"Carrying coal," he thought, over and over. "Really, it was very thoughtless in me. I mustn"t forget them any more."
CHAPTER IV
The desire to flee which Jennie experienced upon seeing the Senator again was attributable to what she considered the disgrace of her position. She was ashamed to think that he, who thought so well of her, should discover her doing so common a thing. Girl-like, she was inclined to imagine that his interest in her depended upon something else than her mere personality.
When she reached home Mrs. Gerhardt had heard of her flight from the other children.
"What was the matter with you, anyhow?" asked George, when she came in.
"Oh, nothing," she answered, but immediately turned to her mother and said, "Mr. Brander came by and saw us."
"Oh, did he?" softly exclaimed her mother. "He"s back then. What made you run, though, you foolish girl?"
"Well, I didn"t want him to see me."
"Well, maybe he didn"t know you, anyhow," she said, with a certain sympathy for her daughter"s predicament.
"Oh yes, he did, too," whispered Jennie. "He called after me three or four times."
Mrs. Gerhardt shook her head.
"What is it?" said Gerhardt, who had been hearing the conversation from the adjoining room, and now came out.
"Oh, nothing," said the mother, who hated to explain the significance which the Senator"s personality had come to have in their lives. "A man frightened them when they were bringing the coal."
The arrival of the Christmas presents later in the evening threw the household into an uproar of excitement. Neither Gerhardt nor the mother could believe their eyes when a grocery wagon halted in front of their cottage and a l.u.s.ty clerk began to carry in the gifts. After failing to persuade the clerk that he had made a mistake, the large a.s.sortment of good things was looked over with very human glee.
"Just you never mind," was the clerk"s authoritative words. "I know what I"m about. Gerhardt, isn"t it? Well, you"re the people."
Mrs. Gerhardt moved about, rubbing her hands in her excitement, and giving vent to an occasional "Well, isn"t that nice now!"
Gerhardt himself was melted at the thought of the generosity of the unknown benefactor, and was inclined to lay it all to the goodness of a great local mill owner, who knew him and wished him well. Mrs.
Gerhardt tearfully suspected the source, but said nothing. Jennie knew, by instinct, the author of it all.
The afternoon of the day after Christmas Brander encountered the mother in the hotel, Jennie having been left at home to look after the house.
"How do you do, Mrs. Gerhardt," he exclaimed genially extending his hand. "How did you enjoy your Christmas?"
Poor Mrs. Gerhardt took it nervously; her eyes filled rapidly with tears.
"There, there," he said, patting her on the shoulder. "Don"t cry.
You mustn"t forget to get my laundry to-day."
"Oh no, sir," she returned, and would have said more had he not walked away.
From this on, Gerhardt heard continually of the fine Senator at the hotel, how pleasant he was, and how much he paid for his washing. With the simplicity of a German workingman, he was easily persuaded that Mr. Brander must be a very great and a very good man.
Jennie, whose feelings needed no encouragement in this direction, was more than ever prejudiced in his favor.
There was developing in her that perfection of womanhood, the full mold of form, which could not help but attract any man. Already she was well built, and tall for a girl. Had she been dressed in the trailing skirts of a woman of fashion she would have made a fitting companion for a man the height of the Senator. Her eyes were wondrously clear and bright, her skin fair, and her teeth white and even. She was clever, too, in a sensible way, and by no means deficient in observation. All that she lacked was training and the a.s.surance of which the knowledge of utter dependency despoils one. But the carrying of washing and the compulsion to acknowledge almost anything as a favor put her at a disadvantage.
Nowadays when she came to the hotel upon her semi-weekly errand Senator Brander took her presence with easy grace, and to this she responded. He often gave her little presents for herself, or for her brothers and sisters, and he talked to her so unaffectedly that finally the overawing sense of the great difference between them was brushed away, and she looked upon him more as a generous friend than as a distinguished Senator. He asked her once how she would like to go to a seminary, thinking all the while how attractive she would be when she came out. Finally, one evening, he called her to his side.
"Come over here, Jennie," he said, "and stand by me."
She came, and, moved by a sudden impulse, he took her hand.
"Well, Jennie," he said, studying her face in a quizzical, interrogative way, "what do you think of me, anyhow?"
"Oh," she answered, looking consciously away, "I don"t know. What makes you ask me that?"
"Oh yes, you do," he returned. "You have some opinion of me. Tell me now, what is it?"
"No, I haven"t," she said, innocently.
"Oh yes, you have," he went on, pleasantly, interested by her transparent evasiveness. "You must think something of me. Now, what is it?"
"Do you mean do I like you?" she asked, frankly, looking down at the big mop of black hair well streaked with gray which hung about his forehead, and gave an almost lionine cast to his fine face.
"Well, yes," he said, with a sense of disappointment. She was barren of the art of the coquette.
"Why, of course I like you," she replied, prettily.
"Haven"t you ever thought anything else about me?" he went on.
"I think you"re very kind," she went on, even more bashfully; she realized now that he was still holding her hand.
"Is that all?" he asked.
"Well," she said, with fluttering eyelids, "isn"t that enough?"
He looked at her, and the playful, companionable directness of her answering gaze thrilled him through and through. He studied her face in silence while she turned and twisted, feeling, but scarcely understanding, the deep import of his scrutiny.
"Well," he said at last, "I think you"re a fine girl. Don"t you think I"m a pretty nice man?"
"Yes," said Jennie, promptly.
He leaned back in his chair and laughed at the unconscious drollery of her reply. She looked at him curiously, and smiled.
"What made you laugh?" she inquired.
"Oh, your answer" he returned. "I really ought not to laugh, though. You don"t appreciate me in the least. I don"t believe you like me at all."
"But I do, though," she replied, earnestly. "I think you"re so good." Her eyes showed very plainly that she felt what she was saying.