"Let Ephraim alone, he"s joined to his idols! As our old preacher used to say in Missouri. Your delusion is hopeless. It"s well the President is safely married."
Betty"s eyes twinkled. Ned paused, blushed, fumbled in his pocket and drew out the card the President had given him to deliver.
"I am ordered by the administration," he gravely continued, "to serve this doc.u.ment on the daughter of Senator Winter."
Betty"s eyes danced with amazement as she read the message in the handwriting of the Chief Magistrate.
"He sent this to me?"
[Ill.u.s.tration: ""Good-bye--Ned!" she breathed softly."]
"Ordered me to serve it on you at once--my excuse for coming at this unseemly hour."
"But why?"
"I gave him a hint of your opinion of his Inaugural. I think it"s a case of a drowning man grasping a straw."
"Well, this is splendid!" she exclaimed.
"You take it seriously?"
"It"s a great honor."
"And are you going?"
"I"d go to-night if it were possible--to-morrow sure----"
She looked at the card curiously.
"I"ve a strange presentiment that something wonderful will come of this meeting."
"No doubt of it. When Senator Winter"s daughter becomes the champion of the "Slave Hound of Illinois" there"ll be a sensation in the Capital gossip to say nothing of what may happen at home."
"I"ll risk what happens at home, Ned! My father has two great pa.s.sions, the hatred of Slavery and the love of his frivolous daughter. I can twist him around my little finger----"
She paused, snapped her finger and smiled up into his face sweetly:
"Do you doubt it, sir?"
"No," he answered with a frown, dropping his voice to low tender tones.
"But would you mind telling me, Miss Betty, why you called me "Mr. Ned"
the other day when I introduced you to John?"
The faintest tinge of red flashed in her cheeks:
"I must have done it unconsciously."
"Please don"t do it again. It hurts. You"ve called me Ned too long to drop it now, don"t you think?"
"Yes."
Her eyes twinkled with mischief as she took his hand in parting.
"Good-bye--Ned!" she breathed softly.
And then he did a foolish thing, but the impulse was resistless. He bent low, reverently kissed the tips of her fingers and fled without daring to look back.
CHAPTER IV
A PAIR OF YOUNG EYES
When Betty"s card was sent in at the White House next morning, a smile lighted the sombre face of the President. He waved his long arms impulsively to his Secretaries and the waiting crowd of Congressmen:
"Clear everybody out for a few minutes, boys; I"ve an appointment at this hour."
The tall figure bowed with courtly deference over the little hand and his voice was touched with deep feeling:
"I want to thank you personally, Miss Betty, for your kind words about my Inaugural. They helped and cheered me in a trying moment."
"I"m glad," was the smiling answer.
"Tell me everything you said about it?" he urged laughingly.
"I"m afraid Mrs. Lincoln might not like it!" she said demurely.
"We"ll risk it. I"m going to take you in to see her in a minute. I want her to know you. Tell me, what else did you say?"
He spoke with the eager wistfulness of a boy. It was only too plain that few messages of good cheer had come to lighten the burden his responsibilities had brought.
A smile touched her eyes with tender sympathy:
"You won"t be vain if I tell you exactly what I said, Mr. President?"
"After all the brickbats that have been coming my way?" he laughed. No man could laugh with more genuine hearty enjoyment. His laughter convulsed his whole being for the moment and fairly hypnotized his hearer into sympathy with his mood.
"Out with it, Miss Betty, I need it!" he urged.
"I said, Mr. President, that you were very tender and very strong----"
she paused and looked straight into his deep set eyes "----and that a great man had appeared in our history."
He was still for a moment and a mist veiled the light at which she gazed. He took her hand in both his, pressed it gently and murmured:
"Thank you, Miss Betty, I shall try to prove worthy of my little champion."
"I think you do things without trying, Mr. President," she answered.