<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
<h3>THE LITTLE SCHOOL-TEACHER</h3></div>
<p>On a warm day in May, a day which opens the crab-apple
blossoms and sets the bees humming, and the children
longing for a chance to pull off shoes and stockings
and go wading in the brook; on such a day the door of
the little schoolhouse stood open and the sunlight lay in a
long patch across the floor toward the “teacher’s desk,”
and the breeze came in and tossed a stray curl about her
forehead, and the children turned their heads often to look
at the round clock on the wall, watching for the slowly
moving hands to point to the hour of four.</p>
<p>It was a mixed school. Children of all ages were there,
from naughty little Johnnie Cole of five to Mary Burt and
Hilton Le Moyne of seventeen and nineteen, who were in
algebra and the sixth reader. It was well known by the
rest of the children why Hilton Le Moyne lingered in the
school this year all through May and June, instead of leaving
in April, as usual, to help his uncle on the farm. It was
“Teacher.” He was in love with her, and always waited
after school, hoping for a chance to walk home with her.</p>
<p>Poor boy! Black haired, red cheeked, and big hearted,
he knew his love was hopeless, for he was younger than
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she––not so much; but there was Tom Howard who was
also in love with her, and he had a span of sorrel horses
which he had raised and broken himself, and they were
his own, and he could come at any time––when she would
let him––and take her out riding.</p>
<p>Ah, that was something to aspire to! Such a team as
that, and “Teacher” to sit by his side and drive out with
him, all in her pretty flat hat with a pink rose on it and
green ribbons flying, and her green parasol over her head––sitting
so easily––just leaning forward a bit and turning
and laughing at what he was saying, and all the town
seeing her with him, and his harness shining and new,
making the team look as splendid as the best livery in town,
and his buggy all painted so bright and new––well! The
time would come when he too would have such an outfit.
It would. And Teacher would see that Tom Howard was
not the only one who could drive up after her in such style.</p>
<p>Little Teacher was tired to-day. The children had been
restless and noisy, and her heart had been heavy with a
great disappointment. She had been carefully saving her
small salary that she might go when school closed and take
a course at the “Art Institute” in “Technique.” For a
long time she had clung to the idea that she would become
an illustrator, and a great man had told her father that
“with a little instruction in technique” his daughter had
“a fortune at the tips of her fingers.” Only technique!
Yes, if she could get it!</p>
<p>Father could help her, of course, only father was a
painter in oils and not an illustrator––and then––he
was so driven, always, and father and mother both thought
it would be best for her to take the course of study recommended
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by the great man. So it was decided, for there
was Martha married and settled in her home not far away
from the Institute, and Teacher could live with her and
study. Ah, the long-coveted chance almost within her
reach! Then––one difficulty after another intervened,
beginning with a great fire in the fall which swept away
Martha’s home and all they had accumulated, together
with her husband’s school, rendering it necessary for the
young couple to go back to Leauvite for the winter.</p>
<p>“Never mind, Betty, dear,” Martha had encouraged her.
“We’ll return in the spring and start again, and you can
take the course just the same.”</p>
<p>But now a general financial stringency prevailed all over
the country. “It always seems, when there’s a ‘financial
stringency,’ that portraits and paintings are the things
people economize on first of all,” said Betty.</p>
<p>“Naturally,” said Mary Ballard. “When people need
food and clothing––they want them, and not pictures.
We’ll just have to wait, dear.”</p>
<p>“Yes, we’ll have to wait, Mary.” Saucy Betty had a
way of calling her mother “Mary.” “Your dress is shabby,
and you need a new bonnet; I noticed it in church,––you’d
never speak of that, though. You’d wear your
winter’s bonnet all summer.”</p>
<p>Yes, Betty must see to it, even if it took every bit of the
fund, that mother and Janey were suitably dressed.
“Never mind, Mary, I’ll catch up some day. You needn’t
look sorry. I’m all right about my own clothes, for Martha
gave me a rose for my hat, and the new ribbons make it so
pretty,––and my green parasol is as good as new for all
I’ve had it three years, and––”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_334' name='page_334'></SPAN>334</span></div>
<p>Betty stopped abruptly. Three years!––was it so
long since that parasol was new––and she was so happy––and
Richard came home––? The family were seated
on the piazza as they were wont to be in the evening, and
Betty walked quietly into the house, and up to her room.</p>
<p>Bertrand Ballard sighed, and his wife reached out and
took his hand in hers. “She’s never been the same since,”
he said.</p>
<p>“Her character has deepened and she’s fine and sweet––”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes. I have three hundred dollars owing me for
the Delong portrait. If I had it, she should have her
course. I’ll make another effort to collect it.”</p>
<p>“I would, Bertrand.”</p>
<p>Julien Thurbyfil and his wife walked down the flower-bordered
path side by side to the gate and stood leaning
over it in silence. Practical Martha was the first to
break it.</p>
<p>“There will be just as much need for preparatory schools
now as there was before the fire, Julien.”</p>
<p>“Yes, dear, yes.”</p>
<p>“And, meanwhile, we are glad of this sweet haven to come
to, aren’t we? And it won’t be long before things are so
you can begin again.”</p>
<p>“Yes, dear, and then we’ll make it up to Betty, won’t
we?”</p>
<p>But Julien was distraught and somber, in spite of brave
words. He had not inherited Mary Ballard’s way of looking
at things, nor his father-in-law’s buoyancy.</p>
<p>All that night Betty lay wakeful and thinking––thinking
as she had many, many a time during the last three
years, trying to make plans whereby she might adjust her
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_335' name='page_335'></SPAN>335</span>
thoughts to a life of loneliness, as she had decided in her
romantic heart was all she would take. How could there
be anything else for her since that terrible night when
Richard had come to her and confessed his guilt––his love
and his renunciation! Was she not sharing it all with
him wherever he might be, and whatever he was doing?
Oh, where was he? Did he ever think of her and know she
was always thinking of him? Did he know she prayed for
him, and was the thought a comfort to him? Surely Peter
was the happier of the two, for he was not a sorrowing
criminal, wandering the earth, hiding and repenting. So
all her thoughts went out to Richard, and no wonder she
was a weary little wight at the end of the school day.</p>
<p>Four o’clock, and the children went hurrying away, all
but Hilton Le Moyne, who lingered awhile at his desk, and
then reluctantly departed, seeing Teacher did not look up
from her papers except to give him a nod and a fugitive
little smile of absent-minded courtesy. Left thus alone,
Betty lifted the lid of her desk and put away the school
register and the carefully marked papers to be given out
the next day, and took from a small portfolio a packet of
closely written sheets. These she untied and looked over,
tossing them rapidly aside one after another until she found
the one for which she searched.</p>
<p>It was a short poem, hastily written with lead pencil, and
much crumpled and worn, as if it had been carried about.
Now she straightened the torn edges and smoothed it out
and began scanning the lines, counting off on her fingers
the rhythmic beats; she copied the verses carefully on a
fresh white sheet of paper and laid them aside; then, shoving
the whole heap of written papers from her, she selected
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another fresh sheet and began anew, writing and scanning
and writing again.</p>
<p>Steadily she worked while an hour slipped by. A great
bumblebee flew in at one window and boomed past her
head and out at the other window, and a bluebird perched
for an instant on the window ledge and was off again. She
saw the bee and the bird and paused awhile, gazing with
dreamy eyes through the high, uncurtained window at
drifting clouds already taking on the tint of the declining
sun; then she stretched her arms across her wide desk, and
putting her head down on them, was soon fast asleep.
Tired little Teacher!</p>
<p>The breeze freshened and tumbled her hair and fanned
her flushed cheek, and it did more than that; for, as the
drifting clouds betokened, the weather was changing, and
now a gust of wind caught at her papers and took some of
them out of the window, tossing and whirling them hither
and thither. Some were carried along the wayside and
lost utterly. One fluttered high over the tree tops and out
across the meadow, and then suddenly ceased its flight and
drifted slowly down like a dried leaf, past the face of a young
man who sat on a stone, moodily gazing in the meadow
brook. He reached out a long arm and caught it as it
fluttered by, just in time to save it from annihilation in the
water.</p>
<p>For a moment he held the scrap of paper absently between
his fingers, then glancing down at it he spied faintly
written, half-obliterated verses and read them; then, with
awakened interest, he read them again, smoothing the torn
bit of paper out on his knee. The place where he sat was
well screened from the road by a huge basswood tree, which
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spread great limbs quite across the stream, and swept both
its banks with drooping branches and broad leaves. Now
he held the scrap on his open palm and studied it closely
and thoughtfully. It was the worn piece from which Betty
had copied the verses.</p>
<table summary=''><tr><td>
<p class='cg'>“Oh, send me a thought on the winds that blow.<br/>
<span class='indent2'> </span>On the wing of a bird send a thought to me;<br/>
For the way is so long that I may not know,<br/>
<span class='indent2'> </span>And there are no paths on the troubled sea.<br/>
<br/>
“Out of the darkness I saw you go,––<br/>
<span class='indent2'> </span>Into the shadows where sorrows be,––<br/>
Wounded and bleeding, and sad and slow,––<br/>
<span class='indent2'> </span>Into the darkness away from me.<br/>
<br/>
“Out of my life and into the night,<br/>
<span class='indent2'> </span>But never out of my heart, my own.<br/>
Into the darkness out of the light,<br/>
<span class='indent2'> </span>Bleeding and wounded, and walking alone.”</p>
</td></tr></table>
<p>Here the words were quite erased and scratched over, and
the pathetic bit of paper looked as if it had been tear-stained.
Carefully and smoothly he laid it in his long bill
book. The book was large and plethoric with bank notes,
and there beside them lay the little scrap of paper, worn
and soiled, yet tear washed, and as the young man touched
it tenderly he smiled and thought that in it was a wealth
of something no bank note could buy. With a touch
of sentiment unsuspected by himself, he felt it too sacred
a thing to be touched by them, and he smoothed it again
and laid it in a compartment by itself.</p>
<p>Then he rose, and sauntered across the meadow to the
country road, and down it past the schoolhouse standing
on its own small rise of ground with the door still wide open,
and its shadow, cast by the rays of the now setting sun
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stretched long across the playground. The young man
passed it, paused, turned back, and entered. There at
her desk Betty still slept, and as he stepped softly forward
and looked down on her she stirred slightly and drew a long
breath, but slept on.</p>
<p>For a moment his heart ceased to beat, then it throbbed
suffocatingly and his hand went to his breast and clutched
the bill book where lay the tender little poem. There at
her elbow lay the copy she had so carefully made. The
air of the room was warm and drowsy, and the stillness
was only broken by the low buzzing of two great bluebottle
flies that struggled futilely against the high window panes.
Dear little tired Betty! Dreaming,––of whom? The
breath came through her parted lips, softly and evenly, and
the last ray of the sun fell on her flushed cheek and
brought out the touch of gold in her hair.</p>
<p>The young man turned away and crossed the bare floor
with light steps and drew the door softly shut after him as
he went out. No one might look upon her as she slept,
with less reverent eyes. Some distance away, where the
road began to ascend toward the river bluff, he seated himself
on a stone overlooking the little schoolhouse and the
road beyond. There he took up his lonely watch, until he
saw Betty come out and walk hurriedly toward the village,
carrying a book and swinging her hat by the long ribbon
ties; then he went on climbing the winding path to the top
of the bluff overlooking the river.</p>
<p>Moodily he paced up and down along the edge of the
bluff, and finally followed a zigzag path to the great rocks
below, that at this point seemed to have hurled themselves
down there to do battle with the eager, dominating flood.
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For a while he stood gazing into the rushing water, not as
though he were fascinated by it, but rather as if he were
held to the spot by some inward vision. Presently he
seemed to wake with a start and looked back along the
narrow, steep path, and up to the overhanging edge of the
bluff, scanning it closely.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes. There is the notch where it lay, and this
may be the very stone on which I am standing. What an
easy thing to fall over there and meet death halfway!”
He muttered the words under his breath and began slowly
to climb the difficult ascent.</p>
<p>The sun was gone, and down by the water a cold, damp
current of air seemed to sweep around the curve of the bluff
along with the rush of the river. As he climbed he came
to a warmer wave of air, and the dusk closed softly around
him, as if nature were casting a friendly curtain over the
drowsing earth; and the roar of the river came up to him,
no longer angrily, but in a ceaseless, subdued complaint.</p>
<p>Again he paced the top of the bluff, and at last seated
himself with his feet hanging over the edge, at the spot from
which the stone had fallen. The trees on this wind-swept
place were mostly gnarled oaks, old and strong and rugged,
standing like a band of weather-beaten life guardsmen
overlooking the miles of country around. Not twenty
paces from where the young man sat, half reclining on his
elbow, stood one of these oaks, and close to its great trunk
on its shadowed side a man bent forward intently watching
him. Whenever the young man shifted his position
restlessly, the figure made a darting movement forward as
if to snatch him from the dangerous brink, then recoiled
and continued to watch.</p>
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<p>Soon the young man seemed to be aware of the presence
and watchful eye, and looked behind him, peering into the
dusk. Then the man left his place and came toward him,
with slow, sauntering step.</p>
<p>“Hullo!” he said, with an insinuating, rising inflection
and in the soft voice of the Scandinavian.</p>
<p>“Hallo!” replied the young man.</p>
<p>“Seek?”</p>
<p>“Sick? No.” The young man laughed slightly.
“What are you doing here?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I yust make it leetle valk up here.”</p>
<p>“Same with me, and now I’ll make it a little walk back
to town.” The young man rose and stretched himself
and turned his steps slowly back along the winding path.</p>
<p>“Vell, I tank I make it leetle valk down town, too,” and
the figure came sauntering along at the young man’s side.</p>
<p>“Oh, you’re going my way, are you? All right.”</p>
<p>“Yas, I tank I going yust de sam your way.”</p>
<p>The young man set the pace more rapidly, and for a
time they walked on in silence. At last, “Live here?” he
asked.</p>
<p>“Yas, I lif here.”</p>
<p>“Been here long?”</p>
<p>“In America? Yes. I guess five––sax––year. Oh, I
lak it goot.”</p>
<p>“I mean here, in this place.”</p>
<p>“Oh, here? Yas, two, t’ree year. I lak it goot too.”</p>
<p>“Know any one here?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yas. I know people I vork by yet.”</p>
<p>“Who are they?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I vork by many place––make garten––und vork
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wit’ horses, und so. Meesus Craikmile, I vork by her on
garten. She iss dere no more.”</p>
<p>The young man paused suddenly in his stride. “Gone?
Where is she gone?”</p>
<p>“Oh, she iss by ol’ country gone. Her man iss gone mit.”
They walked on.</p>
<p>“What! Is the Elder gone, too?”</p>
<p>“Yas. You know heem, yas?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes. I know everybody here. I’ve been away for
a good while.”</p>
<p>“So? Yas, yust lak me. I was gone too goot wile, bot
I coom back too, yust lak you.”</p>
<p>Here they came to a turn in the road, and the village
lights began to wink out through the darkness, and their
ways parted.</p>
<p>“I’m going this way,” said the young man. “You turn
off here? Well, good night.”</p>
<p>“Vell, goot night.” The Swede sauntered away down
a by-path, and the young man kept on the main road to the
village and entered its one hotel where he had engaged a
room a few hours before.</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
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