She stood with her head turned away from me, her slim hand resting limply in mine. From the slight tremor of her shoulders I became aware how deeply her emotion was now swaying her. Evidently she was nearly ready to become mine.
But I remained calm and alert. The time was not yet. Her father had had his prunes, in which he delighted. And when pleasantly approached with a bucket of salad he could not listen otherwise than politely to what I had to say to him. Quick action was necessary--quick but diplomatic action--in view of the imminence of this young man Green, who evidently was _persona grata_ at the bungalow of this irritable old dodo.
Tenderly pressing the pretty hand which I held, and saluting the finger-tips with a gesture which was, perhaps, not wholly ungraceful, I stepped into the kitchen, washed out several heads of lettuce, deftly chopped up some youthful onions, constructed a seductive French dressing, and, stirring together the crisp ingredients, set the savoury masterpiece away in the ice-box, after tasting it. It was delicious enough to draw sobs from any pig.
When I went out to the veranda, Wilna had disappeared. So I unfolded and set up some more box-traps, determined to lose no time.
Sunset still lingered beyond the chain of western mountains as I went out across the gra.s.sy plateau to the cornfield.
Here I set and baited several dozen aluminium crow-traps, padding the jaws so that no injury could be done to the birds when the springs snapped on their legs.
Then I went over to the crater and descended its gentle, gra.s.sy slope.
And there, all along the borders of the vapoury wall, I set box-traps for the lithe little denizens of the fire, baiting every trap with a handful of fresh, sweet clover which I had pulled up from the pasture beyond the cornfield.
My task ended, I ascended the slope again, and for a while stood there immersed in pleasurable premonitions.
Everything had been accomplished swiftly and methodically within the few hours in which I had first set eyes upon this extraordinary place--everything!--love at first sight, the delightfully lightning-like wooing and winning of an incomparable maiden and heiress; the discovery of the fire creatures; the solving of the emerald problem.
And now everything was ready, crow-traps, fire-traps, a bucket of irresistible salad for Blythe, a modest and tremulous avowal for Wilna as soon as her father tasted the salad and I had pleasantly notified him of my intentions concerning his lovely offspring.
Daylight faded from rose to lilac; already the mountains were growing fairy-like under that vague, diffuse l.u.s.tre which heralds the rise of the full moon. It rose, enormous, yellow, unreal, becoming imperceptibly silvery as it climbed the sky and hung aloft like a stupendous arc-light flooding the world with a radiance so white and clear that I could very easily have written verses by it, if I wrote verses.
Down on the edge of the forest I could see Blythe on his camp-stool, madly besmearing his moonlit canvas, but I could not see Wilna anywhere.
Maybe she had shyly retired somewhere by herself to think of me.
So I went back to the house, filled a bucket with my salad, and started toward the edge of the woods, singing happily as I sped on feet so light and frolicsome that they seemed to skim the ground. How wonderful is the power of love!
When I approached Blythe he heard me coming and turned around.
"What the devil do _you_ want?" he asked with characteristic civility.
"I have brought you," said I gaily, "a bucket of salad."
"I don"t want any salad!"
"W-what?"
"I never eat it at night."
I said confidently:
"Mr. Blythe, if you will taste this salad I am sure you will not regret it." And with hideous cunning I set the bucket beside him on the gra.s.s and seated myself near it. The old dodo grunted and continued to daub the canvas; but presently, as though forgetfully, and from sheer instinct, he reached down into the bucket, pulled out a leaf of lettuce, and shoved it into his mouth.
My heart leaped exultantly. I had him!
"Mr. Blythe," I began in a winningly modulated voice, and, at the same instant, he sprang from his camp-chair, his face distorted.
"There are onions in this salad!" he yelled. "What the devil do you mean!
Are you trying to poison me! What are you following me about for, anyway?
Why are you running about under foot every minute!"
"My dear Mr. Blythe," I protested--but he barked at me, kicked over the bucket of salad, and began to dance with rage.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "Kicked over the bucket of salad, and began to dance with rage."]
"What"s the matter with you, anyway!" he bawled. "Why are you trying to feed me? What do you mean by trying to be attentive to me!"
"I--I admire and revere you--"
"No you don"t!" he shouted. "I don"t want you to admire me! I don"t desire to be revered! I don"t like attention and politeness! Do you hear!
It"s artificial--out of date--ridiculous! The only thing that recommends a man to me is his bad manners, bad temper, and violent habits. There"s some meaning to such a man, none at all to men like you!"
He ran at the salad bucket and kicked it again.
"They all fawned on me in Boston!" he panted. "They ran about under foot!
They bought my pictures! And they made me sick! I came out here to be rid of "em!"
I rose from the gra.s.s, pale and determined.
"You listen to me, you old grouch!" I hissed. "I"ll go. But before I go I"ll tell you why I"ve been civil to you. There"s only one reason in the world: I want to marry your daughter! And I"m going to do it!"
I stepped nearer him, menacing him with outstretched hand:
"As for you, you pitiable old dodo, with your bad manners and your worse pictures, and your degraded mania for prunes, you are a necessary evil that"s all, and I haven"t the slightest respect for either you or your art!"
"Is that true?" he said in an altered voice.
"True?" I laughed bitterly. "Of course it"s true, you miserable dauber!"
"D-dauber!" he stammered.
"Certainly! I _said_ "dauber," and I mean it. Why, your work would shame the pictures on a child"s slate!"
"Smith," he said unsteadily, "I believe I have utterly misjudged you.
I believe you are a good deal of a man, after all--"
"I"m man enough," said I, fiercely, "to go back, saddle my mule, kidnap your daughter, and start for home. And I"m going to do it!"
"Wait!" he cried. "I don"t want you to go. If you"ll remain I"ll be very glad. I"ll do anything you like. I"ll quarrel with you, and you can insult my pictures. It will agreeably stimulate us both. Don"t go, Smith--"
"If I stay, may I marry Wilna?"
"If you ask me I won"t let you!"
"Very well!" I retorted, angrily. "Then I"ll marry her anyway!"
"That"s the way to talk! Don"t go, Smith. I"m really beginning to like you. And when Billy Green arrives you and he will have a delightfully violent scene--"