<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2><h3>THORNS AND ROSES.</h3>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/drop_g.jpg" width-obs="100" height-obs="100" alt="G" title="" /></div>
<div class='unindent'>EOFF," said Clover as they sat at
dinner two days later, "couldn't
we start early when we go in to-morrow
to meet Rose, and have the morning
at St. Helen's? There are quite a lot of little
errands to be done, and it's a long time since
we saw Poppy or the Hopes."</div>
<p>"Just as early as you like," replied her
husband. "It's a free day, and I am quite
at your service."</p>
<p>So they breakfasted at a quarter before six,
and by a quarter past were on their way to
St. Helen's, passing, as Clover remarked,
through three zones of temperature; for it
was crisply cold when they set out, temperately
cool at the lower end of the Ute Pass,
and blazing hot on the sandy plain.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"We certainly do get a lot of climate for
our money out here," observed Geoff.</p>
<p>They reached the town a little before ten,
and went first of all to see Mrs. Marsh, for
whom Clover had brought a basket of fresh
eggs. She never entered that house without
being sharply carried back to former days,
and made to feel that the intervening time
was dreamy and unreal, so absolutely unchanged
was it. There was the rickety
piazza on which she and Phil had so often
sat, the bare, unhomelike parlor, the rocking-chairs
swinging all at once, timed as it were
to an accompaniment of coughs; but the
occupants were not the same. Many sets of
invalids had succeeded each other at Mrs.
Marsh's since those old days; still the general
effect was precisely similar.</p>
<p>Mrs. Marsh, who only was unchanged, gave
them a warm welcome. Grateful little Clover
never had forgotten the many kindnesses
shown to her and Phil, and requited them in
every way that was in her power. More than
once when Mrs. Marsh was poorly or overtired,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></SPAN></span>
she had carried her off to the High Valley
for a rest; and she never failed to pay her a
visit whenever she spent a day at St. Helen's.</p>
<p>Their next call was at the Hopes'. They
found Mrs. Hope darning stockings on the
back piazza which commanded a view of the
mountain range. She always claimed the entire
credit of Clover's match, declaring that
if she had not matronized her out to the
Valley and introduced her and Geoff to each
other, they would never have met. Her
droll airs of proprietorship over their
happiness were infinitely amusing to Clover.</p>
<p>"I <i>think</i> we should have got at each other
somehow, even if you had not been in existence,"
she told her friend; "marriages are
made in Heaven, as we all know. Nobody
could have prevented ours."</p>
<p>"My dear, that is just where you are mistaken.
Nothing is easier than to prevent
marriages. A mere straw will do it. Look
at the countless old maids all over the world;
and probably nearly every one of them came
within half an inch of perfect happiness, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></SPAN></span>
just missed it. No, depend upon it, there is
nothing like a wise, judicious, discriminating
friend at such junctures, to help matters
along. You may thank me that Geoff isn't
at this moment wedded to some stiff-necked
British maiden, and you eating your head
off in single-blessedness at Burnet."</p>
<p>"Rubbish!" said Clover. "Neither of us
is capable of it;" but Mrs. Hope stuck to
her convictions.</p>
<p>She was delighted to see them, as she always
was, and no less the bottle of beautiful
cream, the basket full of fresh lettuces, and
the bunch of Mariposa lilies which they had
brought. Clover never went into St. Helen's
empty-handed.</p>
<p>Here they took luncheon No. 1,—consisting
of sponge-cake and claret-cup, partaken
of while gazing across at Cheyenne Mountain,
which was at one of its most beautiful moments,
all aerial blue streaked with sharp sunshine
at the summit. It was the one defect
of the High Valley, Clover thought, that it
gave no glimpse of Cheyenne.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Luncheon No. 2 came a little later, with
Marian Chase, whom every one still called
"Poppy" from preference and long habit.
She was perfectly well now, but she and her
family had grown so fond of St. Helen's that
there was no longer any talk of their going
back to the East. She had just had some
beautiful California plums sent her by an admirer,
and insisted on Clover's eating them
with an accompaniment of biscuits and "natural
soda water."</p>
<p>"I want you and Alice Perham to come
out next week for two nights," said Clover,
while engaged in this agreeable occupation.
"My friend Mrs. Browne arrives to-day, and
she is by far the greatest treat we have ever
had to offer to any one since we lived in the
Valley. You will delight in her, I know.
Could you come on Monday in the stage to
the Ute Hotel, if we sent the carryall over
to meet you?"</p>
<p>"Why, of course. I never have any engagements
when a chance comes for going to
the dear Valley; and Alice has none, I am<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></SPAN></span>
pretty sure. It will be perfectly delightful!
Clover, you are an angel,—'the Angel of
the Penstamen' I mean to call you," glancing
at the great sheaf of purple and white flowers
which Clover had brought. "It's a very
good name. As for Elsie, she is 'Our Lady
of Raspberries;' I never saw such beauties as
she fetched in week before last."</p>
<p>Some very multifarious shopping for the
two households followed, and by that time it
was two o'clock and they were quite ready for
luncheon No. 3,—soup and sandwiches, procured
at a restaurant. They were just coming
away when an open carriage passed them, silk-lined,
with a crest on the panel, jingling curb-chains,
and silver-plated harnesses, all after
the latest modern fashion, and drawn by a
pair of fine gray horses. Inside was a young
man, who returned a stiff bow to Clover's salutation,
and a gorgeously gowned young lady
with rather a handsome face.</p>
<p>"Mr. and Mrs. Thurber Wade, I declare,"
observed Geoffrey. "I heard that they were
expected."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes, Mrs. Wade is so pleased to have
them come for the summer. We must go and
call some day, Geoff, when I happen to have
on my best bonnet. Do you think we ought
to ask them out to the Valley?"</p>
<p>"That's just as you please. I don't mind
if he doesn't. What fine horses. Aren't
you conscious of a little qualm of regret,
Clover?"</p>
<p>"What for? I don't know what you mean.
Don't be absurd," was all the reply he received,
or in fact deserved.</p>
<p>And now it was time to go to the train.
The minutes seemed long while they waited,
but presently came the well-known shriek and
rumble, and there was Rose herself, dimpled
and smiling at the window, looking not a whit
older than on the day of Katy's wedding
seven years before. There was little Rose too,
but she was by no means so unchanged as
her mother, and certainly no longer little,
surprisingly tall on the contrary, with her
golden hair grown brown and braided in a
pig-tail, actually a pig-tail. She had the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></SPAN></span>
same bloom and serenity, however, and the
same sedate, investigating look in her eyes.
There was Mr. Browne too, but he was a
brief joy, for there was only time to shake
hands and exchange dates and promises of
return, before the train started and bore him
away toward Pueblo.</p>
<p>"Now," said Rose, who seemed quite unquenched
by her three days of travel, "don't
let's utter one word till we are in the carriage,
and then don't let's stop one moment
for two weeks."</p>
<p>"In the first place," she began, as the carryall,
mounting the hill, turned into Monument
Avenue, where numbers of new houses
had been built of late years, Queen Anne cottages
in brick and stone, timber, and concrete,
with here and there a more ambitious
"villa" of pink granite, all surrounded with
lawns and rosaries and vine-hung verandas
and tinkling fountains. "In the first place I
wish to learn where all these people and
houses come from. I was told that you lived
in a lodge in the wilderness, but though I see<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></SPAN></span>
plenty of lodges the wilderness seems wanting.
Is this really an infant settlement?"</p>
<p>"It really is. That is, it hasn't come of
age yet, being not quite twenty-one years old.
Oh, you've no notion about our Western
towns, Rose. They're born and grown up
all in a minute, like Hercules strangling the
snakes in his cradle. I don't at all wonder
that you are surprised."</p>
<p>"'Surprised' doesn't express it. 'Flabbergasted,'
though low, comes nearer my meaning.
I have been breathless ever since we
left Albany. First there was that enormous
Chicago which knocked me all of a heap,
then Denver, then that enchanting ride over
the Divide, and now this! Never did I see
such flowers or such colored rocks, and never
did any one breathe such air. It sweeps all
the dust and fatigue out of one in a minute.
Boston seems quite small and dull in comparison,
doesn't it, Röslein?"</p>
<p>"It isn't so big, but I love it the most,"
replied that small person from the front seat,
where she sat soberly taking all things in.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></SPAN></span>
"Mamma, Uncle Geoff says I may drive when
we get to the foot of a long hill we are just
coming to. You won't be afraid, will you?"</p>
<p>"N-o; not if Uncle Geoff will keep his eye
on the reins and stand ready to seize them if
the horses begin to run. Rose just expresses
my feelings," she continued; "but this is as
beautiful as it is big. What is the name of
that enchanting mountain over there,—Cheyenne?
Why, yes,—that is the one that you
used to write about in your letters when you
first came out, I remember. It never made
much impression on me,—mountains never
seem high in letters, somehow, but now I
don't wonder. It's the loveliest thing I ever
saw."</p>
<p>Clover was much pleased at Rose's appreciation
of her favorite mountain, and also with
the intelligent way in which she noted everything
they passed. Her eyes were as quick
as her tongue; chattering all the time, she
yet missed nothing of interest. The poppy-strewn
plain, the green levels of the mesa
delighted her; so did the wide stretches<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></SPAN></span>
of blue distance, and she screamed with joy
at the orange and red pinnacles in Odin's
Garden.</p>
<p>"It is a land of wonders," she declared.
"When I think how all my life I have been
content to amble across the Common, and
down Winter Street to Hovey's, and now and
then by way of adventure take the car to the
Back Bay, and that I felt all the while as if I
were getting the cream and pick of everything,
I am astonished at my own stupidity. Rose,
are you not glad I did not let you catch
whooping cough from Margaret Lyon? you
were bent on doing it, you remember. If I
had given you your way we should not be
here now."</p>
<p>Rose only smiled in reply. She was used to
her little mother's vagaries and treated them
in general with an indulgent inattention.</p>
<p>The sun was quite gone from the ravines,
but still lingered on the snow-powdered peaks
above, when the carriage climbed the last steep
zigzag and drew up before the "Hut," whose
upper windows glinted with the waning light.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></SPAN></span>
Rose looked about her and drew a long breath
of surprise and pleasure.</p>
<p>"It isn't a bit like what I thought it would
be," she said; "but it's heaps and heaps more
beautiful. I simply put it at the head of all
the places I ever saw." Then Elsie came running
on to the porch, and Rose jumped out
into her arms.</p>
<div class='poem'>
"I thank the goodness and the grace<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">That on my birth has smiled,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And brought me to this blessed place</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">A happy Boston child!"</span><br/></div>
<div class='unindent'>she cried, hugging Elsie rapturously. "You
dear thing! how well you look! and how
perfect it all is up here! And this is Mr.
Page, whom I have known all about ever
since the Hillsover days! and this is dear
little Geoff! Clover, his eyes are exactly
like yours! And where is <i>your</i> baby, Elsie?"</div>
<p>"Little wretch! she <i>would</i> go to sleep. I
told her you were coming, and I did all I
could, short of pinching, to keep her awake,—sang,
and repeated verses, and danced her
up and down, but it was all of no use. She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></SPAN></span>
would put her knuckles in her eyes, and
whimper and fret, and at last I had to give
in. Babies are perfectly unmanageable when
they are sleepy."</p>
<p>"Most of us are. It's just as well. I can't
half take it in as it is. It is much better
to keep something for to-morrow. The drive
was perfect, and the Valley is twice as beautiful
as I expected it to be. And now I want
to go into the house."</p>
<p>Elsie had devoted her day to setting forth
the Hut to advantage. She and Roxy had
been to the very top of the East Canyon
for flowers, and returned loaded with spoil.
Bunches of coreopsis and vermilion-tipped
painter's-brush adorned the chimney-piece;
tall spikes of yucca rose from an Indian jar
in one corner of the room, and a splendid
sheaf of yellow columbines from another;
fresh kinnikinick was looped and wreathed
about the pictures; and on the dining-table
stood, most beautiful and fragile of all, a
bowlful of Mariposa lilies, their delicate, lilac-streaked
bells poised on stems so slender<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></SPAN></span>
that the fairy shapes seemed to float in air,
supported at their own sweet will. There
were roses, too, and fragrant little knots of
heliotrope and mignonette. With these Rose
was familiar; the wild flowers were all new
to her.</p>
<p>She ran from vase to vase in a rapture.
They could scarcely get her upstairs to
take off her things. Such a bright evening
followed! Clover declared that she had
not laughed so much in all the seven years
since they parted. Rose seemed to fit at
once and perfectly into the life of the place,
while at the same time she brought the
breath of her own more varied and different
life to freshen and widen it. They all
agreed that they had never had a visitor
who gave so much and enjoyed so much.
She and Geoffrey made friends at once,
greatly to Clover's delight, and Clarence
took to her in a manner astonishing to his
wife, for he was apt to eschew strangers,
and escape them when he could.</p>
<p>They all woke in the morning to a sense
of holiday.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Boys," said Elsie at breakfast, "this isn't
at all a common, every-day day, and I don't
want to do every-day things in it. I want
something new and unusual to happen. Can't
you abjure those wretched beasts of yours for
once, and come with us to that sweet little
canyon at the far end of the Ute, where we
went the summer after I was married? We
want to show it to Rose, and the weather is
simply perfect."</p>
<p>"Yes, if you'll give us half an hour or so
to ride up and speak to Manuel."</p>
<p>"All right. It will take at least as long as
that to get ready."</p>
<p>So Choo Loo hastily broiled chickens and
filled bottles with coffee and cream; and by
half-past nine they were off, children and all,
some on horseback, and some in the carryall
with the baskets, to Elsie's "sweet little canyon,"
over which Pike's Peak rose in lonely
majesty like a sentinel at an outpost, and
where flowers grew so thickly that, as Rose
wrote her husband, "it was harder to find
the in-betweens than the blossoms." They<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></SPAN></span>
came back, tired, hungry, and happy, just at
nightfall; so it was not till the second day
that Rose met the Youngs, about whom her
curiosity was considerably excited. It seemed
so odd, she said, to have "only neighbors,"
and it made them of so much consequence.</p>
<p>They had been asked to dinner to meet
Rose, which was a very formal and festive
invitation for the High Valley, though the
dinner must perforce be much as usual, and
the party was inevitably the same. Imogen
felt that it was an occasion, and wishing to
do credit to it, she unpacked a gown which
had not seen the light before since her arrival,
and which had done duty as a dinner
dress for two or three years at Bideford. It
was of light blue mousselaine-de-laine, made
with a "half-high top" and elbow sleeves,
and trimmed with cheap lace. A necklace
of round coral beads adorned her throat, and
a comb of the same material her hair, which
was done up in a series of wonderful loops
filleted with narrow blue ribbons. She carried
a pink fan. Lionel, who liked bright<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></SPAN></span>
colors, was charmed at the effect; and altogether
she set out in good spirits for the
walk down the Pass, though she was prepared
to be afraid of Rose, of whose brilliancy
she had heard a little too much to
make the idea of meeting her quite comfortable.</p>
<p>The party had just gathered in the sitting-room
as they entered. Clover and Elsie were
in pretty cotton dresses, as usual, and Rose,
following their lead, had put on what at
home she would have considered a morning
gown, of linen lawn, white, with tiny bunches
of forget-me-nots scattered over it, and a
jabot of lace and blue ribbon. These toilettes
seemed unduly simple to Imogen, who
said within herself, complacently, "There is
one thing the Americans don't seem to understand,
and that is the difference between common
dressing and a regular dinner dress,"—preening
herself the while in the sky-blue
mousselaine-de-laine, and quite unconscious
that Rose was inwardly remarking, "My!
where <i>did</i> she get that gown? I never saw<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></SPAN></span>
anything like it. It must have been made
for Mrs. Noah, some years before the ark.
And her hair! just the ark style, too, and
calculated to frighten the animals into good
behavior and obedience during the bad
weather. Well, I put it at the head of all
the extraordinary things I ever saw."</p>
<p>It is just as well, on the whole, that people
are not able to read each other's thoughts in
society.</p>
<p>"You've only just come to America, I
hear," said Rose, taking a chair near Imogen.
"Do you begin to feel at home yet?"</p>
<p>"Oh, pretty well for that. I don't fancy
that one ever gets to be quite at home anywhere
out of their own country. It's very
different over here from England, of course."</p>
<p>"Yes, but some parts of America are more
different than some other parts. You haven't
seen much of us as yet."</p>
<p>"No, but all the parts I have seen seemed
very much alike."</p>
<p>"The High Valley and New York, for
example."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, I wasn't thinking of New York. I
mean the plains and mountains and the Western
towns. We didn't stop at any of them,
of course; but seen from the railway they all
look pretty much the same,—wooden houses,
you know, and all that."</p>
<p>"What astonished us most was the distance,"
said Rose. "Of course we all learned
from our maps, when we were at school, just
how far it is across the continent; but I
never realized it in the least till I saw it.
It seemed so wonderful to go on day after
day and never get to the end!"</p>
<p>"Only about half-way to the end," put
in Clover. "That question of distance is a
great surprise; and if it perplexes you, Rose,
it isn't wonderful that it should perplex foreigners.
Do you recollect that Englishman,
Geoff, whom we met at the <i>table d'hôte</i> at
Llanberis, when we were in Wales, and who
accounted for the Charleston earthquake by
saying that he supposed it had something to
do with those hot springs close by."</p>
<p>"What hot springs <i>did</i> he mean?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I am sure you would never guess unless
I told you. The hot springs in the Yellowstone
Park, to be sure,—simply those, and
nothing more! And when I explained that
Charleston and the Yellowstone were about
as distant from each other as Siberia and
the place we were in, he only stared and
remarked, 'Oh, I think you must be mistaken.'"</p>
<p>"And are they so far apart, then?" asked
Imogen, innocently.</p>
<p>"Oh, Moggy, Moggy! what were your
geography teachers thinking about?" cried
her brother. "It seems sometimes as if
America were entirely left out of the maps
used in English schools."</p>
<p>"Lionel," said his sister, "how can you
say such things? It isn't so at all; but of
course we learned more about the important
countries." Imogen spoke quite artlessly;
she had no intention of being rude.</p>
<p>"Great Scott!" muttered Clarence under
his breath, while Rose flashed a look at
Clover.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Of course," she said, sweetly, "Burmah
and Afghanistan and New Zealand and the
Congo States <i>would</i> naturally interest you
more,—large heathen populations to Christianize
and exterminate. There is nothing
like fire and sword to establish a bond."</p>
<p>"Oh, I didn't mean that. Of course America
is much larger than those countries."</p>
<p>"'Plenty of us such as we are'" quoted
the wicked Rose.</p>
<p>"And pretty good what there is of us,"
added Clover, glad of the appearance of dinner
just then to create a diversion.</p>
<p>"That's quite a dreadful little person," remarked
Rose, as they stood at the doorway
two hours later, watching the guests walk up
the trail under the light of a glorious full
moon. "Her mind is just one inch across.
You keep falling off the edge and hurting
yourself. It's sad that she should be your
only neighbor. I don't seem to like her a bit,
and I predict that you will yet have some
dreadful sort of a row with her, Clovy."</p>
<p>"Indeed we shall not; nothing of the kind.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></SPAN></span>
She's really a good little thing at bottom;
this angularity and stiffness that you object
to is chiefly manner. Wait till she has been
here long enough to learn the ways and wake
up, and you will like her."</p>
<p>"I'll wait," said Rose, dryly. "How
much time should you say would be necessary,
Clover? A hundred years? I should
think it would take at least as long as
that."</p>
<p>"Lionel's a dear fellow. We are all very
fond of him."</p>
<p>"I can understand your being fond of <i>him</i>
easily enough. Imogen! what a name for
just that kind of girl. 'Image' it ought to be.
What a figure of fun she was in that awful
blue gown!"</p>
<p>The two weeks of Rose's visit sped only
too rapidly. There was so much that they
wanted to show her, and there were so many
people whom they wanted her to see, and so
many people who, as soon as they saw her, became
urgent that she should do this and that
with them, that life soon became a tangle of impossibilities.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></SPAN></span>
Rose was one of those charmers
that cannot be hid. She had been a belle all
her days, and she would be so till she died
of old age, as Elsie told her. Her friends of
the High Valley gloried in her success; but
all the time they had a private longing to
keep her more to themselves, as one retires
with two or three to enjoy a choice dainty of
which there is not enough to go round in a
larger company. They took her to the Cheyenne
Canyons and the top of Pike's Peak;
they carried her over the Marshall Pass and
to many smaller places less known to fame,
but no less charming in their way. Invitations
poured in from St. Helen's, to lunch, to
dinner, to afternoon teas; but of these Rose
would none. She could lunch and dine in
Boston, she declared, but she might never
come to Colorado again, and what she thirsted
for was canyons, and not less than one a day
would content her insatiable appetite for
them.</p>
<p>But though she would not go to St. Helen's,
St. Helen's in a measure came to her. Marian<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></SPAN></span>
Chase and Alice made their promised visit;
Dr. and Mrs. Hope came out more than once,
and Phil continually; while smart Bostonians
whom Clover had never heard of turned up at
Canyon Creek and the Ute Valley and drove
over to call, having heard that Mrs. Deniston
Browne was staying there. The High
Valley became used to the roll of wheels and
the tramp of horses' feet, and for the moment
seemed a sociable, accessible sort of place to
which it was a matter of course that people
should repair. It was oddly different from
the customary order of things, but the change
was enlivening, and everybody enjoyed it
with one exception.</p>
<p>This exception was Imogen Young. She
was urged to join some of the excursions
made by her friends below, but on one excuse
or another she refused. She felt shy
and left out where all the rest were so well-acquainted
and so thoroughly at ease, and
preferred to remain at home; but all the
same, to have the others so gay and busy
gave her a sense of loneliness and separation<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></SPAN></span>
which was painful to bear. Clover tried more
than once to persuade her out of her solitary
mood; but she was too much occupied
herself and too absorbed to take much time
for coaxing a reluctant guest, and the others
dispensed with her company quite easily; in
fact, they were too busy to notice her absence
much or ask questions. So the fortnight,
which passed so quickly and brilliantly at the
Hut, and was always afterward alluded to as
"that delightful time when Rose was here,"
was anything but delightful at the "Hutlet,"
where poor Imogen sat homesick and forlorn,
feeling left alone on one side of all the pleasant
things, scarcely realizing that it was her
own choice and doing, and wishing herself
back in Devonshire.</p>
<p>"Lion seems quite taken up with these
new people and <i>that</i> Mrs. Browne," she reflected.
"He's always going off with them
to one place or another. I might as well be
back in Bideford for all the use I am to him."
This was unjust, for Lionel was anxious and
worried over his sister's depressed looks and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></SPAN></span>
indisposition to share in the pleasures that
were going on; but Imogen just then saw
things through a gloomy medium, and not
quite as they were. She felt dull and heavy-hearted,
and did not seem able to rouse herself
from her lassitude and weariness.</p>
<p>Out of the whole party no one was so perfectly
pleased with her surroundings as the
smaller Rose. Everything seemed to suit the
little maid exactly. She made a delightful
playfellow for the babies, telling them fairy
stories by the dozen, and teaching them new
games, and washing and dressing Phillida with
all the gravity and decorum of an old nurse.
They followed her about like two little dogs,
and never left her side for a moment if they
could possibly help it. All was fish that came
to her happy little net, whether it was playing
with little Geoff, going on excursions with
the elders, scrambling up the steep side-canyons
under Phil's escort in search of flowers
and curiosities, or riding sober old Marigold
to the Upper Valley as she was sometimes
allowed to do. The only cloud in her perfect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></SPAN></span>
satisfaction was that she must some day
go away.</p>
<p>"It won't be very pleasant when I get
back to Boston, and don't have anything to
do but just walk down Pinckney Street with
Mary Anne to school, and slide a little bit on
the Common when the snow comes and there
aren't any big boys about, will it, mamma?"
she said, disconsolately. "I sha'n't feel as if
that were a great deal, I think."</p>
<p>"I am afraid the High Valley is a poor
preparation for West Cedar Street," laughed
Rose. "It <i>will</i> seem a limited career to both
of us at first. But cheer up, Poppet; I'm
going to put you into a dancing-class this
winter, and very likely at Christmas-time
papa will treat us both to a Moral Drayma.
There <i>are</i> consolations, even in Boston."</p>
<p>"That 'even in Boston' is the greatest
compliment the High Valley ever received,"
said Clover, who happened to be within hearing.
"Such a moment will never come to it
again."</p>
<p>And now the last day came, as last days<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></SPAN></span>
will. Mr. Browne returned from Mexico,
with forty-eight hours to spare for enjoyment,
which interval they employed in showing
him the two things that Rose loved most,—namely,
the High Valley from top to bottom,
and the North Cheyenne Canyon. The last
luncheon was taken at Mrs. Hope's, who had
collected a few choice spirits in honor of the
occasion, and then they all took the Roses to
the train, and sent them off loaded with fruit
and flowers.</p>
<p>"Miss Young was extraordinarily queer and
dismal last night," said Rose to Clover as they
stood a little aside from the rest on the platform.
"I can't quite see what ails her. She
looks thinner than when we came, and doesn't
seem to know how to smile; depend upon it
she's going to be ill, or something. I wish
you had a pleasanter neighbor,—especially
as she's likely to be the only one for some
time to come."</p>
<p>"Poor thing. I've neglected her of late,"
replied Clover, penitently. "I must make
up for it now that you are going away.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></SPAN></span>
Really, I couldn't take my time for her while
you were here, Rosy."</p>
<p>"And I certainly couldn't let you. I should
have resented it highly if you had. Oh dear,—there's
that whistle. We really have got
to go. I hoped to the last that something
might happen to keep us another day. Oh
dear Clover,—I wish we lived nearer each
other. This country of ours is a great deal
too wide."</p>
<p>"Geoff," said Clover, as they slowly climbed
the hill, "I never felt before that the High
Valley was too far away from people, but
somehow I do to-night. It is quite terrible
to have Rose go, and to feel that I may not
see her again for years."</p>
<p>"Did you want to go with her?"</p>
<p>"And leave you? No, dearest. But I
am quite sure that there are no distances in
Heaven, and when we get there we shall find
that we all are to live next door to each other.
It will be part of the happiness."</p>
<p>"Perhaps so. Meanwhile I am thankful
that my happiness lives close to me now. I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></SPAN></span>
don't have to wait till Heaven for that, which
is the reason perhaps that for some years past
Earth has seemed so very satisfactory to me."</p>
<p>"Geoff, what an uncommonly nice way
you have of putting things," said Clover,
nestling her head comfortably on his arm.
"On the whole I don't think the High Valley
is so <i>very</i> far away."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></SPAN></span></p>
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