and I'm not giving anything LIKE the suppers Mrs. White +and Mrs. Adams give." +</P> + +<P> +"Why don't they eat at home?" said Mr. Valentine hospitably. "What do +they come for anyway? To see the house or each other's clothes, or to +eat? Women are funny at a card party," he went on, always ready to +expand an argument comfortably. "It takes them an hour to settle down +and see how everyone else looks, and whether there happens to be a +streak of dust under the piano; and then when the game is just well +started, a maid is nudging you in the elbow to take a plate of hot +chicken, and another, on the other side, is holding out sandwiches, and +all the women are running to look at the prizes. Now when men play +cards— +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, Barry, don't get started!" his cousin impatiently implored. "I'm +too tired to listen. Come out and fix the table." +</P> + +<P> +"Wish I could really help you," said Barry, as they crossed the hall; +and as a further attempt to soothe her ruffled feelings, he added +amiably, "The place looks fine. The buttercups came up, didn't they?" +</P> + +<P> +"Beautifully! You were a dear to get them," said Mrs. Carew, quite +mollified. +</P> + +<P> +Welcomed openly by all four maids, Barry was soon contentedly busy with +screws and molding-board, in a corner of the sunny kitchen. He and Mrs. +Binney immediately entered upon a spirited discussion of equal +suffrage, to the intense amusement of the others, who kept him supplied +with sandwiches, cake and various other dainties. The little piece of +work was presently finished to the entire satisfaction of everyone, and +Barry had pocketed his tools, and was ready to go, when Mrs. Carew +returned to the kitchen wide-eyed with news. +</P> + +<P> +"Barry," said she, closing the door behind her, "George is here!" +</P> + +<P> +"Well, George has a right here," said Barry, as the lady cast a +cautious glance over her shoulder. +</P> + +<P> +"But listen," his cousin said excitedly; "he thinks he has sold the +Holly house!" +</P> + +<P> +"Gee whiz!" said Barry simply. +</P> + +<P> +"To a Mrs. Burgoyne," rushed on Mrs. Carew. "She's out there with +George on the porch now; a widow, with two children, and she looks so +sweet. She knows the Hollys. Oh, Barry, if she only takes it; such a +dandy commission for George! He's terribly excited himself. I can tell +by the calm, bored way she's talking about it." +</P> + +<P> +"Who is she? Where'd she come from?" demanded Barry. +</P> + +<P> +"From New York. Her father died last year, in Washington, I think she +said, and she wants to live quietly somewhere with the children. Barry, +will you be an angel?" +</P> + +<P> +"Eventually, I hope to," said Mr. Valentine, grinning, but she did not +hear him. +</P> + +<P> +"Could you, WOULD you, take her over the place this afternoon, Barry? +She seems sure she wants it, and George feels he must get back to the +office to see Tilden. You know he's going to sign for a whole floor of +the Pratt Building to-day. George can't keep Tilden waiting, and it +won't be a bit hard for you, Barry. George says to promise her +anything. She just wants to see about bathrooms, and so on. Will you, +Barry?" +</P> + +<P> +"Sure I will," said the obliging Barry. And when Mrs. Carew asked him +if he would like to go upstairs and brush up a little, he accepted the +delicate reflection upon the state of his hair and hands, and said +"sure" again. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap03"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER III +</H3> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne was a sweet-faced, fresh-looking woman about thirty-two +or-three years old, with a quick smile, like a child's, and blue eyes, +set far apart, with a little lift at the corners, that, under level +heavy brows, gave a suggestion of something almost Oriental to her +face. She was dressed simply in black, and a transparent black veil, +falling from her wide hat and flung back, framed her face most +becomingly in square crisp folds. +</P> + +<P> +She and Barry presently walked up River Street in the mellow afternoon +sunlight, and through the old wooden gates of the Holly grounds. On +every side were great high-flung sprays of overgrown roses, dusty and +choked with weeds, ragged pepper tassels dragged in the grass, and +where the path lay under the eucalyptus trees it was slippery with the +dry, crescent-shaped leaves. Bees hummed over rank poppies and tangled +honeysuckle; once or twice a hummingbird came through the garden on +some swift, whizzing journey, and there were other birds in the trees, +little shy brown birds, silent but busy in the late afternoon. Close to +the house an old garden faucet dripped and dripped, and a noisy, +changing group of the brown birds were bathing and flashing about it. +The old Hall stood on a rise of ground, clear of the trees, and bathed +in sunshine. It was an ugly house, following as it did the fashion of +the late seventies; but it was not undignified, with its big door +flanked by bay-windows and its narrow porch bounded by a fat wooden +balustrade and heavy columns. The porch and steps were weather-stained +and faded, and littered now with fallen leaves and twigs. +</P> + +<P> +Barry opened the front door with some difficulty, and they stepped into +the musty emptiness of the big main hall. There was a stairway at the +back of the house with a colored glass window on the landing, and +through it the sunlight streamed, showing the old velvet carpet in the +hall below, and the carved heavy walnut chairs and tables, and the old +engravings in their frames of oak and walnut mosaic. The visitors +peeped into the old library, odorous of unopened books, and with great +curtains of green rep shutting out the light, and into the music room +behind it, cold even on this warm day, with a muffled grand piano drawn +free of the walls, and near it two piano-stools, upholstered in +blue-fringed rep, to match the curtains and chairs. They went across +the hall to the long, dim drawing room, where there was another velvet +carpet, dulled to a red pink by time, and muffled pompous sofas and +chairs, and great mirrors, and "sets" of candlesticks and vases on the +mantels and what-nots. The windows were shuttered here, the air +lifeless. Barry, in George Carew's interest, felt bound to say that +"they would clear all this up, you know; a lot of this stuff could be +stored." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, why store it? It's perfectly good," the lady answered absently. +</P> + +<P> +Presently they went out to the more cheerful dining-room, which ran +straight across the house, and was low-ceiled, with pleasant +square-paned windows on two sides. +</P> + +<P> +"This was the old house," explained Barry; "they added on the front +part. You could do a lot with this room." +</P> + +<P> +"Do you still smell spice, and apples, and cider here?" said Mrs. +Burgoyne, turning from an investigation of the china-closet, with a +radiant face. A moment later she caught her breath suddenly, and walked +across the room to stand, resting her hands on a chair back, before a +large portrait that hung above the fireplace. She stood so, gazing at +the picture—the portrait of a woman—for a full minute, and when she +turned again to Barry, her eyes were bright with tears. +</P> + +<P> +"That's Mrs. Holly," said she. "Emily said that picture was here." And +turning back to the canvas, she added under her breath, "You darling!" +</P> + +<P> +"Did you know her?" Barry asked, surprised. +</P> + +<P> +"Did I know her!" Mrs. Burgoyne echoed softly, without turning. "Yes, I +knew her," she added, almost musingly. And then suddenly she said, +"Come, let's look upstairs," and led the way by the twisted sunny back +stairway, which had a window on every landing and Crimson Rambler roses +pressing against every window. They looked into several bedrooms, all +dusty, close, sunshiny. In the largest of these, a big front corner +room, carpeted in dark red, with a black marble fireplace and an +immense walnut bed, Mrs. Burgoyne, looking through a window that she +had opened upon the lovely panorama of river and woods, said suddenly: +</P> + +<P> +"This must be my room, it was hers. She was the best friend, in one +way, that I ever had—Mrs. Holly. How happy I was here!" +</P> + +<P> +"Here?" Barry echoed. +</P> + +<P> +At his tone she turned, and looked keenly at him, a little smile +playing about her lips. Then her face suddenly brightened. +</P> + +<P> +"Barry, of course!" she exclaimed. "I KNEW I knew you, but the 'Mr. +Valentine' confused me." And facing him radiantly, she demanded, "Who +am I?" +</P> + +<P> +Barry shook his head slowly, his puzzled, smiling eyes on hers. For a +moment they faced each other; then his look cleared as hers had done, +and their hands met as he said boyishly: +</P> + +<P> +"Well, I will be hanged! Jappy Frothingham!" +</P> + +<P> +"Jappy Frothingham!" she echoed joyously. "But I haven't heard that +name for twenty years. And you're the boy whose father was a doctor, +and who helped us build our Indian camp, and who had the frog, and fell +off the roof, and killed the rattlesnake." +</P> + +<P> +"And you're the girl from Washington who could speak French, and who +put that stuff on my freckles and wouldn't let 'em drown the kittens." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, yes, yes!" she said, and, their hands still joined, they laughed +like happy children together. +</P> + +<P> +Presently, more gravely, she told him a little of herself, of the early +marriage, and the diplomat husband whose career was so cruelly cut +short by years of hopeless invalidism. Then had come her father's +illness, and years of travel with him, and now she and the little girls +were alone. And in return Barry sketched his own life, told her a +little of Hetty, and his unhappy days in New York, and of the boy, and +finally of the Mail. Her absorbed attention followed him from point to +point. +</P> + +<P> +"And you say that this Rogers owns the newspaper?" she asked +thoughtfully, when the Mail was under discussion. +</P> + +<P> +"Rogers owns it; that's the trouble. Nothing goes into it without the +old man's consent." Barry tested the spring of a roller shade, with a +scowl. "Barnes, the assistant editor he had before me, threw up his job +because he wouldn't stand having his stuff cut all to pieces and +changed to suit Rogers' policies," he went on, as Mrs. Burgoyne's eyes +demanded more detail. "And that's what I'll do some day. In the six +years since the old man bought it, the circulation has fallen off about +half; we don't get any 'ads'; we're not paying expenses. It's a crime +too, for it's a good paper. Even Rogers is sick of it now; he'd sell +for a song. I'd borrow the money and buy it if it weren't for the +presses; I'd have to have new presses. Everything here is in pretty +good shape," he finished, with an air of changing the subject. +</P> + +<P> +"And what would new presses cost?" Sidney Burgoyne persisted, pausing +on the big main stairway, as they were leaving the house a few minutes +later. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, I don't know." Barry opened the front door again, and they stepped +out to the porch. "Altogether," he said vaguely, snapping dead twigs +from the heavy unpruned growth of the rose vines, "altogether, I +wouldn't go into it without ten thousand. Five for the new presses, +say, and four to Rogers for the business and good-will, and something +to run on—although," Barry interrupted himself with a vehemence that +surprised her, "although I'll bet that the old Mail would be paying her +own rent and salaries within two months. The Dispatch doesn't amount to +much, and the Star is a regular back number!" He stood staring gloomily +down at the roofs of the village; Mrs. Burgoyne, a little tired, had +seated herself on the top step. +</P> + +<P> +"I wish, in all seriousness, you'd tell me about it," she said. "I am +really interested. If I buy this place, it will mean that we come here +to stay for years perhaps, and I have some money I want to invest here. +I had thought of real estate, but it needn't necessarily be that. It +sounds to me as if you really ought to make an effort to buy the paper, +Barry, Have you thought of getting anyone to go into it with you?" +</P> + +<P> +The man laughed, perhaps a little embarrassed. +</P> + +<P> +"Never here, really. I went to Walter Pratt about it once," he +admitted, "but he said he was all tied up. Some of the fellows down in +San Francisco might have come in—but Lord! I don't want to settle +here; I hate this place." +</P> + +<P> +"But why do you hate it?" Her honest eyes met his in surprise and +reproof. "I can't understand it, perhaps because I've thought of Santa +Paloma as a sort of Mecca for so many years myself. My visit here was +the sweetest and simplest experience I ever had in my life. You see I +had a wretchedly artificial childhood; I used to read of country homes +and big families and good times in books, but I was an only child, and +even then my life was spoiled by senseless formalities and conventions. +I've remembered all these years the simple gowns Mrs. Holly used to +wear here, and the way she played with us, and the village women coming +in for tea and sewing; it was all so sane and so sweet!" +</P> + +<P> +"Our coming here was the merest chance. My father and I were on our way +home from Japan, you know, and he suddenly remembered that the Hollys +were near San Francisco, and we came up here for a night. That," said +Mrs. Burgoyne in a lower tone, as if half to herself, "that was twenty +years ago; I was only twelve, but I've never forgotten it. Fred and +Oliver and Emily and I had our supper on the side porch; and afterward +they played in the garden, but I was shy—I had never played—and Mrs. +Holly kept me beside her on the porch, and talked to me now and then, +and finally she asked me if I would like to spend the summer with her. +Like to!—I wonder my heart didn't burst with joy! Father said no; but +after we children had gone to bed, they discussed it again. How Emily +and I PRAYED! And after a while Fred tiptoed down to the landing, and +came up jubilant. 'I heard mother say that what clothes Sidney needed +could be bought right here,' he said. Emily began to laugh, and I to +cry—!" She turned her back on Barry, and he, catching a glimpse of her +wet eyes, took up the conversation himself. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't remember her very well," he said; "a boy wouldn't. She died +soon after that summer, and the boys went off to school." +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, I know," the lady said thoughtfully. "I had the news in Rome—a +hot, bright, glaring day. It was nearly a month after her death, then. +And even then, I said to myself that I'd come back here, some day. But +it's not been possible until now; and now," her voice was bright and +steady again, "here I am. And I don't like to hear an old friend +abusing Santa Paloma." +</P> + +<P> +"It's a nice enough place," Barry admitted, "but the people are—well, +you wait until you meet the women! Perhaps they're not much worse than +women everywhere else, but sometimes it doesn't seem as if the women +here had good sense. I don't mean the nice quiet ones who live out on +the ranches and are bringing up a houseful of children, but this River +Street crowd." +</P> + +<P> +"Why, what's the matter with them?" asked Mrs. Burgoyne with vivacity. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, I mean this business of playing bridge four afternoons a week, and +running to the club, and tearing around in motor-cars all day Sunday, +and entertaining the way they think people do it in New York, and +getting their dresses in San Francisco instead of up here," Barry +explained disgustedly. "Some of them would be nice enough if they +weren't trying to go each other one better all the time; when one gets +a thing the others have all got to have it, or have something nicer. +Take the Browns, now, your neighbors there—" +</P> + +<P> +"In the shingled house, with the babies swinging on the gate as we came +by?" +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, that's it. They've got four little boys. Doctor Brown is a king; +everybody worships him, and she's a sweet little woman; but of course +she's got to strain and struggle like the rest of them. There's a Mrs. +Willard White in this town—that big gray-shingled place down there is +their garage—and she runs the whole place. She's always letting the +others know that hobbles are out, and everything's got to hang from the +shoulder—" +</P> + +<P> +"Very good!" laughed Mrs. Burgoyne, "you've got that very nearly right." +</P> + +<P> +"Willard White's a nice fellow," Barry went on, "except that he's a +little cracked about his Packard. They give motoring parties, and of +course they stop at hotels way up the country for lunch, and the women +have got to have veils and special hats and coats, and so on. Wayne +Adams told me it stood him in about thirty dollars every time he went +out with the Whites. Wayne's got his own car now; his wife kept at him +day and night to get it. But he can't run it, so it's in the garage +half the time." +</P> + +<P> +"That's the worst of motoring," said the lady with a thoughtful nod, +"the people who sell them think they've answered you when they say, +'But you don't run it economically. If you understood it, it wouldn't +cost you half so much!' And the alternative is, 'Get a man at +seventy-five dollars a month and save repairing and replacing bills.' +Nice for business, Barry, but very much overdone for pleasure, I think. +I myself hate those days spent with five people you hardly know," she +went on, "rushing over beautiful roads that you hardly see, eating too +much in strange hotels, and paying too much for it. I sha'n't have a +car. But tell me more about the people. Who are the Adamses? Didn't you +say Adams?" +</P> + +<P> +"Wayne Adams; nice people, with two nice boys," he supplied; "but she's +like the rest. Wayne lies awake nights worrying about bills, and she +gives silver photograph-frames for bridge prizes. That white stucco +house where they're putting in an Italian garden, is the Parker Lloyds. +Mrs. Lloyd's a clever woman, and pretty too; but she doesn't seem to +have any sense. They've got a little girl, and she'll tell you that +Mabel never wore a stitch that wasn't hand-made in her life. Lloyd had +a nervous breakdown a few months ago—we all knew it was nothing but +money worry—but yesterday his wife said to me in all good faith that +he was too unselfish, he was wearing himself out. She was trying to +persuade him to put Mabel in school and go abroad for a good rest." +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne laughed. +</P> + +<P> +"That's like Jeanette Carew showing me her birthday present," Barry +went on with a grin. "It seems that George gave her a complete set of +bureau ivory—two or three dozen pieces in all, I guess. When I asked +her she admitted that she had silver, but she said she wanted ivory, +everybody has ivory now. Present!" he repeated with scorn, "why, she +just told George what she wanted, and went down and charged it to him! +She's worried to death about bills now, but she started right in +talking motor-cars; and they'll have one yet. I'd give a good deal," he +finished disgustedly, "to know what they get out of it." +</P> + +<P> +"I don't believe they're as bad as all that," said the lady. "There +used to be some lovely people here, and there was a whist club too, and +it was very nice. They played for a silver fork and spoon every +fortnight, and I remember that Mrs. Holly had nearly a dozen of the +forks. There was a darling Mrs. Apostleman, and Mrs. Pratt with two shy +pretty daughters—" +</P> + +<P> +"Mrs. Apostleman's still here," he told her. "She's a fine old lady. +When a woman gets to be sixty, it doesn't seem to matter if she wastes +time. Mrs. Pratt is dead, and Lizzie is married and lives in San +Francisco, but Anne's still here. She and her brother live in that +vault of a gray house; you can see the chimneys. Anne's another," his +tone was cynical again, "a shy, nervous woman, always getting new +dresses, and always on club reception committees, with white gloves and +a ribbon in her hair, frightened to death for fear she's not doing the +correct thing. They've just had a frieze of English tapestries put in +the drawing-room and hall,—English TAPESTRIES!" +</P> + +<P> +"Perhaps you don't appreciate tapestries," said Mrs. Burgoyne, with her +twinkling smile. "You know there is a popular theory that such things +keep money in circulation." +</P> + +<P> +"You know there's hardly any form of foolishness or vice of which you +can't say that," he reminded her soberly; and Mrs. Burgoyne, serious in +turn, answered quickly: +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, you're quite right. It's too bad; we American women seem somehow +to have let go of everything real, in the last few generations. But +things are coming around again." She rose from the steps, still facing +the village. "Tell me, who is my nearest neighbor there, in the white +cottage?" she demanded. +</P> + +<P> +"I am," Barry said unexpectedly. "So if you need—yeast is it, that +women always borrow?" +</P> + +<P> +"Yeast," she assented laughing. "I will remember. And now tell me about +trains and things. Listen!" Her voice and look changed suddenly: +softened, brightened. "Is that children?" she asked, eagerly. +</P> + +<P> +And a moment later four children, tired, happy and laden with orchard +spoils, came around the corner of the house. Barry presented them as +the Carews—George and Jeanette, a bashful fourteen and a +self-possessed twelve, and Dick, who was seven—and his own small dusty +son, Billy Valentine, who put a fat confiding hand in the strange +lady's as they all went down to the gate together. +</P> + +<P> +"You are my Joanna's age, Jeanette," said Mrs. Burgoyne, easily. "I +hope you will be friends." +</P> + +<P> +"Who will I be friends with?" said little Billy, raising blue expectant +eyes. "And who will George?" +</P> + +<P> +"Why, I hope you will be friends with me," she answered laughing; "and +I will be so relieved if George will come up sometimes and help me with +bonfires and about what ought to be done in the stable. You see, I +don't know much about those things." At this moment George, hoarsely +muttering that he wasn't much good, he guessed, but he had some good +tools, fell deeply a victim to her charms. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Carew came out of her own gate as they came up, and there was time +for a little talk, and promises, and goodbyes. Then Barry took Mrs. +Burgoyne to the station, and lifted his hat to the bright face at the +window as the train pulled out in the dusk. He went slowly to his +office from the train and attacked the litter of papers and clippings +on his desk absent-mindedly. Once he said half aloud, his big scissors +arrested, his forehead furrowed by an unaccustomed frown, "We were only +kids then; and they all thought I was the one who was going to do +something big." +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap04"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER IV +</H3> + +<P> +Barry appeared at Mrs. Carew's house a little after midnight to find +the card-players enjoying a successful supper, and the one topic of +conversation the possible sale of Holly Hall. Barry, suspected of +having news of it, was warmly welcomed by the tired, bright-eyed women +and the men in their somewhat rumpled evening clothes, and supplied +with salad and coffee. +</P> + +<P> +"Is she really coming, Barry?" demanded Mrs. Lloyd eagerly. "And how +soon? We have been saying what WONDERS could be done for the Hall with +a little money." +</P> + +<P> +"The price didn't seem to worry her," said George Carew. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, she's coming," Barry assured them; "you can consider it settled." +</P> + +<P> +"Good!" said old Mrs. Apostleman in her deep, emphatic voice. "She'll +have to make the house over, of course; but the stable ought to make a +very decent garage. Mark my words, me dears, ye'll see some very +startling changes up there, before the summer's out." +</P> + +<P> +"The house could be made colonial," submitted Mrs. Adams, "or mission, +for that matter." +</P> + +<P> +"No, you couldn't make it mission," Mrs. Willard White decided, and +several voices murmured, "No, you couldn't do that." "But colonial—it +would be charming," the authority went on. "Personally, I'd tear the +whole thing down and rebuild," said Mrs. White further; "but with +hardwood floors throughout, tapestry papers, or the new grass +papers—like Amy's library, Will—white paint on all the woodwork, +white and cream outside, some really good furniture, and the garden +made over—you wouldn't know the place." +</P> + +<P> +"But that would take months," said Mrs. Carew ruefully. +</P> + +<P> +"And cost like sixty," added Dr. Brown, at which there was a laugh. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, she won't wait any six months, or six weeks either," Barry +predicted. "And don't you worry about the expense, Doctor. Do you know +who she IS?" +</P> + +<P> +They all looked at him. "Who?" said ten voices together. +</P> + +<P> +"Why, her father was Frothingham—Paul Frothingham, the inventor. Her +husband was Colonel John Burgoyne;—you all know the name. He was quite +a big man, too—a diplomat. Their wedding was one of those big +Washington affairs. A few years later Burgoyne had an accident, and he +was an invalid for about six years after that—until his death, in +fact. She traveled with him everywhere." +</P> + +<P> +"Sidney Frothingham!" said Mrs. Carew. "I remember Emily Holly used to +have letters from her. She was presented at the English court when she +was quite young, I remember, and she used to visit at the White House, +too. So THAT'S who she is!" +</P> + +<P> +"I remember the child's visit here perfectly," Mrs. Apostleman said, +"tall, lanky girl with very charming manners. Her husband was at St. +Petersburg for a while; then in London—was it? You ought to know, +Clara, me dear—I'm not sure—Even after his accident they went on some +sort of diplomatic mission to Madrid, or Stockholm, or somewhere, +remember it perfectly." +</P> + +<P> +"Colonel Burgoyne must have had money," said Mrs. White, tentatively. +</P> + +<P> +"Some, I think," Barry answered; "but it was her father who was rich, +of course—" +</P> + +<P> +"Certainly!" approved Mrs. Apostleman, fanning herself majestically. +"Rich as Croesus; multi-millionaire." +</P> + +<P> +"Heavens alive!" said Mrs. Lloyd unaffectedly. +</P> + +<P> +"Yes," Willard White eyed the tip of a cigar thoughtfully, "yes, I +remember he worked his own patents; had his own factories. Paul +Frothingham must have left something in the neighborhood of—well, two +or three millions—" +</P> + +<P> +"Two or three!" echoed Mrs. Apostleman in regal scorn. "Make it eight!" +</P> + +<P> +"Eight!" said Mrs. Brown faintly. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, that would be about my estimate," Barry agreed. +</P> + +<P> +"He was a big man, Frothingham," Dr. Brown said reflectively. "Well, +well, ladies, here's a chance for Santa Paloma to put her best foot +forward." +</P> + +<P> +"What WON'T she do to the Hall!" Mrs. Adams remarked; Mrs. Carew sighed. +</P> + +<P> +"It—it rather staggers one to think of trying to entertain a woman +worth eight millions, doesn't it?" said she. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap05"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER V +</H3> + +<P> +From the moment of her arrival in Santa Paloma, when she stood on the +station platform with a brisk spring wind blowing her veil about her +face, and a small and chattering girl on each side of her, Mrs. +Burgoyne seemed inclined to meet the friendly overtures of her new +neighbors more than half-way. She remembered the baggage-agent's name +from her visit two weeks before—"thank Mr. Roberts for his trouble, +Ellen"—and met the aged driver of the one available carriage with a +ready "Good afternoon, Mr. Rivers!" Within a week she had her pew in +church, her box at the post-office, her membership in the library, and +a definite rumor was afloat to the effect that she had invested several +thousand dollars in the Mail, and that Barry Valentine had bought the +paper from old Rogers outright; and had ordered new rotary presses, and +was at last to have a free hand as managing editor. The pretty young +mistress of Holly Hall, with her two children dancing beside her, and +her ready pleased flush and greeting for new friends, became a familiar +figure in Santa Paloma's streets. She was even seen once or twice +across the river, in the mill colony, having, for some mysterious +reason, immediately opened the bridge that led from her own grounds to +that unsavory region. +</P> + +<P> +She was not formal, not unapproachable, as it had been feared she might +be. On the contrary, she was curiously democratic. And, for a woman +straight from the shops of Paris and New York, her clothes seemed to +the women of Santa Paloma to be surprising, too. She and her daughters +wore plain ginghams for every day, with plain wide hats and trim serge +coats for foggy mornings. And on Sundays it was certainly extraordinary +to meet the Burgoynes, bound for church, wearing the simplest of dimity +or cross-barred muslin wash dresses, with black stockings and shoes, +and hats as plain—far plainer!—as those of the smallest children. +Except for the amazing emeralds that blazed beside her wedding ring, +and the diamonds she sometimes wore, Mrs. Burgoyne might have been a +trained nurse in uniform. +</P> + +<P> +"It is a pose," said Mrs. Willard White, at the club, to a few intimate +friends. "She's probably imitating some English countess. Englishwomen +affect simplicity in the country. But wait until we see her evening +frocks." +</P> + +<P> +It was felt that any formal calling upon Mrs. Burgoyne must wait until +the supposedly inevitable session with carpenters, painters, +paper-hangers, carpet-layers, upholsterers, decorators, furniture +dealers, and gardeners was over at the Hall. But although the old house +had been painted and the plumbing overhauled before the new owner's +arrival, and although all day long and every day two or three +Portuguese day-laborers chopped and pruned and shouted in the garden, a +week and then two weeks slipped by, and no further evidences of +renovation were to be seen. +</P> + +<P> +So presently callers began to go up to the Hall; first Mrs. Apostleman +and Mrs. White, as was fitting, and then a score of other women. Mrs. +Apostleman had been the social leader in Santa Paloma when Mrs. White +was little Clara Peck, a pretty girl in the High School, whose rich +widowed mother dressed her exquisitely, and who was studying French, +and could play the violin. But Mrs. Apostleman was an old woman now, +and had been playing the game a long time, and she was glad to put the +sceptre into younger hands. And she could have put it into none more +competent than those of Mrs. Willard White. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. White was a handsome, clever woman, of perhaps six-or +seven-and-thirty. She had been married now for seventeen years, and for +all that time, and even before her marriage, she had been the most +envied, the most admired, and the most copied woman in the village. Her +mother, an insipid, spoiled, ambitious little woman, whose fondest hope +was realized when her dashing daughter made a financially brilliant +match, had lost no time in warning the bride that the agonies of +motherhood, and the long ensuing slavery, were avoidable, and Clara had +entirely agreed with her mother's ideas, and used to laughingly assure +the few old friends who touched upon this delicate topic, that she +herself "was baby enough for Will!" Robbed in this way of her natural +estate, and robbed by the size of her husband's income from the +exhilarating interest of making financial ends meet, Mrs. White, for +seventeen years, had led what she honestly considered an enviable and +carefree existence. She bought beautiful clothes for herself, and +beautiful things for her house, she gave her husband and her mother +very handsome gifts. She was a perfect hostess, although it must be +admitted that she never extended the hospitalities of her handsome home +to anyone who did not amuse her, who was not "worth while". She ruled +her servants well, made a fine president for the local Women's Club, +ran her own motor-car very skillfully, and played an exceptionally good +game of bridge. She was an authority upon table-linens, fancy +needlework, fashions in dress, new salads, new methods in serving the +table. +</P> + +<P> +Willard White, as perfect a type in his own way as she was in hers, was +very proud of her, when he thought of her at all, which was really much +less often than their acquaintances supposed. He liked his house to be +nicely managed, spent his money freely upon it, wanted his friends +handsomely entertained, and his wine-cellar stocked with every +conceivable variety of liquid refreshment. If Clara wanted more +servants, let her have them, if she wanted corkscrews by the gross, +why, buy those, too. Only let a man feel that there was a maid around +to bring him a glass when he came in from golfing or motoring, and a +corkscrew with the glass! +</P> + +<P> +As a matter of fact, his club and his office, and above all, his +motor-cars, absorbed him. His natural paternal instinct had been +diverted toward these latter, and, quite without his knowing it, his +cars were his nursery. Willard White had owned the first electric car +ever seen in Santa Paloma. Later, there had been half-a-dozen machines, +and he loved them all, and spoke of them as separate entities. He spoke +of the runs they had made, of the strains they had triumphantly +sustained, and he and his chauffeur held low-toned conferences over any +small breakage, with the same seriousness that he might have used had +Willard Junior—supposing there to have been such a little +person—developed croup, and made the presence of a physician +necessary. He liked to glance across his lawn at night to the +commodious garage, visible in the moonlight, and think of his +treasures, locked up, guarded, perfect in every detail, and safe. +</P> + +<P> +He and Mrs. White always spoke of Santa Paloma as a "jay" town, and +compared it, to its unutterable disadvantage, to other and larger +cities, but still, business reasons would always keep them there for +the greater part of the year, and they were both glad to hear that a +fabulously wealthy widow, and a woman prominent in every other respect +as well, had come to live in Santa Paloma. Mrs. White determined to +play her game very carefully with Mrs. Burgoyne; there should be no +indecent hurry, there should be no sudden overtures at friendship. +"But, poor thing! She will certainly find our house an oasis in the +desert!" Mrs. White comfortably decided, putting on the very handsomest +of her afternoon gowns to go and call formally at the Hall. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne and the little girls were always most cordial to +visitors. They spent these first days deep in gardening, great heaps of +fragrant dying weeds about them, and raw vistas through the pruned +trees already beginning to show the gracious slopes of the land, and +the sleepy Lobos down beneath the willows. The Carew children and the +little Browns were often there, fascinated by the outdoor work, as +children always are, and little Billy Valentine squirmed daily through +his own particular gap in the hedge, and took his share of the fun with +a deep and silent happiness. Billy gave Mrs. Burgoyne many a heartache, +with his shock of bright, unbrushed hair, his neglected grimed little +hands, his boyish little face that was washed daily according to his +own small lights, with surrounding areas of neck and ears wholly +overlooked, and his deep eyes, sad when he was sad, and somehow +infinitely more pathetic when he was happy. Sometimes she stealthily +supplied Billy with new garters, or fastened the buttons on his blue +overalls, or even gave him a spoonful of "meddy" out of a big bottle, +at the mere sight of which Ellen shuddered sympathetically; a dose +which was always followed by two marshmallows, out of a tin box, by way +of consolation. But further than this she dared not go, except in the +matter of mugs of milk, gingerbread, saucer-pies, and motherly kisses +for any bump or bruise. +</P> + +<P> +The village women, coming up to the Hall, in the pleasant summer +afternoons, were puzzled to find the old place almost unchanged. Why +any woman in her senses wanted to live among those early-Victorian +horrors, the women of Santa Paloma could not imagine. But Mrs. Burgoyne +never apologized for the old walnut chairs and tables, and the old +velvet carpets, and the hopelessly old-fashioned white lace curtains +and gilt-framed mirrors. Even Captain Holly's big clock—"an impossibly +hideous thing," Mrs. White called the frantic bronze horses and the +clinging tiger, on their onyx hillside—was serenely ticking, and the +pink china vases were filled with flowers. And there was an air of such +homely comfort, after all, about the big rooms, such a fragrance of +flowers, and flood of sunny fresh air, that the whole effect was not +half as bad as it might be imagined; indeed, when Mammy Curry, the +magnificent old negress who was supreme in the kitchen and respected in +the nursery as well, came in with her stiff white apron and silver +tea-tray, she seemed to fit into the picture, and add a completing +touch to the whole. +</P> + +<P> +Very simply, very unpretentiously, the new mistress of Holly Hall +entered upon her new life. She was a woman of very quiet tastes, +devoted to her little girls, her music, her garden and her books. With +the negress, she had one other servant, a quiet little New England +girl, with terrified, childish eyes, and a passionate devotion to her +mistress and all that concerned her mistress. Fanny had in charge a +splendid, tawny-headed little boy of three, who played happily by +himself, about the kitchen door, and chased chickens and kittens with +shrieks of delight. Mrs. Burgoyne spoke of him as "Fanny's little +brother," and if the two had a history of any sort, it was one at which +she never hinted. She met an embarrassing question with a readiness +which rather amused Mrs. Brown, on a day when the two younger ladies +were having tea with Mrs. Apostleman, and the conversation turned to +the subject of maids. +</P> + +<P> +"—but if your little girl Fanny has had her lesson, you'll have no +trouble keepin' her," said Mrs. Apostleman. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, I hope I shall keep Fanny," said Mrs. Burgoyne, "she comes of such +nice people, and she's such a sweet, good girl." +</P> + +<P> +"Why, Lord save us!" said the old lady, repentantly, "and I was almost +ready to believe the child was hers!" +</P> + +<P> +"If Peter was hers, she couldn't be fonder of him!" Mrs. Burgoyne said +mildly, and Mrs. Brown choked on her tea, and had to wipe her eyes. +</P> + +<P> +In the matter of Fanny, and in a dozen other small matters, the +independence of the great lady was not slow in showing itself in Mrs. +Burgoyne. Santa Paloma might be annoyed at her, and puzzled by her, but +it had perforce to accept her as she stood, or ignore her, and she was +obviously not a person to ignore. She declined all invitations for +daytime festivities; she was "always busy in the daytime," she said. No +cards, no luncheons, no tea-parties could lure her away from the Hall, +although, if she and the small girls walked in for mail or were down in +the village for any other reason, they were very apt to stop somewhere +for a chat on their way home. But the children were allowed to go +nowhere alone, and not the smartest of children's parties could boast +of the presence of Joanna and Ellen Burgoyne. +</P> + +<P> +Santa Paloma children were much given to parties, or rather their +parents were; and every separate party was a separate great event. The +little girls wore exquisite hand-made garments, silken hose and white +shoes. Professional entertainers, in fashionably darkened rooms, kept +the little people amused, and professional caterers supplied the supper +they ate, or perhaps the affair took the shape of a box-party for a +matinee, and a supper at the town's one really pretty tea-room +followed. These affairs were duly chronicled in the daily and weekly +papers, and perhaps more than one matron would have liked the +distinction of having Mrs. Burgoyne's little daughters listed among her +own child's guests. Joanna and Ellen were pretty children, in a +well-groomed, bright-eyed sort of way, and would have been popular even +without the added distinction of their ready French and German and +Italian, their charming manners, their naive references to other +countries and peoples, and their beautiful and distinguished mother. +</P> + +<P> +But in answer to all invitations, there came only polite, stilted +little letters of regret, in the children's round script. "Mother would +d'rather we shouldn't go to a sin-gul party until we are young ladies!" +Ellen would say cheerfully, if cross-examined on the subject, leaving +it to the more tactful Joanna to add, "But Mother thanks you JUST as +much." They were always close to their mother when it was possible, and +she only banished them from her side when the conversation grew +undeniably too old in tone for Joanna and Ellen, and then liked to keep +them in sight, have them come in with the tea-tray, or wave to her +occasionally from the river bank. +</P> + +<P> +"We've been wondering what you would do with this magnificent +drawing-room," said Mrs. White, on her first visit. "The house ought to +take a colonial treatment wonderfully—there's a remarkable man in San +Francisco who simply made our house over for us last year!" +</P> + +<P> +"It must have been a fearful upheaval," said Mrs. Burgoyne, +sympathetically. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, we went away! Mr. White and I went east, and when we came back it +was all done." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, fortunately," said the mistress of Holly Hall cheerfully, as she +sugared Mrs. Apostleman's cup of tea, "fortunately all these things of +Mrs. Holly's were in splendid condition, except for a little cleaning +and polishing. They used to make things so much more solid, don't you +think so? Why, there are years of wear left in these carpets, and the +chairs and tables are like rocks! Captain Holly apparently got the very +best of everything when he furnished this place, and I reap the +benefit. It's so nice to feel that one needn't buy a chair or a bed for +ten years or more, if one doesn't want to!" +</P> + +<P> +"Dear, sweet people, the Hollys," said Mrs. White, pleasantly, utterly +at a loss. Did people of the nicer class speak of furniture as if it +were made merely to be useful? "But what a distinct period these things +belong to, don't they?" she asked, feeling her way. "So—so solid!" +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, in a way it was an ugly period," said Mrs. Burgoyne, placidly. +"But very comfortable, fortunately. Fancy if he had selected Louis +Quinze chairs, for example!" +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. White gave her a puzzled look, and smiled. +</P> + +<P> +"Come now, Mrs. Burgoyne," said she, good-naturedly, "Confess that you +are going to give us all a surprise some day, and change all this. One +sees," said Mrs. White, elegantly, "such lovely effects in New York." +</P> + +<P> +"In those upper Fifth Avenue shops—ah, but don't you see lovely +things!" the other woman assented warmly. "Of course, one could be +always changing," she went on. "But I like associations with +things—and changing takes so much time! Some day we may think all this +quite pretty," she finished, with a contented glance at the comfortable +ugliness of the drawing-room. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, do you suppose we shall REALLY!" Mrs. White gave a little +incredulous laugh. She was going pretty far, and she knew it, but as a +matter of fact, she was entirely unable to believe that there was a +woman in the world who could afford to have what was fashionable and +expensive in household furnishings or apparel, and who deliberately +preferred not to have it. That her own pretty things were no sooner +established than they began to lose their charm for her, never occurred +to Mrs. White: she was a woman of conventional type, perfectly +satisfied to spend her whole life in acquiring things essentially +invaluable, and to use a naturally shrewd and quick intelligence in +copying fashions of all sorts, small and large, as fast as advanced +merchants and magazines presented them to her. She was one of the great +army of women who help to send the sale of an immoral book well up into +the hundreds of thousands; she liked to spend long afternoons with a +box of chocolates and a book unfit for the touch of any woman; a book +that she would review for the benefit of her friends later, with a +shocked wonder that "they dare print such things!" She liked to tell a +man's story, and the other women could not but laugh at her, for she +was undeniably good company, and nobody ever questioned the taste of +anything she ever said or did. She was a famous gossip, for like all +women, she found the private affairs of other people full of +fascination, and, having no legitimate occupation, she was always at +liberty to discuss them. +</P> + +<P> +Yet Mrs. White was not at all an unusual woman, and, like her +associates, she tacitly assumed herself to be the very flower of +American womanhood. She quoted her distinguished relatives on all +occasions, the White family, in all its ramifications, supplied the +correct precedent for all the world; there was no social emergency to +which some cousin or aunt of Mrs. White's had not been more than equal. +Having no children of her own, she still could silence and shame many a +good mother with references to Cousin Ethel Langstroth's "kiddies", or +to Aunt Grace Thurston's wonderful governess. +</P> + +<P> +Personally, Mrs. White vaguely felt that there was something innately +indecent about children anyway, the smaller they were the less +mentionable she found them. The little emergencies, of nose-bleeds and +torn garments and spilled porridge, that were constantly arising in the +neighborhood of children, made her genuinely sick and faint. And she +had so humorous and so assured an air of saying "Disgusting!" or +"Disgraceful!" when the family of some other woman began to present +itself with reasonable promptness, that other women found themselves +laughing and saying "Disgusting!" too. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne, like Mrs. White, was a born leader. Whether she made any +particular effort to influence her neighbors or not, they could not but +feel the difference in her attitude toward all the various tangible +things that make a woman's life. She was essentially maternal, wanted +to mother all the little living and growing things in the world, wanted +to be with children, and talk of them and study them. And she was +simple and honest in her tastes, and entirely without affectation in +her manner, and she was too great a lady to be either laughed at or +ignored. So Santa Paloma began to ask itself why she did this or that, +and finding her ways all made for economy and comfort and simplicity, +almost unconsciously copied them. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap06"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER VI +</H3> + +<P> +When Mrs. Apostleman invited several of her friends to a formal dinner +given especially for Mrs. Burgoyne everyone realized that the newcomer +was accepted, and the event was one of several in which the women of +Santa Paloma tried with more than ordinary eagerness to outshine each +other. Mrs. Apostleman herself never entered into competition with the +younger matrons, nor did they expect it of her. She gave heavy, rich, +old-fashioned dinners in her own way, in which her servants were +perfectly trained. It was a standing joke among her friends that they +always ate too much at Mrs. Apostleman's house, there were always seven +or eight substantial courses, and she liked to have the plates come +back for more lobster salad or roast turkey. In this, as in all things, +she was a law unto herself. +</P> + +<P> +But for the other women, Mrs. White set the pace, and difficult to keep +they often found it. But they never questioned it. They admired the +richer woman's perfect house-furnishing, and struggled blindly to +accumulate the same number and variety of napkins and fingerbowls, +ramekins and glasses and candlesticks and special forks and special +knives. The first of the month with its bills, became a horror to them, +and they were continually promising their husbands, in all good faith, +that expenses should positively be cut down. +</P> + +<P> +But what use were good resolves; when one might find, the very next +day, that there were no more cherries for the grapefruit, that one had +not a pair of presentable white gloves for the club, or that the +motor-picnic that the children were planning was to cost them five +dollars apiece? To serve grapefruit without cherries, to wear colored +gloves, or no gloves at all to the club, and to substitute some +inexpensive pleasure for the ride was a course that never occurred to +Mrs. Carew, that never occurred to any of her friends. Mrs. Carew might +have a very vague idea of her daughter's spiritual needs, she might be +an entire stranger to the delicately adjusted and exquisitely +susceptible entity that was the real Jeanette, but she would have gone +hungry rather than have Jeanette unable to wear white shoes to Sunday +School, rather than tie Jeanette's braids with ribbons that were not +stiff and new. She was so entirely absorbed in pursuit of the "correct +thing," so anxious to read what was "being read," to own what was +"right", that she never stopped to seriously consider her own or her +daughter's place in the universe. She was glad, of course when the +children "liked their teacher," just as she had been glad years before +when they "liked their nurse." The reasons for such likings or +dislikings she never investigated; she had taken care of the children +herself during the nurse's regular days "off", but she always regarded +these occasions as so much lost time. Mrs. Carew kept her children, as +she kept her house, well-groomed, and she gave about as much thought to +the spiritual needs of the one as the other. She had been brought up to +believe that the best things in life are to be had for money, and that +earthly happiness or unhappiness falls in exact ratio with the +possession or non-possession of money. She met the growing demands of +her family as well as she could, and practised all sorts of harassing +private economies so that, in the eyes of the world, the family might +seem to be spending a great deal more money than was actually the case. +Mrs. Carew's was not an analytical mind, but sometimes she found +herself genuinely puzzled by the financial state of affairs. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know where the money GOES to!" she said, in a confidential +moment, to Mrs. Lloyd. They had met in the market, where Mrs. Carew was +consulting a long list of necessary groceries. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, don't speak of it!" said Mrs. Lloyd, feelingly. "That's so, your +dinner is tomorrow night, isn't it?" she added with interest. "Are you +going to have Lizzie?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, dear me, yes! For eight, you know. Shan't you have her?" For Mrs. +Lloyd's turn to entertain Mrs. Burgoyne followed Mrs. Carew's by only a +few days. +</P> + +<P> +"Lizzie and her mother, too," said the other woman. "I don't know +what's the matter with maids in these days," she went on, "they simply +can't do things, as my mother's maids used to, for example. Now the +four of them will be working all day over Thursday's dinner, and, dear +me! it's a simple enough dinner." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, you have to serve so much with a dinner, nowadays," Mrs. Carew +said, in a mildly martyred tone. "Crackers and everything else with +oysters—I'm going to have cucumber sandwiches with the soup—" +</P> + +<P> +"Delicious!" said Mrs. Lloyd. +</P> + +<P> +"'Cucumbers, olives, salted nuts, currant jelly'", Mrs. Carew was +reading her list, "'ginger chutney, saltines, bar-le-duc, cream +cheese', those are for the salad, you know, 'dinner rolls, sandwich +bread, fancy cakes, Maraschino cherries, maple sugar,' that's to go hot +on the ice, I'm going to serve it in melons, and 'candy'—just pink and +green wafers, I think. All that before it comes to the actual dinner at +all, and it's all so fussy!" +</P> + +<P> +"Don't say one word!" said Mrs. Lloyd, sympathetically. "But it sounds +dee-licious!" she added consolingly, and little Mrs. Carew went +contentedly home to a hot and furious session in her kitchen; hours of +baking, boiling and frying, chopping and whipping and frosting, +creaming and seasoning, freezing and straining. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't mind the work, if only everything goes right!" Mrs. Carew +would say gallantly to herself, and it must be said to her credit that +usually everything did "go right" at her house, although even the maids +in the kitchen, heroically attacking pyramids of sticky plates, were +not so tired as she was, when the dinner was well over. +</P> + +<P> +But there was a certain stimulus in the mere thought of entertaining +Mrs. Burgoyne, and there was the exhilarating consciousness that one of +these days she would entertain in turn; so the Santa Paloma housewives +exerted themselves to the utmost of their endurance, and one delightful +dinner party followed another. +</P> + +<P> +But a dispassionate onlooker from another planet might have found it +curious to notice, in contrast to this uniformity, that no two women +dressed alike on these occasions, and no woman who could help it wore +the same gown twice. Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Carew, to be sure, wore their +"little old silks" more than once, but each was secretly consoled by +the thought that a really "smart" new gown awaited Mrs. White's dinner; +which was naturally the climax of all the affairs. Only the wearers and +their dress-makers knew what hours had been spent upon these costumes, +what discouraged debates attended their making, what muscular agonies +their fitting. Only they could have estimated, and they never did +estimate—the time lost over pattern books, the nervous strain of +placing this bit of spangled net or that square inch of lace, the +hurried trips downtown for samples and linings, for fringes and +embroideries and braids and ribbons. The gown that she wore to her own +dinner, Mrs. White had had fitted in the Maison Dernier Mot, in +Paris;—it was an enchanting frock of embroidered white illusion, over +pink illusion, over black illusion, under a short heavy tunic of silver +spangles and threads. The yoke was of wonderful old lace, and there was +a girdle of heavy pink cords, and silver clasps, to match the aigrette +that was held by pink and silver cords in Mrs. White's beautifully +arranged hair. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne's gowns, or rather gown, for she wore exactly the same +costume to every dinner, could hardly have been more startling than +Santa Paloma found it, had it gone to any unbecoming extreme. Yet it +was the simplest of black summer silks, soft and full in the skirt, +short-sleeved, and with a touch of lace at the square-cut neck. She +arranged her hair in a becoming loose knot, and somehow managed to look +noticeably lovely and distinguished, in the gay assemblies. To brighten +the black gown she wore a rope of pearls, looped twice about her white +throat, and hanging far below her waist; pearls, as Mrs. Adams remarked +in discouragement later, that "just made you feel what's the use! She +could wear a kitchen apron with those pearls if she wanted to, everyone +would know she could afford cloth of gold and ermine!" +</P> + +<P> +With this erratic and inexplicable simplicity of dress she combined the +finish of manner, the poise, the ready sympathies of a truly cultivated +and intelligent woman. She could talk, not only of her own personal +experiences, but of the political, and literary, and scientific +movements of the day. Certain proposed state legislation happened to be +interesting the men of Santa Paloma at this time, and she seemed to +understand it, and spoke readily of it. +</P> + +<P> +"But, George," said Mrs. Carew, walking home in the summer night, after +the Adams dinner, "you have often said you hated women to talk about +things they didn't understand." +</P> + +<P> +"But she does understand, dearie. That's just the point." +</P> + +<P> +"Yes; but you differed with her, George!" +</P> + +<P> +"Well, but that's different, Jen. She knew what she was talking about." +</P> + +<P> +"I suppose she has friends in Washington who keep her informed," said +Mrs. Carew, a little discontentedly, after a silence. And there was +another pause before she said, "Where do men get their information, +George?" +</P> + +<P> +"Papers, dear. And talking, I suppose. They're interested, you know." +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, but—" little Mrs. Carew burst out resentfully, "I never can make +head or tail of the papers! They say 'Aldrich Resigns,' or 'Heavy Blow +to Interests,' or 'Tammany Scores Triumph,' and <I>I</I> don't know what +it's about!" +</P> + +<P> +George Carew's big laugh rang out in the night, and he put his arm +about her, and said, "You're great, Jen!" +</P> + +<P> +Shortly after Mrs. White's dinner a certain distinguished old artist +from New York, and his son, came to stay a night or two at Holly Hall, +on their way home from the Orient, and Mrs. Burgoyne took this occasion +to invite a score of her new friends to two small dinners, planned for +the two nights of the great Karl von Praag's stay in Santa Paloma. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't see how she's going to handle two dinners for ten people each, +with just that colored cook of hers and one waitress," said Mrs. +Willard White, late one evening, when Mr. White was finishing a book +and a cigar in their handsome bedroom, and she was at her +dressing-table. +</P> + +<P> +"Caterers," submitted Mr. White, turning a page. +</P> + +<P> +"I suppose so," his wife agreed. After a thoughtful silence she added, +"Sue Adams says that she supposes that when a woman has as much money +as that she loses all interest in spending it! Personally, I don't see +how she can entertain a great big man like Von Praag in that +old-fashioned house. She never seems to think of it at all, she never +apologizes for it, and she talks as if nobody ever bought new things +until the old were worn out!" +</P> + +<P> +Her eyes went about her own big bedroom as she spoke. Nothing +old-fashioned here! Even eighteen years ago, when the Whites were +married, their home had been furnished in a manner to make the Holly +Hall of to-day look out of date. Mrs. White shuddered now at the mere +memory of what she as a bride had thought so beautiful: the pale green +carpet, the green satin curtains, the white-and-gold chairs and tables +and bed, the easels, the gilded frames! Seven or eight years later she +had changed all this for a heavy brass bedstead, and dark rugs on a +polished floor, and bird's-eye maple chests and chairs, and all +feminine Santa Paloma talked of the Whites' new things. Six or seven +years after that again, two mahogany beds replaced the brass one, and +heavy mahogany bureaus with glass knobs had their day, with plain net +curtains and old-fashioned woven rugs. But all these were in the +guest-rooms now, and in her own bedroom Mrs. White had a complete set +of Circassian walnut, heavily carved, and ornamented with cunningly +inset panels of rattan. On the beds were covers of Oriental cottons, +and the window-curtains showed the same elementary designs in pinks and +blues. +</P> + +<P> +"She dresses very prettily, I thought," observed Mr. White, apropos of +his wife's last remark. +</P> + +<P> +"Dresses!" echoed his wife. "She dresses as your mother might!" +</P> + +<P> +"Very pretty, very pretty!" said the man absently, over his book. +</P> + +<P> +There was a silence. Then: +</P> + +<P> +"That just shows how much men notice," Mrs. White confided to her +ivory-backed brush. "I believe they LIKE women to look like frumps!" +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap07"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER VII +</H3> + +<P> +These were busy days in the once quiet and sleepy office of the Santa +Paloma Morning Mail. A wave of energy and vigor swept over the place, +affecting everybody from the fat, spoiled office cat, who found himself +pushed out of chairs, and bounced off of folded coats with small +courtesy, to the new editor-manager and the lady whose timely +investment had brought this pleasant change about. Old Kelly, the +proof-reader, night clerk, Associated Press manager, and assistant +editor, shouted and swore with a vim unknown of late years; Miss +Watson, who "covered" social events, clubs, public dinners, "dramatic," +and "hotels," cleaned out her desk, and took her fancy-work home, and +"Fergy," a freckled youth who delighted in calling himself a "cub," +although he did little more than run errands and carry copy to the +press-room, might even be seen batting madly at an unused typewriter +when actual duties failed, so inspiring was the new atmosphere. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne had a desk and a corner of her own, where her trim figure +might be seen daily for an hour or two, from ten o'clock until the +small girls came in to pick her up on their way home from school for +luncheon. Barry found her brimming with ideas. She instituted the +"Women's Page," the old familiar page of answered questions, and +formulas for ginger-bread, and brief romances, and scraps of poetry, +and she offered through its columns a weekly cash prize for +contributions on household topics. An exquisite doll appeared in the +window of the Mail office, a doll with a flower-wreathed hat, and a +ruffled dress, and a little parasol to match the dress, and loitering +little girls, drawn from all over the village to study this dream of +beauty, learned that they had only to enter a loaf of bread of their +own making in the Mail contest, to stand a chance of carrying the +little lady home. Beside the doll stood a rifle, no toy, but a genuine +twenty-two Marlin, for the boy whose plans for a vegetable garden +seemed the best and most practical, Mrs. Burgoyne herself talked to the +children when they came shyly in to investigate. "She seems to want to +know every child in the county, the darling!" said Miss Watson to Fergy. +</P> + +<P> +The Valentines, father and son, came into the Mail office one warm June +morning, to find the editor of the "Women's Page" busy at her desk, +with the sunlight lying in a bright bar across her uncovered hair, and +a vista of waving green boughs showing through the open window behind +her. +</P> + +<P> +"What are you two doing here at this hour?" said Sidney, laying down +her pen and leaning back in her chair as if glad of a moment's rest. +"Why, Billy!" she added in admiring tones, "let me see you! How very, +VERY nice you look!" +</P> + +<P> +For the little fellow was dressed in a new sailor suit that was a full +size too large for him, his wild mop had been cut far too close, and a +large new hat and new shoes were much in evidence. +</P> + +<P> +"D'you think he looks all right?" said Barry with an anxious +wistfulness that went straight to her heart. "He looks better, doesn't +he? I've been fixing him up." +</P> + +<P> +"And free sailor waists, and stockings, and nighties," supplemented +Billy, also anxious for her approval. +</P> + +<P> +"He looks lovely!" said Sidney, enthusiastically, even while she was +mentally raising the collar of his waist, and taking an inch or two off +the trousers. She lifted the child up to sit on his father's desk, and +kissed the top of his little cropped head. +</P> + +<P> +"We may not express ourselves very fluently," said Barry, who was +seated in his own revolving chair and busily opening and shutting the +drawers of his desk, "but we appreciate the interest beautiful ladies +take in our manners and morals, and the new tooth-brushes they buy us—" +</P> + +<P> +"My dear!" protested Mrs. Burgoyne, between laughter and tears, "Ellen +used his old one up, cleaning out their paint-boxes!" And she put her +warm hand on his shoulder, and said, "Don't be a goose, Barry!" as +unselfconsciously as a sister might. "Where are you two boys going, +Billy?" she asked, going back to her own desk. +</P> + +<P> +"'Cool," Billy said. +</P> + +<P> +"He's going over to the kindergarten. I've got some work I ought to +finish here," Barry supplemented. "I'll take you across the street, +Infant, I'll be right back, Sidney." +</P> + +<P> +"But, Barry, why are you working now?" asked the lady a few minutes +later when he took his place at his desk. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, don't you worry," he answered, smiling; "I love it. The thought of +old Rogers' face when he opens his paper every morning does me good, +I'm writing this appeal for the new reservoir now, and I've got to play +up the Flower Festival." +</P> + +<P> +"I'm not interested in the Flower Festival," said Mrs. Burgoyne +good-naturedly, "and the minute it's over I'm going to start a crusade +for a girls' clubhouse in Old Paloma. Conditions over there for the +girls are something hideous. But I suppose we'll have to go on with the +Festival for the present. It's a great occasion, I suppose?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, tremendous! The Governor's coming, and thousands of visitors +always pour into town. We'll have nearly a hundred carriages in the +parade, simply covered with flowers, you know. It's lovely! You wait +until things get fairly started!" +</P> + +<P> +"That'll be Fourth of July," Sidney said thoughtfully, turning back to +her exchanges, "I'll begin my clubhouse crusade on the fifth!" she +added firmly. +</P> + +<P> +For a long time there was silence in the office, except for the +rustling of paper and the scratch of pens. From the sunny world +out-of-doors came a pleasant blending of many noises, passing wagons, +the low talk of chickens, the slamming of gates, and now and then the +not unmusical note of a fish-horn. Footsteps and laughing voices went +by, and died into silence. The clock from Town Hall Square struck +eleven slowly. +</P> + +<P> +"This is darned pleasant," said Barry presently, over his work. +</P> + +<P> +"Isn't it?" said the editor of the "Women's Page," and again there was +silence. +</P> + +<P> +After a while Barry said "Finished!" with a great breath, and, leaning +back in his chair, wheeled about to find the lady quietly watching him. +</P> + +<P> +"Barry, are you working too hard?" said she, quite unembarrassed. +</P> + +<P> +"Am I? Lord, not I wish the days were twice as long. I"—Barry rumpled +his thick hair with a gesture that was familiar to Sidney now—"I guess +work agrees with me. By George, I hate to eat, and I hate to sleep; I +want to be down here all the time, or else rustling up subscriptions +and 'ads.'," +</P> + +<P> +"And I thought you were lazy," said Sidney, finding herself, for the +first time in their friendship, curiously inclined to keep the +conversation personal, this warm June morning. It was a thing extremely +difficult to do, with Barry. "You certainly gave me that impression," +she said. +</P> + +<P> +"Yes; but that was two months ago," said Barry, off guard. A second +later he changed the topic abruptly by asking, "Did your roses come?" +</P> + +<P> +"All of them," answered Sidney pleasantly. And vaguely conscious of +mischief in the air, but led on by some inexplicable whim, she pursued, +"Do you mean that it makes such a difference to you, Rogers being gone?" +</P> + +<P> +Barry trimmed the four sides of a clipping with four clips of his +shears. +</P> + +<P> +"Exactly," said he briefly. He banged a drawer shut, closed a book and +laid it aside, and stuck the brush into his glue-pot. "Getting enough +of dinner parties?" he asked then, cheerfully. +</P> + +<P> +"Too much," said Sidney, wondering why she felt like a reprimanded +child. "And that reminds me: I am giving two dinners for the Von +Praags, you know. I can't manage everybody at once; I hate more than +ten people at a dinner. And you are asked to the first." +</P> + +<P> +"I don't go much to dinners," Barry said. +</P> + +<P> +"I know you don't; but I want you to come to this one," said Sidney. +"You'll love old Mr. von Praag. And Richard, the son, is a dear! I +really want you." +</P> + +<P> +"He's an artist, too, isn't he?" said Barry without enthusiasm. +</P> + +<P> +"Who, Richard?" she asked, something in his manner putting her a little +at a loss. "Yes; and he's very clever, and so nice! He's like a brother +to me." +</P> + +<P> +Barry did not answer, but after a moment he said, scowling a little, +and not looking up: +</P> + +<P> +"A fellow like that has pretty smooth sailing. Rich, the son of a big +man, traveling all he wants to, studio in New York, clubs—" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, Richard has his troubles," Sidney said. "His wife is very +delicate, and they lost their little girl... Are you angry with me +about anything, Barry?" she broke off, puzzled and distressed, for this +unresponsive almost sullen manner was unlike anything she had ever seen +in him. +</P> + +<P> +But a moment later he turned toward her with his familiar sunny smile. +</P> + +<P> +"Why didn't you say so before?" he said sheepishly. +</P> + +<P> +"Say—?" she echoed bewilderedly. Then, with a sudden rush of +enlightenment, "Why, Barry, you're not JEALOUS?" +</P> + +<P> +A second later she would have given much to have the words unsaid. They +faced each other in silence, the color mounting steadily in Sidney's +face. +</P> + +<P> +"I didn't mean of ME," she stammered uncomfortably; "I meant of +everything. I thought—but it was a silly thing to say. It sounded—I +didn't think—" +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know why you shouldn't have thought it, since I was fool +enough to show it," said Barry after a moment, coming over to her desk +and facing her squarely. Sidney stood up, opposite him, her heart +beating wildly. "And I don't know why I shouldn't be jealous," he went +on steadily, "at the idea that some old friend might come in here and +take you away from Santa Paloma. You asked me if it was old Rogers' +going that made a difference to me—" +</P> + +<P> +"I know," interrupted Sidney, scarlet-cheeked. "PLEASE"— +</P> + +<P> +"But you know better than that," Barry went on, his voice rising a +little. "You know what you have done for me. If ever I try to speak of +it, you say, as you said about the kid just now, 'My dear boy, I like +to do it.' But I'm going to say what I mean now, once and for all. You +loaned me money, and it was through your lending it that I got credit +to borrow more; you gave me a chance to be my own master; you showed +you had faith in me; you reminded me of the ambition I had as a kid, +before Hetty and all that trouble had crushed it out of me; you came +down here to the office and talked and planned, and took it for granted +that I was going to pull myself together and stop idling, and kicking, +and fooling away my time; and all through these six weeks of rough +sailing, you've let me go up there to the Hall and tell you +everything—and then you wonder if I could ever be jealous!" His tone, +which had risen almost to violence, fell suddenly. He went back to his +desk and began to straighten the papers there, not seeing what he did. +"I never can say anything more to you, Sidney, I've said too much now," +he said a little huskily; "but I'm glad to have you know how I feel." +</P> + +<P> +Sidney stood quite still, her breath coming and going quickly. She was +fundamentally too honest a woman to meet the situation with one of the +hundred insincerities that suggested themselves to her. She knew she +was to blame, and she longed to undo the mischief, and put their +friendship back where it had been only an hour ago. But the right words +did not suggest themselves, and she could only stand silently watching +him. Barry had opened a book, and, holding it in both hands, was +apparently absorbed in its contents. +</P> + +<P> +Neither had spoken or moved, and Sidney was meditating a sudden, +wordless departure, when Ellen Burgoyne burst noisily into the room. +Ellen was a square, splendid child, always conversationally inclined, +and never at a loss for a subject. +</P> + +<P> +"You look as if you wanted to cry, Mother," said she. "Perhaps you +didn't hear the whistle; school's out. We've been waiting ever so long. +Mother, I know you said you hoped Heaven would not send any more dogs +our way for a long while, but Jo and Jeanette and I found one by the +school fence. Mother, you will say it has the most pathetic face you +ever saw when you see it. Its ear was bloody, and it licked Jo's hand +so GENTLY, and it's such a lit-tul dog! Jo has it wrapped up in her +coat. Mother, may we have it? Please, PLEASE—" +</P> + +<P> +Barry wheeled about with his hearty laugh, and Mrs. Burgoyne, laughing +too, stopped the eager little mouth with a kiss. +</P> + +<P> +"It sounds as if we must certainly have him, Baby!" said she. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap08"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER VIII +</H3> + +<P> +The new mistress of the Hall, in her vigorous young interest in all +things, included naturally a keen enjoyment of the village love +affairs, she liked to hear the histories of the old families all about, +she wanted to know the occupants of every shabby old surrey that drew +up at the post-office while the mail was being "sorted." But if the +conversation turned to mere idle talk and speculation, she was +conspicuously silent. And upon an occasion when Mrs. Adams casually +referred to a favorite little piece of scandal, Mrs. Burgoyne gave the +conversation a sudden twist that, as Mrs. White, who was present, said +later, "made you afraid to call your soul your own." +</P> + +<P> +"Do you tell me that that pretty little Thorne girl is actually meeting +this young man, whoever he is, while her mother thinks she is taking a +music lesson?" demanded Mrs. Burgoyne, suddenly entering into the +conversation. "There's nothing against him, I suppose? She COULD see +him at home." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, no, he's a nice enough little fellow," Mrs. White said, "but she's +a silly little thing, and I imagine her people are very severe with +her; she never goes to dances or seems to have any fun." +</P> + +<P> +"I wonder if we couldn't go see the mother, and hint that there is +beginning to be a little talk about Katherine," mused Mrs. Burgoyne. +"Don't you think so, Mrs. Adams?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, my goodness!" Mrs. Adams said nervously, "I don't KNOW anything +about it! I wouldn't for the world—I never dreamed—one would hate to +start trouble—Mr. Adams is very fond of the Thornes—" +</P> + +<P> +"But we ought to save her if we can, we married women who know how +mischievous that sort of thing is," Mrs. Burgoyne urged. +</P> + +<P> +"Why, probably they've not met but once or twice!" Mrs. White said, +annoyed, but with a comfortable air of closing the subject, and no more +was said at the time. But both she and Mrs. Adams were a little uneasy +two or three days later, when, returning from a motor trip, they saw +Mrs. Burgoyne standing at the Thornes' gate, in laughing conversation +with pretty little Katherine and her angular, tall mother. +</P> + +<P> +"And there is nothing in that story at all," said Mrs. Burgoyne later, +to Mrs. Carew. +</P> + +<P> +"I suppose you walked up and said, 'If you are Miss Thorne, you are +clandestinely meeting Joe Turner down by the old mill every week!'" +laughed Mrs. Carew. +</P> + +<P> +"I managed it very nicely," Mrs. Burgoyne said, "I admired their yellow +rose one day, as I passed the gate. Mrs. Thorne was standing there, and +I asked if it wasn't a Banksia. Then the little girl came out of the +house, and she happened to know who I am—" +</P> + +<P> +"Astonishingly bright child!" said Mrs. Carew. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, and then we talked roses, and the father came home—a nice old +man. And I asked him if he'd lend me Miss Thorne now and then to play +duets—and he agreed. So the child's been up to the Hall once or twice, +and she's a nice little thing. She doesn't care tuppence for the Turner +boy, but he's musical, and she's quite music-mad, and now and then they +'accidentally' meet. Her father won't let anyone see her at the house. +She wants to study abroad, but they can't afford it, I imagine, so I've +written to see if I can interest a friend of mine in Berlin—But why do +you smile?" she broke off to ask innocently. +</P> + +<P> +"At the thought of your friend in Berlin!" said Mrs. Carew audaciously. +For she was not at all awed by Mrs. Burgoyne now. +</P> + +<P> +Indeed, she and Mrs. Brown were growing genuinely fond of their new +neighbor, and the occupants of the Hall supplied them with constant +amusement and interest. Great lady and great heiress Sidney Burgoyne +might be, but she lived a life far simpler than their own, and loved to +have them come in for a few minutes' talk even if she were cutting out +cookies, with Joanna and Ellen leaning on the table, or feeding the +chickens whose individual careers interested her so deeply. She walked +with the little girls to school every morning, and met them near the +school at one o'clock. In the meantime she made a visit to the Mail +office, and perhaps spent an hour or two there, or in the markets; but +at least three times a week she wandered over to Old Paloma, and spent +the forenoon in the dingy streets across the river. What she did there, +perhaps no one but Doctor Brown, who came to have a real affection and +respect for her, fully appreciated. Mrs. Burgoyne would tell him, when +they met in some hour of life or death, that she was "making friends." +It was quite true. She was the type of woman who cannot pass a small +child in the street. She must stop, and ask questions, decide disputes +and give advice. And through the children she won the big brothers and +sisters and fathers and mothers of Old Paloma. Even a deep-rooted +prejudice against the women of her class and their method of dealing +with the less fortunate could not prevail against her disarming, +friendly manner, her simple gown and hat, her eagerness to get the new +baby into her arms; all these told in her favor, and she became very +popular in the shabby little settlement across the bridge. She would +sit at a sewing-machine and show old Mrs. Goodspeed how to turn a +certain hem, she would prescribe barley-water and whey for the Barnes +baby, she would explain to Mrs. Ryan the French manner of cooking tough +meat, it is true; but, on the other hand, she let pale little +discouraged Mrs. Weber, of the Bakery, show her how to make a German +potato pie, and when Mrs. Ryan's mother, old Mrs. Lynch, knitted her a +shawl, with clean, thin old work-worn hands, the tears came into her +bright eyes as she accepted the gift. So it was no more than a +neighborly give-and-take after all. Mrs. Burgoyne would fall into step +beside a factory girl, walking home at sunset. "How was it today, +Nellie? Did you speak to the foreman about an opening for your sister?" +the rich, interested voice would ask. Or perhaps some factory lad would +find her facing him in a lane. "Tell me, Joe, what's all this talk of +trouble between you and the Lacy boys at the rink?" +</P> + +<P> +"I'm a widow, too," she reminded poor little Mrs. Peevy, one day, "I +understand." "Do let me send you the port wine I used to take after +Ellen was born," she begged one little sickly mother, and when she +loaned George Manning four hundred dollars to finish his new house, and +get his wife and babies up from San Francisco, the transaction was made +palatable to George by her encouraging: "Everyone borrows money for +building, I assure you. I know my father did repeatedly." +</P> + +<P> +When more subtle means were required, she was still equal to the +occasion. It was while Viola Peet was in the hospital for a burned +wrist that Mrs. Burgoyne made a final and effective attempt to move +poor little Mrs. Peet out of the bedroom where she had lain +complaining, ever since the accident that had crippled her and killed +her husband five years before. Mrs. Burgoyne put it as a "surprise for +Viola," and Mrs. Peet, whose one surviving spark of interest in life +centred in her three children, finally permitted carpenters to come and +build a porch outside her dining-room, and was actually transferred, +one warm June afternoon, to the wide, delicious hammock-bed that Mrs. +Burgoyne had hung there. Her eyes, dulled with staring at a chocolate +wall-paper, and a closet door, for five years, roved almost angrily +over the stretch of village street visible from the porch; the +perspective of tree-smothered roofs and feathery elm and locust trees. +</P> + +<P> +"'Tisn't a bit more than I'd do for you if I was rich and you poor," +said Mrs. Peet, rebelliously. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, I know that!" said Mrs. Burgoyne, busily punching pillows. +</P> + +<P> +"An', as you say, Viola deserves all I c'n do for her," pursued the +invalid. "But remember, every cent of this you git back." +</P> + +<P> +"Every cent, just as soon as Lyman is old enough to take a job," agreed +Mrs. Burgoyne. "There, how's that? That's the way Colonel Burgoyne +liked to be fixed." +</P> + +<P> +"You're to make a note of just what it costs," persisted Mrs. Peet, +"this wrapper, and the pillers, and all." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, let the wrapper be my present to you, Mrs. Peet!" +</P> + +<P> +"No, MA'AM!" said Mrs. Peet, firmly. And she told the neighbors, later, +in the delightfully exciting afternoon and evening that followed her +installation on the porch, that she wasn't an object of charity, and +she and Mrs. Burgoyne both knew it. Mrs. Burgoyne would not stay to see +Viola's face, when she came home from the hospital to find her mother +watching the summer stars prick through the warm darkness, but Viola +came up to the Hall that same evening, and tried to thank Mrs. +Burgoyne, and laughed and cried at once, and had to be consoled with +cookies and milk until the smiles had the upper hand, and she could go +home, with occasional reminiscent sobs still shaking her bony little +chest. +</P> + +<P> +"What are you trying to do over there?" asked Dr. Brown, coming in with +his wife for a rubber of bridge, as Viola departed. "Whereever I go, I +come across your trail. Are we nursing a socialist in our bosom?" +</P> + +<P> +"No-o-o, I don't think I'm that," said Sidney laughing, and pushing the +porch-chairs into comfortable relation. "Let's sit out here until Mr. +Valentine comes. No, I'm not a socialist. But I can't help feeling that +there's SOME solution for a wretched problem like that over there," a +wave of the hand indicated Old Paloma, "and perhaps, dabbling aimlessly +about in all sorts of places, one of us may hit upon it." +</P> + +<P> +"But I thought the modern theory was against dabbling," said Mrs. +Brown, a little timidly, for she held a theory that she was not +"smart." "I thought everything was being done by institutions, and by +laws—by legislation." +</P> + +<P> +"Nothing will ever be done by legislation, to my thinking at least," +Mrs. Burgoyne said. "A few years ago we legislated some thousands of +new babies into magnificent institutions. Nurses mixed their bottles, +doctors inspected them, nurses turned them and washed them and watched +them. Do you know what percentage survived?" +</P> + +<P> +"Doesn't work very well," said the doctor, shaking a thoughtful head +over his pipe. +</P> + +<P> +"Just one hundred per cent didn't survive!" said Mrs. Burgoyne. "Now +they take a foundling or an otherwise unfortunate baby, and give it to +a real live mother. She nurses it if she can, she keeps near to it and +cuddles it, and loves it. And so it lives. In all the asylums, it's the +same way. Groups are getting smaller and smaller, a dozen girls with a +matron in a cottage, and hundreds of girls 'farmed out' with good, +responsible women, instead of enormous refectories and dormitories and +schoolrooms. And the ideal solution will be when every individual woman +in the world extends her mothering to include every young thing she +comes in contact with; one doll for her own child and another doll for +the ashman's little girl, one dimity for her own debutante, and another +just as dainty for the seventeen-year-old who brings home the laundry +every week." +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, but that's puttering here and there," asserted Mrs. Brown, +"wouldn't laws for a working wage do all that, and more, too?" +</P> + +<P> +"In the first place, a working wage doesn't solve it," Mrs. Burgoyne +answered vigorously, "because in fully half the mismanaged and dirty +homes, the working people HAVE a working wage, have an amount of money +that would amaze you! Who buys the willow plumes, and the phonographs, +and the enlarged pictures, and the hair combs and the white shoes that +are sold by the million every year? The poor people, girls in shops, +and women whose babies are always dirty, and always broken out with +skin trouble, and whose homes are hot and dirty and miserable and +mismanaged." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, make some laws to educate 'em then, if it's education they all +need," suggested the doctor, who had been auditing every clause of the +last remark with a thoughtful nod. +</P> + +<P> +"No, wages aren't the question," Mrs. Burgoyne reiterated. "Why, I knew +a little Swedish woman once, who raised three children on three hundred +dollars a year." +</P> + +<P> +"She COULDN'T!" ejaculated Mrs. Brown. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, but she did! She paid one dollar a week for rent, too. One son is +a civil engineer, now, and the daughter is a nurse. The youngest is +studying medicine." +</P> + +<P> +"But what did they EAT, do you suppose?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, I don't know. Potatoes, I suppose, and oatmeal and baked cabbage, +and soup. I know she got a quart of buttermilk every day, for three +cents. They were beautiful children. They went to free schools, and +lectures, and galleries, and park concerts, and free dispensaries, when +they needed them. Laws could do no more for her, she knew her business." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, education WOULD solve it then," concluded Mrs. Brown. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know." Mrs. Burgoyne answered, reflectively, "Book education +won't certainly. But example might, I believe example would." +</P> + +<P> +"You mean for people of a better class to go and live among them?" +suggested the doctor. +</P> + +<P> +"No, but I mean for people of a better class to show them that what +they are striving for isn't vital, after all. I mean for us to so order +our lives that they will begin to value cleanliness, and simplicity, +and the comforts they can afford. You know, Mary Brown," said Mrs. +Burgoyne, turning suddenly to the doctor's wife, with her gay, +characteristic vehemence, "it's all our fault, all the misery and +suffering and sin of it, everywhere!" +</P> + +<P> +"Our fault! You and me!" cried Mrs. Brown, aghast. +</P> + +<P> +"No, all the fault of women, I mean!" Mrs. Burgoyne laughed too as Mrs. +Brown settled back in her chair with a relieved sigh. "We women," she +went on vigorously, "have mismanaged every separate work that was ever +put into our hands! We ought to be ashamed to live. We cumber—" +</P> + +<P> +"Here!" said the doctor, smiling in lazy comfort over his pipe, "that's +heresy! I refuse to listen to it. My wife is a woman, my mother, unless +I am misinformed, was another—" +</P> + +<P> +"Don't mind him!" said Mrs. Brown, "but go on! What have we all done? +We manage our houses, and dress our children, and feed our husbands, it +seems to me." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, there's the big business of motherhood," began Mrs. Burgoyne, +"the holiest and highest thing God ever let a mortal do. We evade it +and ignore it to such an extent that the nation—and other +nations—grows actually alarmed, and men begin to frame laws to coax us +back to the bearing of children. Then, if we have them, we turn the +entire responsibility over to other people. A raw little foreigner of +some sort answers the first questions our boys and girls ask, until +they are old enough to be put under some nice, inexperienced young girl +just out of normal school, who has fifty or sixty of them to manage, +and of whose ideas upon the big questions of life we know absolutely +nothing. We say lightheartedly that 'girls always go through a trying +age,' and that we suppose boys 'have to come in contact with things,' +and we let it go at that! We 'suppose there has always been vice, and +always will be,' but we never stop to think that we ourselves are +setting the poor girls of the other world such an example in the +clothes we wear, and the pleasures we take, that they will sell even +themselves for pretty gowns and theatre suppers. We regret sweat-shops, +even while we patronize the stores that support them, and we bemoan +child-labor, although I suppose the simplest thing in the world would +be to find out where the cotton goes that is worked by babies, and +refuse to buy those brands of cotton, and make our merchants tell us +where they DO get their supply! We have managed our household problem +so badly that we simply can't get help—" +</P> + +<P> +"You CANNOT do your own work, with children," said Mrs. Brown firmly. +</P> + +<P> +"Of course you can't. But why is it that our nice young American girls +won't come into our homes? Why do we have to depend upon the most +ignorant and untrained of our foreign people? Our girls pour into the +factories, although our husbands don't have any trouble in getting +their brothers for office positions. There is always a line of boys +waiting for a possible job at five dollars a week." +</P> + +<P> +"Because they can sleep at home," submitted the doctor. +</P> + +<P> +"You know that, other things being equal, young people would much +rather not sleep at home," said Mrs. Burgoyne, "it's the migrating age. +They love the novelty of being away at night." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, when a boy comes into my office," the doctor reasoned slowly, +"he knows that he has certain unimportant things to do, but he sees me +taking all the real responsibility, he knows that I work harder than he +does." +</P> + +<P> +"Exactly," said Mrs. Burgoyne. "Men do their own work, with help. We +don't do ours. Not only that, but every improvement that comes to ours +comes from men. They invent our conveniences, they design our stoves +and arrange our sinks. Not because they know anything about it, but +because we're not interested." +</P> + +<P> +"One would think you had done your own work for twenty years!" said +Mrs. Brown. +</P> + +<P> +"I never did it," Mrs. Burgoyne answered smiling, "but I sometimes wish +I could. I sometimes envy those busy women who have small houses, new +babies, money cares—it must be glorious to rise to fresh emergencies +every hour of your life. A person like myself is handicapped. I can't +demonstrate that I believe what I say. Everyone thinks me merely a +little affected about it. If I were such a woman, I'd glory in clipping +my life of everything but the things I needed, and living like one of +my own children, as simply as a lot of peasants!" +</P> + +<P> +"And no one would ever be any the wiser," said Mrs. Brown. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know. Quiet little isolated lives have a funny way of getting +out into the light. There was that little peasant girl at Domremy, for +instance; there was that gentle saint who preached poverty to the +birds; there was Eugenie Guerin, and the Cure of Ars, and the few +obscure little English weavers—and there was the President who split—" +</P> + +<P> +"I thought we'd come to him!" chuckled the doctor. +</P> + +<P> +"Well," Mrs. Burgoyne smiled, a little confused at having betrayed +hero-worship. "Well, and there was one more, the greatest of all, who +didn't found any asylums, or lead any crusade—" She paused. +</P> + +<P> +"Surely," said the doctor, quietly. "Surely. I suppose that curing the +lame here, and the blind there, and giving the people their fill of +wine one day, and of bread and fishes the next, might be called +'dabbling' in these days. But the love that went with those things is +warming the world yet!" +</P> + +<P> +"Well, but what can we DO?" demanded Mrs. Brown after a short silence. +</P> + +<P> +"That's for us to find out," said Mrs. Burgoyne, cheerfully. +</P> + +<P> +"A correct diagnosis is half a cure," ended the doctor, hopefully. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap09"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER IX +</H3> + +<P> +Barry was the last guest to reach Holly Hall on the evening of Mrs. +Burgoyne's first dinner-party, and came in to find the great painter +who was her guest the centre of a laughing and talking group in the +long drawing-room. Mrs. Apostleman, with an open book of reproductions +from Whistler on her broad, brocade lap, had the armchair next to the +guest of honor, and Barry's quick look for his hostess discovered her +on a low hassock at the painter's knee, looking very young and fresh, +in her white frock, with a LaMarque rose at her belt and another in her +dark hair. She greeted him very gravely, almost timidly, and in the new +self-consciousness that had suddenly come to them both it was with +difficulty that even the commonplace words of greeting were +accomplished, and it was with evident relief that she turned from him +to ask her guests to come into the dining-room. +</P> + +<P> +Warm daylight was still pouring into the drawing-room at seven o'clock, +and in the pleasant dining-room, too, there was no other light. The +windows here were wide open, and garden scents drifted in from the +recently watered flower-beds. The long table, simply set, was +ornamented only by low bowls of the lovely San Rafael roses. +</P> + +<P> +Guided and stimulated by the hostess, the conversation ran in a gay, +unbroken stream, for the painter liked to talk, and Santa Paloma +enjoyed him. But under it all the women guests were aware of an almost +resentful amazement at the simplicity of the dinner. When, after nine +o'clock, the ladies went into the drawing-room and settled about a +snapping wood fire, Mrs. Lloyd could not resist whispering to Mrs. +Apostleman, "For a COMPANY dinner!" Mrs. Adams was entirely absorbed in +deciding just what position she would take when Mrs. White alluded to +the affair the next day; but Mrs. White had come primed for special +business this evening, and she took immediate advantage of the absence +of the men to speak to Mrs. Burgoyne. +</P> + +<P> +"As president of our little club," said she, when they were all seated, +"I am authorized to ask you if I may put your name up for membership, +Mrs. Burgoyne. We are all members here, and in this quiet place our +meetings are a real pleasure, and I hope an education as well." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, really—!" Mrs. Burgoyne began, but the other went on serenely: +</P> + +<P> +"I brought one of our yearly programs, we have just got them out, and +I'm going to leave it with you. I think Mr. White left it here on the +table. Yes; here it is. You see," she opened a dainty little book and +flattened it with a white, jeweled hand, "our work is all laid out, up +to the president's breakfast in March. I go out then, and a week later +we inaugurate the new president. Let me just run over this for you, for +I KNOW it will interest you. Now here, Tuesdays. Tuesday is our regular +meeting day. We have a program, music, and books suggested for the +week, reports, business, and one good paper—the topics vary; here's +'Old Thanksgiving Customs,' in November, then a debate, 'What is +Friendship,' then 'Christmas Spirit,' and then our regular Christmas +Tree and Jinks. Once a month, on Tuesday, we have some really fine +speaker from the city, and we often have fine singers, and so on. Then +we have a monthly reception for our visitors, and a supper; usually we +just have tea and bread-and-butter after the meetings. Then, first +Monday, Directors' Meeting; that doesn't matter. Every other Wednesday +the Literary Section meets, they are doing wonderful work; Miss Foster +has that; she makes it very interesting. 'What English Literature Owes +to Meredith,' 'Rossetti, the Man,'—you see I'm just skimming, to give +you some idea. Then the Dramatic Section, every other Thursday; they +give a play once a year; that's great fun! 'Ibsen—Did he Understand +Women?' 'Please Explain—Mr. Shaw?'—Mrs. Moore makes that very +amusing. Then alternate Thursdays the Civic and Political Section—" +</P> + +<P> +"Ah! What does that do?" said Mrs. Burgoyne. +</P> + +<P> +"Why," said Mrs. White hesitating, "I haven't been—however, I think +they took up the sanitation of the schools; Miss Jewett, from +Sacramento, read a splendid paper about it. There's a committee to look +into that, and then last year that section planted a hundred trees. And +then there's parliamentary drill." +</P> + +<P> +"Which we all need," said Mrs. Adams, and there was laughter. +</P> + +<P> +"Then there's the Art Department once a month," resumed Mrs. White, +"Founders' Day, Old-Timers' Day, and, in February, we think Judge +Lindsey may address us—" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, are you doing any juvenile-court work?" said the hostess. +</P> + +<P> +"We wanted his suggestions about it," Mrs. White said. "We feel that if +we COULD get some of the ladies interested—! Then here's the French +class once a week; German, Spanish, and the bridge club on Fridays." +</P> + +<P> +"Gracious! You use your clubhouse," said Mrs. Burgoyne. +</P> + +<P> +"Nearly every day. So come on Tuesday," said the president winningly, +"and be our guest. A Miss Carroll is to sing, and Professor Noyesmith, +of Berkeley, will read a paper on: 'The City Beautiful.' Keep that +year-book; I butchered it, running through it so fast." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, just now," Mrs. Burgoyne began a little hesitatingly, "I'm +rather busy. I am at the Mail office while the girls are in school, you +know, and we have laid out an enormous lot of gardening for afternoons. +They never tire of gardening if I'm with them, but, of course, no +children will do that sort of thing alone; and it's doing them both so +much good that I don't want to stop it. Then they study German and +Italian with me, and on Saturday have a cooking lesson. You see, my +time is pretty full." +</P> + +<P> +"But a good governess would take every bit of that off your hands, me +dear," said Mrs. Apostleman. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, but I love to do it!" protested Mrs. Burgoyne with her wide-eyed, +childish look. "You can't really buy for them what you can do yourself, +do you think so? And now the other children are beginning to come in, +and it's such fun! But that isn't all. I have editorial work to do, +besides the Mail, you know. I manage the 'Answers to Mothers' column in +a little eastern magazine. I daresay you've never seen it; it is quite +unpretentious, but it has a large circulation. And these mothers write +me, some of them factory-workers, or mothers of child-workers even, or +lonely women on some isolated ranch; you've no idea how interesting it +is! Of course they don't know who I am, but we become good friends, +just the same. I have the best reference books about babies and +sickness, and I give them the best advice I can. Sometimes it's a boy's +text-book that is wanted, or a second-hand crib, or some dear old +mother to get into a home, and they are so self-respecting about it, +and so afraid they aren't paying fair—I love that work! But, of +course, it takes time. Then I've been hunting up a music-teacher for +the girls. I can't teach them that—" +</P> + +<P> +"I meant to speak to you of that," Mrs. White said. "There's a Monsieur +Posti, Emil Posti, he studied with Leschetizky, you know, who comes up +from San Francisco every other week, and we all take from him. In +between times—" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, but I've engaged a nice little Miss Davids from Old Paloma," said +Mrs. Burgoyne. +</P> + +<P> +"From Old Paloma!" echoed three women together. And Mrs. Apostleman +added heavily, "Never heard of her!" +</P> + +<P> +"I got a good little Swedish sewing-woman over there," the hostess +explained, "and she told me of this girl. She's a sweet girl; no +mother, and a little sister to bring up. She was quite pleased." +</P> + +<P> +"But, good heavens! What does she know? What's her method?" demanded +Mrs. White in puzzled disapproval. +</P> + +<P> +"She has a pretty touch," Mrs. Burgoyne said mildly, "and she's +bristling with ambition and ideas. She's not a genius, perhaps; but, +then, neither is either of the girls. I just want them to play for +their own pleasure, read accompaniments; something of that sort. Don't +you know how popular the girl who can play college songs always is at a +house-party?" +</P> + +<P> +"Well, really—" Mrs. White began, almost annoyed; but she broke her +sentence off abruptly, and Mrs. Apostleman filled the pause. +</P> + +<P> +"Whatever made ye go over there for a dress-maker?" she demanded. "We +never think of going there. There's a very good woman here, in the Bank +Building—" +</P> + +<P> +"Madame Sorrel," supplemented Mrs. Adams. +</P> + +<P> +"She's fearfully independent," Mrs. Lloyd contributed; "but she's good. +She made your pink, didn't she, Sue? Wayne said she did." +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Adams turned pink herself; the others laughed suddenly. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, you naughty girl!" Mrs. White said. "Did you tell Wayne you got +that frock in Santa Paloma?" +</P> + +<P> +"What Wayne doesn't know won't hurt him," said his wife. "Sh! Here they +come!" And the conversation terminated abruptly, with much laughter. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne's dinner-party dispersed shortly after ten o'clock, so +much earlier than was the custom in Santa Paloma that none of the +ordered motor-cars were in waiting. The guests walked home together, +absorbed in an animated conversation; for the gentlemen, who were +delighted to be getting home early, delighted with a dinner that, as +Wayne Adams remarked, "really stood for something to eat, not just +things passed to you, or put down in dabs before you," and delighted +with the pleasant informality of sitting down in daylight, were +enthusiastic in their praise of Mrs. Burgoyne. The ladies differed with +them. +</P> + +<P> +"She knows how to do things," said Parker Lloyd. "Old Von Praag himself +said that she was a famous dinner-giver." +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know what you'd say, Wayne," said Mrs. Adams patiently, "if +<I>I</I> asked people to sit down to the dinner we had to-night! Of course +we haven't eight millions, but I would be ashamed to serve a cocktail, +a soup—I frankly admit it was delicious—steaks, plain lettuce salad, +and fruit. I don't count coffee and cheese. No wines, no entrees; I +think it was decidedly QUEER." +</P> + +<P> +"I wish some of you others would try it," said Willard White +unexpectedly. "I never get dinners like that, except at the club, down +in town. The cocktail was a rare sherry, the steaks were broiled to a +turn, and the salad dressing was a wonder. She had her cheese just ripe +enough, and samovar coffee to wind up with—what more do you want? I +serve wine myself, but champagne keeps you thirsty all night, and other +wines put me to sleep. I don't miss wine! I call it a bang-up dinner, +don't you, Parker?" +</P> + +<P> +Parker Lloyd, with his wife on his arm, felt discretion his part. +</P> + +<P> +"Well," he said innocently selecting the one argument most distasteful +to the ladies, "it was a man's dinner, Will. It was just what a man +likes, served the way he likes it. But if the girls like flummery and +fuss, I don't see why they shouldn't have it." +</P> + +<P> +"Really!" said Mrs. White with a laugh that showed a trace of something +not hilarious, "really, you are all too absurd! We are a long way from +the authorities here, but I think we will find out pretty soon that +simple dinners have become the fad in Washington, or Paris, and that +your marvelous Mrs. Burgoyne is simply following the fashion like all +the rest of us." +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap10"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER X +</H3> + +<P> +Barry had murmured something about "rush of work at the office" when he +came in a few minutes late for Mrs. Burgoyne's dinner, but as the +evening wore on, he seemed in no hurry to depart. Sidney was delighted +to see him really in his element with the Von Praags, father and son, +the awakened expression that was so becoming to him on his face, and +his curiously complex arguments stirring the old man over and over +again to laughter. She had been vexed at herself for feeling a little +shyness when he first came in; the unfamiliar evening dress and the +gravity of his handsome face had made him seem almost a stranger, but +this wore off, and after the other guests had gone these four still sat +laughing and talking like the best of old friends together. +</P> + +<P> +When the Von Praags had gone upstairs, she walked with him to the +porch, and they stood at the top of the steps for a moment, the rich +scent of the climbing LaMarque and Banksia roses heavy about them, and +the dark starry arch of the sky above. Sidney, a little tired, but +pleased with her dinner and her guests, and ready for a breath of the +sweet summer night before going upstairs, was confused by having her +heart suddenly begin to thump again. She looked at Barry, his figure +lost in the shadow, only his face dimly visible in the starlight, and +some feeling, new, young, terrifying, and yet infinitely delicious, +rushed over her. She might have been a girl of seventeen instead of a +sober woman fifteen years older, with wifehood, and motherhood, and +widowhood all behind her. +</P> + +<P> +"A wonderful night!" said Barry, looking down at the dark mass of +tree-tops that almost hid the town, and at the rising circle of shadows +that was the hills. +</P> + +<P> +"And a good place to be, Santa Paloma," Sidney added, contentedly. +"It's my captured dream, my own home and garden!" With her head resting +against one of the pillars of the porch, her eyes dreamily moving from +the hills to the sky and over the quiet woods, she went on +thoughtfully: "You know I never had a home, Barry; and when I visited +here, I began to realize what I was missing. How I longed for Santa +Paloma, the creek, and the woods, and my little sunny room after I went +away! But even when I was eighteen, and we took a house in Washington, +what could I do? I 'came out,' you know. I loved gowns and parties +then, as I hope the girls will some day; but I knew all the while it +wasn't living." She paused, but Barry did not speak. "And, then, before +I was twenty, I was married," Sidney went on presently, "and we started +off for St. Petersburg. And after that, for years and years, I posed +for dressmakers; I went the round of jewelers, and milliners, and +manicures; I wrote notes and paid calls. I let one strange woman come +in every day and wash my hands for me, and another wash my hair, and a +third dress me! I let men—who were in the business simply to make +money, and who knew how to do it!—tell me that my furs must be recut, +or changed, and my jewels reset, and my wardrobe restocked and my +furniture carried away and replaced. And in the cities we lived in it's +horrifying to see how women slave, and toil, and worry to keep up. Half +the women I knew were sick over debts and the necessity for more debts. +I felt like saying, with Carlyle, 'Your chaos-ships must excuse me'; +I'm going back to Santa Paloma, to wear my things as long as they are +whole and comfortable, and do what I want to do with my spare time!" +</P> + +<P> +"You missed your playtime," Barry said; "now you make the most of it." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, no!" she answered, giving him a glimpse of serious eyes in the +half-dark, "playtime doesn't come back. But, at least, I know what I +want to do, and it will be more fun than any play. One of the wisest +men I ever knew set me thinking of these things. He's a sculptor, a +great sculptor, and he lives in an olive garden in Italy, and eats what +his peasants eat, and befriends them, and stands for their babies in +baptism, and sits with them when they're dying. My father and I visited +him about two years ago, and one day when he and I were taking a tramp, +I suddenly burst out that I envied him. I wanted to live in an olive +garden, too, and wear faded blue clothes, and eat grapes, and tramp +about the hills. He said very simply that he had worked for twenty +years to do it. 'You see, I'm a rich man,' he said, 'and it seems that +one must be rich in this world before one dare be poor from choice. I +couldn't do this if people didn't know that I could have an apartment +in Paris, and servants, and motor-cars, and all the rest of it. It +would hurt my daughters and distress my friends. There are hundreds and +thousands of unhappy people in the world who can't afford to be poor, +and if ever you get a chance, you try it. You'll never be rich again.' +So I wrote him about a month ago that I had found MY olive garden," +finished Sidney contentedly, "and was enjoying it." +</P> + +<P> +"Captain Burgoyne was older than you, Sid?" Barry questioned. "Wouldn't +he have loved this sort of life?" +</P> + +<P> +"Twenty years older, yes; but he wouldn't have lived here for one DAY!" +she answered vivaciously. "He was a diplomat, a courtier to his +finger-tips. He was born to the atmosphere of hothouse flowers, and +salons, and delightful little drawing-room plots and gossip. He loved +politics, and power, and women in full dress, and men with orders. Of +course I was very new to it all, but he liked to spoil me, draw me out. +If it hadn't been for his accident, I never would have grown up at all, +I dare say. As it was, I was more like his mother. We went to +Washington for the season, New York for the opera, England for autumn +visits, Paris for the spring: I loved to make him happy, Barry, and he +wasn't happy except when we were going, going, going. He was +exceptionally popular; he had exceptional friends, and he couldn't go +anywhere without me. My babies were with his mother—" +</P> + +<P> +She paused, turning a white rose between her fingers. "And afterwards," +she said presently, "there was Father. And Father never would spend two +nights in the same place if he could help it." +</P> + +<P> +"I wasn't drawn back here as you were," said Barry thoughtfully, "I +liked New York; I could have made good there if I'd had a chance. It +made me sick to give it up, then; but lately I've been feeling +differently. A newspaper's a pretty influential thing, wherever it is. +I've been thinking about that clubhouse plan of yours; I wish to the +Lord that we could do something for those poor kids over there. You're +right. Those girls have rotten homes. The whole family gathers in the +parlor right after dinner. Pa takes his shoes off, and props his socks +up before the stove; Ma begins to hear a kid his spelling; and other +kids start the graphophone, and Aggie is expected to ask her young man +to walk right in. So after that she meets him in the street, and the +girls begin to talk about Aggie." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, Barry, I'm so glad you're interested!" Standing a step above him, +Sidney's ardent face was very close to his own. "Of course we can do +it," she said. +</P> + +<P> +"We!" he echoed almost bitterly. "YOU'LL do it; you're the one—" He +broke off with a short, embarrassed laugh. "I was going to cut that +sort of thing out," he said gruffly, "but all roads lead to Rome, it +seems. I can't talk to you five minutes without—and I've got to go. I +said I'd look in at the office." +</P> + +<P> +"You seem to be afraid to be friendly lately, Barry," said Mrs. +Burgoyne in a hurt voice, flinging away the rose she had been holding, +"but don't you think our friendship means something to me, too? I don't +like you to talk as if I did all the giving and you all the taking. I +don't know how the girls and I would get along without your advice and +help here at the Hall. I think," her voice broke into a troubled laugh, +"I think you forget that the quality of friendship is not strained." +</P> + +<P> +"Sidney," he said with sudden resolution, turning to face her bravely, +"I can't be just friends with you. You're so much the finest, so much +the best—" He left the sentence unfinished, and began again: "You have +a hundred men friends; you can't realize what you mean to me. You—but +you know what you are, and I'm the editor of a mortgaged country paper, +a man who has made a mess of things, who can't take care of his kid, or +himself, on his job without help—" +</P> + +<P> +"Barry—" she began breathlessly, but he interrupted her. +</P> + +<P> +"Listen to me," he said huskily, taking both her warm hands in his, "I +want to tell you something. Say that I WAS weak enough to forget all +that, your money and my poverty, your life and my life, everything that +puts you as far above me as the moon and stars; say that I could do +that—although I hope it's not true—even then—even then I'm not free, +Sidney. There is Hetty, you know; there is Billy's mother—" +</P> + +<P> +There was a silence. Sidney slowly freed her hands, laid one upon her +heart as unconsciously as a hurt child, and the other upon his +shoulder. Her troubled eyes searched his face. +</P> + +<P> +"Barry," she said with a little effort, "have I been mistaken in +thinking Billy's mother was dead?" +</P> + +<P> +"Everyone thinks so," he answered with a quick rush of words that +showed how great the relief of speech was. "Even up in Hetty's home +town, Plumas, they think so. I wrote home that Hetty had left me, and +they drew their own conclusions. It was natural enough; she was never +strong. She was always restless and unhappy, wanted to go on the stage. +She did go on the stage, you know; her mother advised it, and she—just +left me. We were in New York, then; Bill was a little shaver; I was +having a hard time with a new job. It was an awful time! After a few +months I brought Bill back here—he wasn't very well—and then I found +that everyone thought Hetty was dead. Then her mother wrote me, and +said that Hetty had taken a stage-name, and begged me to let people go +on thinking she was dead, and, more for the kid's sake than Hetty's, I +let things stand. But Hetty's in California now; she and her mother +live in San Francisco; she is still studying singing, I believe. She +gets the rent from two flats I have there. But she never writes. And +that," he finished grimly, "is the last chapter of my history." +</P> + +<P> +Sidney still stood close to him, earnest, fragrant, lovely, in her +white gown. And even above the troubled tumult of his thoughts Barry +had time to think how honest, how unaffected she was, to stand so, +making no attempt to disguise the confusion in her own mind. For a long +time there was no sound but the vague stir of the night about them, the +faint breath of some wandering breeze, the rustling flight of some +small animal in the dark, the far-hushed, village sounds. +</P> + +<P> +"Thank you, Barry," Sidney said at length. "I'm sorry. I am glad you +told me. Good-night." +</P> + +<P> +"Good-night," he said almost inaudibly. He ran down the steps and +plunged into the dark avenue without a backward look. Sidney turned +slowly, and slowly entered the dimly lighted hall, and shut the door. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap11"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XI +</H3> + +<P> +"Come down here—we're down by the river!" called Mrs. Burgoyne, from +the shade of the river bank, where she and Mrs. Lloyd were busy with +their sewing. "The American History section is entertaining the club." +</P> + +<P> +"You look studious!" laughed Mrs. Brown, coming across the grass, to +put the Brown baby upon his own sturdy legs from her tired arms, and +sink into a deep lawn chair. The June afternoon was warm, but it was +delightfully cool by the water. "Is that the club?" she asked, waving +toward the group of children who were wading and splashing in the +shallows of the loitering river. +</P> + +<P> +"That's the American History Club," responded Mrs. Burgoyne, as she +flung her sewing aside and snatched the baby. "Paul," said she, kissing +his warm, moist neck, "do you truly love me a little bit?" +</P> + +<P> +"Boy ge' down," said Paul, struggling violently. +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, you shall, darling. But listen, do you want to hear the +tick-tock? Oh, Paul, sit still just one minute!" +</P> + +<P> +"Awn ge' DOWN," said Paul, distinctly, every fibre of his small being +headed, as it were, for the pebbly shingle where it was daily his +delight to dig. +</P> + +<P> +"But say 'deck' first, sweetheart, say 'Deck, I love you,'" besought +the mistress of the Hall. +</P> + +<P> +"Deck!" shouted Paul obediently, eyes on the river. +</P> + +<P> +"And a sweet kiss!" further stipulated Mrs. Burgoyne, and grabbed it +from his small, red, unresponsive mouth before she let him toddle away. +"Yes," she resumed, going on with the tucking of a small skirt, "Joanna +and Jeanette and the Adams boy have to write an essay this week about +the Battle of Bunker Hill, so I read them Holmes' poem, and they acted +it all out. You never saw anything so delicious. Mrs. Lloyd came up +just in time to see Mabel limping about as the old Corporal! The cherry +tree was the steeple, of course, and both your sons, you'll be ashamed +to hear, were redcoats. Next week they expect to do Paul Revere, and I +daresay we'll have the entire war, before we're through. You are both +cordially invited." +</P> + +<P> +"I'll come," said the doctor's wife, smiling. "I love this garden. And +to take care of the boys and have a good time myself is more than I +ever thought I'd do in this life!" +</P> + +<P> +"I live on this bank," said Mrs. Burgoyne, leaning back luxuriously in +her big chair, to stare idly up through the apple-tree to the blue sky. +"I'm going to teach the children all their history and poetry and +myths, out here. It makes it so real to them, to act it. Jo and Ellen +and I read Barbara Frietchie out here a few weeks ago, and they've +wanted it every day or two, since." +</P> + +<P> +"We won't leave anything for the schools to do," said little Mrs. Brown. +</P> + +<P> +"All the better," Mrs. Burgoyne said, cheerfully. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, excuse me!" Mrs. Lloyd, holding the linen cuff she was +embroidering at arm's length, and studying it between half-closed lids. +"I am only too glad to turn Mabel over to somebody else part of the +time. You don't know what she is when she begins to ask questions!" +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know anything more tiring than being with children day in and +day out," said Mrs. Brown, "it gets frightfully on your nerves!" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, I'd like about twelve!" said Mrs. Burgoyne. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, Mrs. Burgoyne! You WOULDN'T!" +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, I would, granted a moderately secure income, and a rather roomy +country home. Although," added Mrs. Burgoyne, temperately, "I do +honestly think twelve children is too big a family. However, one may be +greedy in wishes!" +</P> + +<P> +"Would you want a child of yours to go without proper advantages," said +Mrs. Lloyd, a little severely, "would you want more than one or two, if +you honestly felt you couldn't give them all that other children have? +Would you be perfectly willing to have your children feel at a +disadvantage with all the children of your friends? I wouldn't," she +answered herself positively, "I want to do the best by Mabel, I want +her to have everything, as she grows up, that a girl ought to have. +That's why all this nonsense about the size of the American family +makes me so tired! What's the use of bringing a lot of children into +the world that are going to suffer all sorts of privations when they +get here?" +</P> + +<P> +"Privations wouldn't hurt them," said Mrs. Burgoyne, sturdily, "if it +was only a question of patched boots and made-over clothes and plain +food. They could even have everything in the world that's worth while." +</P> + +<P> +"How do you mean?" said Mrs. Lloyd, promptly defensive. +</P> + +<P> +"I'd gather them about me," mused Sidney Burgoyne, dreamily, her eyes +on the sky, a whimsical smile playing about her mouth, "I'd gather all +seven together—" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, you've come down to seven?" chuckled Mrs. Brown. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, seven's a good Biblical number," Mrs. Burgoyne said serenely, +"—and I'd say 'Children, all music is yours, all art is yours, all +literature is yours, all history and all philosophy is waiting to prove +to you that in starting poor, healthy, and born of intelligent and +devoted parents, you have a long head-start in the race of life. All +life is ahead of you, friendships, work, play, tramps through the green +country in the spring, fires in winter, nights under the summer stars. +Choose what you like, and work for it, your father and I can keep you +warm and fed through your childhoods, and after that, nothing can stop +you if you are willing to work and wait." +</P> + +<P> +"And then suppose your son asks you why he can't go camping with the +other boys in summer school, and your daughter wants to join the +cotillion?" asked Mrs. Lloyd. +</P> + +<P> +"Why, it wouldn't hurt them to hear me say no," said Mrs. Burgoyne, in +surprise. "I never can understand why parents, who practise every +imaginable self-denial themselves, are always afraid the first +renunciation will kill their child. Sooner or later they are going to +learn what life is. I know a little girl whose parents are +multi-millionaires, and who is going to be told some day soon that her +two older sisters aren't living abroad, as she thinks, but shut up for +life, within a few miles of her. What worse blow could life give to the +poorest girl?" +</P> + +<P> +"Horrors!" murmured Mrs. Brown. +</P> + +<P> +"And those are common cases," Mrs. Burgoyne said eagerly, "I knew of so +many! Pretty little girls at European watering-places whose mothers are +spending thousands, and hundreds of thousands of dollars to get out of +their blood what no earthly power can do away with. Sons of rich +fathers whose valets themselves wouldn't change places with them! And +then the fine, clean, industrious middle-classes—or upper classes, +really, for the blood in their veins is the finest in the world—are +afraid to bring children into the world because of dancing cotillions +and motor-cars!" +</P> + +<P> +"Well, of course I have only four," said Mrs. Brown, "but I've been +married only seven years—" +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne laughed, came to a full stop, and reddened a little as +she went back busily to her sewing. +</P> + +<P> +"Why do you let me run on at such a rate; you know my hobbies now!" she +reproached them. "I am not quite sane on the subject of what ought to +be done—and isn't—in that good old institution called woman's sphere." +</P> + +<P> +"That sounds vaguely familiar," said Mrs. Lloyd. +</P> + +<P> +"Woman's sphere? Yes, we hate the sound of it," said Mrs. Burgoyne, +"just as a man who has left his family hates to talk of home ties, and +just as a deserter hates the conversation to come around to the army. +But it's true. Our business is children, and kitchens, and husbands, +and meals, and we detest it all—" +</P> + +<P> +"I like my husband a little," said Mrs. Brown, in a meek little voice. +</P> + +<P> +They all laughed. Then said Mrs. Lloyd, gazing sentimentally toward the +river bank, where her small daughter's twisted curls were tossing madly +in a game of "tag": +</P> + +<P> +"I shall henceforth regard Mabel as a possible Joan of Arc." +</P> + +<P> +"One of those boys MAY be a Lincoln, or a Thomas Edison, or a Mark +Twain," Sidney Burgoyne added, half-laughing, "and then we'll feel just +a little ashamed for having turned him complacently over to a nurse or +a boarding school. Of course, it leaves us free to go to the club and +hear a paper on the childhood of Napoleon, carefully compiled years +after his death. Why, men take heavy chances in their work, they follow +up the slightest opening, but we women throw away opportunities to be +great, every day of our lives! Scientists and theorists are spending +years of their lives pondering over every separate phase of the +development of children, but we, who have the actual material in our +hands, turn it over to nursemaids!" +</P> + +<P> +"Yes, but lots of children disappoint their parents bitterly," said +Mrs. Brown, "and lots of good mothers have bad children!" +</P> + +<P> +"I never knew a good mother to have a bad child—" began Mrs. Burgoyne. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, I have. Thousands," Mrs. Lloyd said promptly. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, no! Not a BAD child," her hostess said, quickly. "A disappointing +child perhaps, or a strong-willed child, you mean. But no good +mother—and that doesn't mean merely a good woman, or a church-going +woman!—could possibly have a really bad child. 'By their fruits,' you +know. And then of course we haven't a perfect system of nursery +training yet; we expect angels. We judge by little, inessential things, +we're exacting about unimportant trifles. We don't want our sons to +marry little fluffy-headed dolls, although the dolls may make them very +good wives. We don't want them to make a success of real estate, if the +tradition of the house is for the bar or the practice of medicine. And +we lose heart at the first suspicion of bad company, or of drinking; +although the best men in the world had those temptations to fight! But, +anyway, I would rather try at that and fail, than do anything else in +the world. My failures at least might save some other woman's children. +And it's just that much more done for the world than guarding the +valuable life of a Pomeranian, or going to New York for new furs!" They +all laughed, for Mrs. Willard White's latest announcement of her plans +had awakened some comment among them. +</P> + +<P> +"Mother, am I interrupting you?" said a patient voice at this point. +Ellen Burgoyne, rosy, dishevelled, panting, stood some ten feet away, +waiting patiently a chance to enter the conversation. +</P> + +<P> +"No, my darling." Her mother held out a welcoming hand. "Oh, I see," +she added, glancing at her watch. "It's half-past four. Yes, you can go +up for the gingerbread now. You mustn't carry the milk, you know, +Ellen." +</P> + +<P> +"Mother," said Ellen, flashing into radiance at the slightest +encouragement, "have you told them about our Flower Festibul plans?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, not yet!" Mrs. Burgoyne heaved a great sigh. "I'm afraid I've +committed myself to an entry for the parade," she told the others +ruefully. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, don't tell me you're going to compete!" exclaimed Mrs. Brown. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, we're rather afraid we are!" Mrs. Burgoyne's voice, if fearful, +was hopeful too, for Ellen's face was a study. "Why, is it such a +terrible effort?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, yes, it's an appalling amount of struggle and fuss, there's all +sorts of red tape, and the flowers are so messy," answered the doctor's +wife warningly, "and this year will be worse than ever. The Women's +Club of Apple Creek is going to enter a carriage, and you know our club +is to have the White's motor; it will be perfectly exquisite! It's to +be all pink carnations, and Mr. White's nephew, a Berkeley boy, and +some of his friends, all in white flannels, are going to run it. Doctor +says there'll be a hundred entries this year." +</P> + +<P> +"Well, I'm afraid I'm in for it," said Mrs. Burgoyne, with a sigh. "I +haven't the least idea in the world what I'm going to do. It isn't as +if we even had a surrey. But I really was involved before I had time to +think. You know I've been trying, with some of my spare time," her eyes +twinkled, "to get hold of these little factory and cannery girls over +in Old Paloma." +</P> + +<P> +"You told me," said Mrs. Brown, "but I don't see how that—" +</P> + +<P> +"Well, you see, their ringleader has been particularly ungracious to +me. A fine, superb, big creature she is, named Alice Carter. This Alice +came up to the children and me in the street the other day, and told +me, in the gruffest manner, that she was interested in a little +crippled girl over there, and had promised to take her to see the +Flower Festival. But it seems the child's mother was afraid to trust +her to Alice in the crowd and heat. Quite simply she asked me if I +could manage it. I was tremendously touched, and we went to see the +child. She's a poor, brave little scrap—twelve years old, did she say, +Baby?" +</P> + +<P> +"Going on thirteen," said Ellen rapidly; "and her father is dead, and +her mother works, and she takes care of such a fat baby, and she is +very gen-tul with him, isn't she, Mother? And she cried when Mother +gave her books, and she can't eat her lunch because her back aches, but +she gave the baby his lunch, and Mother asked her if she would let a +doctor fix her back, and she said, 'Oh, no!'—didn't she, Mother? She +just twisted and twisted her hands, and said, 'I can't.' And Mother +said, 'Mary, if you will be a brave girl about the doctor, I will make +you a pink dress and a wreath of roses, and you shall ride with the +others in the Flower Festibul!' And she just said, 'Oo-oo!'—didn't +she, Mother? And she said she thought God sent you, didn't she, Mother?" +</P> + +<P> +"She did." Mrs. Burgoyne smiled through wet lashes. Mrs. Brown wiped +her own eyes against the baby's fluffy mop. "She's a most pathetic +little creature, this Mary Scott," went on the other woman when Ellen +had dashed away, "and I'm afraid she's not the only one. There's my +Miss Davids' little sister; if I took her in, Miss Davids would be free +for the day; and there's a little deaf-mute whose mother runs the +bakery. And I told Mary we'd manage the baby, too, and that if she knew +any other children who positively couldn't come any other way, she must +let me know. Of course the school children are cared for, they will +have seats right near the grand stand, and sing, and so on. But I am +really terrified about it, you'll have to help me out." +</P> + +<P> +"I'll do anything," Mrs. Brown promised. +</P> + +<P> +"I'll do anything I CAN," said Mrs. Lloyd, modestly, "I loathe and +abominate children unless they're decently dressed and smell of +soap—but I'll run a machine, if some one'll see that they don't swarm +over me." +</P> + +<P> +"I'll put a barbed wire fence around you!" promised Mrs. Burgoyne, +gaily. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Carew, coming up, as she expressed it, "to gather up some +children," was decidedly optimistic about the plan. "Nobody ever uses +hydrangeas, because you can't make artificial ones to fill in with," +she said, "so you can get barrels of them." Mrs. Burgoyne was +enthusiastic over hydrangeas, "But it's not the fancy touches that +scare me," she confessed; "it's the awful practical side." +</P> + +<P> +"What does Barry think?" Mrs. Carew presently asked innocently. Mrs. +Burgoyne's suddenly rosy face was not unobserved by any of the others. +</P> + +<P> +"I haven't seen him for several days, not since the night of my +dinner," she admitted; "I've been lazy, sending my work down to the +office. But I will see him right away." +</P> + +<P> +"He's the one really to have ideas," Mrs. Brown assured her. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap12"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XII +</H3> + +<P> +So Barry was invited up to the Hall to dinner, and found himself so +instantly swept into the plan that he had no time to be self-conscious. +Dinner was served on the side porch, and the sunlight filtered across +the white cloth, and turned the garden into a place of enchantment. +When Billy and the small girls had seized two cookies and two peaches +apiece, and retired to the lawn to enjoy them, he and Sidney sat +talking on in the pleasant dusk. +</P> + +<P> +"You've asked eight, so far," he said, as she was departing for the +office an hour or so after dinner was finished, "but do you think +that's all?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, it positively must be!" Sidney said virtuously, but there was a +wicked gleam in her eye that prepared him for her sudden descent upon +the office two days later, with the startling news that now she had +positively STOPPED, but fourteen children had been asked! +</P> + +<P> +Barry, rather to her surprise, remained calm. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, I've got an idea," he said presently, "that will make that all +right, fourteen children or twenty, it won't make any difference. Only, +it may not appeal to you." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, it will—and you are an angel!" said the lady fervently. +</P> + +<P> +"I've got a friend up the country here in a lumber-mill," Barry +explained, "Joe Painter—he hauls logs down from the forest to the +river, with a team of eight oxen. Now, if he'd lend them, and you got a +hay-wagon from Old Paloma, you wouldn't have any trouble at all." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, but Barry," she gasped, her face radiant, "would he lend them?" +</P> + +<P> +"I think he would; he'd have to come too, you know, and drive them. +I'll ride up and see, anyway." +</P> + +<P> +"Oxen," mused Mrs. Burgoyne, "how perfectly glorious! The children will +go wild with joy. And, you see, my Indian boys—" +</P> + +<P> +"Your WHAT?" +</P> + +<P> +"I didn't mention them," said Sidney serenely, "because they'll walk +alongside, and won't count in the load. But, you see, some of those +nice little mill-boys who don't go to school heard the girls talking +about it, and one of them asked me—so wistfully!—if there was +anything THEY could do. I immediately thought of Indian costumes." +</P> + +<P> +"But how the deuce will you get the costumes made?" said Barry, drawing +a sheet of paper toward him, and beginning some calculations, with an +anxious eye. +</P> + +<P> +"Why, it's just cheese-cloth for the girls. Mrs. Brown and I have our +machines up in the barn, and Mrs. Carew and Mrs. Adams will come up and +help, there's not much to THAT! Barry, if you will really get us +this—this ox-man—nothing else will worry me at all." +</P> + +<P> +"You'll have to put the beasts up in your barn." +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, surely! Ask him what they eat. Oh, Barry, we MUST have them! Think +how picturesque they'll be! I've been thinking my entry would be a +disgrace to the parade, but I don't believe it will be so bad. Barry, +when will we know about it?" +</P> + +<P> +"You can count on it, I guess. Joe won't refuse," Barry said, with his +lazy smile. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, you're an angel! I'm going shopping this instant. Barry, there +will be room now for my Ellen, and Billy, and Dicky Carew, won't there? +It seems their hearts are bursting with the desire. Bunting," murmured +Sidney, beginning a list, "cheese-cloth, pink, blue, and cream, bolts +of it; twine, beads, leather, feathers; some big white hats; ice-cream, +extra milk—" +</P> + +<P> +"Hold on! What for?" +</P> + +<P> +"Why, they have to have something to eat afterward," she reproached +him. "We're going to have a picnic up at the Hall. Then those that can +will join their people for the fireworks, and the others will be taken +home to Old Paloma. The little Scott girl will stay with Ellen and Jo +overnight; Mammy Currey will look after them, and they'll watch the +fireworks from my porch. I've written to ask Doctor Young—he's the +best in San Francisco—to come up from the city next day to see what he +thinks can be done for Mary Scott." +</P> + +<P> +"You get a lot of fun out of your money, don't you, Sidney?" said +Barry, watching her amusedly, as she tucked the list into her purse and +arose with a great air of business. +</P> + +<P> +"More than any one woman deserves," she answered soberly. +</P> + +<P> +"Walter," said Anne Pratt to her brother, one evening about this time, +as she decorously filled his plate from the silver tureen, "have you +heard that Mrs. Burgoyne has gathered up about twenty children in Old +Paloma—cripples, and orphans, and I don't know what all!—and is +getting up a wagon for the Flower Festival? I was up at the Hall +to-day, and they're working like beavers." +</P> + +<P> +"Carew said something about it," said Walter Pratt. "Seems a good idea. +Those poor little kids over there don't have much fun." +</P> + +<P> +"You never said so before, Walter," his sister returned almost +resentfully. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know why I shouldn't have," said Walter literally. "It's true." +</P> + +<P> +"If we did anything for any children, it ought to be Lizzie's," said +Miss Pratt uncomfortably, after a pause. +</P> + +<P> +"I wish to the Lord we COULD do something for Lizzie's kids," her +brother observed suddenly. "I suppose it would kill you to have 'em up +here?" +</P> + +<P> +"Kill me!" Miss Anne echoed with painful eagerness, and with a sudden +tremble of her thin, long hand. "I don't know why it should; there +never were better behaved children born. I don't like Lizzie's husband, +and never shall;" she rushed on, "but seeing those children up at the +Hall to-day made me think of Betty, and Hope, and Davy, cooped up down +there in town. They'd love the Flower Festival, and I could take them +up to the Hall, and Nanny would be wild with joy to have Lizzie's +children here; she'd bake cookies and gingerbread—" A flush had come +into her faded, cool cheek. "Wouldn't they be in your way? You really +wouldn't mind—you won't change your mind about it, Walt?" she said +timidly. +</P> + +<P> +"Change my mind! Why, I'll love to have them running round here," he +answered warmly. "Write Lizzie to-night, and tell her I've got to go +down Tuesday, and I'll bring 'em up." +</P> + +<P> +"I'll tell her that just the things they have will be quite good +enough," said Miss Pratt. "The Burgoyne children just wear +play-ginghams—I'll get them anything else they need!" +</P> + +<P> +"It won't interfere with your club work, Anne?" +</P> + +<P> +"Not in the least!" She was sure of that, "And anyway," she went on +decidedly, "I'm not going to the club so much this summer. Mary Brown +and I went yesterday, and there was—well, I suppose it was a good +paper on 'The Mind of the Child,' by Miss Sarah Rich. But it seemed so +flat. And Mary Brown said, coming away, 'I think Doctor and I will +still come to the monthly receptions, but I believe I won't listen to +any more papers like that. They're all very well for people who have no +children—'" +</P> + +<P> +"Well, by Tuesday night you'll have three!" said Walter, with what was +for him great gaiety of manner. +</P> + +<P> +"Walter," his sister suggested nervously, "you'll be awfully +affectionate with Lizzie, won't you? Be sure to tell her that we WANT +them; and tell her that they'll be playing up at the Hall all summer, +as we used to. You know, I've been thinking, Walter," went on the poor +lady, with her nose suddenly growing red and her eyes watering, "that +I've not been a very good sister to Lizzie. She's the youngest, and +Mother—Mother wasn't here to advise her about her marriage, and—and +now I don't write her; and she wrote me that Betty had a cough, and +Davy was so noisy indoors in wet weather—and I just go to the Club to +hear papers upon 'Napoleon' and 'The Mind of the Child.'" And Miss +Anne, beginning to cry outright, leaned back in her chair, and covered +her face with her handkerchief. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, Anne—well, Anne," her brother said huskily, "we'll make it up +now. Where are you going to put them?" he presently added, with an +inspiration. +</P> + +<P> +Miss Pratt straightened up, blew her nose, wiped her eyes, and rang for +the maid. +</P> + +<P> +"Betty and Hope in the big front room—" she began happily. +</P> + +<P> +Another brief conversation, this time between George Carew and his +wife, was indicative of a certain change of view-point that was +affecting the women of Santa Paloma in these days. Mr. Carew, coming +home one evening, found a very demure and charming figure seated on the +porch. Mrs. Carew's gown was simplicity itself: a thin, dotted, dark +blue silk, with a deep childish lace collar and cuffs. +</P> + +<P> +"You look terribly sweet, Jen," said Mr. Carew; "you look out of +sight." And when he came downstairs again, and they were at dinner, he +returned to the subject with, "Jen, I haven't seen you look so sweet +for a long time. What is that, a new dress? Is that for the reception +on the Fourth? Jen, didn't you have a dress like that when we were +first married?" +</P> + +<P> +"Sorrel made this, and it only cost sixty dollars," said Mrs. Carew. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, get her to make you another," her husband said approvingly. At +which Mrs. Carew laughed a little shakily, and came around the table, +and put her arms about him and said: +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, George, you dear old BAT! Miss Pomeroy made this, upstairs here, +in three days, and the silk cost nine dollars. I DID have a dress like +this in my trousseau—my first silk—and I thought it was wonderful; +and I think you're a darling to remember it; and I AM going to wear +this on the Fourth. It's nice enough, isn't it?" +</P> + +<P> +"Nice enough! You'll be the prettiest woman there," stated Mr. Carew +positively. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap13"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XIII +</H3> + +<P> +The earliest daylight of July Fourth found Santa Paloma already astir. +Dew was heavy on the ropes of flowers and greens, and the flags and +bunting that made brilliant all the line of the day's march; and long +scarfs of fog lingered on the hills, but for all that, and despite the +delicious fragrant chill of the morning air, nobody doubted that the +day would be hot and cloudless, and the evening perfect for fireworks. +Lawn-sprinklers began to whir busily in the sweet shaded gardens long +before the sunlight reached them; windows and doors were flung open to +the air; women, sweeping garden-paths and sidewalks with gay energy, +called greetings up and down the street to one another. Chairs were +dragged out-of-doors; limp flags began to stir in the sunny air; other +flags squeakily mounted their poles. At every window bunting showed; +the schoolhouse was half-hidden in red, white, and blue; the women's +clubhouse was festooned with evergreens and Japanese lanterns; and the +Mail office, the grand stand opposite, the shops, and the bank, all +fluttered with gay colors. Children shouted and scampered everywhere; +gathered in fascinated groups about the ice-cream and candy and popcorn +booths that sprang up at every corner; met arriving cousins and aunts +at the train; ran on last-minute errands. Occasionally a whole package +of exploding firecrackers smote the warm still air. +</P> + +<P> +By half-past ten every window on the line of march, every dooryard and +porch, had its group of watchers. Wagons and motor-cars, from the +surrounding villages and ranches, blocked the side streets. It was very +warm, and fans and lemonade had a lively sale. +</P> + +<P> +From the two available windows of the Mail office, three persons, as +eager as the most eager child, watched the gathering crowds, and waited +for the Flower Parade. They were Mrs. Apostleman, stately in black +lace, and regally fanning, Sidney Burgoyne, looking her very prettiest +in crisp white, with a scarlet scarf over her arm, and Barry Valentine, +who looked unusually festive himself in white flannels. All three were +in wild spirits. +</P> + +<P> +"Hark, here they come!" said Sidney at last, drawing her head in from a +long inspection of the street. She had been waving and calling +greetings in every direction for a pleasant half-hour. Now eleven had +boomed from the town-hall clock, and a general restlessness and +wiltedness began to affect the waiting crowds. +</P> + +<P> +Barry immediately dangled almost his entire length across the window +sill, and screwed his person about for a look. +</P> + +<P> +"H'yar dey come, li'l miss, sho's yo' bawn!" he announced joyfully. +"There's the band!" +</P> + +<P> +Here they came, sure enough, under the flags and garlands, through the +noonday heat. Only vague brassy notes and the general craning of necks +indicated their approach now; but in another five minutes the uniformed +band was actually in view, and the National Guard after it, +tremendously popular, and the Native Sons, with another band, and the +veterans, thin, silver-headed old men in half a dozen carriages, and +more open carriages. One held the Governor and his wife, the former +bowing and smiling right and left, and saluted by the rising school +children, when he seated himself in the judges' stand, with the shrill, +thrilling notes of the national anthem. +</P> + +<P> +And then another band, and—at last!—the slow-moving, flower-covered +carriages and motors, a long, wonderful, brilliant line of them. +White-clad children in rose-smothered pony-carts, pretty girls in a +setting of scarlet carnations, more pretty girls half-hidden in bobbing +and nodding daisies—every one more charming than the last. There were +white horses as dazzling as soap and powder could make them; horses +whose black flanks glistened as dark as coal, and there was a tandem of +cream-colored horses that tossed rosettes of pink Shirley poppies in +their ears. The Whites' motor-car, covered with pink carnations, and +filled with good-looking lads flying the colors of the Women's Club and +the nation's flag, won a special round of applause. Mrs. Burgoyne and +Barry loyally clapped for the Pratt motor-car, from which Joanna +Burgoyne and Lizzie Pratt's children were beaming upon the world. +</P> + +<P> +"But what are they halting for, and what are they clapping?" Sidney +presently demanded, when a break in the line and a sudden outburst of +cheering and applause interrupted the parade. Barry again hung at a +dangerous angle from the window. Presently he sat back, his face one +broad smile. +</P> + +<P> +"It's us," he remarked simply. "Wait until you see us; we're the cream +of the whole show!" +</P> + +<P> +Too excited to speak, Sidney knelt breathless at the sill, her eyes +fixed upon the spot where the cause of the excitement must appear. She +was perhaps the only one of all the watchers who did not applaud, as +the eight powerful oxen came slowly down the sunshiny street, guided by +the tall, lean driver who walked beside them, and dragging the great +wagon and its freight of rapturous children. +</P> + +<P> +Only an old hay-wagon, after all; only a team of shabby oxen, such as a +thousand lumber-camps in California might supply; only a score or more +of the ill-nourished, untrained children of the very poor; but what an +enchantment of love and hope and summer-time had been flung over them +all! The body of the wagon was entirely hidden by exquisite hydrangeas; +the wheels were moving disks of the pale pink and blue blossoms; the +oxen, their horns gilded, their polished hoofs twinkling as they moved, +wore yokes that seemed solidly made of the flowers, and great ropes of +blossoms hid the swinging chains. Over each animal a brilliant cover +had been flung; and at the head of each a young Indian boy, magnificent +in wampum and fringed leather, feathers and beads, walked sedately. The +children were grouped, pyramid-fashion, on the wagon, in a nest of +hydrangea blooms, the pink, and cream, and blue of their gowns blending +with the flowers all about them, the sunlight shining full in their +happy eyes. Over their shoulders were garlands of poppies, roses, +sweet-peas, daisies, carnations, lilies, or other blossoms; their hands +were full of flowers. But it was the radiance of their faces that shone +brightest, after all. It was the little consumptive's ecstatic smile, +as she sat resting against an invisible support; it was the joy in Mary +Scott's thin eager face, framed now in her loosened dark hair, and with +the shadow, like her crutch, laid aside for a while, that somehow +brought tears to the eyes that watched. Santa Paloma cheered and +applauded these forgotten children of hers; and the children laughed +and waved their hands in return. +</P> + +<P> +Youth and happiness and summer-time incarnate, the vision went on its +way, down the bright street; and other carriages followed it, and were +praised as those that had gone before had been. But no entry in any +flower parade that Santa Paloma had ever known, was as much discussed +as this one. Indeed, it began a new era; but that was later on. When +Mrs. Burgoyne's plain white frock appeared among the elaborate gowns +worn at the club luncheon that afternoon, she was quite overwhelmed by +congratulations. She went away very early, to superintend the +children's luncheon at the Hall, and then Mrs. White had a chance to +tell the distinguished guests who she was, and that she could well +afford to play Lady Bountiful to the Santa Paloma children. +</P> + +<P> +"One wouldn't imagine it, she seems absolutely simple and unspoiled," +said Mrs. Governor. +</P> + +<P> +"She is!" said Mrs. Lloyd unexpectedly. +</P> + +<P> +"I told her how scared most of us had been at the mere idea of her +coming here, Parker," Mrs. Lloyd told her husband later, "and how +friendly she is, and that she always wears little wash dresses, and +that the other girls are beginning to wear checked aprons and things, +because her girls do! Of course, I said it sort of laughingly, you +know, but I don't think Clara White liked it ONE BIT, and I don't care! +Clara is rather mad at me, anyway," she went on, musingly, "because +yesterday she telephoned that she was going to send that Armenian +peddler over here, with some Madeira lunch cloths. They WERE beauties, +and only twenty-three dollars; you'd pay fifty for them at Raphael +Weil's—they're smuggled, I suppose! But I simply said, 'Clara, I can't +afford it!' and let it go at that. She laughed—quite cattily, +Parker!—and said, 'Oh, that's rather funny!' But I don't care whether +Clara White thinks I'm copying Mrs. Burgoyne or not! I might as well +copy her as somebody else!" +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne and Barry Valentine went down-town on the evening of the +great day, to see the fireworks and the crowds, and to hear the +announcements of prize-winners. Santa Paloma was in holiday mood, and +the two entered into the spirit of the hour like irresponsible +children. It was a warm, wonderful summer night; the sky was close and +thickly spangled with stars. Main Street bobbed with Japanese lanterns, +rang with happy voices and laughter. The jostling, pushing currents of +men in summer suits, and joyous girls in thin gowns, were all +good-natured. Sidney found friends on all sides, and laughed and called +her greetings as gaily as anyone. +</P> + +<P> +Barry had a rare opportunity to watch her unobserved, as she went her +happy way; the earnest happy brightness in her eyes, when some shabby +little woman from Old Paloma laid a timid hand on her arm, her adoring +interest in the fat babies that slumbered heavily on paternal +shoulders, her ready use of names, "Isn't this fun, Agnes?"—"You +haven't lost Harry, have you, Mrs. O'Brien?"—"Don't you and your +friend want to come and have some ice-cream with us, Josie?" +</P> + +<P> +"But we mustn't waste too much time here, Barry," she would say now and +then; for at eight o'clock a "grand concert program and distribution of +prizes" was scheduled to take place at the town hall, and Sidney was +anxious not to miss an instant of it. "Don't worry, I'll get you +there!" Barry would answer reassuringly, amused at her eagerness. +</P> + +<P> +And true to his word, he stopped her at the wide doorway of the concert +hall, fully five minutes before the hour, and they found themselves +joining the slow stream of men and women and children that was pouring +up the wide, dingy stairway. Everyone was trying, in all good humor, to +press ahead of everyone else, inspired with the sudden agonizing +conviction that in the next two minutes every desirable seat would +certainly be gone. Even Sidney, familiar as she was with every grand +opera house in the world, felt the infection, and asked rather +nervously if any of the seats were reserved. +</P> + +<P> +"Don't worry; we'll get seats," said the imperturbable Barry, and +several children in their neighborhood laughed out in sudden exquisite +relief. +</P> + +<P> +Seats indeed there were, although the front rows were filling fast, and +all the aisle-chairs were taken by squirming, restless small children. +Mrs. Burgoyne sat down, and studied the hall with delighted eyes. It +was ordinarily only a shabby, enormous, high-ceiled room, filled with +rows of chairs, and with an elevated stage at the far end. But, like +all Santa Paloma, it was in holiday trim to-night. All the +windows—wide open to the summer darkness—were framed in bunting and +drooping flowers, and on the stage were potted palms and crossed flags. +Great masses of bamboo and California ferns were tied with red, white +and blue streamers between the windows, and, beside these decorations, +which were new for the occasion, were purple and yellow banners, left +from the night of the Native Sons' Grand Ball and Reception, a month +ago, and, arched above the stage the single word "Welcome" in letters +two feet high, which dated back to the Ladies of Saint Rose's Parish +Annual Fair and Entertainment, in May. If the combined effect of these +was not wholly artistic, at least it was very gay, and the murmur of +voices and laughter all over the hall was gay, too, and gay almost to +intoxication it was to hear the musicians tentatively and subduedly +trying their instruments up by the piano, with their sleek heads close +together. +</P> + +<P> +Presently every chair in the house had its occupant, and the younger +element began a spasmodic sort of clapping, as a delicate hint to the +agitated managers, who were behind the scenes, running blindly about +with worn scraps of scribbled paper in their hands, desperately +attempting to call the roll of their performers. When Joe, the janitor, +came out onto the stage, he was royally applauded, although he did no +more than move a tin stand on which there were numbered cards, from one +side of the stage to the other, and change the number in view from "18" +to "1." +</P> + +<P> +Fathers and mothers, perspiring, clean and good-natured, smiled upon +youthful impatience and impertinence to-night, as they sat fanning and +discussing the newcomers, or leaned forward or backward for hilarious +scraps of conversation with their neighbors. Lovers, as always +oblivious of time, sat entirely indifferent to the rise or fall of the +curtain, the girls with demurely dropped lashes, the men deep in low +monotones, their faces close to the lovely faces so near, their arms +flung, in all absent-mindedness, across the backs of the ladies' +chairs. And any motherly heart might have been stirred with an aching +sort of tenderness, as Sidney Burgoyne's was, at the sight of so much +awkward, budding manliness, so many shining pompadours, and carefully +polished shoes and outrageous cravats—so many silky, filleted little +heads, and innocent young bosoms half-hidden by all sorts of dainty +little conspiracies of lace and lawn. Youth, enchanting, self-absorbed, +important, had coolly taken possession of the hall, as it does of +everything, for its own happy plans, and something of the gossamer +beauty of it seemed to be clouding older and wiser eyes to-night. +Sidney found her eyes resting upon Barry's big, shapely hand, as he +leaned forward, deep in conversation with Dr. Brown, in the chair +ahead, and she was conscious that she wanted to sit back and shut her +eyes, and draw a deep breath of sheer irrational happiness because this +WAS Barry next to her, and that he liked to be there. +</P> + +<P> +Presently the hall thrilled to see two modest-looking and obviously +embarrassed men come out to seat themselves in the half-circle of +chairs that lined the stage, and a moment later applause broke out for +the Mayor and his wife, and the members of the Flower Parade Committee +of Arrangements, and for the nondescript persons who invariably fill in +such a group, and for the kindly, smiling Governor, and the ladies of +his party, and for the Willard Whites, who, with the easiest manners in +the world, were in actual conversation with the great people as they +came upon the stage. +</P> + +<P> +At the sight of them, Mrs. Carew, still vigorously clapping, leaned +over to say to Mrs. Burgoyne: +</P> + +<P> +"Look at Clara White! And we were wondering why they didn't come in! +Wouldn't she make you TIRED!" +</P> + +<P> +"You might kiss her hand, when you go up to get your prize, Mrs. +Burgoyne," suggested Barry, and a general giggle went the rounds. +</P> + +<P> +"If I get a prize," said Sidney, in alarm, "you've got to go up, I +couldn't!" +</P> + +<P> +"We'll see—" Barry began, his voice drowned by the opening crash of +the band. +</P> + +<P> +There followed what the three papers of Santa Paloma were unanimous the +next day in describing as the most brilliant and enjoyable concert ever +given in Santa Paloma. It was received with immense enthusiasm, +entirely unaffected by the fact that everyone present had heard Miss +Emelie Jeanne Foster sing "Twickenham Ferry" before, with "Dawn" as an +encore, and was familiar also with the selections of the Stringed +Instrument Club, and had listened to young Doctor Perry's impassioned +tenor many times. As for George O'Connor, with his irresistible +laughing song, and the song about the train that went to Morro to-day, +he was more popular every time he appeared, and was greeted now by mad +applause, and shouts of "There's George!" and "Hello, George!" +</P> + +<P> +And the Home Boys' Quartette from Emville was quite new, and various +solo singers and a "lady elocutionist" from San Francisco were heard +for the first time. The latter, who was on the program merely for a +"Recitation—Selected," was so successful with "Pauline Pavlovna," and +"Seein' Things at Night" that it was nearly ten o'clock before the +Governor was introduced. +</P> + +<P> +However, he was at last duly presented to the applauding hundreds, and +came forward to the footlights to address them, and made everyone laugh +and feel friendly by saying immediately that he knew they hadn't come +out that evening to hear an old man make a long speech. +</P> + +<P> +He said he didn't believe in speechmaking much, he believed in DOING +things; there were always a lot of people to stand around and make +speeches, like himself—and there was more laughter. +</P> + +<P> +He said that he knew the business of the evening was the giving out of +these prizes here—he didn't know what was in these boxes—he indicated +the daintily wrapped and tied packages that stood on the little table +in the middle of the stage—but he thought every lady in the hall would +know before she went home, and perhaps some one of them would tell +him—and there was more laughter. He said he hoped that there was +something mighty nice in the largest box, because he understood that it +was to go to a fairy-godmother; he didn't know whether the good people +in the hall believed in fairies or not, but he knew that some of the +children in Old Paloma did, and he had seen and heard enough that day +to make him believe in 'em too! He'd heard of a fairy years ago who +made a coach-and-four out of a pumpkin, but he didn't think that was +any harder than to make a coach-and-six out of a hay-wagon, and put +twenty Cinderellas into it instead of one. He said it gave him great +pride and pleasure to announce that the first prize for to-day's +beautiful contest had been unanimously awarded to— +</P> + +<P> +Sidney Burgoyne, watching him with fascinated eyes, her breath coming +fast and unevenly, her color brightening and fading, heard only so +much, and then, with a desperate impulse to get away, half rose to her +feet. +</P> + +<P> +But she was too late. Long before the Governor reached her name, a +sudden outburst of laughter and clapping shook the hall, there was a +friendly stir and murmur about her; a hundred voices came to her ears, +"It's Mrs. Burgoyne, of course!—She's got it! She's got the first +prize!—Go on up, Mrs. Burgoyne! You've got it!—Isn't that +GREAT,—she's got it! Go up and get it!" +</P> + +<P> +"You've got first prize, I guess. You'll have to go up for it," Barry +urged her. +</P> + +<P> +"He didn't say so!" Sidney protested nervously. But she let herself be +half-pushed into the aisle, and somehow reached the three little steps +that led up to the platform, and found herself facing His Excellency, +in an uproar of applause. +</P> + +<P> +The Governor said a few smiling words as he put a large box into her +hands; Sidney knew this because she saw his lips move, but the house +had gone quite mad by this time, and not a word was audible. Everyone +in the hall knew that a tall loving-cup was in the box, for it had been +on exhibition in the window of Postag's jewelry store for three weeks. +It was of silver, and lined with gold, both metals shining with an +unearthly and flawless radiance; and there was "Awarded—as a First +Prize—in the Twelfth Floral Parade—of Santa Paloma, California" cut +beautifully into one side, and a scroll all ready, on the other side, +to be engraved with the lucky winner's name. +</P> + +<P> +She had been joking for two or three weeks about the possibility of +this very occurrence, had been half-expecting it all day, but now +suddenly all the joke seemed gone out of it, and she was only curiously +stirred and shaken. She looked confusedly down at the sea of faces +below her, smiles were everywhere, the eyes that were upon her were +full of all affection and pride—She had done so little after all, she +said to herself, with sudden humility, almost with shame. And it was so +poignantly sweet to realize that they loved her, that she was one of +themselves, they were glad she had won, she who had been a stranger to +all of them only a few months ago! +</P> + +<P> +Her eyes full of sudden tears, her lip shaking, she could only bow and +bow again, and then, just as her smile threatened to become entirely +eclipsed, she managed a husky "Thank you all so much!" and descended +the steps rapidly, to slip into her chair between Barry and George +Carew. +</P> + +<P> +"You know, you oughtn't to make a long tedious speech like that on an +occasion like this, Sid," Barry said, when she had somewhat recovered +her equilibrium, and the silver loving cup was unwrapped, and was being +passed admiringly from hand to hand. +</P> + +<P> +"Don't!" she said warningly, "or you'll have me weeping on your +shoulder!" +</P> + +<P> +Instead of which she was her gayest self, and accepted endless +congratulations with joyous composure, as the audience streamed out +into the reviving festivity of Main Street. The tide was turning in one +direction now, for there were to be "fireworks and a stupendous band +concert" immediately following the concert, in a vacant lot not far +away. +</P> + +<P> +And presently they all found themselves seated on the fragrant grass, +under the stars. George Carew, at Sidney's feet, solemnly wrapped +sections of molasses popcorn in oiled paper, and passed them to the +ladies. Barry's coat made a comfortable seat for Mrs. Burgoyne and +little Mrs. Brown; Barry himself was just behind, and Mrs. Carew and +her big son beside them. All about, in the darkness, were other groups: +mothers and fathers and alert, chattering children. Alice Carter, the +big mill-girl, radiant now, and with a hoarse, inarticulate, adoring +young plumber in tow, went by them, and stooped to whisper something to +Mrs. Burgoyne. "I wish you WOULD come, Alice!" the lady answered +eagerly, as they went on. +</P> + +<P> +Then the rockets began to hiss up toward the stars, each falling shower +of light greeted with a long rapturous "Ah-h-h!" Catherine-wheels +sputtered nearer the ground; red lights made eerie great spots of +illumination here and there, against which dark little figures moved. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know that I ever had a happier day in my life!" said Sidney +Burgoyne. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap14"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XIV +</H3> + +<P> +More happy days followed; for Santa Paloma, after the Fourth of July, +felt only friendliness for the new owner of the Hall, and Mrs. +Burgoyne's informal teas on the river bank began to prove a powerful +attraction, even rivaling the club in feminine favor. Sometimes the +hostess enlisted all their sympathies for a newly arrived Old Paloma +baby, and they tore lengths of flannel, and busily stitched at tiny +garments, under the shade of the willow and pepper trees. Sometimes she +had in her care one or more older babies whose busy mother was taking a +day's rest, or whose father was perhaps ill, needing all the wife's +care. Always there was something to read and discuss; an editorial in +some eastern magazine that made them all indignant or enthusiastic, or +a short story worth reading aloud. And almost always the children were +within call, digging great holes in the pebbly shallows of the river, +only to fill them up again, toiling over bridges and dams, climbing out +to the perilous length of the branches that hung above the water. +Little Mary Scott, released from the fear of an "op'ration," and facing +all unconsciously a far longer journey than the dreaded one to a San +Francisco hospital, had her own cushioned chair near the bank, where +she could hear and see, and laugh at everything that went on, and revel +in consolation and bandages when the inevitable accidents made them +necessary. Mary had no cares now, no responsibility more serious than +to be sure her feet didn't get cold, and to tell Mrs. Burgoyne the +minute her head ached; there was to be nothing but rest and comfort and +laughter for her in life now. "I don't know why we should pity her," +little Mrs. Brown said thoughtfully, one day, as they watched her with +the other children; "we can't ever hope to feel that any of our +children are as safe as she is." +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Burgoyne's method of entertaining the children was simple. She +always made them work as hard as possible. One day they begged her to +let them build a "truly dam" that would really stop the Lobos in its +placid course. She consulted gravely with George Carew: should they +attempt it? George, after serious consideration, thought they should. +</P> + +<P> +As a result, twenty children panted and toiled through a warm Saturday +afternoon, George and the Adams boys shouting directions as they +handled planks and stones; everybody wet, happy, and excited. Not the +least glorious moment was when the dam was broken at five o'clock, just +before refreshments were served. +</P> + +<P> +"We'll do that better next Saturday," said George. But a week later +they wanted to clean the barn and organize a club. Mrs. Burgoyne was +sure they couldn't. All that space, she said, and those bins, and the +little rooms, and all? Very well, then, they could try. Later they +longed for a picnic supper in the woods, with an open fire, and +potatoes, and singing. Their hostess was dubious: entreated them to +consider the WORK involved, dragging stones for the fire, and carrying +potatoes and bacon and jam and all the rest of it 'way up there'. This +was at two o'clock, and at six she was formally asked to come up and +inspect the cleared camping ground, and the fireplace with its +broilers, and the mammoth stack of fuel prepared. +</P> + +<P> +"I knew you'd do it!" said the lady delightedly. "Now we'll really have +a fine supper!" And a memorable supper they had, and Indian stories, +and singing, and they went home well after dusk, to end the day +perfectly. +</P> + +<P> +"They like this sort of thing much better than white dresses, and a +professional entertainer, and dancing, and too much ice-cream," said +Mrs. Burgoyne to Mrs. Adams. +</P> + +<P> +"Of course they do," said Mrs. Adams, who had her own reasons for +turning rather red and speaking somewhat faintly. "And it's much less +work, and much less expense," she added. +</P> + +<P> +"Now it is, when they can be out-of-doors," said Mrs. Burgoyne; "but in +winter they do make awful work indoors. However, there is tramping for +dry weather, and I mean to have a stove set up in the old billiard-room +down-stairs and turn them all loose in there when it's wet. +Theatricals, and pasting things, and singing, and now and then +candy-making, is all fun. And one knows that they're safe, and piling +up happy memories of their home." +</P> + +<P> +"You make a sort of profession of motherhood," said Mrs. White dryly. +</P> + +<P> +"It IS my profession," said the hostess, with her happy laugh. +</P> + +<P> +But her happiness had a sudden check in mid-August; Sidney found +herself no more immune from heartache than any other woman, no more +philosophical over a hurt. It was, she told herself, only a trifle, +after all. She was absurd to let it cloud the bright day for her and +keep her restless and wakeful at night. It was nothing. Only— +</P> + +<P> +Only it was the first time that Barry had failed her. He was gone. Gone +without a word of explanation to anyone, leaving his work at the Mail +unfinished, leaving even Billy, his usual confidant, quite in the dark. +Sidney had noticed for days a certain moodiness and unresponsiveness +about him; had tried rather timidly to win him from it; had got up +uneasily half a dozen times in the night just past to look across the +garden to his house, and wonder why Barry's light burned on and on. +</P> + +<P> +She had meant to send for him in the morning, but Billy, artlessly +appearing when the waffles came on at breakfast, remarked that Dad was +gone to San Francisco. +</P> + +<P> +"To the city, Billy?" Sidney asked. "Didn't he say why?" +</P> + +<P> +"He didn't even say goodbye," Billy replied cheerfully. "He just left a +note for Hayashi. It said he didn't know how long he would be gone." +</P> + +<P> +Sidney tried with small success to deceive herself into thinking that +it was the mere mysteriousness of this that cut her. She presently went +down to see Mrs. Carew, and was fretted because that lady would for +some time discuss nothing but the successful treatment of insects on +the rose-bushes. +</P> + +<P> +"Barry seems to have disappeared," said Sidney finally, in a casual +tone. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Carew straightened up, forgot hellebore and tobacco juice for the +moment. +</P> + +<P> +"Did I tell you what Silva told me?" she asked. +</P> + +<P> +"Silva?" echoed Sidney, at a loss. +</P> + +<P> +"The milkman. He told me that when he came up at five o'clock this +morning, Barry came out of the gate, and that he looked AWFULLY. He +said he was pale, and that his eyes looked badly, and that he hardly +seemed to know what he was doing. And oh, my dear, I'm afraid that he's +drinking again! I'm sure of it. It's two years now since he has done +this. I think it's too bad. But you know he used to go down to town +every little while for a regular TIME with those newspaper men. He +doesn't like Santa Paloma, you know. He gets very bored here. He'll be +back in a day or two, thoroughly ashamed of himself." +</P> + +<P> +Sidney did not answer, because she could not. Resentment and loyalty, +shame and heartache, kept her lips dumb. She walked to and fro in the +garden, alone in the sweet early darkness, for an hour. Then she went +indoors, and tried to amuse herself at the piano. Suddenly her face +twisted, she laid her arm along the rack, and her face on her arm; but +it was only for a moment; then she straightened up resolutely, piled +the music, closed the piano, and went upstairs. +</P> + +<P> +"But perhaps I'm not old enough yet for an olive garden," she told the +stars from her window an hour later. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap15"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XV +</H3> + +<P> +Another day went by, and still there was no news from Barry. The early +autumn weather was exquisite, and Sidney, with the additional work for +the Mail that the editor's absence left for her, found herself very +busy. But life seemed suddenly to taste flat and uninteresting to her. +The sunlight was glaring, the afternoons dusty and windy, and under all +the day's duties and pleasures—the meeting of neighbors, the +children's confidences, her busy coming and going up and down the +village streets—ran a sick undercurrent of disappointment and +heartache. She went to the post-office twice, in that first long day, +for the arriving mail, and Miss Potter, pleased at these glimpses of +the lady from the Hall, chatted blithely as she pushed Italian letters, +London letters, letters from Washington and New York, through the +little wicket. +</P> + +<P> +But there was not a line from Barry. On the second day Sidney began to +think of sending him a note; it might be chanced to the Bohemian Club— +</P> + +<P> +But no, she wouldn't do that. If he did not care enough to write her, +she certainly wouldn't write him. +</P> + +<P> +She began to realize how different Santa Paloma was without his big +figure, his laughter, his joyous comment upon people and things. She +had taken his comradeship for granted, taken it as just one more +element of the old childish days regained, never thought of its rude +interruption or ending. +</P> + +<P> +Now she felt ashamed and sore, she had been playing with fire, she told +herself severely; she had perhaps hurt him; she had certainly given +herself needless heartache. No romantic girl of seventeen ever suffered +a more unreasoning pang than did Sidney when she came upon Barry's +shabby, tobacco-scented office coat, hanging behind his desk, or found +in her own desk one of the careless notes he so frequently used to +leave there at night for her to find in the morning. +</P> + +<P> +However, in the curious way that things utterly unrelated sometimes +play upon each other in this life, these days of bewilderment and +chagrin bore certain good fruit. Sidney had for some weeks been +planning an attack upon the sympathies of the Santa Paloma Women's +Club, but had shrunk from beginning it, because life was running very +smoothly and happily, and she was growing too genuinely fond of her new +neighbors to risk jeopardizing their affection for her by a move she +suspected would be unpopular. +</P> + +<P> +But now she was unhappy, and, with the curious stoicism that is born of +unhappiness, she plunged straight into the matter. On the third day +after Barry's disappearance she appeared at the regular meeting of the +club as Mrs. Carew's guest. +</P> + +<P> +"I hope this means that you are coming to your senses, ye bad girl!" +said Mrs. Apostleman, drawing her to the next chair with a fat +imperative hand. +</P> + +<P> +"Perhaps it does," Sidney answered, with a rather nervous smile. She +sat attentive and appreciative, through the reading of a paper entitled +"Some Glimpses of the Real Burns," and seemed immensely to enjoy the +four songs—Burns's poems set to music—and the clever recitation of +several selections from Burns that followed. +</P> + +<P> +Then the chairman announced that Mrs. Burgoyne, "whom I'm sure we all +know, although she isn't one of us yet (laughter), has asked permission +to address the club at the conclusion of the regular program." There +was a little applause, and Sidney, very rosy, walked rapidly forward, +to stand just below the platform. She was nervous, obviously, and spoke +hurriedly and in a rather unnatural voice. +</P> + +<P> +"Your chairman and president," she began, with a little inclination +toward each, "have given me permission to speak to you today for five +minutes, because I want to ask the Santa Paloma Women's Club a favor—a +great favor, in fact. I won't say how much I hope the club will decide +to grant it, but just tell you what it is. It has to do with the +factory girls across the river. I've become interested in some of them; +partly I suppose because some friends of mine are working for just such +girls, only under infinitely harder circumstances, in some of the +eastern cities, I feel, we all feel, I know, that the atmosphere of Old +Paloma is a dangerous one for girls. Every year certain ones among them +'go wrong,' as the expression is; and when a girl once does that, she +is apt to go very wrong indeed before she stops. She doesn't care what +she does, in fact, and her own people only make it harder, practically +drive her away. Or even if she marries decently, and tries to live down +all the past it comes up between her and her neighbors, between her and +her children, perhaps, and embitters her whole life. And so finally she +goes to join that terrible army of women that we others try to pretend +we never see or hear of at all. These girls work hard all day, and +their homes aren't the right sort of homes, with hot dirty rooms,—full +of quarreling and crowding; and so they slip out at night and meet +their friends in the dancehalls, and the moving-picture shows. And +we—we can't blame them." Her voice had grown less diffident, and rang +with sudden longing and appeal. "They want only what we all wanted a +few years ago," she said. "They want good times, lights and music, and +pretty gowns, something to look forward to in the long, hot +afternoons—dances, theatricals, harmless meetings of all sorts. If we +could give them safe clean fun—not patronizingly, and not too +obviously instructive—they'd be willing to wait for it; they'd talk +about it instead of more dangerous things; they'd give up dangerous +things for it. They are very nice girls, some of them, and their +friends are very nice fellows, for the most part, and they are—they +are so very young. +</P> + +<P> +"However, about the club—I am wondering if it could be borrowed for a +temporary meeting-place for them, if we form a sort of club among them. +I say temporary, because I hope we will build them a clubhouse of their +own some day. But meantime there is only the Grand Opera House, which +all the traveling theatrical companies rent; Hansen's Hall, which is +over a saloon, so that won't do; and the Concert Hall, which costs +twenty-five dollars a night. We would, of course, see that the club was +cleaned after every meeting, and pay for the lights. I—I think that's +about all," finished Sidney, feeling that she had put her case rather +ineloquently, and coming to a full stop. She sat down, her eyes +nowhere, her cheeks very red. +</P> + +<P> +There was the silence of utter surprise in the room. After a pause, +Mrs. White raised a gloved hand. Permission from the chair was given +Mrs. White to speak. +</P> + +<P> +"Your idea would be to give the Old Paloma girls a dance here, Mrs. +Burgoyne?" +</P> + +<P> +"Regular dances, yes," said Sidney, standing up. "To let them use the +clubhouse, say, two nights a week. Reading, and singing, and sewing one +night, perhaps, and a dance another. Or we could get good +moving-picture films, or have a concert or play, and ask the mothers +and fathers now and then; charades and Morris dances, something like +that." +</P> + +<P> +"Dancing and moving-pictures—oh, dear, dear!" said Mrs. White, with a +whimsical smile and a shake of her head, and there was laughter. +</P> + +<P> +"All those things take costuming, and that takes money," said the +chairman, after a silence, rather hesitatingly. +</P> + +<P> +"Money isn't the problem," Mrs. Burgoyne rejoined eagerly; "you'll find +that they spend a good deal now, even for the wretched pleasures they +have." +</P> + +<P> +There was another silence. Then Mrs. White again gained permission to +speak, and rose to do so. +</P> + +<P> +"I think perhaps Mrs. Burgoyne, being a newcomer here, doesn't quite +understand our feeling toward our little club," she said very +pleasantly. "We built it," she went on, with a slight touch of emotion, +"as a little refuge from everything jarring and unpleasant; we meant it +to stand for something a little BETTER and FINER than the things of +everyday life can possibly be. Perhaps we felt that there are already +too many dances and too many moving-picture shows in the world; perhaps +we felt that if we COULD forget those things for a little while—I +don't mean," said Mrs. White smilingly reasonable, "that the reform of +wayward girls isn't a splendid and ennobling thing; I believe heartily +in the work institutions and schools are doing along those lines, +but—" and with a pretty little gesture of helplessness she flung out +her hands—"but we can't have a Hull House in every little town, you +know, and I'm afraid we shouldn't find very many Jane Addamses if we +did! Good girls don't need this sort of thing, and bad girls—well, +unfortunately, the world has always had bad girls and always will have! +We would merely turn our lovely clubhouse over to a lot of little +romping hoydens." +</P> + +<P> +"But—" began Mrs. Burgoyne eagerly. +</P> + +<P> +"Just ONE moment," said the President, sweetly, and Mrs. Burgoyne sat +down with blazing cheeks. "I only want to say that I think this is +outside the purpose for which the club was formed," added Mrs. White. +"If the club would care to vote on this, it seems to me that would be +the wisest way of settling the matter; but perhaps we could hear from a +few more members first?" +</P> + +<P> +There was a little rustle of applause at this, and Sidney felt her +heart give a sick plunge, and raged within herself because her own act +had placed her at so great a disadvantage. In another moment, however, +general attention was directed to a tall, plainly dressed, gentle +woman, who rose and said rather shyly: +</P> + +<P> +"Since you suggested our discussing this a little, Mrs. President, I +would like to say that I like this idea very much myself. I've often +felt that we weren't doing very much good, just uplifting ourselves, as +it were, and I hope Mrs. Burgoyne will let me help her in any way I +can, whether the club votes for or against this plan. I—I have four +girls and boys of my own at home, as you know, and I find that even +with plenty of music, and all the library books and company they want, +it's hard enough to keep those children happy at night. And, ladies, +there must be plenty of mothers over there in Old Paloma who worry +about it as we do, and yet have no way of helping themselves. It seems +to me we couldn't put our clubhouse to better use, or our time either, +for that matter. I would vote decidedly 'yes' to such a plan. I've +often felt that we—well, that we rather wasted some of our time here," +she ended mildly. +</P> + +<P> +"Thank you, Mrs. Moore," said Mrs. White politely. +</P> + +<P> +"I hope it is part of your idea to let our own children have a part in +the entertainments you propose," briskly added another woman, a +clergyman's wife, rising immediately. "I think Doctor Babcock would +thoroughly approve of the plan, and I am sure I do. Every little +while," she went on smilingly, "my husband asks me what GOOD the club +is doing, and I never can answer—" +</P> + +<P> +"Men's clubs do so much good!" said some loud, cheerful voice at the +back of the hall, and there was laughter. +</P> + +<P> +"A great many of them do good and have side issues, like this one, that +are all for good," the clergyman's wife responded quickly, "and +personally I would thank God to be able to save even ten—to save even +one—of those Old Paloma girls from a life of shame and suffering. I +wish we had begun before. Mrs. Burgoyne may propose to build them their +own clubhouse entirely herself; but if not, I hope we can all help in +that too, when the time comes." +</P> + +<P> +"Thank you, Mrs. Babcock," said the President coldly. "What do you +think, Miss Pratt?" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, Mrs. Carew, and Mrs. Brown, and I all feel as Mrs. Burgoyne does," +admitted Anne Pratt innocently, a little fluttered. +</P> + +<P> +It was Mrs. White's turn to color. +</P> + +<P> +"I didn't know that the matter had been discussed," she said stiffly. +</P> + +<P> +"Only generally; not in reference to the club," Mrs. Burgoyne supplied +quickly. +</P> + +<P> +"I myself will propose an affirmative vote," said Mrs. Apostleman's +rich old voice. Mrs. Apostleman was entirely indifferent to +parliamentary law, and was never in order. "How d'ye do it? The ayes +rise, is that it?" +</P> + +<P> +She pulled herself magnificently erect by the chair-back in front of +her, and with clapping and laughter the entire club rose to its feet. +</P> + +<P> +"This is entirely out of order," said Mrs. White, very rosy. Everyone +sat down suddenly, and the chairman gave two emphatic raps of her gavel. +</P> + +<P> +The President then asked permission to speak, and moved, with great +dignity, that the matter be laid before the board of directors at the +next meeting, and, if approved, submitted in due order to the vote of +the club. +</P> + +<P> +The motion was briskly seconded, and a few minutes later Sidney found +herself freed from the babel of voices and walking home with nervous +rapidity. "Well, that's over!" she said once or twice aloud. "Thank +Heaven, it's over!" +</P> + +<P> +"Is your head better, Mother?" said Joanna, who had been hanging on the +Hall gate waiting for her mother, and who put an affectionate arm about +her as they walked up the path. "You LOOK better." +</P> + +<P> +"Jo," said Mrs. Burgoyne seriously, "there's one sure cure for the +blues in this world. I recommend it to you, for it's safer than +cocaine, and just as sure. Go and do something you don't want to—for +somebody else." +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap16"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XVI +</H3> + +<P> +It was no pleasant prospect of a reunion at the club, or an evening +with his old friends, that had taken Barry Valentine so suddenly to San +Francisco, but a letter from his wife—or, rather, from his wife's +mother, for Hetty herself never wrote—which had stirred a vague +distrust and discomfort in his mind. Mrs. Scott, his mother-in-law, was +a worldly, shrewd little person, but good-hearted, and as easily moved +or stirred as a child. This was one of her characteristic letters, +disconnected, ill-spelled, and scrawled upon scented lavender paper. +She wrote that she and Hetty were sick of San Francisco, and they +wanted Barry's permission to sell the Mission Street flats that +afforded them a living, and go away once and for all. Het, her mother +wrote, had had a fine offer for the houses; Barry's signature only was +needed to close the deal. +</P> + +<P> +All this might be true; it sounded reasonable enough; but, somehow, +Barry fancied that it was not true, or at least that it was only partly +so. What did Hetty want the money for, he wondered. Why should her +mother reiterate so many times that if Barry for any possible reason +disapproved, he was not to give the matter another thought; they most +especially wanted only his simple yes or no. Why this consideration? +Hetty had always been persistent enough about the things she wanted +before. "I know you would consent if you could see how our hearts are +set on this," wrote Mrs. Scott, "but if you say 'no,' that ends it." +</P> + +<P> +"Sure, I'll sell," Barry said, putting the letter in his pocket. But it +came persistently between him and his work. What mischief was Hetty in, +he wondered. Had some get-rich-quick shark got hold of her; it was +extremely likely. He could not shake the thought of her from his mind, +her voice, her pretty, sullen little face, rose again and haunted him. +What a child she had been, and what a boy he was, and how mistaken the +whole bitter experience! +</P> + +<P> +Walking home late at night, the memory of old days rode him like a +hateful nightmare. He saw the little untidy flat they had had in New +York; the white winter outside, and a deeper chill within; little Billy +coughing and restless; Hetty practising her scales, and he, Barry, +trying to write at one end of the dining-room table. He remembered how +disappointment and restless ambition had blotted out her fresh, babyish +beauty; how thin and sharp her voice had grown as the months went on. +</P> + +<P> +Barry tried to read, but the book became mere printed words. He went +softly into Billy's room, and sat down by the tumbled bed and the small +warm sleeper. Billy, even asleep, snuggled his hand appreciatively into +his father's, and brought its little fellow to lie there too, and +pushed his head up against Barry's arm. +</P> + +<P> +And there the father sat motionless, while the clock outside in the +hall struck two, and three, and four. This was Hetty's baby, and where +was Hetty? Alone with her little fretful mother, moving from +boarding-house to boarding-house. Pretty no longer, buoyed up by the +hope of an operatic career no longer, pinched—as they must be +pinched—in money matters. +</P> + +<P> +The thought came to him suddenly that he must see her; and though he +fought it as unwelcome and distasteful, it grew rapidly into a +conviction. He must see her again, must have a long talk with her, must +ascertain that nothing he could do for the woman who had been his wife +was left undone. He was no longer the exacting, unsuccessful boy she +had left so unceremoniously; he was a man now, standing on his own +feet, and with a recognized position in the community. The little +fretful baby was a well-brushed young person who attended kindergarten +and Sunday School. A new era of respectability and prosperity had set +in. Hetty, his newly awakened sense of justice and his newly aroused +ambition told him, must somehow share it. Not that there could ever be +a complete reconciliation between them, but there could be good-will, +there could be a readjustment and a friendlier understanding. +</P> + +<P> +The thought of Sidney came suddenly upon his idle musings with a shock +that made his heart sick. Gracious, beautiful, and fresh, although she +was older than Hetty, how far she was removed from this sordid story of +his, this darker side of his life! Perhaps months from now, his +troubled thoughts ran on, he would tell her of his visit to Hetty. For +he had determined to visit her. +</P> + +<P> +Just at dawn he left the house and went out of his own gate. His face +was pale, his eyes deeply ringed and his head ached furiously, but it +was with a sort of content that he took his seat in the early train for +San Francisco. He sank into a reverie, head propped on hand, that +lasted until his journey was almost over; but once in the city, his old +dread of seeing his wife came over him again, and it was only after a +leisurely luncheon at the club that Barry took a Turk Street car to the +dingy region where Hetty lived. +</P> + +<P> +The row of dirty bay-windowed houses on either side of the street, and +the dust and papers blowing about in the hot afternoon wind, somehow +reminded him forcibly of old days and ways. With a sinking heart he +went up one of the flights of wooden steps and asked at the door for +Mrs. Valentine. A Japanese boy in his shirt-sleeves ushered him into a +front room. This was evidently the "parlor"; hot sunlight streamed +through the bay windows; there was an upright piano against the closed +folding doors, and a graphophone on a dusty cherry table; wind whined +at the window-casing; one or two big flies buzzed against the glass. +</P> + +<P> +After a while Mrs. Smiley, the widow who conducted this little +boarding-house, who was a cousin of Hetty and whom Barry had known +years ago, came in. She was a tall, angular blonde, cheerlessly +resigned to a cheerless existence. With her came a keen-faced, freckled +boy of fourteen or fifteen, with his finger still marking a place in +the book he had been reading aloud. +</P> + +<P> +Hetty and her mother were out, it appeared. Mrs. Smiley didn't think +they would be back to dinner; in fact, she reiterated nervously, she +was sure they wouldn't. She was extremely and maddeningly +non-committal. No, she didn't know why they wanted to sell the Mission +Street flats. She had warned them it was a silly thing to bother Barry +about it. No, she didn't know when he could see them tomorrow; she +guessed, almost any time. +</P> + +<P> +Barry went away full of uneasy suspicions, and more than ever convinced +that something was wrong. He went back again the next morning, but +nobody but the Japanese boy appeared to be at home. But a visit in the +late afternoon was more successful, for he found Mrs. Smiley and the +tall son again. +</P> + +<P> +"Hetty IS here, isn't she?" he burst out suddenly, in the middle of a +meaningless conversation. Mrs. Smiley turned pale and tried to laugh. +</P> + +<P> +"Where else would she be?" she demanded, and she went back to her +interrupted dissertation upon the unpleasantness of several specified +boarders then under her roof. +</P> + +<P> +"It is funny," Barry mused. "What did she say when she went out?" +</P> + +<P> +"Why—" Mrs. Smiley began uncomfortably, "But, my gracious, I wish you +would ask Aunt Ide, Barry!" she interrupted herself uncomfortably. +"She'll tell you. She's the one to ask." Aunt Ide was Mrs. Scott. +</P> + +<P> +"Tell me WHAT?" he persisted. "You tell me, Lulu; that's a dear." +</P> + +<P> +"Auntie 'll tell you," she repeated, adding suddenly, to the boy, +"Russy, wasn't Aunt Ide in her room when you went up? You run up and +see." +</P> + +<P> +"Nome," said Russell positively; but nevertheless he went. +</P> + +<P> +"Nice kid, Lulu," said Barry in his idle way, "but he looks thin." +</P> + +<P> +"He's the finest little feller God ever sent a woman," the mother +answered with sudden passionate pride. Color leaped to her sallow +cheeks. "But this house is no place for him to be cooped up reading all +day," she went on in a worried tone, after a moment, "and I can't let +him run with the boys around here; it's a regular gang. I don't know +what I AM going to do with him. 'Tisn't as if he had a father." +</P> + +<P> +"He wouldn't like to come up to me, and get broken on the Mail?" Barry +queried in his interested way. "He'd get lots of fresh air, and he +could sleep at my house. I'll keep an eye on him, if you say so." +</P> + +<P> +"Go on the newspaper! I think he'd go crazy with joy," his mother said. +Tears came into her faded eyes. "Barry, you're real good-hearted to +offer it," she said gratefully. "Of all things in the world, that's the +one Russ wants to do. But won't he be in your way?" +</P> + +<P> +"He'll fit right in," Barry said. "Pack him up and send him along. If +he doesn't like it, I guess his mother'll let him come home." +</P> + +<P> +"Like it!" she echoed. Then in a lower tone she added, "You don't know +what a load you're taking off my mind, Barry." She paused, colored +again, and, to his surprise, continued rapidly, with a quick glance at +the door, "Barry, I never did a thing like this before in my life, and +I can't do it now. You know how much I owe Aunt Ide: she took me in, +and did for me just as she did for Het, when I was a baby; she made my +wedding dress, and she came right to me when Gus died, but I can't let +you go back to Santa Paloma not knowing." +</P> + +<P> +"Not knowing what?" Barry said, close upon the mystery at last. +</P> + +<P> +"You know what Aunt Ide is," Mrs. Smiley said pleadingly. "There's not +a mite of harm in her, but she just—You know she'd been signing +Hetty's checks for a long time, Barry—" +</P> + +<P> +"Go on," Barry said, as she paused distressedly. +</P> + +<P> +"And she just went on—" Mrs. Smiley continued simply. +</P> + +<P> +"Went on WHAT?" Barry demanded. +</P> + +<P> +"After Het—went. Barry," the woman interrupted herself, "I oughtn't be +the one to tell you, but don't you see—Don't you see Het's—" +</P> + +<P> +"Dead," Barry heard his own voice say heavily. The cheap little room +seemed to be closing in about him, he gripped the back of the chair by +which he was standing. Mrs. Smiley began to cry quietly. They stood so +for a long time. +</P> + +<P> +After a while he sat down, and she told him about it, with that +faithfulness to inessential detail that marks her class. Barry listened +like a man in a dream. Mrs. Smiley begged him to stay to dinner to see +"Aunt Ide," but he refused, and in the gritty dusk he found himself +walking down the street, alone in silence at last. He took a car to the +ocean beach, and far into the night sat on the rocks watching the dark +play of the rolling Pacific, and listening to the steady rush and fall +of the water. +</P> + +<P> +The next day he saw his wife's mother, and at the sight of her +frightened, fat little face, and the sound of the high voice he knew so +well, the last shred of his anger and disgust vanished, and he could +only pity her. He remembered how welcome she had made him to the little +cottage in Plumas, those long years ago; how she had laughed at his +youthful appreciation of her Sunday fried chicken and cherry pie, and +the honest tears she had shed when he went, with the dimpled Hetty +beside him, to tell her her daughter was won. She was Billy's +grandmother, after all, and she had at least seen that Hetty was +protected all through her misguided little career from the breath of +scandal, and that Hetty's last days were made comfortable and serene. +He assured her gruffly that it was "all right," and she presently +brightened, and told him through tears that he was a "king," when it +was finally arranged that she should go on drawing the rents of the +Mission Street property for the rest of her life. She and Mrs. Smiley +persuaded him to dine with them, and he thought it quite characteristic +of "Aunt Ide" to make a little occasion of it, and take them to a +certain favored little French restaurant for the meal. But Mrs. Smiley +was tremulous with gratitude and relief, Russell's face was radiant, +his adoring eyes all for Barry, and Barry, always willing to accept a +situation gracefully, really enjoyed his dinner. +</P> + +<P> +He stayed in San Francisco another day and went to Hetty's grave, high +up in the Piedmont Hills, and took a long lonely tramp above the +college town afterward. Early the next morning he started for home, +fresh from a bath and a good breakfast, and feeling now, for the first +time, that he was free, and that it was good to be free—free to work +and to plan his life, and free, his innermost consciousness exulted to +realize, to go to her some day, the Lady of his Heart's Desire, and +take her, with all the fragrance and beauty that were part of her, into +his arms. And oh, the happy years ahead; he seemed to feel the +sweetness of spring winds blowing across them, and the glow of winter +fires making them bright! What of her fabulous wealth, after all, if he +could support her as she chose to live, a simple country gentle-woman, +in a little country town? +</P> + +<P> +Barry stared out at the morning fields and hills, where fog and +sunshine were holding their daily battle, and his heart sang within him. +</P> + +<P> +Fog held the field at Santa Paloma when he reached it, the station +building dripped somberly. Main Street was but a line of vague shapes +in the mist. No grown person was in sight, but Barry was not ten feet +from the train before a screaming horde of small boys was upon him, +with shouted news in which he recognized the one word, over and over: +"Fire!" +</P> + +<P> +It took him a few minutes to get the sense of what they said. He stared +at them dully. But when he first repeated it to himself aloud, it +seemed already old news; he felt as if he had known it for a very long +time: "The MAIL office caught fire yesterday, and the whole thing is +burned to the ground." +</P> + +<P> +"Caught fire yesterday, and the whole thing is burned to the ground: +yes, of course," Barry said. He was not conscious of starting for the +scene, he was simply there. A fringe of idle watchers, obscured in the +fog, stood about the sunken ruins of what had been the MAIL building. +Barry joined them. +</P> + +<P> +He did not answer when a dozen sympathetic murmurs addressed him, +because he was not conscious of hearing a single voice. He stood +silently, looking down at the twisted great knots of metal that had +been the new presses, the great wave of soaked and half-burned +newspapers that had been the last issue of the MAIL. The fire had been +twenty-four hours ago, but the ruins were still smoking. Lengths of +charred woodwork, giving forth a sickening odor, dripped water still; +here and there brave little spurts of flame still sucked noisily. A +twisted typewriter stood erect in steaming ashes; a lunch-basket, with +a red, fringed napkin in it, had somehow escaped with only a wetting. +Barry noticed that the walls of the German bakery next door were badly +singed, that one show-window was cracked across, and that the frosted +wedding-cake inside stood in a pool of dirty water. +</P> + +<P> +He was presently aware that someone was telling him that nobody was to +blame. Details were volunteered, and he listened quietly, like a +dispassionate onlooker. "Hits you pretty hard, Barry," sympathetic +voices said. +</P> + +<P> +"Ruins me," he answered briefly. +</P> + +<P> +And it dawned upon him sickly and certainly that it was true. He was +ruined now. All his hopes had been rooted here, in what was now this +mass of wet ashes steaming up into the fog. Here had been his chance +for a livelihood, and a name; his chance to stand before the community +for what was good, and strong, and helpful. He had been proud because +his editorials were beginning to be quoted here and there; he had been +keenly ambitious for Sidney's plans, her hopes for Old Paloma. How vain +it all was now, and how preposterous it seemed that only an hour ago he +had let his thoughts of the future include her—always so far above +him, and now so infinitely removed! +</P> + +<P> +She would be sympathetic, he knew; she would be all kindness and +generosity. And perhaps, six months ago, he would have accepted more +generosity from her; but Barry had found himself now, and he knew that +she had done for him all he would let her do. +</P> + +<P> +He smiled suddenly and grimly as he remembered another bridge, just +burned behind him. If he had not promised Hetty's mother that her +income should go on uninterruptedly, he might have pulled something out +of this wreckage, after all. For a moment he speculated: he COULD sell +the Mission Street property now; he might even revive the MAIL, after a +while— +</P> + +<P> +But no, what was promised was promised, after all, and poor little Mrs. +Scott must be left to what peace and pleasure the certainty of an +income gave her. And he must begin again, somehow, somewhere, burdened +with a debt, burdened with a heartache, burdened with—His heart turned +with sudden warmth to the thought of Billy; Billy at least, staunch +little partner of so many dark days, and bright, should not be counted +a burden. +</P> + +<P> +Even as he thought of his son, a small warm hand slid into his with a +reassuring pressure, and lie looked down to see the little figure +beside him. Moment after moment went by, timid shafts of gold sunshine +were beginning to conquer the mist now, and still father and son stood +silent, hand in hand. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap17"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XVII +</H3> + +<P> +The mischief was done; no use to stand there by the smoking ruins of +what had been his one real hope for himself and his life. After a while +Barry roused himself. There seemed to be nothing to do at the moment, +no more to be said. He and Billy walked up River Street to their own +gate, but when they reached it, Barry, obeying an irresistible impulse, +merely left his coat and suit-case there, and went on through the Hall +gateway, and up to the house. +</P> + +<P> +The sun was coming out bravely now, and already he felt its warmth in +the garden. Everywhere the fog was rising, was fading against the green +of the trees. He followed a delicious odor of wood smoke and the sound +of voices, to the barnyard, and here found the lady of the house, with +her inevitable accompaniment of interested children. Sidney was +managing an immense brush fire with a long pole; her gingham skirt +pinned back trimly over a striped petticoat, her cheeks flushed, her +hair riotous under a gipsy hat. +</P> + +<P> +At Barry's first word she dropped her pole, her whole face grew +radiant, and she came toward him holding out both her hands. +</P> + +<P> +"Barry!" she said eagerly, her eyes trying to read his face, "how glad +I am you've come! We didn't know how to reach you. You've heard, of +course—! You've seen—?" +</P> + +<P> +"The poor old MAIL? Yes, I'm just from there," he said soberly. "Can we +talk?" +</P> + +<P> +"As long as you like," she answered briskly. And after some directions +to the children, she led him to the little garden seat below the side +porch, and they sat down. "Barry, you look tired," she said then. "Do +you know, I don't know where you've been all these days, or what you +went for? Was it to San Francisco?" +</P> + +<P> +"San Francisco, yes," he assented, "I didn't dream I'd be there so +long." He rubbed his forehead with a weary hand. "I'll tell you all +about it presently," he said. "I had a letter from my wife's mother +that worried me, and I started off at half-cock, I got worrying—but of +course I should have written you—" +</P> + +<P> +"Don't bother about that now, if it distresses you," she said quickly +and sympathetically. "Any time will do for that. I—I knew it was +something serious," she went on, relief in her voice, "or you wouldn't +have simply disappeared that way! I—I said so. Barry, are you hungry?" +</P> + +<P> +He tried to laugh at the maternal attitude that was never long absent +in her, but the tears came into his eyes instead. After all the strain +and sleeplessness and despondency, it was too poignantly sweet to find +her so simply cheering and trustful, in her gipsy dress, with the +brightening sunlight and the sweet old garden about her. Barry could +have dropped on his knees to bury his face in her skirts, and feel the +motherly hands on his hair, but instead he admitted honestly to hunger +and fatigue. +</P> + +<P> +Sidney vanished at once, and presently came back followed by her black +cook, both carrying a breakfast that Barry was to enjoy at once under +the rose vines. Sidney poured his coffee, and sat contentedly nibbling +toast while he fell upon the cold chicken and blackberries. +</P> + +<P> +"Now," said her heartening voice, "we'll talk! What is to be done first +about the MAIL?" +</P> + +<P> +"No insurance, you know," he began at once. "We never did carry any in +the old days and I suppose that's why I didn't. So that makes it a dead +loss. Worse than that—for I wasn't clear yet, you know. The safe they +carried out; so the books are all right, I suppose, although they say +we had better not open it for a few days. Then I can settle everything +up as far as possible. And after that—well, I've been thinking that +perhaps Barker, of the San Francisco TELEGRAM might give me a start of +some sort—" He rumpled his hair with a desperate gesture. "The thing's +come on me like such a thunderbolt that I really haven't thought it +out!" he ended apologetically. +</P> + +<P> +"The thing's come on you like such a thunderbolt," she echoed +cheerfully, "that you aren't taking it like yourself at all! The +question, is if we work like Trojans from now on, can we get an issue +of the MAIL out tomorrow?" +</P> + +<P> +"Get an issue out tomorrow!" he repeated, staring at her. +</P> + +<P> +"Certainly. I would have done what I could about it," said Sidney +briskly, "but not knowing where you were, or when you were coming back, +my hands were absolutely tied. Now, Barry, LISTEN!" she broke off, not +reassured by his expression, "and don't jump at the conclusion that +it's impossible. What would it mean?" +</P> + +<P> +"To get an issue of the MAIL out tomorrow? Why, great Scott, Sid, you +don't seem to realize that there's not a stick left standing!" +</P> + +<P> +"I do realize. I was there until the fire was out," she said calmly. +And for a few minutes they talked of the fire. Then she said abruptly: +"Would Ferguson let you use the old STAR PRESS for a few weeks, do you +think?" +</P> + +<P> +"I don't see why he should," Barry said perversely. +</P> + +<P> +"I don't see why he shouldn't. I'll tell you something you don't know. +Night before last, Barry, while I was down in the office, old Ferguson +himself came in, and poked about, and asked various questions. Finally +he asked me what I thought the chances were of your wanting to buy out +the Star. What do you think at THAT?" +</P> + +<P> +"He's sick of it, is he?" Barry said, with kindling eyes. "Well, we've +seen that coming, haven't we? I will be darned!" He shook his head +regretfully. "That would have been a big thing for the MAIL" he said, +"but it's all up now!" +</P> + +<P> +"Not necessarily," the lady undauntedly rejoined. "I've been thinking, +Barry," she went on, "if you reordered the presses, they'd give you +plenty of time to pay for them, wouldn't they? Might even take +something off the price, under the circumstances?" +</P> + +<P> +"I suppose they might." He made an impatient gesture. "But that's just +one—" +</P> + +<P> +"One item, I know. But it's the main item. Then you could rent the +office and loft over the old station, couldn't you? And move the old +Star press in there this afternoon." +</P> + +<P> +"This afternoon," said Barry calmly. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, we don't gain anything by waiting. You can write a manly and +affecting editorial,"—her always irrepressible laughter broke out, +"full of allusions to the phoenix, you know! And my regular Saturday +column is all done, and Miss Porter can send in something, and there's +any amount of stuff about the Folsom lawsuit. And Young, Mason and +Company ought to take at least a page to advertise their premium day +to-morrow. I'll come down as soon as you've moved—" +</P> + +<P> +Barry reached for his hat. +</P> + +<P> +"The thing can't be done," he announced firmly, "but, by George, Sid, +you would give a field mouse courage! And what a grandstand play, if we +COULD put it through! There's not a second to be lost, though. But look +here," and with sudden gravity he took both her hands, "it'll take some +more money, you know." +</P> + +<P> +"I have some more money," she answered serenely. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, I'll GET some!" he declared emphatically. "It won't be so much, +either, once we get started. And so old Ferguson wanted to sell, did +he?" +</P> + +<P> +"He did. And we'll buy the STAR yet." They were on the path now. +"Telephone me when you can," she said, "and don't lose a minute now! +Good luck!" +</P> + +<P> +And Barry's great stride had taken him half-way down River Street, his +hands in his pockets, his mind awhirl with plans, before it occurred to +him that he had not told her the news of Hetty, after all. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap18"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XVIII +</H3> + +<P> +On that same afternoon, several of the most influential members of the +Santa Paloma Woman's Club met informally at Mrs. Carew's house. Some of +the directors were there, Miss Pratt, Mrs. Lloyd and Mrs. Adams, and of +course Mrs. White, who had indeed been instrumental in arranging the +meeting. They had met to discuss Mrs. Burgoyne's plan of using the +clubhouse as a meeting place for the Old Paloma factory girls. All +these ladies were quite aware that their verdict, however unofficial, +would influence the rest of the club, and that what this group of a +dozen or fifteen decided upon to-day would practically settle the +matter. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Willard White, hitherto serenely supreme in this little world, was +curiously upset about the whole thing, openly opposed to Mrs. +Burgoyne's suggestion, and surprised that her mere wish in the matter +was not sufficient to carry a negative vote. Her contention was that +the clubhouse had been built for very different purposes than those +Mrs. Burgoyne proposed, and that charity to the Old Paloma girls had no +part in the club's original reasons for being. She meant, in the course +of the argument, to hint that while so many of the actual necessities +of decent living were lacking in the factory settlement homes, mere +dancing and moving-pictures did not appeal to her as reasonable or +right; and although uneasily aware that she supported the unpopular +argument, still she was confident of an eventual triumph. +</P> + +<P> +But despite the usual laughter, and the pleasantries and compliments, +there was an air of deadly earnestness about the gathered club-women +today that bespoke a deeper interest than was common in the matter up +for discussion. The President's color rose and deepened steadily, as +the afternoon wore on, and one voice after another declared for the new +plan, and her arguments became a little less impersonal and a little +more sharp. This was especially noticeable when, as was inevitable, the +name of Mrs. Burgoyne was introduced. +</P> + +<P> +"I personally feel," said Mrs. White finally, "that perhaps we Santa +Paloma women are just a little bit undignified when we allow a perfect +stranger to come in among us, and influence our lives so materially, +JUST because she happens to be a multi-millionaire. Are we so swayed by +mere money? I hope not. I hope we all live our lives as suits US best, +not to please—or shall I say flatter, and perhaps win favor with?—a +rich woman. We—some of us, that is!"—her smile was all +lenience—"have suddenly decided we can dress more simply, have +suddenly decided to put our girls into gingham rompers, and instead of +giving them little dancing parties, let them play about like boys! We +wonder why we need spend our money on imported hats and nice dinners +and hand-embroidered underwear, and Oriental rugs, although we thought +these things very well worth having a few months ago—and why? Just +because we are easily led, I'm afraid, and not quite conscious enough +of our own dignity!" +</P> + +<P> +There had been a decided heightening of color among the listening women +during this little speech, and, as the President finished, more than +one pair of eyes rested upon her with a slightly resentful steadiness. +There was a short silence, in which several women were gathering their +thoughts for speech, but Mrs. Brown, always popular in Santa Paloma, +from the days of her short braids and short dresses, and quite the +youngest among them to-day, was the first to speak. +</P> + +<P> +"I daresay that is quite true, Mrs. White," said Mrs. Brown, with +dignity, "except that I don't think Mrs. Burgoyne's money influences +me, or any of us! I admit that she herself, quite apart from her great +fortune, has influenced me tremendously in lots of ways, but I don't +think she ever tried to do it, or realizes that she has. And as far as +copying goes, don't we women always copy somebody, anyway? Aren't we +always imitating the San Francisco women, and don't they copy New York, +and doesn't New York copy London or Paris? We read what feathers are +in, and how skirts are cut, and how coffee and salads are served, and +we all do it, or try to. And when Mrs. Burgoyne came to the Hall, and +never took one particle of interest in that sort of thing, I just +thought it over and wondered why I should attempt to impress a woman +who could buy this whole town and not miss the money?" +</P> + +<P> +Laughter interrupted her, and some sympathetic clapping, but she +presently went on seriously: +</P> + +<P> +"I took all the boys' white socks one day, and dyed them dark brown. +And I dyed all their white suits dark blue. I've gotten myself some +galatea dresses that nothing tears or spoils, and that come home fresh +and sweet from the wash every week. And, as a result, I actually have +some time to spare, for the first time since I was married. We are +going to try some educational experiments on the children this winter, +and, if that leaves any leisure, I am heart and soul for this new plan. +Doctor Brown feels as I do. Of course, he's a doctor," said the loyal +little wife, "and he KNOWS! And he says that all those Old Paloma girls +want is a little mothering, and that when there are mothers enough to +go round, there won't be any charity or legislation needed in this +world." +</P> + +<P> +"I think you've said it all, for all of us, Mary!" Mrs. Carew said, +when some affectionate applause had subsided. "I think things were +probably different, a few generations ago," she went on, "but nowadays +when fashions are so arbitrary, and change so fast, really and +honestly, some of us, whose incomes are limited, will have to stop +somewhere. Why, the very children expect box-parties, and motor-trips, +and caterers' suppers, in these days. And one wouldn't mind, if it left +time for home life, and reading, and family intercourse, but it +doesn't. We don't know what our children are studying, what they're +thinking about, or what life means to them at all, because we are too +busy answering the telephone, and planning clothes, and writing formal +notes, and going to places we feel we ought to be seen in. I'm having +more fun than I had in years, helping our children plan some abridged +plays from Shakespeare, with the Burgoyne girls, for this winter, and +I'm perfectly astonished, even though I'm their mother, at their +enjoyment of it, and at my own. Mr. Carew himself, who NEVER takes much +interest in that sort of thing, asked me why they couldn't give them +for the Old Paloma Girls' Club, if they get a club room. I didn't know +he even knew anything about our club plans. I said, 'George, are you +willing to have Jeannette get interested in that crowd?' and he said, +'Finest thing in the world for her!' and I don't know," finished Mrs. +Carew, thoughtfully, "but what he's right." +</P> + +<P> +"I'm all for it," said breezy Mrs. Lloyd, "I don't imagine I'd be any +good at actually talking to them, but I would go to the dances, and +introduce people, and trot partners up to the wallflowers—" +</P> + +<P> +There was more laughter, and then Mrs. Adams said briskly: +</P> + +<P> +"Well, let's take an informal vote!" +</P> + +<P> +"I don't think that's necessary, Sue," said Mrs. White, generously, "I +think I am the only one of us who believes in preserving the tradition +of the dear old club, and I must bow to the majority, of course. +Perhaps it will be a little hard to see strangers there; our pretty +floors ruined, and our pretty walls spotted, but—" an eloquent shrug, +and a gesture of her pretty hands finished the sentence with the words, +"isn't that the law?" +</P> + +<P> +And upon whole-hearted applause for Mrs. White, Mrs. Carew tactfully +introduced the subject of tea. +</P> + +<P> +They were all chatting amicably enough in the dining-room a few minutes +later when George Carew and Barry Valentine came in. Barry, who seemed +excited, exhilarated and tired, had come to borrow a typewriter from +the Carews. He responded to sympathetic inquiries, that he had been +working like a madman since noon, and that there would be an issue of +the Mail ready for them in the morning. He said, "everyone had been +simply corking about everything," and it began to look like smooth +sailing now. In the few minutes that he waited for young George Carew +to find the typewriter and bring it down to him, a fresh interruption +occurred in the entrance of old Mrs. Apostleman. +</P> + +<P> +Mrs. Apostleman, between being out of breath from hurrying up the hill +in the late afternoon heat, and fearful that the gathering would break +up before she could say what she wanted to say, and entirely unable to +control her gasping and puffing, was a sight at once funny and +pitiable. As she sank into a comfortable chair she held up one fat hand +to command attention, and with the other laid forcible hold upon Barry +Valentine. Three or four of the younger women hurried to her with fans +and tea, and in a moment or two she really could manage disconnected +words. +</P> + +<P> +"Thanks, me dear. No, no cake. Just a mouthful of tea to—there, that's +better! I was afraid ye'd all be gone—that'll do, thank ye, Susie! +Well," she set down her tea-cup, "well! I've a little piece of news for +you all—don't go, Barry, you'll be interested in this, and I couldn't +wait to come up and tell ye!" She began to fumble in her bag, and +presently produced therefrom her eye-glasses and a letter. The latter +she opened with a great crackling of paper. +</P> + +<P> +"This is from me brother, Alexander Wetherall," said she, with an +impressive glance over her glasses. "As ye know, he's a family lawyer +in New York, he has the histories of half the old families in the +country pigeon-holed away in those old offices of his. He doesn't write +me very often; his wife does now and then—stupid woman, but nice. +However, I wrote him in May, and told him Mrs. Burgoyne had bought the +Hall, and just asked him what he knew about her and her people. Here—" +marking a certain line with a pudgy, imperative finger, she handed a +page of the letter to Barry, "read from there on," she commanded, "this +is what he says." +</P> + +<P> +Barry took the paper, but hesitated. +</P> + +<P> +"It's all right!" said the old lady, impatiently, "nobody could say +anything that wasn't good about Sidney Burgoyne." +</P> + +<P> +Thus reassured, Barry turned obediently to the indicated place. +</P> + +<P> +"'You ask me about your new neighbor,'" he read, "'I suppose of course +you know that she is Paul Frothingham's only child by his second +marriage. Her mother died while she was a baby, and Frothingham took +her all over the world with him, wherever he went. She married very +young, Colonel John Burgoyne, of the Maryland family, older than she, +but a very fine fellow. As a girl and as his wife she had an +extraordinary opportunity for social success, she was a great favorite +in the diplomatic circle at Washington, and well known in the best +London set, and in the European capitals. She seems to be quite a +remarkable young woman, but you are all wrong about her money; she is +very far from rich. She—'" +</P> + +<P> +Barry stopped short. Mrs. Apostleman cackled delightedly; no one else +stirred. +</P> + +<P> +"'She got very little of Frothingham's money,'" Barry presently read +on, '"it came to him from his first wife, who was a widow with two +daughters when he married her. The money naturally reverted to her +girls, Mrs. Fred Senior and Mrs. Spencer Mack, both of this city.'" +</P> + +<P> +"Ha! D'ye get that?" said Mrs. Apostleman. "Go on!" +</P> + +<P> +"'Frothingham left his own daughter something considerably less than a +hundred thousand dollars,'" Barry presently resumed, "'not more than +seventy or eighty thousand, certainly. It is still invested in the +estate. It must pay her three or four thousand a year. And besides that +she has only Burgoyne's insurance, twenty or twenty-five thousand, for +those years of illness pretty well used up his own money. I believe the +stepsisters were very anxious to make her a more generous arrangement, +but she seems to have declined it. Alice says they are quite devoted—'" +</P> + +<P> +"Alice don't count!" said the old lady "that's his wife. That's +enough." She stopped the reader and refolded the letter, her +mischievous eyes dancing. "Well, what d'ye think of that?" she demanded. +</P> + +<P> +Barry's bewildered, "Well, I will be darned!" set loose a babel of +tongues. Mrs. Apostleman had not counted in vain upon a sensation; +everyone talked at once. Mrs. White's high, merry laugh dominated all +the other voices. +</P> + +<P> +"So there is a very much better reason for this +simple-dinner-blue-gingham existence than we supposed," said the +President of the Santa Paloma Women's Club amusedly when the first rush +of comment died away. "I think that is quite delicious! While all of us +were feeling how superior she was not to get a motor, and not to +rebuild the Hall, she was simply living within her income, and making +the best of it!" +</P> + +<P> +"I don't know that it makes her any less superior," Mrs. Carew said +thoughtfully. "It—it certainly makes her seem—NICER. I never +suspected her of—well, of preaching, exactly, but I have sometimes +thought that she really couldn't enter into our point of view, with all +that money! I think I'm going to like her more than ever!" she finished +laughingly. +</P> + +<P> +"Why, it's the greatest relief in the world!" exclaimed Mrs. Adams. +"I've been rather holding back about going up there, and imitating her, +because I honestly didn't want to be influenced by eight millions, and +I was afraid. I WAS. Not a week ago Wayne asked me if I thought she'd +like him to donate a sewing machine to her Girls' Club for them to run +up their little costumes with—he has the agency, you know—and I said, +'Oh, don't, Wayne, she can buy them a sewing machine apiece if she +wants to, and never know it!' But I'm going to make him write her, +TO-NIGHT," said Mrs. Adams, firmly, "and I declare I feel as if a +weight had dropped off my shoulders. It MEANS so much more now, if we +offer her the club. It means that we aren't merely giving a Lady +Bountiful her way, but that we're all working together like neighbors, +and trying to do some good in the world." +</P> + +<P> +"And I don't think there's any question that she would live exactly +this way," Miss Pratt contributed shyly, "and play with the children, +and dress as she does, even if she had fifty millions! She's simply +found out what pays in this life, and what doesn't pay, and I think a +good many of us were living too hard and fast ever to stop and think +whether it was really worth while or not. She's the happiest woman I +ever knew; it makes one happy just to be with her, and no money can buy +that." +</P> + +<P> +"But it's curious she never has taken the trouble to undeceive us," +said Mrs. White beginning to fit on an immaculate pair of white gloves, +finger by finger. +</P> + +<P> +"Why—you'll see!—She never dreamed we thought she was anything but +one of ourselves." Mrs. Brown predicted. "Why should she? When did she +ever speak of money, or take the least interest in money? She never +speaks of it. She says 'I can't afford the time, or I can't afford the +effort,' that's what counts with her. Doesn't it, Barry?" +</P> + +<P> +"Barry, do you really suppose—" Mrs. Carew was beginning, as she +turned to the doorway where he had been standing. +</P> + +<P> +But Barry had gone. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR> + +<A NAME="chap19"></A> +<H3 ALIGN="center"> +CHAPTER XIX +</H3> + +<P> +Barry went straight up to the Hall, but Sidney was not there. Joanna +and Ellen, busily murmuring over "Flower Ladies" on the wide terrace +steps, told him that Mother was to be late to supper, and, with +obviously forced hospitality and one eye upon their little families of +inverted roses and hollyhocks, asked him to wait. Barry thanked them, +but couldn't wait. +</P> + +<P> +He went like a man in a dream down River Street, past gardens that +glowed with fragrant beauty, and under the great trees and the warm, +sunset sky. And what a good world it seemed to be alive in, and what a +friendly village in which to find work and love and content. A dozen +returning householders, stopping at their gates, wanted the news of his +venture, a dozen freshly-clad, interested women, watering lawns in the +shade, called out to wish him good fortune. And always, before his +eyes, the thought of the vanished millions danced like a star. She was +not infinitely removed, she was not set apart by great fortune, she was +only the sweetest and best of women, to be wooed and won like any +other. He ran upstairs and flung open the door of the little bare new +office of the MAIL, like an impetuous boy. There was no one there. But +a wide white hat with a yellow rose pinned on it hung above the new oak +desk in the corner, and his heart rose at the sight. His own desk had +an improvised drop light hung over it; he lowered the typewriter from +his cramped arm upon a mass of clippings and notes. Beyond this room +was the great bare loft, where two or three oily men were still toiling +in the fading light over the establishing of the old STAR press. Sashes +had been taken from one of the big windows to admit the entrance of the +heavier parts; thick pulley ropes dangled at the sill. Great unopened +bundles of gray paper filled the center of the floor, a slim amused +youth was putting the finishing touches to a telephone on the wall, and +Sidney, bare-headed, very business-like and keenly interested, was +watching everybody and making suggestions. She greeted Barry with a +cheerful wave of the hand. +</P> + +<P> +"There you are!" she said, relievedly. "Come and see what you think of +this. Do you know this office is going to be much nicer than the old +one? How goes everything with you?" +</P> + +<P> +"Like lightning!" he answered. "At this rate, there's nothing to it at +all. Have the press boys showed up yet?" +</P> + +<P> +"They are over at the hotel, getting their dinners," she explained. +"And we have borrowed lamps from the hotel to use here this evening. +Did you hear that Martin, of the Press, you know, has offered to send +over the A.P. news as fast as it comes in? Isn't that very decent of +him? Here's Miss Porter's stuff." +</P> + +<P> +She sat down, and began to assort papers on her desk, quite absorbed in +what she was doing. Barry, at his own desk, opened and shut a drawer or +two noisily, but he was really watching her, with a thumping heart. +Watching the bare brown head, the lowered lashes, the mouth that moved +occasionally in time with her busy thoughts— +</P> + +<P> +Suddenly she looked up, and their eyes met. +</P> + +<P> +Without the faintest consciousness of what he did, Barry crossed the +floor between them, and as, on an equally unconscious impulse, she +stood up, paling and breathless, he laid his hand over hers on the +littered desk, and they stood so, staring at each other, the desk +between them. +</P> + +<P> +"Sidney," he said incoherently, "who—where—where did your father's +money go—who got it?" +</P> + +<P> +She looked at him in utter bewilderment. +</P> + +<P> +"Where did WHAT—father's money? Who got it? Are you crazy, Barry?" she +stammered. +</P> + +<P> +"Ah, Sidney, tell me! Did it come to you?" +</P> + +<P> +"Why—why—" She seemed suddenly to understand that there was some +reason for the question, and answered quite readily: "It belonged to my +father's first wife, Barry, most of it. And it went to her daughters, +my step-sisters, they are older than I and both married—" +</P> + +<P> +"Then you're NOT worth eight million dollars?" +</P> + +<P> +"I—? Why, you know I'm not!" Her eyes were at their widest. "Who ever +said I was? <I>I</I> never said so!" +</P> + +<P> +"But everyone in town thinks so!" Barry's great sigh of relief came +from his very soul. +</P> + +<P> +Sidney, pale before, grew very red. She freed her hands, and sat down. +</P> + +<P> +"Well, they are very silly, then!" she said, almost crossly. And as the +thought expanded, she added, "But I don't see how anyone COULD! They +must have thought my letting them help me out with the Flower Show and +begging for the Old Paloma girls was a nice piece of affectation! If I +had eight million dollars, or one million, don't you suppose I'd be +DOING something, instead of puttering away with just the beginning of +things!" The annoyed color deepened. "I hope you're mistaken, Barry," +said she. "Why didn't you set them right?" +</P> + +<P> +"I! Why, I thought so too!" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, Barry! What a hypocrite you must have thought me!" She buried her +rosy face in her hand for a moment. Presently she rushed on, half +indignantly, "—With all my talk about the sinfulness of American +women, who persistently attempt a scheme of living that is far beyond +their incomes! And talking of the needs of the poor all over the world, +with all that money lying idle!" +</P> + +<P> +"I thought of it chiefly as an absolute and immovable barrier between +us," Barry said honestly, "and that was as far as my thinking went." +</P> + +<P> +Her eyes met his with that curious courage she had when a difficult +moment had to be faced. +</P> + +<P> +"There is a more serious barrier than that between us," she reminded +him gravely. +</P> + +<P> +"Hetty!" he said stupidly. "But I TOLD you—" +</P> + +<P> +But he stopped short, realizing that he had not yet told her, and +rather at a loss. +</P> + +<P> +"You didn't tell me anything," she said, eyeing him steadily. +</P> + +<P> +"Why," Barry's tone was much lower, "I meant to tell you first of all, +but—you know what a day I have had! It seems impossible that I only +left San Francisco this morning." +</P> + +<P> +He brought his chair from his own desk, and sat opposite her, and, +while the summer twilight outside deepened into dusk, unmindful of +time, he went over the pitiful little story. Sidney listened, her +serious eyes never leaving his face, her fine hands locked idly before +her. The telephone boy and the movers had gone now, and there was +silence all about. +</P> + +<P> +"You have suffered enough, Barry; thank God it is all over!" she said, +at the end, "and we know," she went on, with one of her rare +revelations of the spiritual deeps that lay so close to the surface of +her life, "we know that she is safe and satisfied at last, in His +care." For a moment her absent eyes seemed to fathom far spaces. Barry +abruptly broke the silence. +</P> + +<P> +"For one year, Sidney," he said, in a purposeful, steady voice that was +new to her, and that brought her eyes, almost startled, to his face, +"for one year I'm going to show you what I can do. In that time the +Mail will be where it was before the fire, if all goes well. And then—" +</P> + +<P> +"Then—" she said, a little unsteadily, rising and gathering hat and +gloves together, "then you shall come to me and tell me anything you +like! But—but not now! All this is so new and so strange—" +</P> + +<P> +"Ah, but Sidney!" he pleaded, taking her hands again, "mayn't I speak +of it just this one day, and then never again? Let me think for this +whole year that PERHAPS you will marry a country editor, and that we +shall spend the rest of our lives together, writing and planning, and +tramping through the woods, and picnicking with the kiddies on the +river, and giving Christmas parties for every little rag-tag and +bob-tail in Old Paloma!" +</P> + +<P> +"But you don't want to settle down in this stupid village," she laughed +tremulously, tears on her lashes, "at the ugly old Hall, and among +these superficial empty-headed women?" +</P> + +<P> +"Just here," he said, smiling at his own words, "in the sweetest place +in the world, among the best neighbors! I never want to go anywhere +else. Our friends are here, our work is here—" +</P> + +<P> +"And we are here!" she finished it for him, laughing. Barry, with a +great rising breath, put his arms about the white figure, and crushed +her to him, and Sidney laid her hand on his shoulder, and raised her +face honestly for his first kiss. +</P> + +<P> +"And now let me go home to my neglected girls," she said, after an +interval. "You have a busy night ahead of you, and your press boys will +be here any minute." +</P> + +<P> +But first she took a sheet of yellow copy paper, and wrote on it, "One +year of silence. August thirtieth to August thirtieth." "Is this +inclusive?" she asked, looking up. +</P> + +<P> +"Exclusive," said Barry, firmly. +</P> + +<P> +"Exclusive," she echoed obediently. And when she had added the word, +she folded the sheet and gave it to Barry. "There is a little reminder +for you," said she. +</P> + +<P> +Barry went down to the street door with her, to watch her start +homeward in the sweet summer darkness. +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, one more thing I meant to say," she said, as they stood on the +platform of what had been the old station, "I don't know why I haven't +said it already, or why you haven't." +</P> + +<P> +"And that is, Madam—?" he asked attentively. +</P> + +<P> +"It's just this," she swayed a little nearer to him—her laughing voice +was no more than a whisper. "I love you, Barry!" +</P> + +<P> +"Haven't I said that?" he asked a little hoarsely. +</P> + +<P> +"Not yet." +</P> + +<P> +"Then I say it," he answered steadily, "I love you, my darling!" +</P> + +<P> +"Oh, not here, Barry—in the street!" was Mrs. Burgoyne's next remark. +</P> + +<P> +But there was no moon, and no witnesses but the blank walls and +shuttered windows of neighboring storehouses. And the silent year had +not, after all, fairly begun. +</P> + +<BR><BR><BR><BR> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Rich Mrs. Burgoyne, by Kathleen Norris + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE *** + +***** This file should be named 4288-h.htm or 4288-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/4/2/8/4288/ + +Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. HTML version by Al Haines. + + +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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