Mr. Brown was a busy man, but he never failed to be in his place at
the foot of the table every day punctually at half past twelve,
solely because at that hour his little daughter, Jane, would show
her grave and earnest and dark brown, almost swarthy, face at the
head. Eight years ago another face used to appear there, also
grave, earnest, but very fair and very lovely to look upon, to the
doctor the fairest of all faces on the earth. The little, plain,
swarthy-faced child the next day after that lovely face had been
forever shut away from the doctor's eyes was placed in her high
chair at the head of the table, at first only at the lunch hour,
but later at all meal times before the doctor to look at. And it
was an ever-recurring joy to the lonely man to discover in the
little grave face before him fleeting glimpses of the other face so
tenderly loved and so long vanished. These glimpses were to be
discovered now in the deep blue eyes, deep in colour and in
setting, now in the smile that lit up the dark, irregular features
like the sudden break of sunlight upon the rough landscape,
transforming it into loveliness, now in the knitting of the heavy
eyebrows, and in the firm pressing of the lips in moments of
puzzled thought. In all the moods and tenses of the little maid
the doctor looked for and found reminiscences of her mother.
Through those eight lonely years the little girl had divided with
his profession the doctor's days. Every morning after breakfast he
stood to watch the trim, sturdy, round little figure dance down the
steps, step primly down the walk, turn at the gate to throw a kiss,
and then march away along the street to the corner where another
kiss would greet him before the final vanishing. Every day they
met at noon to exchange on equal terms the experiences of the
morning. Every night they closed the day with dinner and family
prayers, the little girl gravely taking her part in the reading
during the last year from her mother's Bible. And so it came that
with the years their friendship grew in depth, in frankness and in
tenderness. The doctor was widely read beyond the literature of
his profession, and every day for a half hour it was his custom to
share with the little girl the treasures of his library. The
little maid repaid him with a passionate love and a quaint
mothering care tender and infinitely comforting to the lonely man.
The forenoon had been hot and trying, and Dr. Brown, having been
detained in his office beyond his regular hour, had been more than
usually hurried in his round of morning calls, and hence was more
than ordinarily tired with his morning's work. At his door the
little girl met him.
"Come in, Papa, I know you're hot," she said, love and reproach in
her face, "because I was hot myself, and you will need a nice, cool
drink. I had one and yours is in here." She led him into the
study, hovering about him with little touches and pushes. "You
ought not to have taken so long a round this morning," she said
with gentle severity. "I know you went out to St. James to see
Mrs. Kale, and you know quite well she doesn't need you. It would
do in the afternoon. And it was awful hot in school."
"Awful?" said the doctor.
"Well, very exceedingly then--and the kids were very tired and Miss
Mutton was as cross as anything."
"It was no wonder. How many kids were there for her to watch?"
"Oh, Papa, you said 'kids!'"
"I was just quoting my young daughter."
"And she said we were to get out this afternoon an hour earlier,"
continued Jane, ignoring his criticism, "and so I am going to take
my bicycle and go with Nora and the girls down to the freight
sheds."
"The freight sheds?"
"Yes, Larry and Joe have come in, and Rover and Rosie--she's the
cow, and they milked her every day twice and drank the milk and
they used to have their meals together in the car."
"Rosie, too? Very interesting indeed."
"Now, Papa, you must not laugh at me. It is very interesting.
They all came for days and days together in the car from somewhere
down East, Ontario, I think. And Mr. Gwynne says they are just
like a circus. And they play instiments and dance."
"What, Rosie too? How clever of her!"
The child's laugh rang out joyously. "Oh, Papa, that's awfully
funny. And we're going down on our wheels. Nora can ride now, you
know, and she's going to take Ethel May's wheel. It's awfully hard
to ride, but Nora's as strong as Kathleen."
"Well, well," said her father, greatly interested in this exciting
but somewhat confused tale. "Just wait until I wash my hands and
then you shall tell me what it all means. Thank you for this
deliciously cool lemonade. It is very refreshing. You will tell
me all about it at lunch."
The lunch hour was devoted first of all to disentangling from the
mass the individual members of the car party, which after an
adventurous journey across half a continent had apparently made
camp at the Winnipeg freight sheds. Then followed the elucidation
of the details of the plan by which this camp was to be attacked
and raided during the afternoon.
"Now that I have a fairly clear conception of whom Larry, Joe, Sam,
Rosie and Rover are--I think I have them right--"
"Exactly, Papa."
"I wish to find out just who are to form the advance party, the
scouting party."
"The scouting party? I don't know what you mean. But Nora--you
know Nora?"
"Certainly, the little black-eyed Irish Terrier--terror, I mean."
"Oh, Papa, she's just lovely and she's my friend."
"Is she, dear, then I apologise, but indeed I meant nothing
derogatory to her. I greatly like her, she is so spunky."
"Yes, there's Nora, and Kathleen, Nora's sister."
"Oh, Kathleen, the tall beautiful girl with the wonderful hair?"
The little girl sighed. "Oh, such lovely long yellow hair." The
little maid's hair was none of these. "And she is not a bit proud--
just nice, you know--just as if she were not so lovely, but like--
only like me."
"Like you, indeed!" exclaimed the doctor indignantly. "Like my
little girl? I don't see any one quite like my little girl. There
is not one of them with all their yellow hair and things that is to
be compared with my own little girl."
"Oh, Papa. I know you think so, and I wish it was so. And I am
awfully glad you think so, but of course you are prejuist, you
know."
"Prejudiced? Not a bit, not a bit."
"Well, that's Kathleen and Nora, and--and perhaps Hazel--you know
Hazel, Papa, Hazel Sleighter?"
"The western girl--not at all wild and woolly though. A very
modern and very advanced young lady, isn't she?"
"Oh, I don't know what you mean, Papa. She says she may go down,
but I don't think she likes going with a lot of kids. You know she
has her hair up. She has to have it up in the store. She says the
man would not have her behind the counter if she had not her hair
up."
"Oh, that's it. I thought perhaps the maturity of her age made it
necessary."
"I don't know what maturevy means, but she is awfully old. She is
going on sixteen."
"Dear me, as old as that?" inquired her father.
"Yes, but she said she wanted to see that circus car. That's what
she calls Mr. Gwynne's car. And she says she wants to see the
elephunts perform. There are not any elephunts. There's only
Rosie and Rover. But she may get off. She can get off if she can
fool her boss, she says. So we're all going down and we may bring
Larry home with us, Mrs. Sleighter says. Though Mrs. Gwynne says
there's not any room, they're so filled up now. And I said Larry
could come here and Joe, too. But I am not so sure about Sam. I
think he must be awfully queer. Mr. Gwynne thinks he's queer."
"It is quite possible, indeed probable, my dear," assented her
father.
"Yes, Mr. Gwynne said he looked like a third-rate how-do-you-feel
performer."
"A what, exactly?"
"A how-do-you-feel performer."
"Oh, a vaudeville performer."
"Yes, a fodefeel performer. I don't know what that means, but he
must be queer. But I think Larry would be all right, and Joe. You
see, we know them."
"Oh, do we?"
"Yes, certainly, Papa. Larry is Nora's brother. He's awfully
clever. He's only fifteen and he passed the Entrance in Ontario
and that's ever so much harder than here. He passed it before he
was fourteen."
"Before he was fourteen!" replied her father. "Amazing!"
"Yes, and he plays the mouth organ and the tin whistle and the
fiddle, and Mr. Gwynne says he has learned some stunts from Sam. I
think he must be awfully nice. So I said he could come here. And
Mrs. Gwynne thanked me so nicely, and she's just lovely, Papa."
"I have not seen her," said her father, "but I have heard her
voice, and I quite agree with you. The voice always tells. Have
you noticed that? The voice gives the keynote of the soul."
"I don't know, Papa. There's Mrs. Sleighter's voice. I don't like
it very much, but I think she's nice inside."
"Ah, you are right, my dear. Perhaps I should have said that a
certain kind of voice always goes with a beautiful soul."
"I know," replied his daughter. "That's like Mrs. Gwynne's voice.
And so we'll go down to the car and bring Larry home with us, and
perhaps his mother will let him come here. She did not say she
would and you can't tell. She's quiet, you know, but somehow she
isn't like Mrs. Sleighter. I don't think you could coax her to do
what she didn't want."
"And Mrs. Sleighter--can you coax Mrs. Sleighter?"
"Oh, yes, the girls just coax her and coax her, and though she
doesn't want to a bit, she just gives in."
"That's nice of her. That must be very nice for the girls, eh?"
"Oh, I don't know, Papa."
"What? don't you think it is nice to be able to coax people to do
what you want?"
"It is nice to get what you want, but I think really, really, you'd
rather you could not coax them to do it just because you coax
them."
"Ah, I see."
"Yes; you see, you're never really quite sure after you get it
whether you ought to get it after all."
"I see," said her father; "that rather spoils it."
"Yes, but you never do that, Papa."
"Oh, you can't coax me, eh? I am glad to know that. I was afraid,
rather."
"Well, of course, I can coax you, Papa, but you usually find some
other way, and then I know it is quite right."
"I wish I was quite as sure of that, Jane. But you are going to
bring Larry home with you?"
"Yes, if Mrs. Gwynne will let him come. I told her we had four
rooms and we were only using two, and they are all crowded up in
Mrs. Sleighter's, two girls in each room, and Tom's room is so
tiny, and I don't think Larry would like to go in Tom's room.
And we have two empty rooms, so we might just as well."
"Yes, certainly, we might just as well. You might perhaps mention
it to Anna."
"Oh, I did, Papa, and she said she would have it all ready."
"So it is all arranged. I was thinking--but never mind."
"I know you were thinking, that I ought to have asked you, Papa;
and I ought to have. But I knew that when a little boy had no home
to go to you would of course--"
"Of course," replied her father hurriedly. "You were quite right,
Jane. And with those two rooms, why not bring them all, Joe and
Pete--Pete, is it?"
"Sam, Papa. I am not so sure. I think we should leave Joe and
Sam. You see Joe won't mind staying in the car. Nora says he
lives in just a shack at home, and Sam--I am a little afraid of
Sam. We don't know him very well, you see."
"I see. We are quite safe in your hands, little woman. You can do
just as you and Mrs. Gwynne arrange."
As the father watched the little, trim, sturdy figure stepping down
the street he muttered to himself, "That child grows more like her
mother every day." He heaved a great sigh from the depths of his
heart. "Well, God keep her, wise little woman that she is! I wish
I were a wiser man. I must be firm with her; it would be a shame
to spoil her. Yes, I must be firm." But he shrugged his shoulders
and smiled at himself. "The worst of it is, or the best of it is,"
he continued, "the little witch is almost always right, God bless
her, just like her mother, just like her mother." He hastily wiped
his eyes, and went off to his office where Mrs. Dean awaited him
and her little girl with the burned hand. And the mother wondered
at the gentleness of him as he dressed the little girl's wounded
hand.
It followed that the scouting party included not only Miss Hazel
Sleighter, but also her big brother Tom, who, being temporarily in
the high school, more perhaps because of his size and the maturity
of his bearing than by virtue of his educational qualifications,
was at the present moment most chiefly concerned in getting into
form his baseball team for the match the following Saturday in
which the High School was to meet All Comers under eighteen. The
freight shed being on his way to the practice ground, Tom deigned
to join the party and to take in the circus car as he passed. The
car dwellers were discovered on the open prairie not far from the
freight shed, keeping guard over Rosie, who was stretching her legs
after her railway journey. The boys were tossing a baseball to
each other as Tom pedalled up on his wheel.
"Hello, there, here you are," he shouted to Sam, holding up his
hands for a catch.
The ball came with such impact that Tom was distinctly jarred, and
dropped the ball. With all his force he threw the ball back to
Sam, who caught it with the ease of a professional and returned it
with such vigour that again Tom dropped it.
"Let's have a knock-up," he said, hitting a long fly.
Sam flew after the ball with amazing swiftness, his scarecrow
garments fluttering and flapping in the air, and caught it with an
upward leap that landed him on his back breathless but triumphant.
"Say, you're a crackerjack," said Tom; "here's another."
Meanwhile Larry was in the hands of his sisters, who had delightedly
kissed him to his shamefaced chagrin, and introduced him to their
new-found friends.
"So this is Larry." said Miss Hazel Sleighter, greeting him with a
dazzling smile. "We have heard a lot about you. I think you must
be quite wonderful. Come here, Tom, and meet your friends."
Poor Larry! In the presence of this radiant creature and of her
well-dressed brother, he felt terribly conscious of the shabbiness
of the second best suit which his mother had thought good enough
for the journey in the car. Tom glanced at the slight, poorly
dressed, pale-faced lad who stood before him with an embarrassed,
almost a beseeching look in his eyes.
"Can you play ball?" asked Tom.
"Not much," replied Larry; "not like Sam. Come here, Sam," he
called, remembering that he had not introduced his friend. Sam
shuffled over with an air of complete nonchalance.
"This is Sam," said Larry. "Sam--I have forgotten your name."
"Nolan," said Sam shortly.
"Miss Hazel Sleighter," said Larry.
"How do you do, Miss Hazel," said Sam, sweeping her an elaborate
bow, and then gazing boldly into her eyes. "I hope you're well.
If you're as smart as you look, I guess you're way up in G."
"I am quite well, thank you," returned Miss Hazel, the angle of her
chin indicating her most haughty air.
"Say, young lady, pass up the chilly stuff," replied Sam with a
laugh. "It don't go with that mighty fine complexion of yours.
Say, did you ever see the leading lady in 'The Spider's Web'?
Well, you make me think of her, and she was a peacherino. Never
seen her? No? Well, you ought to see her some day and think of
me."
Hazel turned a disgusted shoulder on Sam's impudent face and
engaged Larry in vivacious conversation.
"Well, I am off to the ball practice," said Tom. "Got a match on
Saturday--High School against the world. Guess they would like to
have you, Sam, only I wouldn't care to have you play against us.
You don't play baseball, eh?" continued Tom, addressing Larry.
"What do you play--football?"
"Not much; never tried much," said Larry, flushing over his lack of
sporting qualifications.
"He plays the fiddle," said a quiet little voice.
Larry, flushing violently, turned around and saw a little, brown-
faced maid gazing thoughtfully at him.
"Oh, he does, eh? Ha, ha, ha. Good game, eh? Ha, ha, ha." They
all joined in the laugh.
"And he plays the mouth organ, too, and does funny stunts,"
sturdily continued the little girl, disdaining Tom's scornful
laughter.
"Good for you, Jane."
"Yes, and he passed his entrance to the High School a year ago when
he was fourteen, in Ontario, anyway." This appeared to check Tom's
hilarity.
"My, what a wonder he is! And did he tell you all this himself?"
"No, indeed," said Jane indignantly.
"Oh, I am glad to hear that," said Tom with a grin. "Won't you
come along, Sam? It's only a little way down."
"All right," said Sam cheerfully. "So long, folks. See you later,
Larry. Au reservoir, young lady, as the camel said to the elephant
when he asked what he'd have. Hope I see you later if not sooner--
ta-ta; tinga-ling; honk honk." Again he swept Miss Hazel an
elaborate bow.
"Thinks he's smart," said that young lady, lifting her nose. "He's
a regular scarecrow. Who in the world is he and where did he come
from?" she demanded of Larry, who proceeded to account for Sam's
presence with their party.
The visitors peered into the car and poked into its recesses,
discovered the food supplies for boy and beast, and inspected the
dormitories under Larry's guidance, while the boy, who had
recovered from his embarrassment, discoursed upon the wonderful
experience of the journey. Miss Hazel flashed her great blue eyes
and her white teeth upon him, shook all her frizzes in his face,
smiled at him, chattered to him, jeered at him, flattered him with
all the arts and graces of the practiced flirt she was, until
Larry, swept from his bearings, walked the clouds in a wonder world
of rosy lights and ravishing airs. His face, his eyes, his eager
words, his tremulous lips, were all eloquent of this new passion
that possessed him.
As for Miss Hazel, accustomed as she was to the discriminating
admiration of her fellow clerks, the sincerity and abandonment of
this devotion was as incense to her flirtatious soul. Avid of
admiration and experienced in most of the arts and wiles necessary
to secure this from contiguous males, small wonder that the
unsophisticated Larry became her easy prey long before she had
brought to bear the full complement of her enginery of war.
It was a happy afternoon for the boy, but when informed by his
sisters of his mother's desire that he should return with them, he
was resolute in his refusal, urging many reasons why it was
impossible that he should leave the car and his comrades. There
was nothing for it but to leave him there and report to his mother
their failure.
"I might have known," she said. "He would never come to a
stranger's house in his old clothes. I will just bring down his
best suit after tea."
The dinner hour at Dr. Brown's was fully occupied with an animated
recital of the adventures of the afternoon. Each member of the car
party was described with an accuracy and fulness of detail that
would have surprised him.
"And you know, Papa," said the little maid, "Tom just laughed at
Larry because he could not play baseball and things, and I just
told him that Larry could play the mouth organ lovely and the
fiddle, and they laughed and laughed. I think they were laughing
at me. Tom laughed loudest of all, and he's not so smart himself,
and anyway Larry passed the entrance a year ago and I just told him
so."
"Oh, did you," said her father, "and how did Master Tom take that?"
"He didn't laugh quite as much. I don't think I like him very
much."
"Ah?"
"But Hazel, she was just lovely to Larry. I think she's nice,
Papa, and such lovely cheeks and hair." Here Jane sighed.
"Oh, has she? She is quite a grown-up young lady, is she not?"
"She has her hair up, Papa. She's sixteen, you know."
"I remember you told me that she had reached that mature age."
"And I think Larry liked her, too."
"Ah? And why do you think so?"
"He just looked at her, and looked, and looked."
"Well, that seems fairly good evidence."
"And he is coming up here to-night when we bring him his good
clothes."
"Oh, you are to bring him his good clothes, are you?"
"Yes, Mrs. Gwynne and I are taking them down in the carriage."
"Oh, in the carriage--Mrs. Gwynne--"
"Yes, you know-- Oh, here's Nora at the door. Excuse me, Papa. I
am sure it is important."
She ran to the door and in a moment or two returned with a note.
"It's for you, Papa, and I know it's about the carriage." She
watched her father somewhat anxiously as he read the note.
"Umm-um. Very good, very nice and proper. Certainly. Just say to
Mrs. Gwynne that we are very pleased to be able to serve her with
the carriage, and that we hope Larry will do us the honour of
coming to us."
Jane nodded delightedly. "I know, Papa. I told her that already.
But I'll tell her this is the answer to the note."
Under Jane's direction and care they made their visit to the car,
but on their return no Larry was with them. He would come after
the picnic and baseball game tomorrow, perhaps, but not to-night.
His mother was plainly disappointed, and indeed a little hurt. She
could not understand her son. It was not his clothes after all as
she had thought. She pondered over his last words spoken as he
bade her farewell at the car door, and was even more mystified.
"I'll be glad when we get to our own place again," he said. "I
hate to be beholden to anybody. We're as good as any of them
anyway." The bitterness in his tone mystified her still more.
It was little Jane who supplied the key to the mystery. "I don't
think he likes Tom very much," said the little girl. "He likes
Hazel, though. But he might have come to our house; I did not
laugh." And then the mother thought she understood.
That sudden intensity of bitterness in her boy's voice startled her
a little, but deep down in her heart she was conscious of a queer
feeling of satisfaction, almost of pride. "He's just like his
father," she said to herself. "He likes to be independent."
Strict honesty in thought made her add, "And like me, too, I fear."
The picnic day was one of those intensely hot June days when the
whole world seems to stand quivering and breathlessly attent while
Nature works out one of her miracles over fields of grain, over
prairie flowers, over umbrageous trees and all things borne upon
the bosom of Mother Earth, checking the succulence of precocious
overgrowths, hardening fibre, turning plant energy away from
selfish exuberance in mere stalk building into the altruistic
sacrament of ripening fruit and hardening grain. A wise old
alchemist is Mother Earth, working in time but ever for eternity.
The picnickers who went out to the park early in the day were
driven for refuge from the blazing sun to the trees and bushes,
where prostrated by the heat they lay limp and flaccid upon the
grass. Miss Hazel Sleighter, who for some reason which she could
not explain to herself had joined the first contingent of
picnickers, was cross, distinctly and obviously cross. The heat
was trying to her nerves, but worse, it made her face red--red all
over. Her pink parasol intensified the glow upon her face.
"What a fool I was to come, in this awful heat," she said to
herself. "They won't be here for hours, and I will be just like
a wash-rag."
Nor was Larry enjoying the picnic. The material comforts in the
form of sandwiches, cakes and pies, gloriously culminating in
lemonade and ice cream, while contributing a temporary pleasure,
could not obliterate a sense of misery wrought in him by Miss
Hazel's chilly indifference. That young lady, whose smiles so
lavishly bestowed only yesterday had made for him a new heaven and
a new earth, had to-day merely thrown him a passing glance and a
careless "Hello," as she floated by intent on bigger game.
In addition, the boy was conscious of an overpowering lassitude
that increased as the day wore on. His misery and its chief cause
had not escaped the observing eyes of the little maid, Jane Brown,
whose clear and incisive voice was distinctly audible as she
confided to her friend Nora her disappointment in Miss Hazel.
"She won't look at him to-day," she said. "She's just waiting for
the boys to come. She'll be nicer then."
There was no animus in the voice, only surprise and disappointment.
To Larry, however, the fact that the secret tragedy of his soul was
thus laid bare, filled him with a sudden rage. He cast a wrathful
eye upon the little maid. She met his glance with a placid smile,
volunteering the cheerful remark, "They won't be long now."
A fury possessed the boy. "Oh shut your mouth, will you?" he said,
glaring at her.
For a moment little Jane looked at him, surprise, dismay, finally
pity succeeding each other in the deep blue eyes. Hastily she
glanced about to see if the others had heard the awful outburst.
She was relieved to note that only Joe and Nora were near enough to
hear. She settled herself down in a position of greater comfort
and confided to her friend Nora with an air of almost maternal
solicitude, "I believe he has a pain. I am sure he has a pain."
Larry sprang to his feet, and without a glance at his anxious
tormentor said, "Come on, Joe, let's go for a hunt in the woods."
Jane looked wistfully after the departing boys. "I wish they would
ask us, Nora. Don't you? I think he is nice when he isn't mad,"
she said. To which Nora firmly assented.
A breeze from the west and the arrival of the High School team,
resplendent in their new baseball uniforms, brought to the limp
loiterers under the trees a reviving life and interest in the day's
doings.
It was due to Jane that Sam got into the game, for when young Frank
Smart was searching for a suitable left fielder to complete the All
Comers team, he spied seated among the boys the little girl.
"Hello, Jane; in your usual place, I see!" he called out to her as
he passed.
"Hello, Frank!" she called to him brightly. "Frank! Frank!" she
cried, after the young man had passed, springing up and running
after him.
"I am in a hurry, Jane; I must get a man for left field."
"But, Frank," she said, catching his arm, for young Smart was a
great friend of hers and of her father's. "I want to tell you.
You see that funny boy under the tree," she continued, lowering her
voice. "Well, he's a splendid player. Tom doesn't want him to
play, and I don't either, because I want the High School to beat.
But it would not be fair not to tell you, would it?"
Young Smart looked at her curiously. "Say, little girl, you're a
sport. And is he a good player?"
"Oh, he's splendid, but he's queer--I mean he looks queer. He's
awfully funny. But that doesn't matter, does it?"
"Not a hair, if he can play ball. What's his name?"
"Sam--something."
"Sam Something? That is a funny name."
"Oh, you know, Sam. I don't know his other name."
"Well, I'll try him, Jane," said young Smart, moving toward the boy
and followed by the eager eyes of the little girl.
"I say, Sam," said Smart, "we want a man for left field. Will you
take a go at it?"
"Too hot," grunted Sam.
"Oh, you won't find it too hot when you get started. Rip off your
coat and get into the game. You can play, can't you?"
"Aw, what yer givin' us. I guess I can give them ginks a few
pointers."
"Well, come on."
"Too hot," said Sam.
Jane pulled young Smart by the sleeve. "Tell him you will give him
a jersey," she said in a low voice. "His shirt is torn."
Again young Smart looked at Jane with scrutinising eyes. "You're a
wonder," he said.
"Come along, Sam. You haven't got your sweater with you, but I
will get one for you. Get into the bush there and change."
With apparent reluctance, but with a gleam in his little red eyes,
Sam slouched into the woods to make the change, and in a few
moments came forth and ran to take his position at left field.
The baseball match turned out to be a mere setting for the display
of the eccentricities and superior baseball qualities of Sam, which
apparently quite outclassed those of his teammates in the match.
After three disastrous innings, Sam caused himself to be moved
first to the position of short stop, and later to the pitcher's
box, to the immense advantage of his side. But although, owing to
the lead obtained by the enemy, his prowess was unable to ward off
defeat from All Comers, yet under his inspiration and skilful
generalship, the team made such a brilliant recovery of form and
came so near victory that Sam was carried from the field in triumph
shoulder high and departed with his new and enthusiastically
grateful comrades to a celebration.
Larry, however, was much too miserable and much too unhappy for
anything like a celebration. The boy was oppressed with a feeling
of loneliness, and was conscious chiefly of a desire to reach his
car and crawl into his bed there among the straw. Stumbling
blindly along the dusty road; a cheery voice hailed him.
"Hello, Larry!" It was Jane seated beside her father in his car.
"Hello!" he answered faintly and just glanced at her as the car
passed.
But soon the car pulled up. "Come on, Larry, we'll take you home,"
said Jane.
"Oh, I'm all right," said Larry, forcing his lips into his old
smile and resolutely plodding on.
"Better come up, my boy," said the doctor.
"I don't mind walking, sir," replied Larry, stubbornly determined
to go his lonely way.
"Come here, boy," said the doctor, regarding him keenly. Larry
came over to the wheel. "Why, boy, what is the matter?" The
doctor took hold of his hand.
Larry gripped the wheel hard. He was feeling desperately ill and
unsteady on his legs, but still his lips twisted themselves into a
smile. "I'm all right, sir," he said; "I've got a headache and it
was pretty hot out there."
But even as he spoke his face grew white and he swayed on his feet.
In an instant the doctor was out of his car. "Get in, lad," he
said briefly, and Larry, surrendering, climbed into the back seat,
fighting fiercely meanwhile to prevent the tears from showing in
his eyes. Keeping up a brisk and cheerful conversation with Jane
in regard to the game, the doctor drove rapidly toward his home.
"You will come in with us, my boy," said the doctor as they reached
his door.
By this time Larry was past all power of resistance and yielded
himself to the authority of the doctor, who had him upstairs and
into bed within a few minutes of his arrival. A single word Larry
uttered during this process, "Tell my mother," and then sank into a
long nightmare, through which there mingled dim shapes and quiet
voices, followed by dreamless sleep, and an awakening to weakness
that made the lifting of his eyelids an effort and the movement of
his hand a weariness. The first object that loomed intelligible
through the fog in which he seemed to move was a little plain face
with great blue eyes carrying in them a cloud of maternal anxiety.
Suddenly the cloud broke and the sun burst through in a joyous
riot, for in a voice that seemed to him unfamiliar and remote Larry
uttered the single word, "Jane."
"Oh!" cried the little girl rapturously. "Oh, Larry, wait." She
slipped from the room and returned in a moment with his mother, who
quickly came to his side.
"You are rested, dear," she said, putting her hand under his head.
"Drink this. No, don't lift your head. Now then, go to sleep
again, darling," and, stooping down, she kissed him softly.
"Why--are--you--crying?" he asked faintly. "What's the--matter?"
"Nothing, darling; you are better. Just sleep."
"Better?--Have--I--been--sick?"
"Yes, you have been sick," said his mother.
"Awfully sick, " said Jane solemnly. "A whole week sick. But you
are all right now," she added brightly, "and so is Joe, and Sam,
and Rover and Rosie. I saw them all this morning and you know we
have been praying and praying and--"
"Now he will sleep, Jane," said his mother, gently touching the
little girl's brown tangle of hair.
"Yes, he will sleep; oh, I'm just awful thankful," said Jane,
suddenly rushing out of the room.
"Dear little girl," said the mother. "She has been so anxious and
so helpful--a wonderful little nurse."
But Larry was fast asleep, and before he was interested enough to
make inquiry about his comrades in travel the car in charge of Joe
and Sam, with Mr. Gwynne in the caboose, was far on its way to
Alberta. After some days Jane was allowed to entertain the sick
boy, as was her custom with her father, by giving an account of her
day's doings. These were happy days for them both. Between the
boy and the girl the beginnings of a great friendship sprang up.
"Larry, I think you are queer," said Jane to him gravely one day.
"You are not a bit like you were in the car."
A quick flush appeared on the boy's face. "I guess I was queer
that day, Jane," he said. "I know I felt queer."
"Yes, that's it," said Jane, delighted by some sudden recollection.
"You were queer then, and now you're just ornary. My, you were
sick and you were cross, too, awful cross that day. I guess it was
the headick. I get awfully cross, too, when I have the headick. I
don't think you will be cross again ever, will you, Larry?"
Larry, smiling at her, replied, "I'll never be cross with you,
Jane, anyway, never again."