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<h1><cite>Jean Craig In New York</cite></h1>
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<p class="center">FALCON
<ANTIMG class="vertical-align" src="images/colophon-bw.png" width-obs="80" height-obs="75" alt="" />
BOOKS</p>
<p class="center p120"><cite>Jean Craig In New York</cite></p>
<p class="center">BY KAY LYTTLETON</p>
<p class="noi">When lovely Jean Craig moved with her
family to Woodhow farm in Connecticut,
she thought she was giving up her art lessons
forever. And then suddenly the opportunity
came to go to New York to
study, and she went to live with her cousin
Beth in the suburbs of New York. These
months were an exciting interlude in her
life. She loved seeing her old friends
again, going to parties, and meeting new
people, among them Aldo Thomas, an
artist from Italy.</p>
<p><cite>Jean Craig in New York</cite> tells of Jean’s
adventures in the city, but it is also the
story of the Craigs who meet life’s adventures
with gaiety and courage.</p>
<p class="center mt3">Other FALCON BOOKS for Girls:</p>
<p class="center">JEAN CRAIG GROWS UP<br/>
JEAN CRAIG FINDS ROMANCE<br/>
PATTY AND JO, DETECTIVES</p>
</div>
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<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="644" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> There sat a robust, middle-aged newcomer.</div>
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<p class="center p180"><cite>JEAN CRAIG<br/>
IN NEW YORK</cite></p>
<p class="center p120">by KAY LYTTLETON</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/colophon-bw.png" width-obs="80" height-obs="75" alt="Falcon Books Colophon" /></div>
<p class="center">THE WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY<br/>
<small>CLEVELAND AND NEW YORK</small></p>
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<p class="center">Falcon Books<br/>
<i>are published by</i> THE WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY<br/>
<i>2231 West 110th Street · Cleveland 2 · Ohio</i></p>
<p class="center mt3">W 2</p>
<p class="center">COPYRIGHT 1948 BY THE WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY</p>
<p class="center">MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
</div>
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<h2 id="Contents">Contents</h2></div>
<table summary="Contents">
<tr>
<td class="tdr">1.</td>
<td class="tdl">Jean Finds a Stranger</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#i">9</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">2.</td>
<td class="tdl">New York Cousins</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#ii">23</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">3.</td>
<td class="tdl">Exhibit A</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#iii">38</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">4.</td>
<td class="tdl">Christmas at the Ellis Place</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#iv">52</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">5.</td>
<td class="tdl">New York Dreams Come True</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#v">61</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">6.</td>
<td class="tdl">Leaving Home</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#vi">75</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">7.</td>
<td class="tdl">Aldo from Italy</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#vii">82</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">8.</td>
<td class="tdl">Jean Meets a Contessa</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#viii">94</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">9.</td>
<td class="tdl">Letters from Home</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#ix">109</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">10.</td>
<td class="tdl">At the Art Academy</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#x">122</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">11.</td>
<td class="tdl">The Sculptured Head</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xi">136</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">12.</td>
<td class="tdl">From Out of the West</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xii">148</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">13.</td>
<td class="tdl">Spring Picnic</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xiii">158</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">14.</td>
<td class="tdl">Billie’s Crisis</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xiv">172</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">15.</td>
<td class="tdl">Fire!</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xv">190</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">16.</td>
<td class="tdl">Future Plans</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xvi">205</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
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<p class="center p180">JEAN CRAIG IN NEW YORK</p>
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9"></SPAN>9</span>
<h2 id="i">1. Jean Finds a Stranger</h2></div>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">It</span> was just
five days before Christmas when a
pink express card arrived in the noon mail.
The Craigs knew there must be something unusual
in the mail, for Mr. Ricketts, the rural
free delivery carrier, had lingered at the end
of the drive.</p>
<p>Jean, the oldest of the four children, slipped
into a coat and stadium boots and ran down the
drive to see what he wanted.</p>
<p>“There’s something for you folks at the express
office, I guess. If it’s anything heavy I
suggest you go down and get it today. Looks
like we’d have some snow before nightfall.”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10"></SPAN>10</span>
He waited while Jean glanced at the card.
“Know what it is?”</p>
<p>“Why, no, I don’t believe I do,” she answered.
“We’ve gotten all our Christmas
packages. Maybe they’re books for Dad.”</p>
<p>“Like enough,” said Mr. Ricketts. “I
didn’t know. I always feel a little bit interested,
you know.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know,” laughed Jean, as he started
his truck. She hurried back to the house, her
head down against the wind. The front door
banged as Kit, fifteen and two years younger
than Jean, let her in, her hands floury from
baking.</p>
<p>“For Pete’s sake, why do you stand talking
all day to that old gossip? Any mail from the
West?”</p>
<p>The previous spring, the Craig family had
moved to Elmhurst, Connecticut, because of
Mr. Craig’s health. Due to a war injury,
he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11"></SPAN>11</span>
had required a complete rest. At the suggestion
of his cousin Rebecca, the family had left
Long Island to live on a farm. Rural living
was far different from anything Jean, Kit,
thirteen-year-old Doris, and eleven-year-old
Tommy were used to, but they grew to love
it more and more as they made new friends and
discovered the never-ending surprises that the
country held for them.</p>
<p>As told in <cite>Jean Craig Grows Up</cite>, the family
met their landlord, Ralph McRae, a young
good-looking boy of twenty-four, from Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan, who was immediately
attracted to Jean. When he returned to his
western ranch, he took Buzzy Hancock, his
cousin and Kit’s best friend, back with him.
Now, Jean was finding it hard to wait for the
summer to come when Ralph and Buzzy
would return.</p>
<p>With a letter from Ralph in her hand,
Jean<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12"></SPAN>12</span>
answered Kit’s questions hurriedly. “Mr.
Ricketts only wanted to know about an express
package, whether it was heavy or light,
where it came from, and if we expected it.”
She piled the rest of the mail on the dining
room table. “There is no mail from Saskatoon
for you, Kit, only for me.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I thought maybe Buzzy might have
written to me. The mug, he promised to send
me a silver fox skin for Christmas, if he could
find one. I’m going to give up waiting for it.
With Christmas five days away, he surely
would have sent it by now.”</p>
<p>Kit’s face was perfectly serious. Buzzy had
asked her before he left Elmhurst what she
would like best, and she had told him. The
others laughed at her, but she held firmly to
the idea that if it were possible, Buzzy would
get it for her.</p>
<p>Jean was engrossed in a five-page
letter<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13"></SPAN>13</span>
from Ralph and had paid no attention to Kit’s
remarks. She finished reading the letter, full
of Christmas wishes and regret for having to
be away from her, especially during the holiday
season, and opened another from one of
the students at the Academy back in New
York. The previous winter, Jean had studied
art there and had been sorry to give it up.</p>
<p>“Peg Moffat is taking up impressionism.”
Jean turned back to the first page of the letter
she had been reading. “She says she never fully
realized before that art is only the highest
form of expressing your ideals to the world at
large.”</p>
<p>“Tell her she’s all wrong.” Kit looked up
from her seed catalogues. “Becky told me the
other day she believes schools were first invented
for the relief of distressed parents just
to give them a breathing spell, and not for kids
at all.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14"></SPAN>14</span>“Still,
if Peg’s hit a new trail of interest, it
will make her think she’s really working.
Things have come to her so easily, she doesn’t
appreciate them. Perhaps she can express herself
now.”</p>
<p>“Express herself? For gosh sakes, Jeannie,
tell her to come up here, and we’ll let her express
herself all over the place. Gee! Just smell
my mince pies this minute. Isn’t cooking an expression
of individual art too?” And Kit made
a beeline for the oven in time to rescue four
mince pies.</p>
<p>“Who’s going to drive down after the package?”
asked Mrs. Craig from the doorway. “I
want to send an order for groceries too and
you’ll want to be back before dark.”</p>
<p>“I’m terribly sorry, Mom,” called Kit
from the kitchen, “but Lucy and some of the
girls are coming over and I promised them I’d
go after evergreen and Princess pine. We’re
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15"></SPAN>15</span>getting
it for wreaths and stars to decorate the
church.”</p>
<p>“Tommy and I’ll go. I love the drive.” Jean
handed Peg’s letter over to Kit to read, and
gave just a bit of a sigh. Nobody could possibly
have sustained any inward melancholy at
Woodhow. There was too much to be done
every minute of the day. Still, Peg’s letter did
bring back vividly memories of last winter
at the Art Academy. Perhaps the students did
take themselves and their aims too seriously,
yet it had all been wonderful and interesting.
Even in the peaceful countryside, Jean missed
the companionship of girls her own age, with
the same tastes and interests as herself.</p>
<p>She called to Tommy, who was down in the
basement making a model airplane, and told
him to come with her to the express office. He
came upstairs under protest, his face smeared
with dirt.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16"></SPAN>16</span>
“Gosh, Tommy, you look a sight. If you’re
going to come with me, you’ll have to wash
first. Look at your hands.”</p>
<p>“Gee, whiz,” he grumbled, “what’s the
use in washing all the time. A guy only gets
dirty again, anyway.” But he leisurely went
upstairs and came down again after what
seemed to Jean an unnecessarily long time.</p>
<p>“What took you so long, anyway? Hurry
up. I don’t want to be driving after dark.”</p>
<p>“OK, OK, I’m coming.” And the two went
out the back door to the garage.</p>
<p>It was only a drive of seven miles to Nantic,
but the children never tired of the ride. It was
so still and dreamlike with the early winter silence
on the land. At the mill house, Lucy
Peckham waved to them. Along the riverside
meadows they saw the two little Peckham boys
driving sheep with Shep, their black and white
dog, barking madly at the foot of a tall hickory
tree.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17"></SPAN>17</span>
“Look, Tommy, see those red berries in that
thicket overhanging the rail fence? Will you
get out and pick me some?” Jean stopped the
car and Tommy jumped out. A car passed going
the other way while Jean was waiting, and
she recognized the driver as the stationmaster’s
son.</p>
<p>“Somebody is coming home for Christmas,
I guess,” she remarked to Tommy when he
came back.</p>
<p>Jean drove on with her chin up, cheeks rosy
and eyes alert. When they drove up in front of
the express office, Tommy didn’t want to wait
in the car, so they walked up the steps of the
office together. Just as they opened the door,
they caught the voice of Mr. Briggs, the agent,
not pleasant and sociable as it usually was, but
sharp and high-pitched.</p>
<p>“Well, you can’t loaf around here, son, I
tell you that right now. The minute I spied
you hiding behind that stack of ties down the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18"></SPAN>18</span>
track, I knew you’d run away from some place,
and I’m going to find out all about you and let
your family know you’re caught.”</p>
<p>“I ain’t got any family,” came back a boy’s
voice hopefully. “I’m my own boss and can go
where I please.”</p>
<p>“Did you hear that, Jean?” exclaimed Mr.
Briggs, turning around at the opening of the
door. “Just size him up, will you. He says he’s
his own boss, and he’s no bigger than a pint of
cider. Where did you come from?”</p>
<p>“Off a freight train.”</p>
<p>Mr. Briggs leaned his hands on his knees
and bent down to get his face on a level with
the boy’s.</p>
<p>“Isn’t he slick, though? Can’t get a bit of
real information out of him except that he
liked the looks of Nantic and dropped off
the slow freight when she was shunting back
and forth up yonder. What’s your name?”</p>
<p>“Jack. Jack Davis.” He didn’t look at Mr.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19"></SPAN>19</span>
Briggs, but off at the hills, windswept and
bare except for their patches of green pines.
There was a curious expression in his eyes, Jean
thought, not loneliness, but a dumb fatalism.
As Becky might have said, it was as if he had
known nothing but trouble and didn’t expect
anything better.</p>
<p>“How old are you?”</p>
<p>“’Bout nine or ten.”</p>
<p>“What made you drop off that freight
here?”</p>
<p>Jack was silent and seemed embarrassed.
Tommy, who had been eyeing him curiously,
responded instantly.</p>
<p>“Because you like it best, isn’t that why?”
he suggested eagerly. Jack’s face brightened
up at that.</p>
<p>“I liked the looks of the hills, but when I
saw all them mills, I—I thought I’d get some
work maybe.”</p>
<p>“You’re too little,” Mr. Briggs cut in. “I’m<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20"></SPAN>20</span>
going to hand you right over to the proper authorities,
and you’ll land up in the State Home
for Boys if you haven’t got any folks of your
own.”</p>
<p>Jack met the shrewd gray eyes doubtfully.
His own filled with tears that rose slowly and
dropped on his worn short coat. He put his
hand up to his shirt collar and held on to it
tightly as if he would have kept back the ache
there, and Jean’s heart could stand it no longer.</p>
<p>“I think he belongs up at Woodhow, please,
Mr. Briggs,” she said quickly. “I know
Mother and Dad will take him up there if he
hasn’t any place to go, and we’ll look after
him. I’m sure of it. He can drive back with
us.”</p>
<p>“But you don’t know where he came from
nor anything about him, Jean. I tell you he’s
just a little tramp. You can see that, or he
wouldn’t be hitching on to freight trains.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21"></SPAN>21</span>
That’s no way to do if you’re decent God-fearing
folks, riding freights and dodging trainmen.”</p>
<p>“Let me take him home with me now, anyway,”
pleaded Jean. “We can find out about
him, later. It’s Christmas Friday, remember,
Mr. Briggs.”</p>
<p>There was no resisting the appeal that underlay
her words, and Mr. Briggs relented
gracefully, although he maintained the county
school was the proper receptacle for all such
human rubbish.</p>
<p>Jean laughed at him happily, as he stood
with his feet wide apart, his hands thrust into
his coat pockets.</p>
<p>“It’s your own affair, Jean,” he returned
dubiously. “I wouldn’t stand in your way so
long as you see fit to take him along. But he’s
just human rubbish. Want to go, Jack?”</p>
<p>And Jack rose, wiping his eyes with his coat<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22"></SPAN>22</span>
sleeve, and glared resentfully back at Mr.
Briggs. He took the smaller package, Tommy
the other, and the three left the office.</p>
<p>“Guess we can all squeeze into the front
seat,” Jean said. “We’re going down to the
store, and then home.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23"></SPAN>23</span>
<h2 id="ii">2. New York Cousins</h2></div>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Doris</span> caught the sound of the squeaking snow
under the tires of the car as it came up the
drive about four o’clock. It was nearly dark.
She was standing in the living room lighting
the Christmas candles in the windows, and she
ran to the front door.</p>
<p>“Hi,” called Jean when she saw Doris in
the doorway, “we’re back.”</p>
<p>Tommy jumped out of the car at the back
door and took Jack by the hand, giving it a reassuring
squeeze. He was shivering, but
Tommy pulled him into the kitchen where Kit
was getting supper. Over in a corner lay the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24"></SPAN>24</span>
pile of evergreens and pine that she and the
other girls had gathered that afternoon.</p>
<p>“Look, Kit,” Tommy cried, quite as if Jack
had been some wonderful gift instead of a
dusty, tired, limp little derelict of fate and
circumstance. “This is Jack and he’s come to
stay with us. Where’s Mom?”</p>
<p>One quick look at Jack’s face checked all
mirthfulness in Kit. There were times when it
was better to say nothing. She was always intuitive,
quick to catch moods in others and understand.
This case needed her mother. Jack
was fairly blue from the cold, and there was a
pinched, hungry look around his mouth and
nose that made Kit leave her currant biscuits.</p>
<p>“Upstairs with Dad. Beat it up there fast
and call her, Tommy.” She smiled at Jack, a
radiant, comradely smile that endeared Kit to
all she met. “We’re so glad you’ve come
home,” she said, drawing him over to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25"></SPAN>25</span>
stove. “You sit up on that stool and get warm.”
She slipped into the pantry and dipped out a
mug of rich, creamy milk, then cut a wide
slice of warm gingerbread. “There now. See
how that tastes. You know, it’s the funniest
thing how wishes come true. I was just longing
for somebody to sample my cake and tell
me if it was good. Is it?”</p>
<p>Jack drank nearly the whole glass of milk
before he spoke, looking over the rim at her
with very sleepy eyes.</p>
<p>“It’s awful good,” he said. “I ain’t had anything
to eat since yesterday morning.”</p>
<p>“Oh, dear,” cried Kit. This was beyond her.
She turned with relief at Mrs. Craig’s quick
light step in the hall.</p>
<p>“Yes, dear, I know. Jeannie told me.” She
went straight over to the stool. And she did
just the one right thing. That was the marvel
of Mrs. Craig, she always seemed to know naturally<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26"></SPAN>26</span>
what a person needed most and gave it
to them. She took Jack in her arms, his head
on her shoulder, patting him while he began to
cry chokingly.</p>
<p>“Never mind, child, now,” she told him.
“You’re home.” She lifted him to her lap and
started to untie his worn sodden shoes.
“Tommy, get your slippers, dear, and a pair
of wool socks. Warm the milk, Kit, it’s better
that way. And you cuddle down on the couch
by the living room fire, Jack, and rest.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Craig had gone into the living room
and found a gray woolen blanket in the wall
closet off the little side hall. From the chest
of drawers she took some of Tommy’s outgrown
winter underwear. Supper was nearly
ready, but Jack was to have a warm bath and
be clad in clean fresh clothing. Tucking him
under one wing, as Kit said, she left the
kitchen, and Jean told the rest how she had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27"></SPAN>27</span>
rescued him from Mr. Briggs’s righteous indignation
and charitable intentions.</p>
<p>“Got a good face and looks you square in the
eye,” said Doris. “I’d take a chance on him any
day, and he can help around the place a lot,
splitting kindlings and shifting stall bedding
and what not. He and Tommy seem to be good
friends already.”</p>
<p>The telephone bell rang and Jean answered.
Rambling up through the hills from Norwich
was the party line, two lone wires stretching
from telephone pole to telephone pole. Its
tingling call was a welcome sound. This time
it was Rebecca at the other end. After her marriage
to Judge Ellis, they had taken the long-deferred
wedding trip up to Boston, visiting
relatives there, and returning in time for a
splendid old-fashioned Thanksgiving celebration
at the Ellis home. Maple Grove, Becky’s
former home, was closed for the winter but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28"></SPAN>28</span>
Matt, the hired man, decided to stay on there
indefinitely and work the farm on shares for
Miss Becky, as he still called her.</p>
<p>“And like enough,” Becky said comfortably,
when she heard of his intentions, “he’s
going to marry somebody himself. I wouldn’t
put it past him a bit. I wish he’d choose Cindy
Anson. There she is living alone down in that
little bit of a house, running a home bakery
when she’s born to fuss over a man. I told Matt
when I left, if I were he I’d buy all my pies
and cake from Cindy, and then when I drove
by Cindy’s I just dropped a passing word
about how badly I felt at leaving such a fine
man as Matt to shift for himself up at the
house, so she said she’d keep an eye on him.”</p>
<p>Over the telephone now came her voice,
vibrant and cheery, and Jean answered the
call.</p>
<p>“Hello, yes, this is Jean. Mother’s right in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29"></SPAN>29</span>
the living room. Who? Oh, wait till I tell the
kids.” She turned her head, her brown eyes
sparkling. “New York cousins over at the
Judge’s. Who did you say they are, Becky?
Yes? Beth and Elliott Newell. I’ll tell Dad
right away. Tomorrow morning early? That’s
swell. ’Bye.”</p>
<p>Before the others could stop her, she was on
her way upstairs. The largest, sunniest room
had been given over to her father. The months
of relaxation and rest up in the hills had
worked wonders in Mr. Craig’s health. As old
Dr. Gallup was apt to say when Kit rebelled
at the slowness of recovery, “Can’t expect to
do everything in a minute. Even the Lord took
six days to fix things the way he liked them.”</p>
<p>Instead of spending two-thirds of his time
in bed or on the couch now, he would sit up for
hours and could walk around the wide porch,
or even along the garden paths before the cold<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30"></SPAN>30</span>
weather set in. But there still swept over him
without warning the great fatigue and weakness,
the dizziness and exhaustion which had
followed as one of the lesser ills in his nervous
breakdown.</p>
<p>He sat before the open fire now, reading
from one of his favorite news magazines, with
Miss Tilly purring on his knees. Tommy had
found Miss Tilly one day late in October, loafing
along the barren stretch of road going over
to Gayhead school. She was a yellow kitten
with white nose and paws. Tommy, forever
adopting stray animals, had tucked her up in
his arms and taken her home. Becky had
looked at the yellow kitten with instant recognition.</p>
<p>“That’s a Scarborough kitten. Sally Scarborough’s
raised yellow kittens with white
paws ever since I can remember.”</p>
<p>“Had I better take it back?” asked Tommy
anxiously.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31"></SPAN>31</span>
“Land, no, child. It’s a barn-cat. You can
tell that, it’s so frisky. Ain’t got a bit of repose
or common sense. Like enough Mrs. Scarborough’d
be real glad if it had a good home.
Give it a name, and feed it well, and it’ll slick
right up.”</p>
<p>So Miss Tilly had remained, but not out in
the barn. Somehow she had found her way up
to Mr. Craig’s room and its peace must have
appealed to her, for she would stay there for
hours, dozing with half-closed jade-green
eyes and incurved paws.</p>
<p>“Dad!” Jean exclaimed, entering the quiet
room like an autumn flurry of wind. “What do
you think? Becky just phoned, and she wants
me to tell you two New York cousins are there.
Beth and Elliott Newell. Do you remember
them?”</p>
<p>“Of course,” smiled Mr. Craig. “It must
be little Cousin Beth and her boy. I used to
visit at her old home when I was a little boy.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32"></SPAN>32</span>
She wanted to be an artist, I know.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Dad, an artist? And did she study and
succeed?”</p>
<p>“I think so. I remember she lived abroad for
some time and married there. Her maiden
name was Lowell, Beth Lowell.”</p>
<p>“Did she marry an artist too?” Jean leaned
forward from her low chair facing him, her
eyes bright with romance, but Mr. Craig
laughed.</p>
<p>“No, indeed, she married a schoolmate
from New York. He went after her, for I suppose
he tired of waiting for Beth’s career to
come true. They had a very happy life together
and I think Beth misses him very much since
he died about two years ago. Listen a minute.”</p>
<p>Up from the lower part of the house floated
strains of music. Surely there had never issued
such music from a mouth organ. The tune was
a mournful blues that had a haunting melody.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33"></SPAN>33</span>
“It must be Jack,” Jean said, smiling mischievously
up at her father, for he had not yet
met Jack. She ran out to the head of the stairs.</p>
<p>“Can Jack come up, Mom?”</p>
<p>Up he came, fresh from a tubbing, wearing
a shirt and a pair of overalls that belonged to
Tommy. His straight blond hair fairly glistened
from its recent brushing and his face
shone, but it was Jack’s eyes that won him
friends at the start. Mixed in color they were,
like a moss agate, with long dark lashes, and
just now they were filled with contentment.</p>
<p>“They wanted me to play for them downstairs,”
he said gravely, stopping beside Mr.
Craig’s chair. “I can play lots of tunes. My
mother gave me this last Christmas.”</p>
<p>This was the first time he had mentioned his
mother and Jean followed up the clue gently.</p>
<p>“Where, Jack?”</p>
<p>He looked down at the floor, shifting his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34"></SPAN>34</span>
weight from one foot to the other. “Over in
Providence. She got sick and they took her to
the hospital and she never came back.”</p>
<p>“Not at all?”</p>
<p>He shook his head. “Then afterwards—”
much was comprised in that one word and
Jack’s tone, “afterwards we started off together,
my Dad and me. He said he’d try and
get a job on some farm with me, but nobody
wanted him this time of year, and with me too.
And he said one morning he wished he didn’t
have me bothering around. When I woke up
on the freight yesterday morning, he wasn’t
there. Guess he must have dropped off. Maybe
he can get a job now.”</p>
<p>So it slipped out, Jack’s personal history,
and the father and daughter wondered at his
sturdy acceptance of life’s discipline. Only
nine, but already he faced the world as his own
master, fearless and optimistic. All through<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35"></SPAN>35</span>
that first evening he sat in the kitchen on the
high stool, playing tunes he had learned from
his father. Tommy was entranced and begged
him to teach him how to play.</p>
<p>After supper the girls and Tommy drew up
their chairs around the dining room table as
usual. Here every night the three younger ones
prepared their lessons for the next day. Jean
generally read or sat with her father awhile,
but tonight she answered Peg Moffat’s letter.
It was read over twice, the letter that blended
in so curiously with the coming of the cousins
from New York.</p>
<p>Ever since Jean could remember she had
drawn pictures. No one guessed how she loved
the paintings in New York’s art galleries.
They had seemed so real to her, the face of a
Millet peasant lad crossing a stubble field at
dawn; a Breton girl knitting as she walked
homeward behind some straying sheep; one of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36"></SPAN>36</span>
Frans Hals’ Flemish boys, his chin pressed
close to his violin, his deep eyes looking at you
from under the brim of his hat.</p>
<p>Once she had read of Albrecht Dürer,
painting his masterpieces while he starved.
How the people whispered after his death
that he had used his heart’s blood to mix with
his wonderful pigments. Of course it was only
a story, but Jean remembered it. When she
saw a picture that seemed to hold one and speak
its message of beauty, she would say to herself,
“There is Dürer’s secret.”</p>
<p>And some day, if she ever could put on canvas
the dreams that came to her, she meant to
use the same secret.</p>
<p>“I do think Socrates was an old bore,” said
Kit, yawning and stretching her arms, after
a struggle with her homework. “Always mixing
in and contradicting everybody and starting
something. No wonder his wife was
cranky.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37"></SPAN>37</span>
“He died beautifully,” Doris replied.
“Something about a sunset and all his friends
around him.”</p>
<p>“If you’ve finished your homework, why
don’t you go to bed?” Jean told them. She
finished her letter alone. It was not easy to
write it. Peg wanted her to come down for the
spring term. She could board with her if she
liked. Expenses were very light.</p>
<p>Any expense would be heavy if piled on the
monthly budget of Woodhow. Jean knew that.
So she wrote back with a heartache behind the
plucky refusal, and stepped out on the moonlit
porch for a minute. It was clear and cold
after the light snowfall. The stars were very
faint. From the river came the sound of the
waterfall.</p>
<p>“You stand steady, Jean Craig,” she said,
between her teeth. “Don’t you dare be a quitter.
You’ve got to see this winter straight
through.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38"></SPAN>38</span></div>
<h2 id="iii">3. Exhibit A</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">After</span> her marriage to Judge Ellis, Becky had
taken Ella Lou, her big collie dog, from Maple
Grove over to the large white house behind
its towering elms.</p>
<p>“I’ve had that dog for ten years and never
saw another one like her for intelligence,” she
would say, her head held a little bit high, her
glasses halfway down her nose. “I told the
Judge if he wanted me he’d have to take Ella
Lou too.”</p>
<p>So it was Ella Lou’s familiar black nose
that poked around the door the following
morning when the New York cousins came
over to get acquainted.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39"></SPAN>39</span>
Jean never forgot her introduction to Beth
Newell. She was about forty-seven then, with
her son Elliott fully five inches taller than herself,
but she looked about twenty-seven. Her
feathery brown hair, her wide gray eyes, and
quick, sweet laughter, endeared her to Jean
right away.</p>
<p>Elliott was about fifteen, not one single bit
like his mother, but broad-shouldered and
blond and sturdy. It was so much fun, Kit said,
to watch him take care of his mother.</p>
<p>“Where’s your high school out here?” he
asked. “I’m at prep school specializing in
math.”</p>
<p>“And how any son of mine can adore mathematics
is beyond me,” Beth laughed. “I suppose
it’s reaction. Do you like math, Jean?”
She put her arm around the slender figure
nearest her.</p>
<p>“I should say not,” Jean answered immediately,
and then all at once, out popped her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40"></SPAN>40</span>
heart’s desire before she could check the
words. Anybody’s heart’s desire would pop out
with Beth’s eyes coaxing it. “I—I want to be
an artist.”</p>
<p>“Keep on wishing and working then, dear,
and as Becky says, if it is to be it will be.”</p>
<p>While the others talked of New England
farms, these two sat together on the couch,
Jean listening eagerly and wistfully while her
cousin told of her own girlhood aims and how
she carried them out.</p>
<p>“We didn’t have much money, so I knew I
had to win out for myself. There were two
boys to help bring up, and Mother was not
well, but I used to sketch every spare moment
I could, and I read everything on art I could
find, even articles from old magazines in the
attic. But most of all I sketched anything and
everything, studying form and composition.
When I was eighteen, I taught school for two<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41"></SPAN>41</span>
terms in the country. Dad had said if I earned
the money myself, I could go abroad, and how
I worked to get that first nest egg.”</p>
<p>“How much did you get a week?”</p>
<p>“Twelve dollars, but my board was only
three and a half in the country, and I saved all
I could. Of course, at that time, it was cheaper
to go abroad—and easier, too. I wouldn’t
recommend your trying to go to Europe right
now, but there are plenty of good schools and
teachers in this country. If you really do want
work and kind of hunt a groove you’re fitted
for, you’ll always find something to do.”</p>
<p>Jean was leaning forward, her chin propped
on her hands. “Yes, I know,” she said. “Do go
on, please.”</p>
<p>“Ellen Brainerd, the teacher I studied
under in Boston at one time, was one of New
England’s marvelous spinsters with the far vision
and cash enough to make a few of her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42"></SPAN>42</span>
dreams come true. Every year she used to take
a group of art students to Europe, and with
her encouragement I went the third year,
helping her with a few of the younger ones,
and paying part of my tuition that way. And
oh,” Beth’s eyes were sparkling as she recalled
her student days, “we set up our easels in the
fountain square in Barcelona and hunted
Dante types in Florence. We trailed through
Flanders and Holland and lived for a time in
Paris.”</p>
<p>“And you painted all those places?” exclaimed
Jean. “I’ve wanted so much to go.”</p>
<p>“Well, I tried to,” Beth looked ruefully
into the open fire. “Yes, I tried to paint like
all the old masters and new masters, from
Rembrandt to Degas. I did everything except
try to develop a technique of my own.”</p>
<p>“But isn’t it important to study the techniques
of the masters?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43"></SPAN>43</span>
“Yes, of course it is, but it was long after I
came back home that I realized this. After
David came over and stopped my career by
marrying me I came back home. We lived out
near New Rochelle and I began painting
things of everyday life just as I saw them, the
things I loved. It was our old apple tree out by
the well, steeped in full May bloom, that
brought me my first prize.”</p>
<p>“Gee, after Paris and all the rest!”</p>
<p>“Yes. And the next year they accepted our
red barn in a snowstorm. I painted it from our
kitchen window. Another was a water color of
our Jersey calves standing knee deep in the
brook in June. That is the kind of picture I
have succeeded with. I think because, as I say,
they are part of the home life and scenes I
love best and so I have put a part of myself into
them.”</p>
<p>Dürer’s heart’s blood, Jean thought to herself.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44"></SPAN>44</span>
“You’ve helped me so much, Beth,” she
said aloud. “I was just longing to go back to
the art school right now, and throw up everything
here that I ought to do.”</p>
<p>“Keep on sketching every spare moment
you can. Learn form and color and composition.
Things are only beautiful according to
the measure of our own minds. I’d like you to
come to New York and study there. You could
stay with me and share my studio when you
weren’t in classes.”</p>
<p>“I’d love to come when Mother can spare
me.” Jean’s eyes sparkled at this prospect.</p>
<p>“Well, do so, my dear,” Becky’s hands were
laid on her shoulders from behind. “It’s a
poor family that can’t support one genius.”
She laughed in her full-hearted, joyous way.
“Now, listen, all of you. I’ve come to invite
you to have Christmas dinner with us.”</p>
<p>“But, Becky,” began Mrs. Craig, “there
are so many of us—”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45"></SPAN>45</span>
“Not half enough to fill the big old house.
Some day after all the children are married
and there are plenty of grandchildren, then we
can talk about there being too many, though I
doubt it. There’s always as much house room
as there is heart room, if you only think so.
Bring along the little one too.” She smiled over
her shoulder at Jack, sitting in his favorite
corner in the kitchen working industriously on
one of Tommy’s model airplanes, and he gave
a funny little one-sided grin back in shy return.
“Billie’s going away to school after New
Year’s, did I tell you?”</p>
<p>“Oh, golly,” cried Doris, so abruptly that
everyone laughed at her. “Doesn’t it seem as
if boys get all of the adventures of life just
naturally.” Billie was the Judge’s grandson
and Doris’s pal. He was two years older than
Doris but they liked the same things and had
been great friends ever since Doris first found
his secret hide-out.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46"></SPAN>46</span>
“He’s had adventures enough, but he does
need the friendship of boys his own age. I
don’t want him to be tied down with a couple
of old folks like the Judge and myself. You’re
never young but once. Besides, I always did
want to go to these college football games and
have a boy of mine in the huddle.”</p>
<p>“Gol—lee!” Doris exclaimed after the
front door had closed on the last glimpse of
Ella Lou’s plumed tail going out to the car.
“Doesn’t it seem as if Becky leaves behind her
a big sort of glow? She can say more nice
things in a few minutes than anybody I ever
heard. Except about Billie’s going away. I
wonder why he didn’t come down and tell me
himself.”</p>
<p>“Well, you know, Doris,” Kit remarked,
“you haven’t a mortgage on Billie.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t care if he goes away. It isn’t
that,” Doris answered easily. “I wouldn’t like<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47"></SPAN>47</span>
a boy that couldn’t hold his own with the other
guys. Jean, did you realize the full significance
of Becky’s invitation? No baking or cooking.
No working our fingers to the bone for dinner
on Christmas Day. I think she’s simply wonderful.”</p>
<p>Jean laughed and slipped up the back stairs
to her own room. She felt around in her desk
until she found her folio of sketches. The dining
room was deserted excepting for Doris
watering the rows of geraniums in the bay
window, so Jean sat down to look over her old
art work. Doris went upstairs to see her father,
and Kit appeared with a frown on her face,
puzzling over a knitting book.</p>
<p>“I hate the last days before Christmas,” she
said savagely. “What on earth can we concoct
at this last minute for Beth? I think I’ll knit
her a pair of white cable-stitch gloves. If I
can’t finish them in time I’ll give her one with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48"></SPAN>48</span>
the promise of the other. What can I give to
Judge Ellis?”</p>
<p>“Something useful,” Jean answered.</p>
<p>“I can’t bear useful things for Christmas
presents. Abby Tucker says she never gets any
winter clothes till Christmas and then all the
family unload useful things on her. I’m going
to send her a bottle of perfume in a green
leather case. I’ve had it for months and never
touched it and she’ll adore it. I wish I could
think of something for Billie too, something
he’s never had and always wanted.”</p>
<p>“He’s going away,” Jean mused. “Why
don’t you fix up a book of snapshots taken all
around here. We took some marvelous ones
this summer.”</p>
<p>“A boy wouldn’t like that.”</p>
<p>“He will when he’s homesick.” Jean
opened her folio and began turning over her
art school studies, mostly conventionalized designs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49"></SPAN>49</span>
from her beginnings in textile design.
After her talk with Beth they only dissatisfied
her. Suddenly she glanced up at the figure
across the table, Kit with rumpled short curls,
her bangs in disarray, and an utterly relaxed
posture, elbows on the table, her feet sprawled
in front of her. Jean’s pencil began to move
over the back of her drawing pad. She was
pleased to see how easy it was to catch Kit’s
expression. It wasn’t so hard, the ruffled hair,
the half-averted face. Kit’s face was such an
odd mixture of whimsicality and determination.
The rough sketch grew and all at once
Kit glanced up and caught on to what was going
on.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s me, isn’t it, Jean? I wish you’d
conventionalized me and embellished me. I’d
like to look glamorous and sophisticated.
That’s lovely, specially with the nose screwed
up that way and my forehead wrinkled. I like<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50"></SPAN>50</span>
that, it’s so subtle. Anyone getting one good
look at the helpless frenzy in that downcast
gaze—”</p>
<p>“Oh, Kit, be good,” laughed Jean. She held
the sketch away from her critically. “Looks
just like you.”</p>
<p>“OK, hang it up as ‘Exhibit A.’ I don’t
mind. There’s a look of genius to it at that.”</p>
<p>“Naturally, I had to include that too,” replied
Jean teasingly. Just then Mrs. Craig
came into the room.</p>
<p>“Mom, look what my sister has done to
me,” Kit cried tragically. Jean said nothing,
only the color rose slowly in her cheeks as her
mother stood looking at it.</p>
<p>“It’s the first since I left school,” she said,
half-ashamed of the effort and all it implied.</p>
<p>“Finish it up, dear, and let me have it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, would you really like it, Mom?”</p>
<p>“Love it,” answered her mother promptly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51"></SPAN>51</span>
“And don’t give up hope. Perhaps we may be
able to squeeze in the spring term after all.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52"></SPAN>52</span></div>
<h2 id="iv">4. Christmas at the Ellis Place</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">It</span> took two trips in the car to transport the
Christmas guests and gifts from Woodhow
over to the Ellis place. It was one of the few
pretentious houses in Elmhurst. For seven generations
it had been in the Ellis family. The
old house sat far back from the road with a
double drive curving like a big U around it.
Huge elms stood protectingly before it, and
behind lay a succession of buildings from the
old forge, no longer used, to the smokehouse.
One barn stood across the road and another at
the top of the lane.</p>
<p>Doris and Tommy were the first to run up<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53"></SPAN>53</span>
the steps and into the center hall, almost
bumping into Billie as he ran to meet them.
Behind him came Mrs. Ellis in a soft gray
suit. Her white blouse was fastened at the
throat with a cameo pin. “Come right in, all
of you,” she called happily. “Do stop jumping
up and down, Tommy, you make me nervous.
Merry Christmas.”</p>
<p>Up the long colonial staircase she led the
way into the big guest room. Down in the library,
Beth was playing softly on the big
square piano, <em>Oh Little Town of Bethlehem</em>.
The air was filled with the scent of pine and
hemlock, and enticing odors of things cooking
stole up the back stairs.</p>
<p>Doris and Billie retreated to a corner with
the latter’s book supply, with Tommy and
Jack peering over Billie’s shoulder to get a
look too. It was hard to realize that this was
really Billie, the Huckleberry Finn of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54"></SPAN>54</span>
summer before. All of the old self-consciousness
and shy abstraction had gone. Even the
easy comradely manner in which he leaned
over the Judge’s chair showed the good understanding
and sure confidence between the two.</p>
<p>“Yes, he does show up real proud,” Becky
agreed warmly with Mrs. Craig when they
were all downstairs before the glowing fire.
“Of course, we’re going to miss him when he
goes away to school, but he’s getting along
splendidly. I want him to go where he’ll associate
with plenty of other boys. He’s lived
alone with the ants and bees and rabbits long
enough.”</p>
<p>As the others went in to dinner Jean lingered
behind a minute to glance about the
pleasant room. The fire crackled down in the
deep old rock hearth. In each of the windows
a white candle was burning brightly. Festoons
of ground pine and evergreen draped the mantelpiece.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55"></SPAN>55</span>
Jean gazed out at the somber, frost-touched
garden. There wasn’t one bit of peace
in her heart, even while she fairly ached with
the longing to be like the others.</p>
<p>“You’re a coward, Jean Craig, a deliberate
coward,” she told herself. “You don’t like the
country one bit. You love the city where everybody’s
doing something, and it’s just a rat race
for all. You’re longing for everything you
can’t have, and you’re afraid to face the winter
up here. You might just as well tell yourself
the truth. You hate to be poor.”</p>
<p>There came a burst of laughter from the
dining room and Kit calling to her to hurry
up. It appeared that Doris, the tender-hearted,
had said pathetically when Mrs. Gorham, the
housekeeper, brought in the great roast turkey,
“Poor old General Putnam!”</p>
<p>“That isn’t the General,” Billie called from
his place. “The General ran away yesterday.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56"></SPAN>56</span>
First off, he lit up in the apple trees. Then as
soon as he saw Ben was high enough, off he
flopped and made for the corncrib. Just as he
caught up with him there, he chose the wagon
sheds and perched on the rafters, and when
he’d almost got hold of his tail feathers, if he
didn’t try the barn and all his flock after him,
mind you. So he thought he’d let him roost till
dark, and when he stole in after supper, the old
codger had gone, bag and baggage. He’ll come
back as soon as he knows our minds aren’t set
on wishbones.”</p>
<p>“Then who is this?” asked Kit, quite as if it
were some personage who rested in state on the
big willow platter.</p>
<p>“That is some unnamed patriot who died
for his country’s good,” said the Judge solemnly.
“Who says white meat and who says
dark?”</p>
<p>“For pity’s sake, child, what are you crying<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57"></SPAN>57</span>
about?” exclaimed Becky after dinner while
they were all sitting around the table talking
leisurely.</p>
<p>Jack sobbed sleepily, “I—I don’t know.”</p>
<p>“He’s lonely for his own family,” Doris
spoke up.</p>
<p>“I ain’t neither,” groaned Jack, “it’s too
much mince pie.”</p>
<p>So under Becky’s directions, Billie took
him up to his room, and administered “good
hot water and soda.”</p>
<p>“Too bad, ’cause he missed seeing all the
things taken off the tree,” said Becky, laying
aside Jack’s presents for him, a long warm
knit muffler from herself, a fine knife from
the Judge with a pocket chain on it, a package
of Billie’s books that he had had as a child, and
ice skates from the Craigs. After much figuring
over the balance left from their Christmas
money they had gone together on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58"></SPAN>58</span>
skates for him, knowing he would have more
fun and exercise out of them than anything,
and he needed something to bring back the
sparkle to his eyes and the color to his cheeks.</p>
<p>“Put them all up on the bed beside him, and
he’ll find them in the morning,” Billie suggested.
“If you’ll let him stay, Mrs. Craig, I’ll
bring him over.”</p>
<p>Tommy was the most excited over his
Christmas presents. Kit and Jean had given
him a hockey stick and puck to use on the river
when it was frozen over, his mother and father
a ping pong set that he was bursting to set up
in the basement, a model airplane kit from
Doris, and a pair of argyle socks and Norwegian
sweater from the Judge and Becky. But
Billie had given him his most coveted present,
his own tame crow, Moki. “Where’d you get
the name from, Billie?” he asked.</p>
<p>Billie stroked the smooth glossy back of the
crow fondly. “I found him one day over in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59"></SPAN>59</span>
pine woods on the hill. He was just a little
thing then. The nest was in a dead pine, and
somebody’d shot it all to pieces. The rest of
the family had gone, but I found him fluttering
around on the ground, scared to death with
a broken wing. Ben helped me fix it, and he
told me to call him Moki. You know he’s read
everything, and he can talk some Indian, Pequod
mostly, he says. He isn’t sure but what
there may be some Pequod in him way back, he
can talk it so well, and Moki means ‘watch out’
in Pequod. I call him that because I used to put
him on my shoulder and he’d go anywhere
with me through the woods, and call out when
he thought I was in danger.”</p>
<p>“How do you know what he thought?”</p>
<p>“After you get acquainted with him, you’ll
know what he thinks too,” answered Billie.</p>
<p>Always living in a little world of make-believe
all her own, Doris received mostly fairy
tales and what Kit called “princess stories.”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60"></SPAN>60</span>
Saved from the old home at Sandy Cove, her
mother and father gave her two glass lamps
for her bureau and Jean had made the shades
herself, out of starched white dotted swiss.
Becky had knit each of the girls soft angora
socks and mittens in matching pastels, and
Beth gave them old silver spoons that had been
part of their great great-grandmother Peabody’s
wedding silver.</p>
<p>“When you come to New York,” she told
Jean, “I’ll show you many of her things.”</p>
<p>Jean nodded, remembering her longing to
go away earlier in the evening. But the look in
her father’s face made her realize more than
anything that had happened in the long
months of trial in the country, how worthwhile
was the sacrifice that had brought him
back into his home country for healing and
happiness.</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61"></SPAN>61</span></div>
<h2 id="v">5. New York Dreams Come True</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Christmas</span> week had already passed when the
surprise came. As Kit said the charm of the
unexpected was always catching you unaware
when you lived on the edge of nowhere.</p>
<p>Beth and Elliott had departed two days
after Christmas for New York. Somehow even
Tommy could not get really acquainted with
this new boy cousin. Billie, once won, was a
friend forever, but Elliott was a smiling, confident
boy, quiet and resourceful, with little to
say.</p>
<p>By this time, Jean had settled down contentedly
to the winter regime. She was giving<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62"></SPAN>62</span>
Doris piano lessons, and taking over more of
the household duties with Kit back at school.
School had been one of the problems to be
solved that first year. Doris and Tommy went
to the District schoolhouse at the crossroads,
a one-story, red frame building. Doris had despised
it thoroughly until she heard that her
father had gone there in his boyhood, and she
had found his old desk with his initials carved
on it.</p>
<p>Kit was in high school, and the nearest one
was over the hills six miles away. Every
morning, she caught the school bus at the end
of the drive. Mrs. Craig would often stand out
on the wide porch in the early morning and
watch the three go off.</p>
<p>“I think they’re wonderfully plucky,” she
said one morning to Jean. “If they had been
country girls, born and bred, it would be different,
but stepping right out of Long Island<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63"></SPAN>63</span>
shore life into these hills, you have all managed
splendidly.”</p>
<p>“We’d have been a fine lot of quitters if we
hadn’t,” Jean answered. “I think it’s been
much harder for you than for us, Mom.”</p>
<p>And then the oddest, most unexpected thing
had happened, something that strengthened
the bond between them and made Jean’s way
easier. Her mother had turned and had met
Jean’s glance with a telltale flush on her
cheeks and a certain whimsical glint in her
eyes.</p>
<p>“Jean, do you never suspect me?” she had
asked, half laughingly. “I know just exactly
what a struggle you have gone through, and
how you miss all that lies back in New York.
I do too. If we could just divide up the time,
and live part of the year here and the other part
back at the Cove. I wouldn’t dare tell Becky
that I had ever regretted, but there are days<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64"></SPAN>64</span>
when the silence and the loneliness up here
seem to crush so strongly in on one.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mom! I never knew you felt like
that.” Jean leaned her head against her shoulder.
“I’ve been horribly selfish, just thinking
of myself. But now that Dad’s getting strong
again, you can go away, can’t you, for a little
visit anyway?”</p>
<p>“Not without him,” Mrs. Craig said decidedly.
“Perhaps by next summer we can, I
don’t know. I don’t want to suggest it until he
feels the need of a change too. But I’ve been
thinking about you, Jean, and I want you to go
to school in New York for a little while anyway.
Beth and I had a talk together before she
left, and I felt proud of you, when I heard her
speak of your work. She says the greatest
worry on her mind is that Elliott has no definite
ambition, no aim. He has always had
everything that they could give him, and she
begins now to realize it was all wrong.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65"></SPAN>65</span>
“But, Mother, how can I go and leave
you?”</p>
<p>“I want you to, Jean. You have been a great
help to me. Don’t think I haven’t noticed
everything you have done to save me worry,
because I have.”</p>
<p>“Well, you had Dad to care for—”</p>
<p>“I know, and he’s so much better now that
I haven’t any dread left.”</p>
<p>Peg Moffat wrote after receiving her
Christmas box from Jean. Jean had gathered
pine cones, ground pine, sprays of red berries,
and little winter ferns. It was one of several
she had sent to friends in the city for whom
she felt she could not afford expensive presents.</p>
<p>Peg had caught the real spirit of it, and had
written back urgently. “You must run down
if only for a few days, Jean. I put the pines and
other greens around the studio for decorations
at Christmas and they just talk at me about you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66"></SPAN>66</span>
all the time. Never mind about new clothes.
Come along.”</p>
<p>It was these same new clothes that secretly
worried Jean all the same, but with some new
ribbon for two of her formals, her brown wool
suit cleaned, and a new feather for her hat, she
felt she could make the trip if it were only possible.</p>
<p>It was the letter that arrived the following
day that really caused a stir in the family. Beth
wrote to Jean that there was a special course
beginning the following week at the Academy
in textile designing. It was only a two-months’
course so it wouldn’t be very expensive and
Jean could stay with her, eliminating the
problem of board. “I really think if you can
possibly be spared from home at this time, it
would be a wise thing for you to enroll in the
course. It is in the field you’re interested in
and you will learn both valuable and practical<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67"></SPAN>67</span>
things from it. Please write me immediately
and say you’ll come.”</p>
<p>When Jean showed the letter to her mother,
her answer was swift and decisive. “An opportunity
such as this cannot be ignored. Of
course you will go.”</p>
<p>The winter sunshine had barely clambered
to the crests of the hills the following morning
when Becky drove up with Ella Lou.</p>
<p>“Thought I’d get an early start so I could
sit awhile with you,” she called breezily. “The
Judge had to go to court at Putnam. Real sad
case, too. Some of our neighborhood boys in
trouble. I told him not to dare send them up to
any State homes or reformatories, but to put
them on probation and make their families
pay the fines.”</p>
<p>Kit was just putting on her stadium boots.
“Oh, what is it, Becky?” she called from the
kitchen. “What’s the news?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68"></SPAN>68</span>
“Well, I guess it’s pretty exciting for the
poor mothers.” Mrs. Ellis put her feet up on
the stool. “There’s been considerable things
stolen lately, just odds and ends of harness and
bicycle supplies from the store, and three hams
from Miss Bugbee’s cellar, and so on; a little
here and a little there, hardly no more’n a real
smart magpie could make away with. But the
men set out to catch whoever it might be, and
if they didn’t land three of our own boys. It
makes every mother in town shiver.”</p>
<p>“None that we know, are there?” asked
Doris, with wide eyes.</p>
<p>“I guess not, unless maybe Abby Tucker’s
brother Martin. There his poor mother
scrimped and saved for weeks to buy him a bicycle
out of her butter-and-egg money, and it
just landed him in mischief. Off he kited,
first here and then there with the two Lonergan
boys, and they had a camp up toward Cynthy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69"></SPAN>69</span>
Allan’s place, where they played they were
cave robbers or something. I had the Judge up
and promise he’d let them off on probation.
There isn’t one of them over fifteen, and Elmhurst
can’t afford to let her boys go to prison.
And I shall drive over this afternoon and give
their mothers some good advice.”</p>
<p>“Why not the fathers too?” asked Jean.
“Seems as if mothers get all the blame when
boys go wrong.”</p>
<p>“No, it isn’t that exactly. I knew the two
fathers when they were youngsters too. Fred
Lonergan was as nice and obliging a lad as
ever you did see, but he always liked cider too
well, and that made him lax. I used to tell him
when he couldn’t get it any other way, he’d
squeeze the dried winter apples hanging still
on the wild trees. He’ll have to pay the money
damage, but the real sorrow of the heart will
fall on Emily, his wife. She used to be our<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70"></SPAN>70</span>
minister’s daughter, and she knows what’s
right. And the Tucker boy never did have any
sense or his father before him, but his mother’s
the best quilter we’ve got. If I’d been in her
shoes I’d have put Philemon Tucker right
straight out of the house just as soon as he
began to squander and hang around the grocery
store swapping stories with men just like
him. It’s her house from her father, and I
shall put her right up to making Philemon
walk a chalk line after this, and do his duty as
a father.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you’re a glorious peacemaker,” exclaimed
Mrs. Craig. “Hurry, children, you’ll
be late for school.” She hurriedly put the last
touches to three hearty lunches, and followed
them out to the front porch and watched them
out of sight.</p>
<p>“Lovely morning,” said Becky, fervently.
“The ice on the trees makes the country look
like fairyland.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71"></SPAN>71</span>
“And here I’ve been shivering ever since I
got out of bed,” Jean cried, laughingly. “It
seemed so bleak and cheerless. You find something
beautiful in everything, Becky.”</p>
<p>“Well, happiness is a sort of habit, I guess,
Jeannie. Come tell me, now, how you are fixed
about going away? That’s why I came down.”</p>
<p>“You mean—”</p>
<p>“I mean in clothes. Don’t mind my speaking
right out, because I know that Beth will want
to take you places, and you must look right.
And don’t you say one word against it, Margaret,”
as Mrs. Craig started to speak. “The
child must have her chance. Makes me think,
Jean, of my first silk dress. Nobody knew how
much I wanted one, and I was about fourteen,
skinny and overgrown, with pigtails down my
back. A well-to-do aunt in Boston sent a silk
dress to my little sister Susan who died. I can
see it now, just as plain as can be, a sort of dark
bottle-green with a little spray of violets here<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72"></SPAN>72</span>
and there. Susan was sort of pining anyway,
and green made her look too pale, so the dress
was set aside for me. Mother said she’d let the
hem down and face it when she had time. But
there was a picnic and my heart hungered for
that silk dress to wear. I managed somehow to
squeeze into it, and slip away with the other
girls before Mother noticed me.”</p>
<p>“But did it fit you?” asked Jean.</p>
<p>“Fit me?” Becky laughed. “Fit me like an
acorn cap would a bullfrog. I let the hem down
as far as I could, but didn’t stop to hem it or
face it, and there it hung, six inches below my
petticoat, with the sun shining through as nice
as could be. My Sunday School teacher took me
to one side and said severely, ‘Rebecca Craig,
does your mother know that you’ve let that
hem down without fixing it properly?’ Well, it
did take away my hankering for a silk dress.
Now, run along upstairs and get out all your
wardrobe so we can look it over.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73"></SPAN>73</span>
Jean obeyed for somehow Becky swept
away objections before her airily. And the
wardrobe was at a low ebb.</p>
<p>Becky dragged her chair over beside the
couch now, and took inventory of the pile of
clothing Jean laid there.</p>
<p>“You’ll want a good knockabout sport coat
like the other girls are wearing. Then a couple
of new sweaters and skirts for school. Now,
what about date dresses?”</p>
<p>Here Jean felt quite proud as she laid out
her assortment. She and Kit had always gone
out a good deal at the Cove, and she had a number
of well-chosen, expensive dresses.</p>
<p>“They look all right to me, but I guess Beth
will know what to do to them, with a touch
here and there. Well, if I were you, I’d just
bundle all I wanted to take along in the way of
pretty things into the trunk and let Beth tell
you what to do with them. I’ll give you the
money to buy the other things you’ll need in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74"></SPAN>74</span>
New York. Their stores have more selection
than what we’ve got around here. Good heavens,
child, you’ll squeeze the breath out of
me,” as Jean gave her a hug of thanks. “I
must be going along.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75"></SPAN>75</span></div>
<h2 id="vi">6. Leaving Home</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Thursday</span> of that week was set for Jean’s departure.
This gave very little time for preparations,
and Kit plunged into them with a
zest and vigor that made Jean laugh.</p>
<p>“Well, so little ever happens up here we
just have to make the most of goings and comings,”
said Kit exuberantly. “And besides, I’m
rather fond of you, in an offhand sort of way.”</p>
<p>“Of course, we’re all glad for you,” Doris
put in seriously. “It’s an opportunity, Mom
says, and I suppose we’ll all get one in time.”</p>
<p>Jean glanced up as they sat around the last
evening, planning and talking. Out in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76"></SPAN>76</span>
side hall stood her trunk, packed, locked, and
strapped, ready for the early trip in the morning.
Tommy was trying his best to nurse a
frost-bitten chicken back to life out by the
kitchen stove, where Jack was mending
Doris’s skates. Kit and Doris were freely giving
her advice.</p>
<p>“Enjoy yourself all you can, but think of us
left at home and don’t stay too long,” advised
Doris.</p>
<p>“Yes, and learn all about designing things
for people. Personally I don’t want to make
things for people,” Kit said emphatically. “I
want to soar alone. I’m going with Sally to live
on the top of a mountain. But, gosh, I do envy
you, Jean, after all. You must write and tell
us every single thing that happens, for we’ll
love to hear it all. Don’t be afraid it won’t be
interesting. I wish you’d even keep a diary.
Buzzy told me once that his grandmother did,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77"></SPAN>77</span>
every day from the time she was fourteen, and
they had a perfectly awful time getting rid of
them when she died. Imagine burning barrels
full of diaries.”</p>
<p>Tommy came out of the kitchen to tell them
to be quiet. “I’ve just this minute got that
chicken to sleep. They’re such light sleepers,
but I think it will get well. It only had its poor
toes frostbitten. Jack found it on the ground
this morning, crowded off the perch. Chickens
look so civilized, and they’re not. They’re
regular savages.”</p>
<p>There flashed across Jean’s mind a picture
of the evenings ahead without the home circle,
without the familiar living room, and the
other room upstairs where at this time her
mother would be brushing out her soft hair,
and listening to some choice bit of reading Mr.
Craig had run across during the day and saved
for her.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78"></SPAN>78</span>
“I just wish I had a chance to go West like
Sally,” Kit said suddenly. “When I’m old
enough, I’m going to take up a homestead
claim and live on it with a wonderful horse
and some dogs, wolf dogs. I wish Sally’d wait
till we were both old enough, and had finished
school. She could be a forest ranger and I’d
raise—”</p>
<p>“Ginseng,” Jean suggested mischievously.
“Dopey. It takes far more courage than that
just to stick it out on one of these old barren
farms, all run-down and fairly begging for
somebody to take them in hand. What do you
want to hunt a western claim for? Besides, I
don’t think there are any left anymore.”</p>
<p>“Space,” Kit answered with feeling. “I
don’t want to see my neighbors’ chimney pots
sticking up all around me through the trees.
I want to gaze off at a hundred hilltops, and
not see somebody’s scarecrow waggling empty<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79"></SPAN>79</span>
sleeves at me. Sally and I have the spirits of
eagles.”</p>
<p>“Isn’t that nice,” said Doris pleasantly.
“It’ll make such a good place to spend our vacations,
kids. While Sally and Kit are out soaring,
we can fish and ride and have really swell
times.”</p>
<p>“Cut it out,” Jean whispered, as Kit’s ire
started to rise. “It’s getting late, really, and I
have to get up while it is still night, you know.
Good night all.”</p>
<p>The start next morning was made at seven,
before the sun was up. The tears were wet on
Jean’s cheeks as she climbed into the seat beside
Kit, and turned to wave goodbye to the
group on the porch. She had not realized before
what this first trip away from home
meant.</p>
<p>“Write us everything,” called Doris, waving
both hands to her.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80"></SPAN>80</span>
“Come back soon,” yelled Tommy.</p>
<p>But her mother went back into the house
in silence, away from the living room into the
study where Jean had kept her own bookcase,
desk, and a few choice pictures. A few old
paintbrushes lay beside Jean’s worn pigskin
gloves on the table. Mrs. Craig picked up both,
laid her cheek against the gloves and closed her
eyes. The years were racing by so fast, so fast,
she thought, and mothers must be wide-eyed
and generous and fearless, when the children
suddenly begin to top heads with one, and feel
impatient to be out on their own.</p>
<p>Ready to try it alone, she thought. If it had
been Kit now, she would not have felt this
curious little pang. Kit was self-sufficient and
full of buoyancy that was bound to carry her
over obstacles, but Jean was sensitive and dependent
on her environment for spur and stimulation.
She heard a step behind her and turned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81"></SPAN>81</span>
eagerly as Mr. Craig came into the room, looking
for her. He saw the brushes and the gloves
in her hand, and the look in her eyes uplifted
to his own. Very gently he folded his arms
around her, his cheek pressed close to her
brown hair.</p>
<p>“She’s only seventeen,” whispered Mrs.
Craig.</p>
<p>“Eighteen in April,” he answered, “and
dear, she isn’t trusting to her own strength for
the flight. Don’t you know this quiet little girl
of ours is mounted on Pegasus, and riding him
handily in her upward trend?”</p>
<p>But there was no winged horse or genius in
view to Jean’s blurred sight as she watched the
road unroll before her, and looking back, saw
only the curling smoke from Woodhow’s
white chimneys.</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82"></SPAN>82</span></div>
<h2 id="vii">7. Aldo from Italy</h2>
<p class="noi">“<span class="smcap">This</span> is truly beautiful,” Jean said, in breathless
admiration, as she laid aside her coat and
hat, and stood in the big living room in Hastings.
The beautiful home not far from New
York had been a revelation to her. Overlooking
the Hudson River, the view, although totally
different, reminded her a little of her
former home at Sandy Cove.</p>
<p>The center hall had a blazing fire in the big
old rock fireplace, and Victoria, a prize-winning
Angora, opened her wide blue eyes at the
newcomer but did not stir. In the living room
was another open fire. Influence of an artist’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83"></SPAN>83</span>
hand was quite evident in the details of the
room. There were flowering plants at the windows,
and fresh roses on the table in gracefully
studied arrangements.</p>
<p>“You know, or maybe you don’t know,”
said Beth, “that we have one hobby here, raising
flowers, and especially roses. We exhibit
every year, and you’ll grow to know them and
love the special varieties just as I do. You have
no idea, Jean, of the thrill when you find a new
bloom different from all the rest.”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t be surprised to find out anything
new and wonderful about this place.”
Jean laughed, leaning back in the deep-seated
chair. Like the rest of the room’s furniture it
was slipcovered in chintz, deep cream, cross-barred
in dull green, with splashy pink roses
scattered here and there. Two large white
Polar rugs lay on the polished floor.</p>
<p>“If those were not members of the Peabody<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84"></SPAN>84</span>
family, old and venerated, they never would
be allowed to bask before my fire,” Beth said.
“But way back there was an Abner Peabody
who sailed the northern seas, and used to bring
back trophies and bestow them on members of
his family as future heirlooms. Consequently,
we fall over these bears in the dark, and bless
Abner’s precious memory.”</p>
<p>After she was thoroughly warmed up and
had drunk a cup of scalding tea, Jean found
her way up to the room that was to be hers during
her visit. It was the sunniest kind of a retreat
in daffodil yellow and rich brown. The
furniture was all in warm, deep-toned ivory,
and there were springlike bouquets of daffodils
everywhere.</p>
<p>“Gee, I think this is just darling,” Jean
gasped, standing in the middle of the floor and
gazing around happily. “It’s just as if spring
were already here.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85"></SPAN>85</span>
“I put a drawing board here for you too,”
Beth told her. “Of course you’ll use my studio
any time you like, but it’s handy to have a corner
all your own at odd times. I forgot to mention
it before, but we’re going to have a guest
for the weekend. A boy whose parents I knew
in Sorrento years ago. His name is Aldo
Thomas. His father was an American sculptor
who married an Italian Contessa. Aldo is also
studying art here in New York this winter and
lives with his aunt. He has inherited his father’s
artistic talent so I know you will find
much in common. And I also think you’ll do
each other a world of good.”</p>
<p>“How?”</p>
<p>“Well, you’re thoroughly an American
girl, Jean, and Aldo is half Italian. You’ll understand
what I mean when you see him. He is
high-strung and temperamental, and you are
so steady-nerved and well-balanced.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86"></SPAN>86</span>
Jean thought over this last when she was
alone, and smiled to herself. Why on earth did
one have to give outward signs of temperament,
she wondered, before people believed
one had sensitive feelings or responsive emotions?
Must she wear her heart on her sleeve
for a sort of personal barometer? Peg Moffat
was high-strung and temperamental too. So
was Kit. They both indulged now and then in
mental fireworks, but nobody took them seriously,
or considered it a mark of genius. She
felt just a shade of half-amused tolerance toward
this Aldo person who was to get any balance
or poise out of her own nature.</p>
<p>“If Beth knew for one minute,” she told
the face in the oval mirror of the dressing
table, “what kind of a person you really are,
she’d never trust you to balance anybody’s temperament.”</p>
<p>But the following day brought a trim car<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87"></SPAN>87</span>
to the door, and out stepped Aldo. And Jean,
coming down the wide center staircase, saw
Beth before the fire with a tall, thin figure,
whose clothes seemed to hang on him carelessly
as if he wore them as a concession to convention.</p>
<p>“This is my cousin Jean,” said Mrs. Newell
in her pleasant way. Aldo extended his hand
diffidently. “I want you two to be very good
friends.”</p>
<p>“But I know, surely, we shall be,” Aldo
said easily. And at the sound of his voice Jean’s
prejudices melted. He had very dark eyes with
lids that drooped slightly at the outer corners.
His thin face emphasized his prominent
cheekbones and his skin was fair in spite of
his Italian heritage.</p>
<p>“Now, you won’t be treated one bit as
guests,” Beth told them. “You must come and
go as you like, and have the freedom of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88"></SPAN>88</span>
house. I keep my own study hours and like to
be alone then. Do as you like and be happy.
Run along, both of you.”</p>
<p>“She is wonderful, isn’t she?” Aldo said
as they walked out to the cliff above the river.
“She makes me feel always as if I were a ship
waiting with loose sails, and all at once—a
breeze—and I am on my way again. You have
not been to Sorrento, have you? You can see
the little fisher boats from our terraces. It is
all so beautiful, but now the villa is quite
shabby and parts of it are gone. It was bombed
during the war and there are no materials to
rebuild it. But it is still beautiful.”</p>
<p>Jean was strangely charmed by him. He
was so different from anyone she had ever
known. None of the boys she knew would have
talked so poetically, even if they had known
the right words and phrases to use. That would
be sissy stuff.</p>
<p>“I wonder if you ever knew Peg Moffat.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89"></SPAN>89</span>
She’s a Long Island girl from the Cove where
I used to live, and she lived abroad every year
until the war came, for two or three months
with her mother. She is an artist.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know her,” Aldo shook his head
doubtfully. “You see over there, while we entertained
a great deal, I was away at school in
Milan or Rome and scarcely met anyone excepting
in the summertime, and then we went
to my aunt’s villa up on Lake Maggiore. Ah,
but that is the most beautiful spot of all. There
is one island there called Isola Bella. I wish I
could carry it right over here with me and set
it down for you to see. It is all terraces and
splendid old statuary, and when you see it at
sunrise it is like a jewel, it glows so with color.”</p>
<p>Jean stood looking down at the river, listening.
There was always a lingering love in her
heart for the beauty and romance of Europe,
and especially of Italy. “I’d love to go there,”
she said, with a little sigh.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90"></SPAN>90</span>
“And that is what I was always saying when
I was there, and my father told me of this
country. I wanted to see it so. He would tell me
of the great gray hills that climb to the north,
and the craggy broken shoreline up through
Maine, and the little handful of amethyst isles
that lie all along it. He was born in New
Hampshire, at Portsmouth. We are going up
to see the house some day, but I know just what
it looks like. It stands close down by the water’s
edge in the old part of the town, and there is
a big rambling garden with flagged walks. His
grandfather was a shipbuilder and sent his
ships out all over the world. And he had just
one daughter. There was an artist who came up
from the south in one of his ships, and he was
taken very ill. So they took him in as a guest,
and the daughter cared for him. And when he
was well, what do you think?”</p>
<p>“They married.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91"></SPAN>91</span>
“But more than that,” he said warmly. “He
carved the most wonderful figureheads for my
great grandfather’s ships. All over the world
they were famous. His son was my father.”</p>
<p>It was indescribable, the tone in which he
said the last. It told more than anything
else how much he admired this sculptor father
of his. That night Jean wrote to Ralph.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noi">Dearest Ralph,</p>
<p>I know you’ll want to know all about my
trip. Beth met me at Grand Central Station
and we drove out here to Hastings. Honestly,
Ralph, when I saw the house, I had
to blink my eyes. It looks as if it belonged
right out on the North Shore at the Cove.
The lawn sweeps down at the back to the
cliffs where you can look right down at the
Hudson. And inside the house it is summertime
even now. They have flowers everywhere
you look, because they raise their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92"></SPAN>92</span>
own. Beth says she’ll give me slips from
her rosebushes and I can start a sunken rose
garden.</p>
<p>A most interesting artist friend of Beth’s
has come out to spend the weekend here.
His name is Aldo Thomas—the Aldo because
his mother is an Italian countess and
the Thomas because his father is an American
sculptor. He has been telling me all
about Italy and his father’s statues.</p>
<p>Monday I begin my course at the Academy
and I am so excited, although it seems
as though I have forgotten all I have
learned. I have to keep reminding myself
that all of this is really happening to me.
I woke up this morning completely bewildered
for I thought I was still back in
Elmhurst.</p>
<p>I hope to see Peg Moffat while I am
here. Of course I shall probably see her at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93"></SPAN>93</span>
school, but I won’t have much opportunity
to really talk to her there. She has a studio
in Greenwich Village that I am simply
dying to see.</p>
<p>Even with all these new things to do and
see and learn I still miss you terribly. And
June seems such a long way off. I wish it
were tomorrow that you were coming back
so that you could enjoy this with me. But
since that is impossible I shall write you
everything that happens while I’m here.</p>
<p class="right nmb">All my love,</p>
<p class="right2 nmt">Jeannie</p>
</blockquote>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94"></SPAN>94</span></div>
<h2 id="viii">8. Jean Meets a Contessa</h2>
<p class="noi">“<span class="smcap">I’ve</span> just had a telephone call from your
aunt, the Contessa,” Beth said to Aldo at
breakfast Saturday morning. “She sends an
invitation to us for this afternoon, a private
view of paintings and sculpture at Henri
Morel’s studio. She knew him in Italy and
France, and he leaves for the west coast on
Monday. There will be a small reception and
tea, nothing too formal, Jean, so dress well,
hold up your chin and turn out your toes, and
behave with credit to your chaperon. It is
your debut.”</p>
<p>Aldo looked at her quite seriously, but Jean
caught the flutter of fun in her eyes, and knew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95"></SPAN>95</span>
it would not be as ceremonious as it sounded.
When she was ready that afternoon she slipped
into Beth’s own bedroom, at the south end of
the house. Here were three rooms, all so different,
and each showing a distinct phase of
character. One was her winter studio. This
was a large sunny room, paneled in soft-toned
pine, with a wood-brown rug on the floor, and
all the treasures accumulated abroad during
her years there of study and travel. In this
room Jean used to find the girl Beth, who had
ventured forth after the laurels of genius, and
found success awaiting her with love back in
Hastings.</p>
<p>The second room was a private sitting room,
comfortable furniture, and window boxes
filled with blooming hyacinths. Here were
framed photographs of family and friends,
a portrait of Elliott over the desk, his class
colors on the wall, and intimate snapshots he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96"></SPAN>96</span>
had sent her. This was the mother’s and wife’s
room. And the last was her bedroom. Here
Jean found her dressing. All in black, with a
bunch of violets pinned to her waist. She
turned and looked at Jean critically.</p>
<p>“I only had this new green suit,” said Jean.
“I thought with a sort of feminine blouse it
would look all right.”</p>
<p>The blouse was white handkerchief linen
with folded-back cuffs that were edged with
Irish crochet lace. Above it Jean’s eager face
framed in brown hair, her brown eyes, small
imperative chin with its deep cleft, and look
of interest that Kit called “questioning curiosity,”
all seemed accentuated.</p>
<p>“It’s just right, dear,” said Beth. “Go get
a yellow jonquil to wear.”</p>
<p>There was a clean smell of fresh snow in
the air as they drove along the highway to
New York that afternoon. Once Aldo called<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97"></SPAN>97</span>
out in surprise. A pair of sparrows teetered on
a fence rail, bickering with each other.</p>
<p>“Ah, there they are,” he cried. “And in
Italy now there would be no snow. My father
told me of the sparrows here. He said they
were such quarrelsome and saucy birds that he
really didn’t like them when he lived here.
But now, not seeing them, he misses their
chirping.”</p>
<p>“How queer it is,” Jean said, “I mean the
way one remembers and loves all the little
things about one’s own country.”</p>
<p>“Not so much all the country. Just the spot
of earth you spring from. He loves New England.”</p>
<p>“And I love Long Island. I was born there,
not at the Cove, but farther down the coast
near Montauk Point, and the smell of salt
water and the marshes always stirs me. I love
the long green rolling stretches, and the little<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98"></SPAN>98</span>
low hills in the background like you see in
paintings of the Channel Islands and some of
the ones along the Scotch coast. Just a few
straggly scrub pines, you know, and the willows
and wild cherry trees and beach plums.”</p>
<p>“Somewhere I’ve read about that—the
earth’s hold upon her people. I’m afraid I only
respond to New York’s rolling country, too.
I’ve been so homesick abroad just to look at a
crooked apple tree in bloom that I didn’t know
what to do. Where were you born, Aldo?”</p>
<p>“At the Villa Marina. Ah, but you should
see it.” Aldo’s dark eyes glowed with pride.
“It is dull terra cotta color, and then dull green
too, the mold of ages, I think, like the under
side of an olive leaf, and flowers everywhere,
and poplars in long avenues. My father laughs
at our love for it, and says it is just a moldy
old ruin, but every summer we used to spend
there. Some day perhaps you could come to see<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99"></SPAN>99</span>
us, Jean. Would they lend her to us for a while,
do you think, Mrs. Newell?”</p>
<p>“I should love to. Isn’t it fun dreaming of
impossible things like this?”</p>
<p>“Sometimes they turn out to be very possible,”
Beth returned, whimsically. “Hopes to
me are so tangible. We just set ahead of us the
big hope, and the very thought gives us incentive
and endeavor and punch. Plan from now
on, Jean, for one spring in Italy. Then, maybe,
some spring you’ll find yourself there.”</p>
<p>They arrived just a little late at the Morel
studio. Jean had expected it to be more of
the usual workshop, where canvases heaped
against the walls seemed to have collected the
dust of ages, and a broom would have been a
desecration. Here, you ascended in an elevator,
from an entrance hall that Beth declared
always made her think of an Egyptian tomb.</p>
<p>When they reached the ninth floor, they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100"></SPAN>100</span>
found themselves in the long foyer of the
Morel studio. Jean had rather a confused idea
of what followed. There was the meeting with
Morel himself, stoop-shouldered and thin,
with his vivid foreign face, half-closed eyes,
and sparse gray hair. Near him stood Madame
Morel, with a wealth of auburn hair and big
dark eyes. Aldo said to Jean just before they
were separated, “He loves to paint red hair,
and Aunt Signa says she has the most wonderful
hair you ever saw.”</p>
<p>Beth had been taken possession of by a stout
smiling young man with horn-rimmed glasses
and was already the center of a little group.
Jean heard his name, and recognized it as that
of a famous illustrator. Aldo introduced her to
a tall girl in brown whom he had met in Italy,
and then somehow, Jean could not have told
how it happened, they drifted apart. Not but
what she was glad of a breathing spell, just<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101"></SPAN>101</span>
a chance to get her bearings. Morel was showing
some recent canvases, still unframed, at
the end of the studio, and everyone seemed to
gravitate that way.</p>
<p>Jean found a quiet corner just as someone
handed her fragrant tea in a little red and gold
cup, and she was free to look around her. A
beautiful woman had just arrived. She was tall
and past first youth, but Jean leaned forward
expectantly. This must be the Contessa. Her
gown seemed as indefinite and elusive in detail
as a cloud. It was dull blue violet in color, with
a gleam of gold here and there as she moved
slowly toward Morel’s group. Under a wide-brimmed
felt hat, the same shade of blue violet,
Jean saw the lifted face, with tired lovely
eyes, and close waves of pale golden hair. And
this was not all. If only Doris could have seen
her, thought Jean. She had wanted a princess
from real life, or a countess, anything that was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102"></SPAN>102</span>
tangibly romantic and noble, and here was the
very pattern of a princess, even to a splendid
white Russian wolfhound that followed her
with docile eyes and drooping long nose.</p>
<p>“My dear, would you mind coaxing that absent-minded
girl at the tea table to part with
some lemon for my tea? And the Roquefort
sandwiches are excellent too.”</p>
<p>Jean turned at the sound of the new voice
beside her. There on the same settee sat a robust,
middle-aged latecomer. Her black coat
was worn and frayed, her hat altogether too
youthful with its pink and purple roses veiled
in net. Jean saw, too, that there was a button
missing from her dress, and her collar was
pinned at a slightly crooked angle. But the collar
was real lace and the pin was of old pearls
and amethysts. It was her face that charmed.
Framed in an indistinct mass of fluffy hair,
mixed gray and blonde, with a turned-up, winning<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103"></SPAN>103</span>
mouth, and delightfully expressive eyes,
it was impossible not to feel immediately interested
and acquainted.</p>
<p>Before long, Jean found herself indulging
in all sorts of confidences. They seemed united
by a common feeling of, not isolation exactly,
but newness to this circle.</p>
<p>“I enjoy it so much more sitting over here
and looking on,” Jean said. “Beth, my cousin,
knows everyone, of course, but it is like a
painting. You close one eye, and get the group
effect. And I must remember everything to
write home to the girls and Tommy.”</p>
<p>“Tell me about them. Who are they that
you love them so?” asked her new friend. “I,
too, like the bird’s-eye view best. I told Morel
I did not come to see anything but his pictures,
and now I am ready for tea and talk.”</p>
<p>So Jean told all about Woodhow and the
family there and before she knew it, she had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104"></SPAN>104</span>
disclosed too, her own hopes and ambitions,
and perhaps a glimpse of what it might mean
to the others at home, if she, the first to leave,
could only make good. And her companion
told her, in return, of how sure one must be
that the career decided upon was what one
really wanted before one gives up all to it.</p>
<p>“Over in France, and in Italy, too, but
mostly in France,” she said, “I have found
girls like you who before the war were living
on little but hopes, wasting their time and
what money could be spared them from some
home over here, following false hopes, and
sometimes starving. It is but a will-o’-the-wisp,
this success in art, a sort of pitiful madness
that takes possession of our brains and
hearts and makes us forget the commonplace
things in life that lie before us.”</p>
<p>“But how can you tell for sure?” asked
Jean, leaning forward anxiously.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105"></SPAN>105</span>
“Who can answer that? I have only pitied
the ones who could not see that they had no
genius. Ah, my dear, when you meet real
genius, then you know the difference instantly.
It is like the real gems and the paste. There is
consecration and no thought of gain. The work
is done irresistibly, spontaneously, because
they cannot help it. They do not think of so-called
success, it is only the fulfillment of
their own visions that they love. You like to
draw and paint, you say, and you have studied
some in New York. What then?”</p>
<p>Jean pushed back her hair impulsively.</p>
<p>“Do you know, I think you are a little bit
wrong. You won’t mind my saying that, will
you, please? It is only this. Suppose we are not
geniuses, we who see pictures in our minds and
long to paint them. I think that is the gift too,
quite as much as the other, as the power to execute.
Think how many go through life with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106"></SPAN>106</span>
eyes blind to all beauty and color! Surely it
must be something to have the power of seeing
it all, and of knowing what you want to paint.
My cousin Becky back home says it’s better to
aim at the stars and hit the fence post, than
to aim at the fence post and hit the ground.”</p>
<p>“Ah, so, and one of your English poets says
too, ‘A man’s aim should outreach his grasp,
or what’s a heaven for?’ Maybe, you are quite
right. The vision is the gift.” She turned and
laid her hand on Jean’s shoulder, her eyes
beaming with enjoyment of their talk. “I shall
remember you, Brown Eyes.”</p>
<p>And just at this point Beth and Aldo came
toward them, the former smiling at Jean.
“Don’t you think you’ve monopolized the
Contessa long enough?” she asked. Jean could
not answer. The Contessa? This whimsical,
oddly-dressed woman who had sat and talked
with her over their tea in the friendliest sort of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107"></SPAN>107</span>
way, all the time that Jean had thought the
Contessa was the tall lady in the ethereal dress
with the Russian wolfhound at her heels.</p>
<p>“But this is delightful,” exclaimed the
Contessa, happily. “We have met incognito.
I thought she was some demure little art student
who knew no one here, and she has been
so kind to me, who also seemed lonely. Come
now, we will meet with the celebrities.”</p>
<p>With her arm around Jean’s waist, she led
her over to the group around Morel, and told
them in her charming way of how they had
discovered each other.</p>
<p>“And she has taught me a lesson that you,
Morel, with all your art, do not know, I am
sure. It is not the execution that is the crown
of ambition and aspiration, it is the vision itself.
For the vision is divine inspiration, but
the execution is the groping of the human
hand.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108"></SPAN>108</span>
“Oh, but I never could say it so beautifully,”
exclaimed Jean, pink-cheeked and embarrassed,
as Morel laid his hand over hers.</p>
<p>“Nevertheless,” he said, gently, “success to
thy fingertips, Mademoiselle.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109"></SPAN>109</span></div>
<h2 id="ix">9. Letters from Home</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Jean</span> confessed her mistake to Beth after they
had returned home. There were just a few
minutes to spare before bedtime, after wishing
Aldo good night, and she sat on a little stool
before the fire in the sitting room.</p>
<p>“I hadn’t the least idea she was the Contessa.
You know that tall woman with the
wolfhound, Beth—”</p>
<p>Mrs. Newell laughed softly. “That was
Betty Goodwin. Betty loves to dress up. She
plays little parts for herself all the time. I
think today she was an Austrian princess perhaps.
The next time she will be a tailor-made
English girl. Betty indulges her whims, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110"></SPAN>110</span>
she has just had her portrait done by Morel as
a sort of dream maiden, I believe. I caught a
glimpse of it on exhibition last week. Looks as
little like Betty as I do. Jean, paint if you must,
but paint the thing as you see it, and do choose
apple trees and red barns rather than dream
maidens who aren’t real.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know what I shall paint,” Jean answered
with a little quick sigh. “She rather
frightened me, I mean the Contessa. I don’t
think she has much use for my kind of art.
She thinks only real geniuses should paint.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense. Paint all you like. It will train
you in form and color and that you can apply
later to your designing. You’re seventeen,
aren’t you, Jean?”</p>
<p>Jean nodded. “Eighteen in April.”</p>
<p>“You seem younger than that. If I could,
I’d swamp you in paint and study for the next
two years. By that time you would have either
found out that you were tired to death of it,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111"></SPAN>111</span>
and wanted real life, or you would be doing
something worthwhile in the art line. But in
any event you would have no regrets. I mean
you could live the rest of your life contentedly,
without feeling there was something you had
missed. It was odd your meeting the Contessa
as you did. She likes you very much. Now run
along and good night, dear.”</p>
<p>When Jean reached her own room, she
found a surprise. On the desk lay a letter from
home that Mathilda had laid there. Mathilda
was Beth’s standby, as she said. She was tall
and spare and middle-aged, with a broad serene
face, and sandy-red hair worn parted in
the middle. It was just like her, Jean thought,
to lay the letter from home where it would
catch her eye and make her happy before she
went to sleep.</p>
<p>One joy of a letter from home was that it
turned out to be several as soon as you got it
out of the envelope. The one on top was from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112"></SPAN>112</span>
her mother, written just before the mail truck
came up the hill.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noi">Dear Princess,</p>
<p>You have been much on my mind, but I
haven’t time for a long letter, since Mr.
Ricketts may chug up over the hill any
minute, and he won’t wait. I am ever so glad
for you that you have had this opportunity
to study again. Dad is really quite himself
these days, and Becky has lent me Mrs. Gorham,
so the work has been very easy for me,
even without you.</p>
<p>Becky says it looks like an early spring
this year, although how she can tell when it
<SPAN name="is" id="is"></SPAN><ins title="Original has 'it'">is</ins>
still so bleak and barren is beyond me. The
roads are still piled with snow and the river
is frozen over. The girls, Tommy, and Jack
have been skating almost every day.</p>
<p>Have you everything you need? Let me
know otherwise. You know, I can always
find some way out. Write often to us, my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113"></SPAN>113</span>
dear. I feel very near you these days in love
and thought. Your character is developing
so fast and I want to watch so carefully.
There is always a curious bond between the
firstborn and a mother, to the mother especially,
for you taught me motherhood,
my darling. Some day you will understand
what I mean, when you look down into the
face of your own. I must stop, for I am getting
altogether homesick for you.</p>
<p class="right nmb">Tenderly,</p>
<p class="right2 nmt">Mother.</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="noi">Jean sat for a few minutes after reading this,
without unfolding the other letters. Mothers
were wonderful persons, she thought. Their
loving arms stretched so far over one, and gave
forth a love and protectiveness such as nothing
else in the world could do.</p>
<p>The next was from Doris, quite like her
too. Brief and beautifully penned on her very
own pink notepaper.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noi"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114"></SPAN>114</span>
Dear Jeannie,</p>
<p>I do hope you are having a wonderful
time. Have you met any glamorous people
yet? If you have, I hope you write us all
about them. I want to know everything.</p>
<p>School is very uninteresting just now and
it is cold walking to school. But I do have
that one teacher that I’m crazy about, you
know, Miss Simmons. She wears such nice
clothes and her voice is so beautiful. I can’t
bear people with loud voices. When I see
her in the morning, it just wipes out all the
cold walk and everything that’s gone
wrong.</p>
<p>I wish I could have gone away to school
like you and Billie, or at least I wish Billie
was back home. Kit says it’s time to go to
bed.</p>
<p class="right nmb">Your loving sister,</p>
<p class="right2 nmt">Doris.</p>
</blockquote>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115"></SPAN>115</span>
“Oh, Doris, you crazy kid,” Jean laughed
to herself. The letter was entirely typical of
Doris and her vagaries.</p>
<p>Tommy’s letter was hurried.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noi">Dear Jean,</p>
<p>We miss you awfully. Jack got hurt yesterday.
His foot was jammed when a tree
fell on it. He is better now because I helped
to take care of his foot. He wasn’t hurt
badly.</p>
<p>We go skating every day for the river is
frozen over. Jack and I and some of the
other boys have been playing hockey with
my new puck that you gave me for Christmas.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gorham made caramel filling today
the way you do and it all ran out in the oven.
She said the funniest thing. “Thunder and
lightning.” Just like that. And when I
laughed, she told me not to because she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116"></SPAN>116</span>
ought not to say such things, but when
cooking went wrong, she just lost her head
completely. Isn’t that funny? Bring me
home a puppy. I’d love it.</p>
<p class="right nmb">Love,</p>
<p class="right2 nmt">Tommy.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The letter from her father was gay and
cheerful and full of advice. He did sound
better, just as her mother had said.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noi">Jeannie dear,</p>
<p>Although we all miss you, we seem to
be getting along pretty well. With Mrs.
Gorham to help, your mother does not
have too much to do.</p>
<p>The Judge dropped in last evening for a
visit. He says that Billie is getting along
splendidly at school. He has many new
friends and seems to like the work. Becky
and the Judge, of course, miss him as we
do you, my dear.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117"></SPAN>117</span>
I am in the middle of an interesting new
book on world economics. I wish you were
here so that I could read parts of it to you.
Even though your art work is very important,
it is equally valuable to be well-informed
on the affairs of the world in
which you live. I hope you will keep this
bit of advice in mind, for in order to be
fully successful, you must keep abreast of
the times and not be so completely engrossed
in your work, that you fail to recognize
what goes on around you.</p>
<p>But I didn’t mean to start preaching.
You shall learn all this as you study and
grow older, I am sure. I expect to see great
changes in you when you return. But do
not change too much so that we won’t know
you. We love you as you are, darling.</p>
<p class="right nmb">With all my love,</p>
<p class="right2 nmt">Dad.</p>
</blockquote>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118"></SPAN>118</span>
Jean was quite moved by this letter, for her
father was making her responsible for her
own future. It made her feel quite different
somehow, as though she was entrusted with
the power to make or break her own career.</p>
<p>Last of all was Kit’s letter, two sheets of
penciled scribbling, crowded together on both
sides.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noi">Hi, Jean,</p>
<p>I’m writing this the last thing at night
when my brain is getting calm. Any old
time the poet starts singing carelessly of
the joys and beauties of the country in the
wintertime, I hope he lands on this waste
spot during a January blizzard. He’d
change his mind in a hurry.</p>
<p>If you get your hands on any of the current
fashion magazines, be sure to send
them home to us. Even if we can’t indulge,
we can dream, can’t we? I’m getting awfully
tired of skirts and sweaters. It’s high<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119"></SPAN>119</span>
time I was allowed to burst forth in something
really stunning that would knock
everybody cold.</p>
<p>I have a new friend, a dog. Jack says
he’s just a stray, but he isn’t. He’s a shepherd
dog, and very intelligent. I’ve named
him Mac. He fights with Tommy, which
is strange for that brother of ours usually
has a way with animals. I guess he’s just a
one-man dog, for he likes me alone.</p>
<p>I miss you in the evenings an awful lot.
Doris goes around in a sort of moon ring of
romance nowadays, so it’s no fun talking to
her, and Tommy spends most of his time
fooling around with those blasted airplanes
of his. His attitude toward Jack is really
wonderful, it’s almost fatherly. Did you
ever wish we had another boy in the family?
I do now and then. I’d like one about
sixteen, just between us two, that I could be
pals with. Tommy’s too little. Buzzy comes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120"></SPAN>120</span>
the nearest to being a big brother that I’ve
ever had. That guy really had a marvelous
sense of fairness, Jean, do you realize that?
I hope being out West hasn’t changed him
too much. I liked him the way he was. I
am impatient for his return. Do you feel
the same way about Ralph?</p>
<p>Well, my dear artistic close relative and
beloved sister, it is almost ten, so it’s time
for Kathleen to turn into her lonely cot.
Give my love to Beth, and write to me personally.
We can’t bear your inclusive family
letters.</p>
<p class="right nmb">Yours,</p>
<p class="right2 nmt">Kit.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>If it hadn’t been so late, Jean felt she could
have sat down then and there, and answered
every one of them. They took her straight
back to Woodhow and all the daily round of
fun there. In the morning she read parts of
them to Aldo.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121"></SPAN>121</span>
“Ah, but you are lucky,” Aldo said quietly
when she had finished. “I am just myself, and
it’s so monotonous. I wish I could meet your
family and know them all.”</p>
<p>“They are a wonderful family, although I
rather envy you in a way. Sometimes it seems
as if one loses individuality in a large
family.”</p>
<p>“You shouldn’t feel that way,” replied
Aldo. “Why, look, here you are in New York
about to start studying again. Isn’t that proof
enough that there is room for individuality
even in a big family?”</p>
<p>Jean thought of this later when she was
getting ready for the next day at school and
decided that Aldo was probably right. “I’ll
work so hard these next two months, that the
family will be convinced that the time was
well spent. I’ll make them proud of me, or
at least I’ll try.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122"></SPAN>122</span></div>
<h2 id="x">10. At the Art Academy</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">The</span> next morning Jean took the commuter’s
train into New York and found her way to
the Art Academy. The first person she ran
into after she had enrolled was Peg Moffat.</p>
<p>“Gosh, it’s good to see you again, Jean. I
was so excited when you wrote to say you were
coming back. How long will you be here?”</p>
<p>“Just a couple of months, Peg. I’m taking
that special course in textile designing.”</p>
<p>It was now nearly a year since Jean had
been a student at the art school. She had gone
into the work enthusiastically when they had
lived at the Cove on Long Island, making the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123"></SPAN>123</span>
trip back and forth every day. It thrilled her
to be back again for it represented so much to
her, all the aims and ambitions of a year
before.</p>
<p>As they walked upstairs to Jean’s classroom,
some of the girls recognized her and
called out. Jean waved her hand to them, but
did not stop. She was too busy looking at the
sketches along the walls, listening to the familiar
sounds through open doors, Pop Higgins’
deep laugh, Miss Weston’s clear voice
calling to one of the girls, Pierre the Frenchman,
standing with his arm resting on a boy’s
shoulders, pointing out to him mistakes in
underlay of shadows. Even the familiar smell
of turpentine and paint made her unbearably
happy to be there.</p>
<p>Margaret Weston was the girls’ favorite
instructor. The daughter of an artist herself,
she had been born in Florence, Italy, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124"></SPAN>124</span>
brought up there, later living in London and
then Boston. Jean remembered how delightful
her talks with the girls had been when she
had described her father’s intimate circle of
friends back in Italy. It had seemed so interesting
to link the past and present with one
who could remember, as a little girl, visits to
all the art shrines. Jean had always been a favorite
with her. The quiet, imaginative girl
had appealed to Margaret Weston perhaps
because she had the gift of visualizing the
past and its great dreamers. She took both her
hands now in a firm clasp, smiling down at
her.</p>
<p>“Back again, Jean?”</p>
<p>“Only for this special course, Miss Weston,”
Jean smiled a little wistfully. “I wish
it were for longer. It seems awfully good to
be here and see you all.”</p>
<p>“Have you done any work at all in the
country?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125"></SPAN>125</span>
Had she done any work? A swift memory
of the real work of Woodhow swept over
Jean, and she could have laughed.</p>
<p>“Not much.” She shook her head. “I sort
of lost my way for a while, there was so much
else that had to be done, but I’m going to
study now.”</p>
<p>So for two months, Jean could make believe
that she was back as a “regular.” Every
morning she went to class, getting inspiration
and courage even from the teamwork. Later
that first month, she was surprised to see Aldo
waiting for her at the main entrance.</p>
<p>“I’ve come to take you away. It is not good
to bury yourself completely in your work. It
is time that you thought of something besides
paint and warp and woof.”</p>
<p>Jean suddenly remembered the words of
her father’s first letter to her. How he had
warned her of forgetting everything but her
work. “Where are we going?” she asked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126"></SPAN>126</span>
“I have tickets to the latest Broadway play.
It’s a musical and very good, from all I hear
and have read about it. But first we are going
to lunch at the Waldorf.”</p>
<p>Jean never forgot that afternoon with
Aldo. She forgot the art school completely
while she listened to the gay tunes and witty
dialogue coming from the stage. When she
returned to Elmhurst, she often remembered
that day and it made it easier for her to work
at home at everyday chores.</p>
<p>Later, while they were having dinner in a
small Italian restaurant that Aldo frequented
often, she told him of her work. How her designs
were progressing and how she was learning
to weave and how wonderful it was to see
her own designs come to life in the threads of
the material on her loom.</p>
<p>In return, Aldo told her of his own work.
He was now working in clay and hoped to do<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127"></SPAN>127</span>
some real sculpture before he was through.
“I want to work in marbles, the way my father
does,” he said simply. In those few words
his own ambitions were exposed.</p>
<p>They parted at Grand Central, Jean to go
back to Beth’s in Hastings and Aldo to take
the subway uptown to his aunt’s apartment.</p>
<p>A few days later, Jean went home with
Peg Moffat to spend the weekend with her in
her Greenwich Village studio. “Yet you can
hardly call it a studio now, since Mom came
and took possession,” Peg said. “We girls had
it all nice and messy, and she keeps it in order,
I tell you.”</p>
<p>“Somebody was needed to keep it in order,”
Mrs. Moffat put in. They were all
sitting around the table after dinner that
evening.</p>
<p>“Eloise and Janet and I kept house,” Peg
put in significantly. “And, really, talk about<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128"></SPAN>128</span>
temperament! We had no regular meals at
all, and Eloise says if you show her crackers
and pimento cheese again for a year, she’ll
simply die in her tracks. Mom has fed us up
beautifully since she came back from Miami.
Real substantial food.”</p>
<p>“Yes and they didn’t think they needed me
at all, Jean. Somehow a mother doesn’t go
with studio equipment, but this one does, and
now everyone in the block comes down to visit
us. They all need mothering now.”</p>
<p>Jean found the studio delightfully attractive.
The ceiling was beamed in dark oak, and
a wide fireplace with a crackling wood fire
made Jean almost feel as if she were back
home. There were wide shelves lined with
books on painting all around the room. At the
windows hung shrimp-colored draperies that
could be pulled across on transverse rods to
shut out the night. A small spinet piano took<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129"></SPAN>129</span>
up one corner of the room and now Peg walked
over to it and sat down to play. In the middle
of a Mozart sonata, Jean sighed heavily.</p>
<p>Peg stopped playing, turned around, and
asked, “What is it? Tired?”</p>
<p>Jean’s lashes were wet with unshed tears.</p>
<p>“I was wishing Mother were here too,”
she answered. “She loves all this so—just as I
do. It’s awfully lonesome up there sometimes
without any of this. I love the hills and the
freedom, but, oh, it is so lonely. Why, I even
love to hear the horns of the cabs blowing impatiently
and the sound of the busses releasing
their air brakes.”</p>
<p>Jean slept late the next morning, late for
her at least. It was nearly ten when Mrs.
Moffat came into the large room to pull back
the curtains and say that breakfast was nearly
ready.</p>
<p>“Did you close the big house at the Cove?”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130"></SPAN>130</span>
Jean asked while they were dressing.</p>
<p>“Rented it furnished. With Brock away at
college and me sharing this studio with Eloise
and Janet, Mother thought she’d let it go,
and stay with me when she came back from
Florida. She’s over at Aunt Win’s while I’m
at classes. They’ve got an apartment overlooking
Central Park because Uncle Frank
can’t bear commuting in the winter. We’ll go
over there tomorrow afternoon. Aunt Win’s
up to her eyebrows in hospital work.”</p>
<p>“Know something, Peg?” Jean said suddenly,
“I do believe that’s what ails Elmhurst.
Nobody up there is doing anything different
this winter from what they have every
winter for the last fifty years. Down here
there’s always something new and interesting
going on.”</p>
<p>“Sure, but is that good? After a while you
expect something new all the time, and you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131"></SPAN>131</span>
can’t settle down to any one thing steadily.
Coming, Mom, right away.”</p>
<p>“Good morning, lazy things,” said Mrs.
Moffat as she poured the coffee. “I’ve had my
breakfast. I’ve got two appointments this
morning and must rush.”</p>
<p>“Mother always mortgages tomorrow. I’ll
bet anything she’s got appointments lined up
for a month ahead. What’s on for today?”</p>
<p>“Dentist and shopping with your Aunt
Win. I’m going to have lunch with her, so
you girls will be alone. There are seats for a
recital at Carnegie Hall if you’d enjoy it. I
think Jean would. It’s a Chamber Music
group. Peg only likes orchestral concerts, but
if you go to this, you might drop in later at
Signa’s. It’s not far, you know, Peg, and not
a bit out of your way. Aunt Win and I will
join you there.”</p>
<p>“Isn’t she the dearest, bustling Mother?”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132"></SPAN>132</span>
Peg said placidly, when they were alone.
“Sometimes I feel ages older than she is. She
has as much fun dashing around to everything
as if New York were a steady sideshow. Do
you want to go?”</p>
<p>“I’d love to,” Jean answered frankly.
“Who’s Signa?”</p>
<p>“A girl Aunt Win’s interested in. She plays
the violin. Jean Craig, do you realize the
world is just jammed full of people who can
do things, I mean unusual things like painting
and playing and singing, better than the average
person, and yet there are only a few of
them who are really great. It’s such a tragedy
because they all keep on working and hoping
and thinking they’re going to be great. Aunt
Win has about a dozen tucked under her wing
that she encourages, and I think it’s perfectly
deadly.”</p>
<p>Peg planted both elbows on the table and
held her cup of coffee in the air.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133"></SPAN>133</span>
“Because they won’t be great geniuses, you
mean?”</p>
<p>“Sure. They’re just half-way. All they’ve
got is the longing, the urge forward.”</p>
<p>“But it’s something to have the aims and
the ambitions, don’t you think?”</p>
<p>“Maybe so,” Peg said briskly. “Maybe I
can’t see them myself, and it’s just a waste of
time keeping me at the Academy. I’m not a
genius, and I’ll never paint great pictures, but
I am going to be an illustrator, and while I’m
learning I can imagine myself all the geniuses
that ever lived. We were told, not long ago,
to paint a typical city scene. Most of the class
went in for the regulation things, Washington
Arch and Grant’s Tomb, Madison Square
and the opera crowd at the Met. Do you know
what I did?” She pushed back her hair from
her eager face, and smiled. “I went down on
the East Side and you know how they’re always
digging up the streets here after the gas<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134"></SPAN>134</span>
mains or something that’s gone wrong? Well,
I found some workmen resting, sitting on the
edge of the trench eating lunch in the sunlight,
and some kids playing in the dirt as if
it were sand. Golly, it was wonderful, Jean,
the color and composition and I managed to
get it all in lovely splashes. I just called it
<em>Noon</em>. Does it sound good?”</p>
<p>“Splendid,” said Jean.</p>
<p>Peg nodded happily. “Miss Weston said it
was the best thing I had done, the best in the
class. You can find beauty anywhere if you
look for it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, gee, it’s good to be down talking to
you again,” Jean exclaimed. “It spurs me
along so to be where others are working and
thinking.”</p>
<p>“Think so?” Peg turned her head with her
funny quizzical smile. “You ought to hear
Pop Higgins talk on that. He runs away to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135"></SPAN>135</span>
a little shack somewhere up on the Hudson
when he wants to paint. He says Emerson and
Thoreau were right when they wrote about
the still places where you rest and invite your
soul. Let’s get dressed. It’s after eleven already
and if we want to do any shopping before
that concert we ought to be going.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136"></SPAN>136</span></div>
<h2 id="xi">11. The Sculptured Head</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">That</span> evening a few of Peg’s artist friends
came in to talk shop, and Jean found her old-time
favorite teacher, Pop Higgins, among
them. He was about seventy, but erect and
quick of step as any of the boys, with iron-gray
hair, close-cut and curly, and keen
brown eyes. He was really splendid looking,
Jean thought.</p>
<p>“You know, Jeannie,” he began, slipping
comfortably down a trifle in his chair, “you’re
looking fine. I think your studies here have
done something to you. How is it going?”</p>
<p>“It’s going beautifully, but much too fast.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137"></SPAN>137</span>
I’ll have to be going home soon, I’m afraid.
There are only a few weeks left in the
course.”</p>
<p>“That’s all right. Anything that tempers
character while you’re young is good for the
whole system. I was born out west in Kansas,
when the West was still pretty wild. I used to
ride cattle for my father when I was only
about ten. And, Lord above, those nights on
the plains taught my heart the song of life. I
wouldn’t take back one single hour of them.”</p>
<p>“Did you paint then?”</p>
<p>He laughed, a deep, hearty laugh that
made Mrs. Moffat smile at them. “Never
touched a brush until after I was thirty. I
loved color and could see it. I knew that shadows
were purple or blue, and I used to squint
one eye to get the tint of the earth after we’d
plowed, dull rusty-red like old wounds, it
was. First sketch I ever drew was one of my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138"></SPAN>138</span>
sister Polly. She stood on the edge of a gully
hunting some stray turkeys. I’ve got the
painting I made later from that sketch. It was
exhibited, too, called <em>Sundown</em>.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ve seen it,” Jean said. “The land is
all in deep blues and hyacinth tones and the
sky is amber and the queerest green, and her
skirt is just a dash of red.”</p>
<p>“The red that shows under an oriole’s wing
when he flies. She was seventeen then. About
your age, isn’t it, Jeannie?”</p>
<p>He glanced at her sideways. Jean nodded.</p>
<p>“I thought so, although she looked
younger.”</p>
<p>“I—I hope she didn’t die,” said Jean
anxiously.</p>
<p>“Die? Bless your heart,” he laughed again.
“She’s living up in Colebrook. Went back
over the same route her mother had traveled,
and married in the old home town. Pioneer
people live to be pretty old.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139"></SPAN>139</span>
“It must have been wonderful,” Jean said.
“Mother’s from the West too, only way out
West, from California. Her brother has the
big ranch there where she was born, but she
never knew any hardships at all. Everything
was comfortable and there was always plenty
of money, she says, and it never seemed like
the real West to us, when she’d tell of it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but it is, the real West of the last
sixty years, as it has grown up to success and
prosperity. If I keep you here talking any
longer to an old fellow like myself, the boys
won’t be responsible for their actions. You’re
a novelty, you know. Bruce is glaring at me.”</p>
<p>He rose leisurely and went over beside
Mrs. Moffat’s chair, and Bruce Pearson hurried
to take his place.</p>
<p>“I thought he’d keep you talking here all
night. And you sat there drinking it all in as
if you liked it.”</p>
<p>“I did,” said Jean flatly. “I loved it. I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140"></SPAN>140</span>
haven’t been here at all. I’ve been way out on
a Kansas prairie.”</p>
<p>“Stuff,” said Bruce calmly. “Say, got any
good dogs up at your place?”</p>
<p>“No. Kit wrote me she picked up a stray
shepherd dog, but I haven’t seen him yet.
Why?” Jean looked at him with sudden
curiosity.</p>
<p>“Nothing, only you remember when you
were moving from the Cove, Tommy sold me
his Cocker pup?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I remember.”</p>
<p>“We’ve got some swell puppies. I was wondering
whether you’d take one home to
Tommy from me if I brought it in.”</p>
<p>“I’d love to. Tommy had his twelfth birthday
the other day and I couldn’t think of anything
to get him so I just sent a birthday telegram.
The puppy will make a perfect belated
gift,” said Jean, her face aglow. It was just
like Bruce to think of that, and how Tommy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141"></SPAN>141</span>
would love it. “I think we’ll name him Bruce,
if you don’t mind.”</p>
<p>Bruce didn’t mind in the least. In fact, he
felt it would be a sign of remembrance, he
said. And he would bring in the puppy as soon
as Jean was ready to go home.</p>
<p>“But you needn’t hurry her,” Peg warned,
coming to sit with them. “She hasn’t been
here long, and I’m hoping if I can just stretch
it along rather unconsciously, she’ll stay right
through the term, the way she should.”</p>
<p>Jean felt almost guilty, as her own heart
echoed the wish. How she would study, if
only it could happen.</p>
<p>On the following Saturday afternoon, Jean
left Beth to go browsing through the galleries
of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She had
little time left in New York, and wanted to
revisit some of her favorites before she had to
go back to Elmhurst.</p>
<p>Beth drove her up to the station and waved<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142"></SPAN>142</span>
to her as she boarded the local. “Call me before
you leave, and I’ll pick you up,” she
called as the train started to move. Jean nodded,
walked back into the car, and found a
seat.</p>
<p>After settling herself comfortably, she
opened her bag, and found a letter from
Ralph that had been in the day’s mail. She
had not had time to read it before she left.
She opened it now and read.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noi">Jeannie darling,</p>
<p>Your last letter sounded so enthusiastic
about your work, that I know you must be
having a marvelous time. It’s too bad you
can’t stay there longer.</p>
<p>But who’s this Aldo guy that’s been
squiring you thither and yon, all over New
York? You needn’t be so nice to him just
because he’s a friend of your cousin Beth’s.
Too bad that I’m not there to look after
things. You better not go falling for him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143"></SPAN>143</span>
with all his foreign airs and old-world
charm. I know that type of smooth operator,
for I saw a bunch of them when I
served with the army overseas.</p>
<p>You’ll say I’m jealous. Well, what if I
am? After all, I saw you first.</p>
<p>Write me, my darling, immediately and
say these fears of mine are completely unfounded.
I’ll be waiting anxiously for your
sweet words of comfort and encouragement.
If I don’t receive them, I’ll hop the
next train and see for myself what the
score is.</p>
<p>Buzzy and I are working hard as usual
and life goes on in its unaltered and unalterable
course. We will probably leave here
in April, instead of waiting until June. I
want to be in Elmhurst in the spring with
you.</p>
<p class="right nmb">Dearest love,</p>
<p class="right2 nmt">Ralph.</p>
</blockquote>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144"></SPAN>144</span>
Jean was greatly amused by his letter and
laughed to herself over the “villainous character”
who was taking her away from Ralph.
Of course Aldo had been very nice to her,
taking her to lunch and all that. But he was
only a good friend.</p>
<p>She spent a pleasant afternoon wandering
through the art galleries of the museum. She
revisited many of her old favorites—paintings
she had stood before many times when
the family had lived on Long Island. Then
she found a special exhibition of paintings by
modern American artists.</p>
<p>Jean spent a long time looking at these.
Some of the artists’ names were familiar to
her, others were new. In one corner of the
gallery she came upon the sculptured head of
a woman. Her face looked old and the lines in
it were the lines of extreme hardship and pain.
The forehead was high, the nose long and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145"></SPAN>145</span>
sharp, but the mouth was quite different. It
was smiling, “in spite of everything,” Jean
thought to herself. Although everything else
about the head characterized utter disillusionment,
the mouth looked gay and carefree.</p>
<p>A step behind her made Jean turn suddenly
and there stood Aldo.</p>
<p>“Like it?” he asked briefly.</p>
<p>“Why, yes—no—I don’t know.” Jean hesitated,
confused. “It’s so strange. I can’t reconcile
the mouth to the rest of the head—”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you about her, then maybe you’ll
understand. She is an old Italian woman. Her
husband and three sons were killed in the first
World War, but undaunted, she raised her
youngest son alone, although she was very
poor and it was hard. Her son married and
had two sons of his own. He became a successful
lawyer. Then the second war came. Her
home was demolished, her son’s entire family<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146"></SPAN>146</span>
was killed, and yet, in spite of everything she
has been through, she manages to smile that
way, the smile of a young girl. I think it’s the
best thing my father ever did.”</p>
<p>“Your father? I didn’t know—I mean—I
never looked at the nameplate.”</p>
<p>“Yes. You see, I brought it with me when
I came. Then, when I heard they were having
this exhibition here, I entered it in his name.
I think he’ll be pleased when he hears. He
never exhibited anything in this country.”</p>
<p>The two stood and gazed at the head
awhile in silence. It was Aldo who spoke first.
“Look, are you doing anything now, could we
go somewhere and have supper?”</p>
<p>“I think I could. If you’ll wait until I call
Beth, so she won’t worry.”</p>
<p>They went back to the small Italian restaurant
where Aldo had taken Jean before. It
was almost empty when they walked in for it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147"></SPAN>147</span>
was still quite early. After they had eaten,
Aldo said suddenly, “I’m going back to Italy
next week.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m sorry you’re going so soon,” replied
Jean. “But we wouldn’t have seen much
more of each other anyway, I’m going home
too.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps we will meet again someday, in
Italy. Then I will show you all the beautiful
places I love that I have told you about.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” said Jean doubtfully. It seemed
so far away, like having a star for a goal and
she was bound to hit the fence post.</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148"></SPAN>148</span></div>
<h2 id="xii">12. From Out of the West</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">All</span> too soon, the course was over for Jean
and now she was going home. It was hard for
her to say goodbye to her friends at school,
especially Peg Moffat. She would always be
indebted to Beth for giving her this opportunity.
They had many long talks about art
and Beth offered to criticize Jean’s work if
she would send it to her.</p>
<p>Jean had had a letter from Ralph just before
she left New York and he said he was
leaving then for Elmhurst. He and Buzzy
had decided to return earlier than they had
previously planned so they could be at Woodhow<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149"></SPAN>149</span>
in time to celebrate Jean’s eighteenth
birthday. He would arrive about the same
time she did. That was almost the only reason
she could think of for returning home and
leaving the glamor and breathlessness of New
York behind her, although she had to admit
to herself she missed her family. It was the
day before her birthday when she arrived.</p>
<p>Jean looked around eagerly as she jumped
to the platform, wondering which of the
family would drive down to meet her, but instead
of Kit or her mother, Ralph stepped up
to her with outstretched arms. All the way
from Saskatoon, she thought, and just the
same as he was a year before. Kit said later,
in describing him, “He doesn’t look as if he
could be the hero, but he’d always be the hero’s
best friend, like Mercutio was to Romeo.”
But Jean felt differently. This was the
one she had waited for all those months to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150"></SPAN>150</span>
come back to her. Her exciting stay in New
York, the course at the art school, all faded
into insignificance by comparison with her
feeling about Ralph.</p>
<p>Mr. Briggs waved a welcome as he trundled
the express truck past them down the
platform. “Looks a bit like rain. Good for
the planters,” he called.</p>
<p>Ralph took Jean by the hand and led her
over to the car. They drove up the long
curved hill from the station and Jean lifted
her head to it all, the long overlapping hill
range that unfolded as they came to the first
stretch of level road, the rich green of the
pines gracing their slopes, and most of all the
beautiful haze of young green that lay like a
veil over the land from the first bursting leaf
buds.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s swell to be home,” she exclaimed.
“Over at Beth’s the land seems so level, and I
guess I really like the hills.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151"></SPAN>151</span>
“What on earth have you got in the basket,
Jean?”</p>
<p>Jean had forgotten all about the puppy.
Bruce had kept his word and met her at the
train with a sleepy, diminutive cocker pup all
curled up comfortably in a basket. He had
started to show signs of personal interest,
scratching and whining as soon as Jean had
set the basket down at her feet in the car.</p>
<p>“It’s for Tommy. Bruce Pearson sent it up
to him to remember Jiggers by.”</p>
<p>“Jiggers?”</p>
<p>“It’s the dog Tommy had back at the Cove.
He sold him to Bruce, a neighbor of ours, before
we moved away. Now, Bruce is sending
one of the pups back for Tommy.”</p>
<p>“How nice. I hear he and his friend Jack
have been pleading for a puppy. This will be
a pleasant surprise. The girls were sorry they
couldn’t drive down,” Ralph said. “They
were having some sort of Easter doings at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152"></SPAN>152</span>
school. Buzzy and I arrived two days ago and
I asked for the privilege of coming down.
Your mother’s up at the Judge’s today. Billie’s
pretty sick, I think.”</p>
<p>“Billie?” cried Jean. “Not Billie?”</p>
<p>Even to think of Billie’s being ill was absurd.
It was like saying a raindrop had the
measles. He had never been sick all the years
he had lived up there, bare-headed in the
winter, free as the birds and animals he loved.
All the way home she felt subdued.</p>
<p>“He came back from school Monday for
Easter vacation and they are afraid of pneumonia.
I don’t understand how he could have
gotten it, but I’m sure if anybody could pull
him through it would be Mrs. Ellis,” said
Ralph.</p>
<p>But even with the best nursing and care,
things looked bad for Billie. It was supper
time before Mrs. Craig returned. The reunion
between mother and daughter was indeed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153"></SPAN>153</span>
a happy one. “I can’t tell you how I feel
to have you back again, darling.”</p>
<p>“And it’s wonderful to be back. I missed
you all so.”</p>
<p>Doris was indignant and stunned at the
blow that had fallen on her friend, Billie. She
sputtered, “The idea that Billie should have
to be sick during vacation. How long will he
be in bed, Mother?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know, dear,” Mrs. Craig said.
“He’s strong and husky, but it will be some
time, I’m afraid, before he’ll be well again.
Dr. Gallup came right over.”</p>
<p>“That’s good,” Kit put in. “He’ll get him
well in no time. I don’t think there ever was
a doctor so set on making people well. I’d
rather see him come in the door, no matter
what was wrong with me, sit down and tell
me I had just a little distemper, open his
black case, and mix me up that everlasting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154"></SPAN>154</span>
mess that tastes like cinnamon and sugar, than
have a whole line of city specialists tapping
me.”</p>
<p>Doris and Tommy clung closely to Jean,
taking her and Ralph around the place to
show her all the new chicks, orphans and otherwise.
Woodhow really was showing signs
of full return this year for the care and love
spent on its rehabilitation. The fruit trees,
after Buzzy’s pruning and fertilizing, and
general treatment that made them look like
swaddled babies, were blossoming profusely,
and on the south slope of the field along the
river, rows and rows of young peach trees had
been set out. The garden too, had come in for
its share of attention. Doris loved flowers, and
had worked there more diligently than she
usually could be coaxed to on any sort of real
labor. She had cleared away the old dead
plants first, and with Tommy’s help had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155"></SPAN>155</span>
plowed up the central plot, taking care to save
all the perennials.</p>
<p>“You know what I wish, Mom,” said
Doris, standing with earth-stained fingers in
the midst of the tangle of old vines and
bushes. “I wish we could lay out paths and
put stones down on them, flat stones, I mean,
like flags. And have flower beds with borders.
Could we, do you think?”</p>
<p>Her earnestness made Mrs. Craig smile,
but she agreed to the plan, and Becky helped
out with slips from her flower store, so that
the prospect for a garden was very good. And
later Buzzy Hancock came up with Sally to
advise and help too. The year out West had
turned the country boy into a stalwart, independent
individual whom even Sally regarded
with some respect. He was taller than before,
broad-shouldered, and sure of himself.</p>
<p>“I think Ralph has done wonders for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156"></SPAN>156</span>
him,” Sally said. “Mother thinks so too. He
talks so enthusiastically about the West that
she doesn’t seem to mind going out there any
more, after seeing what it’s made of Buzzy.
And Ralph says we’ll always keep the home
here so that when we want to come back, we
can. I think he likes Elmhurst. He says it
never seems like home way out West. You
need to walk on the earth where your fathers
and grandfathers have trod, and even to
breathe the same air. Mom says the only place
she hates to leave behind is our little family
burial plot over in the woods.”</p>
<p>Although the Craig family had planned a
birthday party and Kit had baked a beautiful
cake, it was at Jean’s own request that they
decided not to have the party since Billie was
sick. Instead they had a family picnic dinner
in the back yard. Of course, Ralph and
Buzzy were there.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157"></SPAN>157</span>
Jean was thrilled with all her lovely gifts,
especially with the rough turquoise that
Ralph had brought from Saskatoon. When
he gave it to her, he said, “I knew you would
like to design your own setting for this stone.”
Jean was very pleased with his thoughtfulness.</p>
<p>Even Jack had a present for her, a picture
that he had made by collecting leaves and
flowers from the woods and glueing them to a
piece of plywood. Tommy had helped him to
make the birchwood frame, and Jean was
touched by their efforts to make her birthday
such a happy one.</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158"></SPAN>158</span></div>
<h2 id="xiii">13. Spring Picnic</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">In</span> the days following Easter, while Mrs.
Craig was over at the Ellis place helping care
for Billie who was still very sick, the girls and
Tommy managed the house alone. When
Tommy came in from the barn one morning,
he found Jean getting breakfast in the
kitchen. “Seen anything of Jack?” he asked.
“I haven’t seen him this morning, and he was
going to help me and Ralph plow. I’ll bet a
cookie he’s taken to his heels. He’s been acting
funny for several days ever since that peddler
went along here.”</p>
<p>“Oh, not really, Tommy,” said Jean anxiously.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159"></SPAN>159</span>
She had overlooked Jack completely
in the excitement of Billie’s illness. “What
could happen to him?”</p>
<p>“Nothing special,” answered Tommy
dryly, “maybe he was tired of staying here
and working all the time.”</p>
<p>“You can’t expect a little kid only nine to
work very hard, can you?”</p>
<p>“No—o. But he’s got to do something. He
keeps asking me when somebody’s going
down to Nantic. Looks suspicious to me!”</p>
<p>“Nantic? Do you suppose—” Jean stopped
short. Tommy failed to notice her hesitancy,
but went on outdoors. Perhaps the boy was
wondering if he could get any trace of his father
down at Nantic, she thought. There was
a great deal of her mother’s nature in Jean’s
sympathy and swift, sure understanding of
another’s need. She kept an eye out for Jack
all day, but the afternoon passed and supper<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160"></SPAN>160</span>
was on the table without any sign of their
Christmas waif. And finally, when Ralph
came in from the barn with Tommy, he said
he was pretty sure Jack had run away.</p>
<p>“Do you think it’s because he didn’t want
to stay with us while Mother was away?”
asked Doris.</p>
<p>“No, I don’t,” Tommy put in. “I think he’s
just born restless and he had to take to the
road when the call came to him.”</p>
<p>But Jean felt the responsibility of Jack’s
loss, and set a lamp burning all night in the
living room window as a sign to light his way
back home. It was such a long walk down to
Nantic, and when he got there, Mr. Briggs
would be sure to see him, and make trouble
for him. And perhaps he had just wandered
out into the hills on a regular hike and had
gotten lost.</p>
<p>But neither the next day, nor the day after,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161"></SPAN>161</span>
did any news come to them of Jack. Mr.
Briggs was sure he hadn’t been around the
station or the freight trains. Saturday Kit and
Doris drove around through the wood roads,
looking for some sign of him, and Jean telephoned
to all the points she could think of,
giving a description of him, and asking them
to send the wanderer back if they found him.
But the days passed, and it looked as if Jack
had really gone.</p>
<p>One afternoon Jean and Ralph were sitting
on the back steps when Buzzy and Kit hailed
them from the hill. Kit was wearing a pair of
slacks and a red blouse hanging outside of
them. On her head she had jammed one of
Tommy’s caps, and on the side she had stuck
a quail’s feather.</p>
<p>“Hi,” called Kit, “we’ve been for a hike,
clear over to the village. Mother phoned she
needed some things from the drugstore, so we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162"></SPAN>162</span>
thought we’d walk over and get them. Billie’s
just the same. He doesn’t know a soul, and all
he talks about is making his math exams. I
think it’s perfectly shameful to take a boy like
that who loves reading and nature and natural
things, and grind him down to regular stuff.”</p>
<p>She flopped down on the grass in front of
them with Buzzy at her side. “I love a good
long hike,” Kit went on. “Especially when I
feel bothered or indignant. We’ve kept up the
hiking club ever since the roads opened up,
Jean. It’s more fun than anything out here. I
never realized there was so much to know
about just woods and fields until Sally taught
me where to hunt for things. Do you like to
hike, Ralph?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know. Not too long. I think I’d
rather ride.”</p>
<p>“Me, too,” Doris said flatly. She had been
working in the garden and had come up when
she heard Kit and Buzzy’s voices. “I don’t see<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163"></SPAN>163</span>
a bit of fun dragging around like Kit does,
through the woods and over swamps, climbing
hills, and always wanting to get to the top
of the next one.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but I love to,” Kit replied. “Maybe
I’ll be a mountain climber yet. Kids, you don’t
grasp that there is something strange and interesting
in my own special temperament.
The longing to attain, the—the insatiable desire
to seize adventure and follow her fleeing
footsteps, the longing to tap the stars on their
foreheads and let them know I’m here.”</p>
<p>Ralph laughed at her. “Well, even if I
don’t share such desires with you, Kit, how
about all of us going for a picnic one of these
days. It seems to me that the ground isn’t too
wet for one, and it would do us all good to
stop worrying about Billie since there is nothing
we can do to hasten his recovery. Do you
agree, Buzzy?”</p>
<p>“That’s a swell idea, Ralph,” he replied,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164"></SPAN>164</span>
chewing on a blade of grass. “Why not make
it tomorrow. I’ll ask Mom to pack us up some
food.”</p>
<p>“No, leave that to us, Buzzy,” Jean interrupted.
“We’ve got some steaks in the house
that are just asking to be broiled outdoors over
a charcoal fire. With those and some fruit and
coffee, we should have enough. Let’s plan to
leave here around five and make an evening
of it.”</p>
<p>“What good times a large family can
have,” Ralph said as he slipped his arm
through Jean’s on a walk through the garden
later. “Sometimes I wish I had been lucky
enough to have had brothers and sisters. You
feel so odd when you are all the family yourself.”</p>
<p>The next evening Kit, Buzzy, Jean, and
Ralph hiked down the river to a small beach
that seemed to all of them ideal for a picnic.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165"></SPAN>165</span>
It was Buzzy who had suggested the spot. He
said he and the other boys used to go there a
lot in the summer to fish and swim. While the
boys built the fire, Kit and Jean walked on
down the river a little way.</p>
<p>Not far off, the girls found some violets
and picked some to take home. Looking across
the river, Jean saw an old house nestled
among the trees. “Who lives there, do you
know, Kit? I never saw it before.”</p>
<p>“It’s Cynthy Allen’s place. People say she’s
queer, but I don’t think so. She’s real old, over
seventy. But she thinks she is only about seventeen,
and she’s always doing flighty things.
She’s lived out in the woods ever since she ran
away from her family years ago. Once she
started to make doughnuts and they found her
hanging them on nails all over the kitchen. So
people have been afraid of her ever since.
Isn’t that silly?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166"></SPAN>166</span>
“Let’s go over to see her some day. Want
to?”</p>
<p>“Sure. I’ll bet she gets lonely there, all by
herself. Say, we’d better start back. That fire
ought to be started by now.”</p>
<p>And it was. The boys were lying lazily on
their backs in front of it when Kit and Jean
came up. “Hey, you lazy guys, why aren’t you
cooking the steaks instead of lying there doing
nothing?” Kit called.</p>
<p>“We’re waiting for you to do it,” retorted
Buzzy. “It’s women’s work to do the cooking.
Besides, you have to wait until the wood’s
burned down to coals before you can start
broiling.”</p>
<p>“We’ve got news for you,” put in Ralph,
“we did put in the potatoes to bake. So you
see, you’ve jumped to conclusions as usual,
Kit, and we weren’t as lazy as you thought.”</p>
<p>“I’m so hungry from that trek down the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167"></SPAN>167</span>
hillside, I could eat those steaks raw,” said
Jean. “Shall I put them on now? When did
you start the potatoes?”</p>
<p>“Quite a while ago. They should be done
soon. Here, I’ll test them.” Ralph groaned as
he struggled to his feet. “This is the life for
me. Flat on my back beside a nice warm fire.”</p>
<p>Going back up the hill after the picnic was
much harder, they found, than it had been to
go down. “Why did you let me eat so much,”
mourned Buzzy. “I’ll never make it to the
top.”</p>
<p>“Come on, I’ll race you,” cried Kit, and
pulling him along she began to run. Laughing
and shouting, they soon were out of earshot
and Jean and Ralph walked leisurely on
behind.</p>
<p>“Nothing could make me run after a supper
like that,” Ralph commented. The moon
had risen and it shone down on Jean’s hair<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168"></SPAN>168</span>
making it look silvery in the pale light. Ralph
kissed her lightly. “You’re awfully sweet,
Jeannie. Do you know that? I wish I could
make you mine forever.”</p>
<p>“Maybe it could be arranged sometime,”
Jean said lightly.</p>
<p>“Won’t you be serious?”</p>
<p>“No. I can’t be now. I’m too young. Besides
they need me at home.”</p>
<p>Ralph felt slightly discouraged by her answer,
but he knew she was right. True, she
was young, but he was young, too. And he
would wait for her until she was ready, he
thought to himself. He could tell by the radiant
look in her face that she, too, was in love.</p>
<p>Before she went upstairs to bed that night,
Jean went out in the kitchen to make sure the
back door was locked. She glanced out of the
window and caught her breath. Dodging out
of sight behind a pile of wood that was waiting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169"></SPAN>169</span>
to be split, was a familiar figure. Without
waiting to call anyone, she slipped quietly
around the house and there, sure enough,
backed up against the woodshed, was Jack.</p>
<p>“Oh, Jack,” Jean exclaimed happily.
“Come here this minute. Nobody’s going to
hurt you, don’t you know that? Aren’t you
hungry?”</p>
<p>Jack nodded mutely. He didn’t look one bit
ashamed, just eager and glad to be back home.
Jean put her arm around him, patting him
as her mother would have done, and leading
him to the kitchen.</p>
<p>After he had finished a huge sandwich,
several glasses of milk, and a piece of cake,
the truth finally came out. “I went hunting
my dad down around Norwich,” he said.</p>
<p>“Did you find him?” cried Jean.</p>
<p>Jack nodded happily.</p>
<p>“Braced him up too. He says he won’t<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170"></SPAN>170</span>
drink any more ’cause it’ll disgrace me. He’s
gone to work up there in the lockshop steady.
He wanted me to stay with him, but as soon
as I got him braced up, I came back here. You
didn’t get my letter, did you? I left it stuck
in the clock.”</p>
<p>Stuck in the clock? Jean looked up at the
old eight-day Seth Thomas on the kitchen
shelf that Kit had bought from old Mr.
Weaver as a joke. It was made of black walnut,
with green vines painted on it and morning
glories rambling in wreaths around its
borders. She opened the little glass door and
felt inside. Sure enough, tucked far back was
Jack’s farewell letter, put carefully where nobody
would ever think of finding it. It was
written laboriously in pencil, and Jean read
it to herself.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noi">Dere folks,</p>
<p>I hered from a pedlar my dad is sick up<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171"></SPAN>171</span>
in norwich. goodbye and thanks i am coming
back sumday.</p>
<p class="right nmb">yurs with luv,</p>
<p class="right2 nmt">Jack.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Jack looked at her with his old confident
smile.</p>
<p>“See?” he said. “I told you I was coming
back.”</p>
<p>“And you’re going to stay too,” replied
Jean thankfully. “I’m so glad you weren’t
lost forever, Jack. Now you’d better run
along to bed.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172"></SPAN>172</span></div>
<h2 id="xiv">14. Billie’s Crisis</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Billie</span> failed to rally from the pneumonia
as soon as everyone had hoped. Doris was
restless and uneasy over her pal’s plight. She
would saddle Princess and ride over on her
twice a day to see what the bulletins were,
and sometimes sit out in the garden watching
the windows of the room where Becky kept
vigil. She almost resented the joyous activity
of the bees and birds in their spring delirium
when she thought of Billie, lying there fighting
pneumonia.</p>
<p>Jean never forgot the final night. She had
a phone call from her mother about nine, to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173"></SPAN>173</span>
leave Mrs. Gorham in charge and come to
her.</p>
<p>“I’d like you to be here, dear. It’s the crisis,
and we can’t be sure what may happen. Billie’s
in a heavy sleep now, and the old doctor
says we can just wait. Becky is with him.”</p>
<p>Jean took off her coat when she arrived,
and went in where old Dr. Gallup sat. It always
seemed foolish to call him old, although
he was over sixty. His hair was gray and
straggled boyishly as some football hero’s, his
eyes were brown and bright, and his smile
something so much better than medicine that
one just naturally revived at the sight of him,
Becky said. He sat now by the table, looking
out of the window, one hand tapping the
edge, the other deep in his pocket. One could
not have said what his thoughts were as he
sat looking out into the shadowy spring night.</p>
<p>“Hello, Jeannie,” he said cheerily. “Going<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174"></SPAN>174</span>
to keep me company, are you? Did you
come up alone?”</p>
<p>“Kit drove me over. Doctor, Billie is all
right, isn’t he?”</p>
<p>“We hope so,” answered the old doctor.
“But what is it to be all right? If the boy’s
race is run, it has been a good one, and he goes
out fearlessly, and if not, then he is all right
too, and we hope to hold him with us. But
when this time comes and it’s the last sleep
before dawn, there’s nothing to do but watch
and wait.”</p>
<p>“But do you think—”</p>
<p>Jean hesitated. She could not help feeling
he must know what the hope was.</p>
<p>“He’s got a fine fighting chance,” said the
doctor. “Now, I’m going in with Mrs. Ellis,
and you comfort the Judge and brace him up.
He’s in the study there.”</p>
<p>It was dark in the study. Jean opened the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175"></SPAN>175</span>
door gently and looked in. The old Judge sat
in his deep, old leather chair by the desk, and
his head was bent forward. She did not say a
word, but tiptoed over and knelt beside him,
her cheek against his sleeve. And the Judge
laid his arm around her shoulders in silence,
patting her absent-mindedly. So they sat until
out of the windows the garden took on a
lighter aspect, and there came the faint twittering
of birds wakening in their nests.</p>
<p>Jean, watching the beautiful miracle of
the dawn, marveled. The dew lent a silvery
radiance to every blade of grass, every leaf
and twig. There was an unearthly, mystic
beauty to the whole landscape and the garden.</p>
<p>And just then the old doctor put his head
in the door and sang out cheerily, “It’s all
right. Billie’s awake.”</p>
<p>Jean called Kit later to tell her the good
news and Kit drove over shortly. “That’s a relief,”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176"></SPAN>176</span>
Kit exclaimed. “I hardly slept a wink
all night, I was so worried. You don’t look
as if you slept.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t and I’m practically dead on my
feet. But I’m so glad that Billie is going to
pull through.”</p>
<p>Now that Billie’s recovery was assured
everybody’s spirits seemed to become lighter.
After two weeks of almost daily showers
there had come a spell of close warm weather
that dried up the fields and woods, and left
them, so Becky said, dry as tinder and twice
as dangerous.</p>
<p>Kit and Doris were preparing the garden
for planting.</p>
<p>“Oh, dear!” Kit leaned back against the
side of the barn and looked lazily off at the
widening valley before her. “I’m so afraid
that Dad will get too interested in chicken
raising and crops and soils and things, so that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177"></SPAN>177</span>
we’ll stay on here forever. Somehow I didn’t
mind it half as much all through the winter,
but now that spring is here, it’s just simply
awful to have to pitch in and work from the
rising of the sun until it goes down. I want to
be a lady of leisure.”</p>
<p>Overhead the great fleecy, white clouds
sailed up from the south in a squadron of
splendor. A new family of bluebirds lately
hatched was calling hungrily from a nest in
the old cherry tree nearby, and being scolded
lustily by a catbird for lack of patience. There
was a delicate haze lingering still over the
woods and distant fields. The new foliage was
out, but hardly enough to make any difference
in the landscape’s coloring.</p>
<p>“How’s Billie?” asked Doris suddenly.
“I’ll be awfully glad when he’s out again.”</p>
<p>“They’ve got him on the porch bundled up
like a mummy. He’s so topply that you can<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178"></SPAN>178</span>
push him over with one finger and Becky
treats him as if she had him wadded up in
pink cotton. I think if they just stopped treating
him like a half-sick person, and just let
him do as he pleased he’d get well twice as
fast.”</p>
<p>Doris had been gazing up at the sky dreamily.
All at once she said, “What a funny cloud
that is over there, Kit.”</p>
<p>It hung over a big patch of woods toward
the village, a low motionless, pearl-colored
cloud, very peculiar looking, and very suspicious,
and the odd part about it was that it
seemed balanced on a base of cloud, like a
huge mushroom or a waterspout in shape.</p>
<p>“What on earth is that?” exclaimed Kit,
springing to her feet. “That’s never a cloud,
and it’s right over the old Ames place. Do
you suppose they’re out burning brush with
the woods so dry?”</p>
<p>“There’s nobody home today. Don’t you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179"></SPAN>179</span>
know it’s Saturday, and Astrid said they were
all going to the auction at Woodchuck Hill?”</p>
<p>Kit did not wait to hear any more. She sped
to the house like a young deer and, with eyes
quite as startled, she burst into the kitchen
and called up the stairs.</p>
<p>“Mother, do you see that smoke over the
Ames’s woods?”</p>
<p>“Smoke,” echoed Mrs. Craig’s voice.
“Why, no, dear, I haven’t noticed any. Wait
a minute, and I’ll see.”</p>
<p>But Kit was by nature a joyous alarmist.
She loved a new thrill, and in the daily monotony
that smothered one in Elmhurst anything
that promised an adventure came as a
heaven-sent relief. She flew up the stairs,
stopping to call to Jean who was in her room.
Her father and mother were standing at the
open window when she entered their room,
and Mr. Craig had his field glasses.</p>
<p>“It is a fire, isn’t it, Dad?” Kit asked eagerly,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180"></SPAN>180</span>
and even as she spoke there came the
long, shrill blast of alarm on the Peckham
mill whistle. There was no fire department of
any kind for fourteen miles around. Nothing
seemed to unite the little outlying communities
of the hill country so much as the fire
peril, but on this Saturday it happened that
nearly all the available men had leisurely
jaunted over to the Woodchuck Hill auction.
This was one of the characteristics of Elmhurst,
shunting its daily tasks when any diversion
offered.</p>
<p>“Oh, listen,” exclaimed Doris who had
followed Kit from the barn. “There’s the
alarm bell ringing up at the church, too. It
must be a big one.”</p>
<p>Even as she spoke the telephone bell rang
downstairs, while Tommy called from the
front garden. “Awful big fire just broke out
between here and Ames’s. I’m going over
with the mill boys to help fight it.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181"></SPAN>181</span>
“Be careful, son,” called Mr. Craig.</p>
<p>“Can I go too, Tommy?” cried Jack eagerly.
“I won’t be in the way, honest, I won’t.”</p>
<p>“Naw, you’d better stay here. You might
get hurt and I won’t be able to take care of
you. Besides you should be here to milk the
cow in case I don’t get back on time.” Tommy
started off up the road with a shovel over one
shoulder and a heavy mop over the other.
Jean was at the telephone. It was Judge Ellis
calling.</p>
<p>“He’s worried about Becky, Mother,”
Jean called up the stairs. “Cynthy Allen
wanted her to come over to her place today to
get some carpet rags, and Becky drove over
there about an hour ago. He says her place
lies right in the path of the fire. Mrs. Gorham
has gone away for the day to the auction with
Ben, and the Judge will have to stay with
Billie. He’s terribly anxious.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Dad,” exclaimed Kit, “couldn’t I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182"></SPAN>182</span>
please, please, go over and stay with Billie,
and let the Judge come up to the fire, if he
wants to. I’m sure he’s just dying to. Not but
what I’m sure Becky can take care of herself.
May I? Oh, you dear. Tell him I’m coming,
Jean.”</p>
<p>Jean had left the telephone and was putting
on her coat. “Mother,” she asked, “do
you mind if Doris and I just walk up the wood
road a little way? We won’t go near the fighting
line where the men are at all, and I’d
love to see it. Besides I thought perhaps we
might work our way around through that big
back wood lot to Cynthy’s place and see if
Becky is there. Then, we could drive back
with them.”</p>
<p>“Why, yes, Jean, I think it’s safe for you
both to go. Don’t you, Tom?”</p>
<p>Mr. Craig smiled at Jean’s flushed, excited
face. It was so seldom that she lost her presence
of mind and really became excited. “I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183"></SPAN>183</span>
don’t think it will hurt them a bit,” he said.</p>
<p>Doris grabbed her coat and the two girls
started up the hill road for about three-quarters
of a mile. The church bell over at the
Plains kept ringing steadily. At the top of the
hill they came to the old wood road that
formed a short cut over to the old Ames place.
Here where the trees met overhead in an arcade
the road was heavy with black mud, and
they had to keep to the side up near the old
rock walls. As they advanced farther there
came a sound of driving wheels, and all at
once Hedda’s mother appeared in her car. She
sat hunched over the wheel, a man’s old felt
hat jammed down over her heavy, blonde
hair, and an old overcoat with the collar upturned,
thrown about her. Leaning forward
with eager eyes, she seemed to be thoroughly
enthusiastic over this new excitement in Elmhurst.</p>
<p>“Looks like it’s going to be some fire,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184"></SPAN>184</span>
girls,” she said as she stopped the car momentarily
to speak to them. “I’m giving the
alarm along the road.” And off she went.</p>
<p>“Isn’t that something?” declared Jean.
“And to think that she runs a ninety-acre
farm with the help of Hedda, thirteen years
old, and two hired men. She gets right out
into the fields with them and manages everything
herself.”</p>
<p>A farm truck coming the opposite way
held Mr. Rudemeir and his son August. An
array of mops, axes, and shovels hung out
over the rear of the truck. Mr. Rudemeir was
smoking his clay pipe placidly, and merely
waved one hand at the girls in salutation, but
August called, “It has broken out on the other
side of the road, farther down.”</p>
<p>“It must be going toward the Allan place,
then,” said Jean anxiously. She hesitated. The
smoke was thickening in the air, but they penetrated
farther into the woods. Up on the hill<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185"></SPAN>185</span>
to one side, she saw the Ames place, half obscured
already by the blue haze. It lay directly
in the path of the fire, unless the wind
happened to change, and if it should change
it would surely catch Doris and herself if
they tried to reach Cynthy’s house down near
the river bank. Still she felt that she must
take the chance. There was an old road used
by the lumber men, and she knew every step
of the way.</p>
<p>“Come on,” she said to Doris. “I’m sure we
can make it.”</p>
<p>They turned now from the main road into
an old overgrown byway. Along its sides rambled
ground pine, and wintergreen grew
thickly in the shade of the old oaks. Jean took
the lead, hurrying on ahead. When they came
out on the river road, the little gray house was
in sight, and sure enough Becky’s car was out
in front.</p>
<p>Jean didn’t even stop to rap at the door. It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186"></SPAN>186</span>
stood wide open, and the girls went through
the door into the kitchen. It was empty.</p>
<p>“Becky,” called Jean loudly. “Becky, are
you here?”</p>
<p>From somewhere upstairs there came an
answer.</p>
<p>“For pity’s sakes, child!” exclaimed Becky,
appearing at the top of the stairs with her arms
full of carpet rags. “What are you doing down
here? Cynthy and I are just sorting out some
things she wanted to take over to my place.”</p>
<p>“Haven’t you seen the smoke? All the
woods are on fire up around the Ames place.
The Judge was worried, and telephoned for us
to warn you.”</p>
<p>“Land!” laughed Mrs. Ellis. “Won’t he
ever learn that I’m big enough and old enough
to take care of myself. I never saw an Elmhurst
fire yet that put me in any danger.”</p>
<p>She stepped out of the doorway, pushed her
glasses up on her forehead and sniffed the air.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187"></SPAN>187</span>
“’Tis kind of smoky, ain’t it,” she said.
“And the wind’s beginning to shift.” She
looked up over the rise of the hill in front of
the house. Above it poured great belching
masses of lurid smoke. Even as she looked, the
huge winglike mass veered and swayed in the
sky like vast shapes of strange animals. Jean
caught her breath as she gazed.</p>
<p>Becky started out to the car with Doris.
“Jean, you go and get Cynthy quick as you
can!” she called.</p>
<p>Jean ran to the house and met Cynthy groping
her way nervously downstairs. She was old
and frail and her scrawny hands clutching the
banister were knotted and the veins were large.</p>
<p>“What on earth is it?” she faltered. “Land,
I ain’t had such a set-to with my heart in years.
Is the fire coming this way? Where’s Becky?”</p>
<p>“She says for you to come right away.
Please, please hurry up, Miss Allan.”</p>
<p>But Cynthy sat down in a forlorn heap on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188"></SPAN>188</span>
the step, rocking her arms, and crying, piteously.</p>
<p>“Oh, I never, never can leave them, my
poor, precious darlings. Can’t you get them
for me? There’s General Washington and
Ethan Allen, Betsey Ross and Pocahontas, and
there’s three new kittens in my yarn basket in
the old garret over the ell.”</p>
<p>Jean surmised that she meant her pet cats,
dearer to her probably than any human being
in the world. Supporting her gently, she got
her out of the house, promising her she would
find the cats. For the next five minutes, just
at the most crucial moment, she hunted for
the cats, and finally succeeded in coaxing all
of them into meal bags. Every scurrying
breeze brought down fluttering wisps of half-burned
leaves from the burning woods. The
shouts of the men could be plainly heard calling
to each other as they worked to keep the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189"></SPAN>189</span>
fire back from the valuable timber along the
river front.</p>
<p>“I think we’ve just about time to get by before
the fire breaks through,” said Mrs. Ellis
calmly. Jean was on the back seat, one arm supporting
old Cynthy, her other hand pacifying
the rebellious captives in the bags.</p>
<p>Not a word was said as Becky turned the car
toward home, but they had not gone far before
the wind changed suddenly. The full force of
the smoke from the fire-swept area poured
over them suffocatingly. Cynthy half-rose to
her feet in terror, Jean’s arm around her waist
trying to hold her down as she screamed.</p>
<p>“For land’s sakes, Cynthy, keep your head,”
called Mrs. Ellis. “If it’s the Lord’s will that
we should all go up in a chariot of fire, don’t
squeal out like a stuck pig. Hold her close,
Jean. I’m going to drive into the river.”</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190"></SPAN>190</span></div>
<h2 id="xv">15. Fire!</h2>
<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">At</span> the bend of the road the land sloped suddenly
straight for the river brink. A quarter
of a mile below was the dam, above Mr. Rudemeir’s
red sawmill. Little River widened at
this point, and swept in curves around a little
island. There were no buildings on it, only
broad low lush meadows that provided a home
for muskrats and waterfowl. Late in the fall
fat otters could be seen circling around the still
waters, and wild geese and ducks made it a
port of call in their flights north and south.</p>
<p>As Becky started to drive the car into the
water, Jean asked just one question.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191"></SPAN>191</span>
“Do you know how deep it is here?”</p>
<p>“No, it varies in spots,” answered Becky
cheerfully. Her chin was up, her firm lips set
in an unswerving smile. She was holding the
steering wheel tightly. To Jean she had never
seemed more resourceful or fearless. “There’s
some pretty deep holes, here and there, but
we’ll trust that we don’t hit them.”</p>
<p>Becky edged the car along slowly and inch
by inch they moved across the river. Out in
midstream, the car stalled once and for a
minute or two, danger seemed imminent. By
a stroke of luck, the car started again and
Becky gave a quick look over her shoulder.</p>
<p>Jean was hanging on grimly to the cats and
Cynthy. It was hard saying which of the two
was proving the more difficult to manage.
The car lurched perilously, but Becky held
steady, and suddenly they felt the rise of the
shore line again. Overhead, there had flown a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192"></SPAN>192</span>
vanguard of frightened birds, flying ahead of
the smothering clouds of smoke that poured
now in blinding masses down from the burning
woods. The faint cries and calls of the men
working along the back fire line reached the
little group on the far shore.</p>
<p>As the car jolted up the bank, Doris glanced
back over her shoulder at the way they had
come. Cynthy gave one look too, and covered
her face with her hands. The flames had swept
straight down over her little home, and she
cried out in anguish.</p>
<p>“Pity’s sakes, Cynthy, praise God that the
two of us aren’t burning up this minute with
those old shingles and rafters,” cried Mrs.
Ellis, joyfully.</p>
<p>“Oh, and Miss Allan, not one of the cats
got wet even,” Doris exclaimed, laughing almost
hysterically. “You should be thankful
for that.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193"></SPAN>193</span>
The flames had reached the opposite shore,
but while the smoke billowed across, Little
River left them high and dry in the safety
zone.</p>
<p>“I guess we’d better be making for home as
quick as we can,” said Becky. Except for a
little pallor around her lips, and an extra
brightness to her eyes, no one could have told
that she had just fought a winning battle with
death. She stepped on the starter and headed
toward home.</p>
<p>The Judge was watching anxiously, pacing
up and down the long porch with Billie sitting
in his chair bolstered up with pillows beside
him. He had telephoned repeatedly down to
Woodhow, but they were all quite as anxious
now as himself. It was Billie who first caught
sight of the car and its occupants.</p>
<p>Kit had gone out to the kitchen to start
lunch going. She had refused to believe that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194"></SPAN>194</span>
any harm could come to Becky or anyone under
her care, and at the sound of Billie’s voice, she
glanced from the window and caught sight of
Jean’s coat.</p>
<p>“Land alive, don’t hug me to death, all of
you,” exclaimed Becky. “Jean, you go and
telephone your mother right away and relieve
her anxiety. Like enough, she thinks we’re all
burned to cinders by this time, and tell her
she’d better have plenty of coffee and sandwiches
made up to send over to the men in the
woods. All us women will have our night’s
work cut out for us.”</p>
<p>It was the Craigs’ first experience with a
country forest fire. All through the afternoon
fresh relays of men kept arriving from the
nearby villages, and outlying farms, ready to
relieve those who had been working through
the morning.</p>
<p>There was but little sleep for any members<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195"></SPAN>195</span>
of the family that night. Jean never forgot the
thrill of watching the fire from the upstairs
windows, and when she wasn’t preparing
food with the others, she spent most of the
time up there until daybreak. There was a fascination
in seeing that battle from afar, and
realizing how the little puny efforts of a handful
of men could hold in check such a devastating
force. Only country dwellers could appreciate
the peril of having all one owned in
the world, all that was dear and precious, and
comprised the word “home,” swept away in
the path of the flames.</p>
<p>“Poor old Cynthy,” said Jean. “I’m so glad
she has her cats. I shall never forget her face
when she looked back. Just think of losing all
the little keepsakes of a lifetime.”</p>
<p>It was nearly five o’clock when Tommy returned.
Even though he was only twelve, he
had certainly done a man-sized job that day.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196"></SPAN>196</span>
He was grimy and smoky, but exuberant.</p>
<p>“By golly, we’ve got her under control,” he
cried. “Got some milk and doughnuts for a
guy? Who do you suppose worked better than
anybody? Gave us all pointers on how to manage
a fire. He says this is just a little fire compared
with the ones he has up home. He says
he’s seen a forest fire twenty miles wide,
sweeping over the mountains.”</p>
<p>“Who do you mean, Tommy?” asked Jean.
“For gosh sakes, quit elaborating and come to
the point.”</p>
<p>“Who do you suppose I mean?” asked
Tommy reproachfully. “Buzzy Hancock’s
cousin, your Ralph McRae from Saskatoon.”</p>
<p>Jean blushed prettily, as she always did
when Ralph’s name was mentioned. She
hadn’t spent as much time with Ralph since
his arrival as she had wanted to owing to Billie’s
illness. Still, oddly enough, even Tommy’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197"></SPAN>197</span>
high praise of him made her feel shyly
happy.</p>
<p>The fire burned fitfully for three days,
breaking out unexpectedly in new spots and
keeping everyone excited and busy. The old
Ames barn went up in smoke, and Mr. Rudemeir’s
sawmill caught fire three times.</p>
<p>“Whew!” he said, jubilantly, “I guess I
sat out on that roof all night long, slapping
sparks with a wet mop, but it didn’t get ahead
of me.”</p>
<p>Lucy Peckham and Kit ran a sort of pony
express, riding horseback from house to house,
carrying food and coffee over to the men who
were scattered nearly four miles around the
fire-swept area. Ralph and Sally ran their own
rescue work at the north end of town. Buzzy
had been put on the mail truck with Mr. Rickett’s
eldest boy, while the former gave his services
on the volunteer fire corps. The end of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198"></SPAN>198</span>
third day Jean was driving back from Nantic
after a load of groceries when she noticed
Ralph turning on to the main road ahead of
her. She stopped the car beside him and asked
him to get in.</p>
<p>“The fire’s all out,” he said. “We have left
some of the boys on guard yet, in case it may be
smouldering in the underbrush. I have just
been telling Rudemeir and the other men, if
they’d learn to pile their brush the way we do
up home, they would be able to control these
little fires in no time. You girls must be awfully
tired out. You did splendid work.”</p>
<p>“Kit and Lucy did, you mean,” answered
Jean. “All I did was to help cook.” She
laughed. “I never dreamed that men and boys
could eat so many doughnuts and cupcakes.
Becky says she sent over twenty-two loaves of
gingerbread, not counting all the other stuff.
Was anyone hurt, at all?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199"></SPAN>199</span>
“You mean eating too much?” asked Ralph
teasingly. Then more seriously, he added, “A
few of the men were burnt a little bit, but
nothing to speak of. How beautiful your
springtime is down here in New England. It
makes me want to take off my coat and go to
work right here, reclaiming some of these old
worked-out acres, and making them show the
good that still lies in them if they are plowed
deep enough.”</p>
<p>Jean sighed quickly. “Do you really think
one could ever make any money here?” she
asked. “Sometimes I get awfully discouraged,
Ralph. Of course, we didn’t come up here
with the idea of being farmers. It was Dad’s
health that brought us, but once we were here,
we couldn’t help but see the chance of making
Woodhow pay our way a little. Becky has told
us we’re in awfully good luck to even get our
vegetables and fruit out of it this last year, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200"></SPAN>200</span>
it isn’t the past year I’m thinking of. It’s the
next year, and the next one and the next. One
of the most appalling things about Elmhurst
is, that you get absolutely contented up here,
and you go around singing blissfully. Old Pop
Higgins who taught our art class down in New
York always said that contentment was fatal
to progress, and I believe it. Dad is really a
brilliant man, and he’s getting his full strength
back. And while I have a full sense of gratitude
toward the healing powers of these old
green hills, still I have a horror of Dad stagnating
here.”</p>
<p>Ralph turned his head to watch her face.
“Has he said anything himself about wanting
to go back to his work?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Not yet. I suppose that is what we really
must wait for. His own confidence returning.
You see, what I’m afraid of is this. Dad was
born and brought up right here, and the granite
of these old hills is in his system. He loves<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201"></SPAN>201</span>
every square foot of land around here. Just
supposing he should be contented to settle
down, like old Judge Ellis, and turn into a sort
of Connecticut country squire.”</p>
<p>“There are worse things than that in the
world,” Ralph replied. “Too many of our
best men forget the land that gave them birth,
and pour the full strength of their powers and
capabilities into the city market. You speak of
Judge Ellis. Look at what that old man’s mind
has done for his home community. He has
literally brought modern improvements into
Elmhurst. He has represented her up at Hartford
off and on for years, when he was not sitting
in judgment here.”</p>
<p>“You mean, that you think Dad ought not
to go back?” asked Jean, almost resentfully.
“That just because he happened to have been
born here, he owes it to Elmhurst to stay here
now, and give it the best he has?”</p>
<p>Ralph laughed good-naturedly. “We’re<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202"></SPAN>202</span>
getting into rather deep water, Jeannie,” he
answered. “I can see that you don’t like the
country, and I do. I love it down east here
where all of my family came from originally,
and I’m very fond of the West.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m sure I’d like that too,” broke in
Jean eagerly. “Mother’s from the West, California,
and I’d love to go out there. I would
love the scope and freedom. What bothers me
here are all those rock walls, for instance.” She
pointed at the old one along the road, uneven,
half tumbling down, and overgrown with
gray moss—the standing symbol of the infinite
patience and labor of a bygone generation.
“Just think of all the people who spent
their lives carrying those stones, and cutting up
all this beautiful land into these little shut-in
pastures.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but those rocks represent the clearing
of fields for tillage. If they hadn’t dug them
out of the ground, they wouldn’t have had any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203"></SPAN>203</span>
cause for Thanksgiving dinners. I’m extremely
proud of my New England blood, and
I want to tell you right now, if it wasn’t for
the New England blood that went out to conquer
the West, where would the West be today?”</p>
<p>“That’s OK,” said Jean, a little crossly,
“but if they had pioneered a little bit right
around here, there wouldn’t be so many run-down
farms. What I would like to do, now
that Dad is getting well, is make Woodhow
our playground in summertime, and go back
home in the winter.”</p>
<p>“Home,” he repeated, curiously.</p>
<p>“Yes, we were all born down in New York,”
answered Jean, looking south over the country
landscape as though she could see Manhattan’s
panoramic skyline rising like a mirage of beckoning
promises. “I’m afraid that is home to
me.”</p>
<p>Ralph was quiet while Jean was lost in her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204"></SPAN>204</span>
memories of her wonderful visit with Beth in
New York. Suddenly she turned to Ralph.</p>
<p>“I’m very confused,” she said. “I really
don’t know what I want. The only thing I am
sure of is that I like you better than any boy
I’ve ever met.” Jean hesitated a little over this
admission. “When I’m here I long to be in
New York, and when I was in New York I
missed everybody and everything in the country
very much.”</p>
<p>“You’re still very young, Jean, but with
your level head I’m sure you’ll be able to make
a decision soon. I, for one, am willing to wait,”
said Ralph.</p>
<hr class="divider x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205"></SPAN>205</span></div>
<h2 id="xvi">16. Future Plans</h2>
<p class="noi">“<span class="smcap">It</span> always seems to me,” said Becky, the
first time she drove down with Billie to spend
the day, “as if Maytime is a sort of fulfilled
promise to us, after the winter and spring.
When I was a girl, spring up here behaved itself.
It was sweet and balmy and gentle, and
now it’s turned into an uncertain young tomboy.
The weather doesn’t really begin to settle
until the middle of May, but when it does—”
She drew in a deep breath and smiled. “Just
look around you at the beauty it gives us.”</p>
<p>She sat out on the tree seat in the garden
that sloped from the south side of the house.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206"></SPAN>206</span>
The terraces were a riot of spring bloom; tall
gold and purple flags grew side by side with
dainty columbine and narcissus. Along the
stone walls white and purple lilacs flung their
delicious perfume to every passing breeze. The
old apple trees that straggled in uneven rows
up through the hill pasture behind the barn
had been transformed into gorgeous splashy
masses of pink bloom against the tender green
of young foliage.</p>
<p>“What’s Jean doing over there in the orchard?”
Kit rose from her knees, her fingers
grimy with the soil, her face flushed and warm
from her labors, and answered her own question.
“Why, she’s painting.”</p>
<p>Jean was out of their hearing. Frowning
slightly, with compressed lips, she bent over
her work. She was sitting on the ground, her
knees supporting her drawing board. The
week before she had sent off five studies to
Beth, and two of her very best ones down to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207"></SPAN>207</span>
Mr. Higgins. Answers had come back from
both, full of criticism, but with plenty of encouragement,
too. Mrs. Craig had read the two
letters and given her eldest the quick impulsive
embrace which ever since her childhood had
been to Jean her highest reward of merit. But
it was from her father, perhaps, that she derived
the greatest happiness. He laid one arm
around her shoulders, smiling at her with a
certain whimsical speculation in his keen eyes.</p>
<p>“Well, my dear, if you will persist in developing
such talent, we can’t afford to hide
this light under a bushel. You should have
more training.”</p>
<p>“But when?” interrupted Jean. “It isn’t
that I want to know for my own pleasure, but
you don’t know how fearfully precious these
last years in my teens seem to me. There’s such
a terrible lot of things to learn before I can
really say I’ve finished.”</p>
<p>“And one of the first things you have to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208"></SPAN>208</span>
learn is just that you never stop learning. That
you never really start to learn until you know
your own limitations. Somewhere over there
lies New York,” he said, looking down the
valley. “Often through the past year, I have
stood looking in that direction. I’ve got a job
back there waiting—”</p>
<p>Jean interrupted, her face alight with gladness.
“Oh, Dad, Dad, you do want to go back.
You don’t know how afraid I’ve been that
you’d take root up here and stay forever. I
know it’s perfectly splendid, and it has been a
place of refuge for us all, but now that you are
getting to be just like your old self—”</p>
<p>Her father’s hand checked her.</p>
<p>“Steady there,” he warned. “Not quite so
fast. I am still a little bit uncertain when I
try to speed up. We’ve got to be patient a little
while longer.”</p>
<p>Jean pressed his hand in hers and understood.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209"></SPAN>209</span>
If it had been hard for them to be patient,
it had been doubly so for him, groping
his way back slowly, the past year, on the upgrade
to health.</p>
<p>Jean was thinking of their talk as she sat out
in the orchard today, trying to catch some of
the fleeting beauty of its blossom-laden trees.</p>
<p>“How are you getting along, dear?” asked
a well-known voice behind her.</p>
<p>“I don’t know, Dad,” said Jean, leaning
back with her head on one side, looking for all
the world like a meditative brown thrush. “I
can’t seem to get that queer silver-gray effect.
You take a day like this, just before a rain, and
it seems to underlie everything. I’ve tried dark
green and gray and sienna, and it doesn’t do a
bit of good.”</p>
<p>“Mix a little Chinese black with every color
you use,” said her father, closing one eye to
look at her painting. “It’s the old master’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210"></SPAN>210</span>
trick. You’ll find it in the Flemish school, and
the Veronese. It gives you the atmospheric
gray quality in everything. Here come Ralph
and Sally.”</p>
<p>Sally waved her hand, but joined Kit, Doris
and Billie in the lower garden at their grubbing
for cutworms.</p>
<p>“If you put plenty of salt in the water when
you sprinkle those, it’ll help a lot,” she told
them.</p>
<p>“Oh, we’ve salted them. We each took a bag
of salt and went out sprinkling one night, and
then it rained, and I honestly believe it was a
tonic to the cutworm colony. The only thing
to do, is go after them and annihilate them.”</p>
<p>Ralph nodded to the group on the terrace,
but went on up to the orchard. Kit watched
him with speculative eyes and spoke in her
usual impulsive fashion.</p>
<p>“Do you suppose he’s come here with the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211"></SPAN>211</span>
idea of taking Jean away? Because if he has
any such notions at all, I’d like to tell him she’s
not for him. If he thinks for one moment he’s
going to throw her across his saddle and carry
her off to Saskatoon, he’s very much mistaken.”</p>
<p>Sally glanced up at the figures in the orchard,
before she answered in her slow, deliberate
fashion. “I’m sure I don’t know, but
Ralph said he was coming back here every
spring, so he can’t expect to take her away this
year.”</p>
<p>Ralph threw himself down in the grass beside
Jean. She smiled at him, then bent over
her board, absently touching in some shadows
on the trunks of the trees. Her thoughts had
wandered from the old orchard, as they did so
often these days. It was the future that seemed
more real to her, with its hopes and ambitions,
than the present.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212"></SPAN>212</span>
“Oh, Jean,” called Kit, “Becky’s going
now.”</p>
<p>Ralph rose and caught her hand as she
started to leave. “I hope your ambitions carry
you far, Jean,” he said earnestly. “Sally,
Buzzy, Mrs. Hancock and I are leaving for
Saskatoon Monday morning and I’ll hardly
get over again since Buzzy and I are doing all
the packing and crating, but you’ll see me
again next spring, won’t you?”</p>
<p>Jean looked up at him startled.</p>
<p>“Why, I didn’t know you were going so
soon. Of course, I’ll see you when you come
back,” she said with a heavy heart. Heavier
than she would have wanted Ralph to see.</p>
<p>“I’ll come,” Ralph promised, and he stood
where she left him, under the blossoming apple
trees, watching her as she joined her
family circle. Ralph had deliberately planned
this abrupt goodbye. With his usual thoughtfulness<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213"></SPAN>213</span>
he did not want to influence Jean’s
thinking.</p>
<p>As Jean walked back across the path to the
lower terrace, her thoughts were sad. Perhaps
she would never see him again, perhaps she
would decide never to marry and to continue
her art career, yet if she could have known,
many changes would take place in the next
year that are told in <cite>Jean Craig Finds Romance</cite>.</p>
<p>She shook off these unhappy thoughts and
came up to the others smiling and saying to
Becky, “You’ll be over again to see us soon,
won’t you?”</p>
<p>Becky gave her an understanding smile that
seemed to say, “I’m always here and you belong
here too.”</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/endpaper.jpg" width-obs="800" height-obs="573" alt="Endpaper" /></div>
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<div class="tn">
<p class="center">Transcriber’s Note:</p>
<p class="noi">Punctuation has been standardised. Hyphenation has been retained
as it appears in the original publication. The following change was made:</p>
<ul class="nobullet">
<li>Page 112<br/>
it still so bleak <i>changed to</i><br/>
<SPAN href="#is">is</SPAN> still so bleak</li>
</ul></div>
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