<div><span class='pageno' title='349' id='Page_349'></span><h1>XX</h1></div>
<p class='pindent'>General Goguet and Roelf Pool had
been in Chicago one night and part of a day.
Dirk had not met them—was to meet them at
Paula’s dinner that evening. He was curious about
Pool but not particularly interested in the warrior.
Restless, unhappy, wanting to see Dallas (he admitted
it, bitterly) he dropped into her studio at an unaccustomed
hour almost immediately after lunch and
heard gay voices and laughter. Why couldn’t she work
alone once in a while without that rabble around her!</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dallas in a grimy smock and the scuffed kid slippers
was entertaining two truants from Chicago society—General
Emile Goguet and Roelf Pool. They seemed
to be enjoying themselves immensely. She introduced
Dirk as casually as though their presence were a natural
and expected thing—which it was. She had
never mentioned them to him. Yet now: “This is
Dirk DeJong—General Emile Goguet. We were
campaigners together in France. Roelf Pool. So
were we, weren’t we, Roelf?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>General Emile Goguet bowed formally, but his eyes
were twinkling. He appeared to be having a very
good time. Roelf Pool’s dark face had lighted up
with such a glow of surprise and pleasure as to transform
it. He strode over to Dirk, clasped his hand.
“Dirk DeJong! Not—why, say, don’t you know me?
I’m Roelf Pool!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I ought to know you,” said Dirk.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, but I mean I’m—I knew you when you were a
kid. You’re Selina’s Dirk. Aren’t you? My Selina.
I’m driving out to see her this afternoon. She’s
one of my reasons for being here. Why, I’m——”
He was laughing, talking excitedly, like a boy. Dallas,
all agrin, was enjoying it immensely.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“They’ve run away,” she explained to Dirk, “from
the elaborate programme that was arranged for them
this afternoon. I don’t know where the French got
their reputation for being polite. The General is a
perfect boor, aren’t you? And scared to death of
women. He’s the only French general in captivity
who ever took the trouble to learn English.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>General Goguet nodded violently and roared. “And
you?” he said to Dirk in his careful and perfect English.
“You, too, are an artist?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No,” Dirk said, “not an artist.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What, then?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why—uh—bonds. That is, the banking business.
Bonds.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ah, yes,” said General Goguet, politely. “Bonds.
A very good thing, bonds. We French are very fond
of them. We have great respect for American bonds,
we French.” He nodded and twinkled and turned
away to Dallas.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“We’re all going,” announced Dallas, and made
a dash for the stuffy little bedroom off the studio.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Well, this was a bit too informal. “Going where?”
inquired Dirk. The General, too, appeared bewildered.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Roelf explained, delightedly. “It’s a plot. We’re
all going to drive out to your mother’s. You’ll go,
won’t you? You simply must.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Go?” now put in General Goguet. “Where is it
that we go? I thought we stayed here, quietly. It is
quiet here, and no reception committees.” His tone
was wistful.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Roelf attempted to make it clear. “Mr. DeJong’s
mother is a farmer. You remember I told you all
about her in the ship coming over. She was wonderful
to me when I was a kid. She was the first person
to tell me what beauty was—is. She’s magnificent.
She raises vegetables.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ah! A farm! But yes! I, too, am a farmer.
Well!” He shook Dirk’s hand again. He appeared
now for the first time to find him interesting.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Of course I’ll go. Does Mother know you’re coming?
She has been hoping she’d see you but she
thought you’d grown so grand——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Wait until I tell her about the day I landed in
Paris with five francs in my pocket. No, she doesn’t
know we’re coming, but she’ll be there, won’t she?
I’ve a feeling she’ll be there, exactly the same. She
will, won’t she?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“She’ll be there.” It was early spring; the busiest
of seasons on the farm.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dallas emerged in greatcoat and a new spring
hat. She waved a hand to the faithful Gilda Hanan.
“Tell any one who inquires for me that I’ve felt
the call of spring. And if the boy comes for that
clay pack picture tell him to-morrow was the
day.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They were down the stairs and off in the powerful
car that seemed to be at the visitors’ disposal. Through
the Loop, up Michigan Avenue, into the south side.
Chicago, often lowering and gray in April, was wearing
gold and blue to-day. The air was sharp but beneath
the brusqueness of it was a gentle promise.
Dallas and Pool were very much absorbed in Paris
plans, Paris reminiscences. “And do you remember the
time we . . . only seven francs among the lot
of us and the dinner was . . . you’re surely coming
over in June, then . . . oils . . .
you’ve got the thing, I tell you . . . you’ll be
great, Dallas . . . remember what Vibray said
. . . study . . . work . . .”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dirk was wretched. He pointed out objects of interest
to General Goguet. Sixty miles of boulevard.
Park system. Finest in the country. Grand Boulevard.
Drexel Boulevard. Jackson Park. Illinois
Central trains. Terrible, yes, but they were electrifying.
Going to make ’em run by electricity, you know.
Things wouldn’t look so dirty, after that. Halsted
Street. Longest street in the world.</p>
<p class='pindent'>And, “Ah, yes,” said the General, politely. “Ah,
yes. Quite so. Most interesting.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The rich black loam of High Prairie. A hint of
fresh green things just peeping out of the earth. Hothouses.
Coldframes. The farm.</p>
<p class='pindent'>It looked very trim and neat. The house, white
with green shutters (Selina’s dream realized), smiled
at them from among the willows that were already
burgeoning hazily under the wooing of a mild and
early spring.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But I thought you said it was a small farm!” said
General Goguet, as they descended from the car. He
looked about at the acreage.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It is small,” Dirk assured him. “Only about
forty acres.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ah, well, you Americans. In France we farm on
a very small scale, you understand. We have not the
land. The great vast country.” He waved his right
arm. You felt that if the left sleeve had not been
empty he would have made a large and sweeping gesture
with both arms.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina was not in the neat quiet house. She was not
on the porch, or in the yard. Meena Bras, phlegmatic
and unflustered, came in from the kitchen. Mis’
DeJong was in the fields. She would call her. This
she proceeded to do by blowing three powerful blasts
and again three on a horn which she took from a
hook on the wall. She stood in the kitchen doorway
facing the fields, blowing, her red cheeks puffed
outrageously. “That brings her,” Meena assured
them; and went back to her work. They came out
on the porch to await Selina. She was out on the west
sixteen—the west sixteen that used to be unprolific,
half-drowned muckland. Dirk felt a little uneasy,
and ashamed that he should feel so.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Then they saw her coming, a small dark figure
against the background of sun and sky and fields. She
came swiftly yet ploddingly, for the ground was heavy.
They stood facing her, the four of them. As she
came nearer they saw that she was wearing a dark skirt
pinned up about her ankles to protect it from the wet
spring earth and yet it was spattered with a border of
mud spots. A rough heavy gray sweater was buttoned
closely about the straight slim body. On her
head was a battered soft black hat. Her feet, in
broad-toed sensible boots, she lifted high out of the
soft clinging soil. As she came nearer she took off
her hat and holding it a little to one side against the
sun, shaded her eyes with it. Her hair blew a little
in the gentle spring breeze. Her cheeks were faintly
pink. She was coming up the path now. She could
distinguish their faces. She saw Dirk; smiled, waved.
Her glance went inquiringly to the others—the bearded
man in uniform, the tall girl, the man with the
dark vivid face. Then she stopped, suddenly, and her
hand went to her heart as though she had felt a great
pang, and her lips were parted, and her eyes enormous.
As Roelf came forward swiftly she took a few
quick running steps toward him like a young girl. He
took the slight figure in the mud-spattered skirt, the
rough gray sweater, and the battered old hat into his
arms.</p>
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