Darrell had been in his room but a short time, however, when he heard a light tap at his door, and, opening it, Mrs. Dean entered.
"You seem like a son to me, Mr. Darrell," she said, with quiet dignity, "so I have taken the liberty to come to your room for a few minutes the same as I would to a son"s."
"That is right, Mrs. Dean," Darrell replied, escorting her to a large arm-chair; "my own mother could not be more welcome."
"You know us pretty well by this time, Mr. Darrell," she said, as she seated herself, "and you know that we"re not given to expressing our feelings very much, but I felt that I couldn"t let you go away without a few words with you first. I sometimes think that those who can"t express themselves are the ones that feel the deepest, though I guess we often get the credit of not having any feelings at all."
"If I ever had such an impression of you or your brother, I found out my error long ago," Darrell remarked, gravely, as she paused.
"Yes, I think you understand us; I think you will understand me, Mr.
Darrell, when I say to you that I haven"t felt anything so deeply in years as I do your leaving us now--not so much the mere fact of your going away as the real reason of your going. I felt bad when you left for camp a year ago, but this is altogether different; then you felt, and we felt, that you were one of us, that your home was with us, and I hoped that as long as you remained in the West your home would be with us. Now, although there is no change in our love for you, or yours for us, I know that the place is no longer a home to you, that you do not care to stay; and about the hardest part of it all is, that, knowing the circ.u.mstances as I do, I myself would not ask you to stay."
"You seem to understand the situation, Mrs. Dean; how did you learn the circ.u.mstances?" Darrell asked, wonderingly.
She regarded him a moment with a motherly smile. "Did you think I was blind? I could see for myself. Katherine has told me nothing," she added, in answer to the unspoken inquiry which she read in his eyes; "she has told me no more than you, but I saw what was coming long before either you or she realized it."
"Oh, Mrs. Dean, why didn"t you warn me in time?" Darrell exclaimed.
"The time for warning was when you two first met," Mrs. Dean replied; "for two as congenial to be thrown together so constantly would naturally result just as it has; it is no more than was to be expected, and neither of you can be blamed. And," she added, slowly, "that is not the phase of the affair which I most regret. I think such love as you two bear each other would work little harm or sorrow to either of you in the end, if matters could only be left to take their own course. I may as well tell you that I think no good will come of this scheme of David"s. Mr. Walcott is not a suitable man for Katherine, even if she were heart free, and loving you as she does--as she always will, for I understand the child--it would have been much better to have waited a year or two; I have no doubt that everything would come out all right.
Of course, as I"m not her mother, I have no say in the matter and no right to interfere; but mark my words: David will regret this, and at no very distant day, either."
"I know that nothing but unhappiness can come of it for Kate, and that is what troubles me far more than any sorrow of my own," said Darrell, in a low voice.
"It will bring unhappiness and evil all around, but to no one so much as David Underwood himself," said Mrs. Dean, impressively, as she rose.
"Mrs. Dean," said Darrell, springing quickly to his feet, "you don"t know the good this little interview has done me! I thank you for it and for your sympathy from the bottom of my heart."
"I wish I could give you something more practical than sympathy," said Mrs. Dean, with a smile, "and I will if I ever have the opportunity. And one thing in particular I want to say to you, Mr. Darrell: so long as you are in the West, whether your home is with us or not, I want you to feel that you have a mother in me, and should you ever be sick or in trouble and need a mother"s care and love, no matter where you are, I will come to you as I would to my own son."
They had reached the door; Darrell, too deeply moved for speech and knowing her aversion to many words, bent over her and kissed her on the forehead.
"Thank you, mother; good-night!" he said.
She turned and looked at him with glistening eyes, as she replied, calmly,--
"Good-night, my son!"
The household was astir at an early hour the next morning. There were forced smiles and some desultory conversation at the breakfast-table, but it was a silent group which gathered outside in the early morning sunlight as Darrell was about taking his departure. He dreaded the parting, and, as he glanced at the faces of the waiting group, he determined to make it as brief as possible for their sakes as well as his own.
The heavy teams came slowly around from the stables, and behind them came Trix, daintily picking her steps along the driveway. With a word or two of instructions to the drivers Darrell sent the teams ahead; then, having adjusted saddle and bridle to his satisfaction, he turned to Mr.
Underwood, who stood nearest.
"My boy," said the latter, extending his hand, "we hate to spare you from the old home, but I don"t know where I would have got a man to take your place; with you up there I feel just as safe as though I were there myself."
"Much obliged, Mr. Underwood," Darrell replied, looking straight into the elder man"s eyes; "I think you"ll find me worthy of any trust you may repose in me--at the camp or elsewhere."
"Every time, my boy, every time!" exclaimed the old gentleman, wringing his hand.
Mrs. Dean"s usually placid face was stern from her effort to repress her feelings, but there was a glance of mother-love in her eyes and a slight quivering of her lips as she bade him a quiet good-by.
But it was Kate"s pale, sweet face that nearly broke his own composure as he turned to her, last of all. Their hands clasped and they looked silently into each other"s eyes for an instant.
"Good-by, John; G.o.d bless you!" she said, in tones audible only to his ear.
"G.o.d bless and help you, Kathie!" he replied, and turned quickly to Trix waiting at his side.
"Look at Duke," said Kate, a moment later, as Darrell sprang into the saddle; "he doesn"t know what to make of it that you haven"t bade him good-by."
Duke, who had shown considerable excitement over the unusual proceedings, had bounded to Kate"s side as Darrell approached her, expecting his usual recognition; not having received it, he sat regarding Darrell with an evident sense of personal injury quite pathetic.
Darrell looked at the drooping head and smiled. "Come, Duke," he said, slowly starting down the driveway.
Kate bent quickly for a final caress. "Go on, Duke!" she whispered.
Nothing loath to follow Darrell, he bounded forward, but after a few leaps, on discovering that his beloved mistress was not accompanying them, he stopped, looking back in great perplexity. At a signal from her and a word from Darrell he again started onward, but his backward glances were more than Kate could bear, and she turned to go into the house.
"What are you sending the dog after him for, anyway?" inquired her father, himself somewhat puzzled.
"I have given Duke to Mr. Darrell, papa," she replied.
Something in the unnatural calmness of her tone startled him; he turned to question her. She had gone, but in the glimpse which he had of her face he read a little of the anguish which at that moment wrung her young heart, and happening at the same time to catch his sister"s eye, he walked away, silent and uncomfortable.
_Chapter XX_
FORGING THE FETTERS
During the weeks immediately following Darrell"s departure the daily routine of life at The Pines continued in the accustomed channels, but there was not a member of the family, including Mr. Underwood himself, to whom it did not seem strangely empty, as though some essential element were missing.
To Kate her present life, compared with the first months of her return home, was like the narrow current creeping sluggishly beneath the icy fetters of winter as compared with the same stream laughing and singing on its way under summer skies. But she was learning the lesson that all must learn; that the world sweeps relentlessly onward with no pause for individual woe, and each must keep step in its ceaseless march, no matter how weary the brain or how heavy the heart.
Walcott"s visits continued with the same frequency, but he was less annoying in his attentions than formerly. It had gradually dawned upon him that Kate was no longer a child, but a woman; and a woman with a will as indomitable as her father"s once it was aroused. He was not displeased at the discovery; on the contrary, he looked forward with all the keener antic.i.p.ation to the pleasure of what he mentally termed the "taming" process, once she was fairly within his power. Meantime, he was content to make a study of her, sitting evening after evening either in conversation with her father or listening while she played and sang, but always watching her every movement, scanning every play of her features.
"A loose rein for the present," he would say to himself, with a smile; "but by and by, my lady, you will find whether or no I am master!"
He seldom attempted now to draw her into a tete a tete conversation, but finding her one evening sitting upon a low divan in one of the bay-windows looking out into the moonlight, he seated himself beside her and began one of his entertaining tales of travel. An hour or more pa.s.sed pleasantly, and Walcott inquired, casually,--
"By the way, Miss Underwood, what has become of my four-footed friend? I have not seen him for three weeks or more, and his attentions to me were so marked I naturally miss them."
"Duke is at the mining camp," Kate answered, with a faint smile.
Walcott raised his eyebrows incredulously. "Possible! With my other admirer, Mr. Darrell?"
"He is with Mr. Darrell."
"Accept my grat.i.tude, Miss Underwood, for having made my entree to your home much pleasanter, not to say safer."