"Whereas, we love her fit to die,
"Therefore, be it resolved that we will tell her so and tell her she"ll never know how much, and we thank her and thank her and thank her.
"And a copy of these res"lutions is ordered to be spread on paper and on her heart, and we will spread them on ours.
"Kitty Mountcastle "Jessie Royall "Margaret Potts "And Me."
The last two words were emphasized by a low bow, then, turning, she ran into Mary Cary"s outstretched arms, and threw hers around her neck.
"Oh, Miss Mary, I"m so glad I"ve said it, and I didn"t miss but once.
Here they are!" The paper was thrust in her hand. "I didn"t help write these, but I wrote some once when my grandfather died. I remember just as well--"
"Minna, Minna!" Mary Cary lifted the excited little face from her shoulder and kissed her lips. "Your grandfather died before you were born, but you remembered splendidly to-night. I don"t see--"
"Pooh! That wasn"t anything!" Minna"s eyes were raised to the ceiling. "All I"ve got to do is to hear a thing and I can say it.
I can say Shakespeare if you want me to."
Mary Cary got up. "Mercy, no! Don"t say anything else if you love me. Run back to Peggy and keep still for just a minute more." She stood at the table, looking at Mrs. McDougal speaking to Hedwig, who a moment later came back with a large knife and handed it to her, and, as she took it, Mary Cary dropped back into her chair.
Flourishing the knife, Mrs. McDougal advanced to the cake, then turned to the others sitting stiff and upright in their chairs, and bowed again. "The ceremonies is over and the cake will be cut. And then maybe you"ll open your mouths and say something. You"re settin" like you"re at a funeral. Then resolutions sounded like it, but you mustn"t mind them, Miss Mary"--she turned to the latter in a whisper--"they didn"t have much time to make up anything, and I asked Miss Samson just to let "em say something from their hearts, and they thought resolutions was more dignified than plain every-day speech, and more respectful. I asked for a testimony and for Minna Haskins to say it. She"s such a little devil and so fond of you. Maybe now you"d like to say something yourself?" She rapped on the table for silence. "Miss Cary would like to say something, and when she"s through we"ll eat."
For half a moment Mary Cary leaned against the library table, her hands behind her clasping it with an intensity of which she was not conscious, and for a moment more words would not come. Slowly the hot color died out of her face and her lips quivered.
"No," she said, presently. "No. I can"t say anything. When we feel much we can say little, and I couldn"t tell you how you have--have humbled me; but I do thank you for your kind, kind words. It is not I you should thank, however. I have done so little. I could have done nothing had it not been for Yorkburg"s friend. I had nothing to give but--"
"Love, which is what few have, judging by the spa.r.s.e way it"s handed out." Mrs. McDougal stuck the knife in the cake and left it there, then waved her hand. "Go on! Go on!"
"I had only--love to give when I came back, and love by itself can"t do what it would. It needs money to help. Money without love may not be much, but love with money--" Her voice broke.
"Is hard to beat. Just tell you friend we thank him hearty, or her if it"s a her. When love and money married get, their children will be great, you bet." Mrs. McDougal threw back her head, and her hearty laugh was joined in by none more heartily than Miss Gibbie, who used the opportunity to put her handkerchief to her nose and keep it there awhile. "Bless my soul, if I ain"t made a rhyme! Thirty-seven and never did it before! Luck and accidents come to all, my grandmother used to say, and when I speaks poetry on the spot it"s both together. I"m real proud of myself, that I am! That"s all right, Miss Mary; don"t you try to say nothin". We understand you, and we just want you to understand us." She pulled her by the sleeve. "There"s Miss Hedwig standin" in the door lookin" at you. Goodness gracious! If she ain"t gone and set a spread on the dining-room table, and me ready to cut the cake this minute! Looks like we"re goin" to have a party, after all. Miss Mary, you blow out this candle, and I"ll light it again when we get in the dining-room." She dropped her voice. "Here, get behind me and wipe your eyes if you want to. Got a handkerchief? Ain"t our eyes funny? Trickle when there ain"t a bit of sense in it. Are you through?" She lifted the cake triumphantly. "My! but I"m glad I"m livin"! If there"s anything I do love in life "tis a party, and I ain"t been to one since I married McDougal, and that"s more"n nineteen years ago!"
Chapter XX
A SUDDEN CHANGE
Dull gray skies, a sobbing wind, and rain falling in monotonous regularity greeted the day following the testimony party. The contrast in temperature and condition was not cheerful, and as Mary Cary stood upon the porch looking down the road which led to Yorkburg she shivered in the damp, cold air, then breathed deeply that her lungs might have their bath.
"It"s between the twenty-four hours that all the changes in life come, I suppose, but a change like this makes yesterday seem ages ago.
Was it really /yesterday/ Peggy and I ran like the King of France down hill and up again? and just last night we had that dear, queer, precious party?"
She sighed happily and began it walk up and down the porch. "It"s too bad John and Mr. Fielding should happen to be here together. John despises Mr. Fielding. I don"t wonder. When he shakes hands with me I"m so afraid he"ll hear me shiver I hold my breath. And yet he"s a very generous man. If I"d allow him he"d give me any amount needed for any object. I"d as soon allow him to give me poison as a check for library, or baths, or the asylum, or anything else in Yorkburg. I"m sorry he"s here, but I couldn"t prevent his coming, not knowing he intended doing so until he arrived. And John just wrote day before yesterday he"d be here to-day. I haven"t been very polite to Mr.
Fielding, but he has no reason to expect me to be polite. I"ve told him I would never marry him and there wasn"t the slightest use in coming here, but I might as well talk to the wind. If for him there"s to be transmigration, he"ll be a rubber ball next time. He"s as persistent as John--that is, as John used to be. For nearly six months John has forgotten he ever wanted to marry me. I understand he and Lily Deford have become great friends. Mrs. Deford never loses an opportunity of telling me so."
She threw back her head and laughed. "Lily Deford! What on earth does he talk to her about? Hand embroidery and silk stockings are Lily"s specialties, and she rarely gets beyond either in words or deeds. She"s a pretty little powder puff, and I"d feel sorry for her if she wasn"t so ma-ridden and spineless. But if John enjoys her--" She shut her eyes tight, a trick caught unconsciously from Miss Gibbie, then turned and went indoors. And in the hall Hedwig heard her humming cheerfully as she put on raincoat and overshoes and made ready for a walk to town.
An hour later the meeting called in Mr. Moon"s office to settle certain matters relating to the recent planting of trees was over, and, leaving the mills, Mary Cary turned into King Street. The driving rain of the morning had slackened somewhat, but the street was deserted, the hour being that of Yorkburg"s dinner, and as she neared the upper end nothing was in sight but a stray dog whose wet tail flapped in dejected appeal for the door before which he stood to be opened.
"You poor thing!" She stooped and patted the shivering creature, "I"ve felt sometimes like you look, but I hope I"ll never look like you feel."
The door was opened, and with an extra flourish of tail and a yelp of grat.i.tude the dog disappeared, and again she started up the street.
Only the drip of the rain, the trickle of water in the gutters, and the flap of the torn awning in front of the drug store broke the sullen stillness, and then some distance ahead she saw a man and a woman, under an umbrella held close to their heads, coming slowly toward her.
The slowness of their walk caught her attention, but the intentness of their talk made them unconscious of her approach, and not until she was quite near them was the umbrella held by the man lifted so that she could see who he was. She stopped suddenly as if hit, and in her face the color surged so hotly that the damp air stung.
"Why, Mary!" John Maxwell"s umbrella dropped to the ground, and with hat in his left hand he extended his right in frank joy at seeing her. "What in the world are you doing out on a day like this?"
"Enjoying myself." The hand held eagerly toward her was barely touched. "How do you do, Lily? Are you out for fun, too?"
"Oh no! I"m out for--" She turned helplessly to the man beside her.
In his face the color had leaped as swiftly as it had in Mary"s, but in his it died as quickly as it came, and her cool greeting whitened it. "I came out to get some embroidery cotton number thirty-six from Simcoe"s and met Mr. Maxwell coming from the inn. He was--"
"Fortunate to meet you. When did you get in, John? She asked the question as if for the time of day, opened her bag, took from it her handkerchief, and wiped her face. "I believe my umbrella leaks. My face is actually wet."
"I got in yesterday afternoon. I went by to see Miss Gibbie and heard she was spending the evening with you."
"So he came to see us. Wasn"t it good of him?" And Lily, whose slow brain was confused by an undefined something she could not understand, looked first at one and then the other. "I wanted mam-ma to send for Mr. Brickhouse so we could play cards, but she wouldn"t do it and went to bed by nine o"clock. Mam-ma never will play cards with Mr. Maxwell; says he"s too good a player. But won"t you come in some evening while he"s here, Mary, and play with us? I"ll get five more people and that will make two tables. Mr. Maxwell is going to stay some time."
"Is he?" Mary Cary fastened the b.u.t.tons of her left glove, then held her umbrella straight, as if to go on. "I"m sorry I can"t come in for cards while he"s here, but I don"t care for cards." She laughed lightly and nodded. "Too bad I"ve kept you standing in the rain.
Good-bye!" and she started off.
"Hold on a minute, Mary!" Hat still in hand, John handed the umbrella to Lily Deford and took a few steps behind her. "What time are you going out this afternoon? I"ll come by for you. May I stay to tea? I must see you this evening."
"Must you?" She shook the rain off her umbrella. "I"m sorry, but I have an engagement this evening."
He looked at her as if not understanding. "You mean I can"t come?"
His face flushed, and a quick frown swept over it.
Her shoulders shrugged slightly, a movement she knew he disliked.
"If you perfer to so put it--that is what I mean."
His clear gray eyes were searching hers as if what he had heard was unbelievable. "Your engagements must be very imperative. I have not seen you for nearly six months and naturally my time here must be short."
Mary Cary looked up, and the smile on her face was one he did not know. "Short? I understood Lily to say a minute ago you would be here some time."
"Lily knows nothing about it."
"No?" Again her eyebrows lifted. "She seemed to speak with authority. But whether she did or not, it is hardly kind to keep her standing in the rain. Don"t you think you had better go back to her?"
"I think I had." He looked down, and then again in her baffling eyes. "You haven"t on your overshoes. Your feet are soaking wet."
She too looked down. "I started out with them. Guess I left them in Mr. Moon"s office. Are you sure Lily has on hers?"
"I don"t know whether she has or not. Lily can take care of her own feet."
"And I of mine. Standing on wet ground isn"t good for them.
Good-bye!" And with a half-nod she walked on up the street.
What was it? What was the matter with her? Her blood was pounding through heart and brain, and the damp air on her face only added to its burning. In her eyes was an angry light, and she bit her lips lest they make movements of the words which sprang to them.