// fpn source for The Liberty Girl, by Rena I. Halsey
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.dt The Liberty Girl, by Rena I. Halsey
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.ca “Ah there, girls! How are you?”—Page #11#.
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THE
LIBERTY GIRL
BY
RENA I. HALSEY
Author of “Blue Robin, the Girl Pioneer”
and “America’s Daughter”
ILLUSTRATED BY NANA FRENCH BICKFORD
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[Illustration]
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BOSTON
LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO.
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Published, August, 1919
Copyright, 1919
By Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co.
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.hr 10%
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All rights reserved
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THE LIBERTY GIRL
Norwood Press
BERWICK & SMITH CO.
NORWOOD, MASS.
U. S. A.
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INSCRIBED,
WITH DEEP APPRECIATION,
TO
THE SONS OF LIBERTY,—
ALL THOSE SOLDIERS, SEAMEN, AND AIRMEN,
WHO HAVE HEROICALLY GIVEN OF
THEIR BEST FOR THE
BROTHERHOOD
OF MAN
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CONTENTS
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CHAPTER||PAGE
I|“God Speed You”|#11:ch01#
II|Giving Her Best|#28:ch02#
III|The Liberty Girls|#46:ch03#
IV|The Liberty Garden|#60:ch04#
V|The Liberty Pageant|#73:ch05#
VI|The Strange Letter|#89:ch06#
VII|The Visit to Camp Mills|#106:ch07#
VIII|Seven Pillars|#121:ch08#
IX|The Little Old Lady in the Red House|#133:ch09#
X|The Sweet-Pea Ladies|#147:ch10#
XI|The Ride Through the Notch|#164:ch11#
XII|Nathalie’s Liberty Boys|#179:ch12#
XIII|“The Mountains with the Snowy Foreheads”|#194:ch13#
XIV|“Sons of Liberty”|#211:ch14#
XV|The Gallery of the Gods|#222:ch15#
XVI|Butternut Lodge|#238:ch16#
XVII|The Cabin on the Mountain|#256:ch17#
XVIII|The Liberty Cheer|#275:ch18#
XIX|“The White Comrade”|#288:ch19#
XX|The Liberty Tea|#302:ch20#
XXI|The Funnies|#322:ch21#
XXII|The Man in the Woods|#334:ch22#
XXIII|A Mystery Solved|#348:ch23#
XXIV|The Winner of the Prize|#362:ch24#
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ILLUSTRATIONS
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.li
“Ah there, girls! How are you?” (Page 11) | Frontispiece |
| FACING PAGE |
“My name is Liberty, My throne is Law” | 76 |
“Is that your dog? Oh, I love dogs!” | 184 |
The girl found herself gazing into the sun-tanned face of a young man in khaki | 232 |
Nathalie bent over in anxious solicitude | 260 |
“Oh, it is Philip, my son!” | 376 |
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.li
“Ah there, girls! How are you?” (Page 11) Frontispiece
FACING PAGE
“My name is Liberty,
My throne is Law” 76
“Is that your dog? Oh, I love dogs!” 184
The girl found herself gazing into the
sun-tanned face of a young man in khaki 232
Nathalie bent over in anxious solicitude 260
“Oh, it is Philip, my son!” 376
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.pn 11
.h1 nobreak
THE LIBERTY GIRL
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.h2 id=ch01 nobreak
CHAPTER I||“GOD SPEED YOU”
.sp 2
“Oh, Nathalie, I do believe there’s Grace Tyson
in her new motor-car,” exclaimed Helen
Dame, suddenly laying her hand on her companion’s
arm as the two girls were about to cross Main
Street, the wide, tree-lined thoroughfare of the old-fashioned
town of Westport, Long Island.
Nathalie Page halted, and, swinging about, peered
intently at the brown-uniformed figure of a young girl
seated at the steering-wheel of an automobile, which
was speeding quickly towards them.
Yes, it was Grace, who, in her sprightliest manner,
her face aglow from the invigorating breezes of an
April afternoon, called out, “Ah there, girls! How
are you? Oh, my lucky star must have guided me,
for I have something thrilling to tell you!” As she
spoke the girl guided the car to the curb, and the next
moment, with an airy spring, had landed on the ground
at their side.
.pn +1
With a sudden movement the uniformed figure
clicked her heels together and bent stiffly forward as
her arm swung up, while her forefinger grazed her
forehead in a military salute. “I salute you, comrades,”
she said with grave formality, “at your service
as a member of the Motor Corps of America.
“Yes, girls,” she shrilled joyously, forgetting her
assumed rôle in her eagerness to tell her news, “I’m on
the job, for I’m to see active service for the United
States government. I’ve just returned from an infantry
drill of the Motor Corps at Central Park, New
York.
“No, I’ll be honest,” she added laughingly, in answer
to the look of amazed inquiry on the faces of her companions,
“and ’fess’ that I didn’t have the pleasure of
drilling in public, for I’m a raw recruit as yet. We recruits
go through our manual of arms at one of the
New York armories, drilled by a regular army sergeant.
Oh, I’ve been in training some time, for you
know I took out my chauffeur’s and mechanician’s State
licenses last winter.
“One has to own her car at this sort of government
work,”—Grace’s voice became inflated with importance,—“and
be able to make her own repairs on the
road if necessary. But isn’t my new car a Jim
Dandy?” she asked, glancing with keen pride at the big
gray motor, purring contentedly at the curb. “It was
a belated Christmas gift from grandmother.
.pn +1
“But I tell you what, girls,” she rattled on, “I’ve
been put through the paces all right, but I’ve passed my
exams with flying colors. Phew! wasn’t the physical
exam stiff!—before a regular high official of the
army medical corps. I was inoculated for typhoid,
and for paratyphoid. I’ll secretly confess that I don’t
know what the last word means. Yes, and I took the
oath of allegiance to the United States Government, administered
by another army swell,—and that’s where
my Pioneer work proved O. K. And then we had the
First Aid course, too, at St. Luke’s. The head nurse,
who gave us special lessons in bandaging, said I was
A No. 1; and in wigwagging, oh, I did the two-flag
business just dandy.”
“But what is your special work?” asked Nathalie,
for the two girls were somewhat surprised and bewildered
by all these high-sounding, official-like terms.
To be sure, Grace had long been known as an expert
driver, but she had never shown her efficiency in any
way but by giving the girls joy-rides once in a while;
yes, and once she had driven her father to New York.
But war work, thought Nathalie, for this aristocratic-looking,
sweet-faced young girl, whose eyes
gleamed merrily at you from under the peaked army
cap—with its blue band and the insignia of the Corps,
a tire surmounted by Mercury’s wings—set so jauntily
on the fluffy hair. To be sure the slim, trim figure
in the army jacket, short skirt over trousers, and high
.pn +1
boots did have a warlike aspect, but it was altogether
too girlish and charming to be suggestive of anything
but a toy soldier, like one of the tiny painted tin things
that Nathalie used to play with when a wee tot.
“Do? Why, I am a military chauffeur,” returned
Grace patronizingly, “and in the business of war-relief
work for the Government. At present I’m to act as
chauffeur to one of our four lieutenants, Miss Gladys
Merrill. Oh, she’s a dear! I have to drive her all
over the city when she is engaged on some Government
errand. You should see me studying the police maps,
and then you would know what I do. Sometimes we
are called to transport some of the army officers from
the railroad station to the ferry, or to headquarters.
Then we do errands for the Red Cross, too.
“Why, the other day I helped to carry a lot of
knitted things down on the pier, to be packed in a ship
bound for the other side; they were for the soldiers at
the front. We do work for the National Defense, and
for the Board of Exemption. I’m doing my ‘bit,’
even if it is a wee one, towards winning the war,”
ended the girl, with a note of satisfaction in her voice.
“O dear, but wouldn’t I like to drive an ambulance
in France! But I’ve got to be twenty-one to do that
sort of work,”—the girl sighed. “But did I tell you
that brother Fred is doing American Field Service? I
had a letter from him yesterday, and he said that he and
a lot of American boys have established a little encampment
.pn +1
of ambulances not far from the front-line trench.
They live in what was once a château belonging to
Count Somebody or Another, but now it is nothing but
a shell.
“Oh, Fred thinks it is glorious fun,” cried the girl,
with sparkling eyes. “He has to answer roll-call at
eight in the morning, and then he eats his breakfast at
a little café near. He has just black bread,—think of
that, coffee, and, yes, sometimes he has an egg. Then
he has to drill, clean his car, and—oh, but he says it’s
a great sight to see the aëroplanes constantly flying
over his head, like great monsters of the air. And
sometimes he goes wild with excitement when he sees
an aërial battle between a Boche and a French airman.
“Yes, he declares it is ‘some’ life over there,” animatedly
continued Grace, “for even his rest periods are
thrilling, for they have to dodge shells, and sometimes
they burst over one’s head. Several times he thought
he was done for. And at night the road near the
château is packed with hundreds of marching guns,
trucks of ammunition, and war supplies and cavalry,
all on their way to the front.
“But when he goes in his ambulance after the
blessés—they are the poor wounded soldiers—it is
just like day, for the sky is filled with star-shells
shooting around him in all colors, and then there is a
constant cannonading of shells and shot of all kinds.
When he hears a purr he knows it’s a Boche plane and
.pn +1
dodges pretty lively, for if he doesn’t ‘watch out’ a
machine-gun comes sputtering down at him. He’s
awfully afraid of them because they drop bombs.
“But he says it would make your heart ache to see
him when he carries the blessés. He has to drive
them from the postes de secours—the aid-stations—to
the hospitals. He has to go very slowly, and even
then you can hear the poor things groan and shriek
with the agony of being moved. And sometimes,”
Grace lowered her voice reverently, “when he goes to
take them out of the ambulance he finds a dead soldier.
“But dear me,” she continued in a more cheerful
tone, “he seems to like the life and is constantly hoping—I
believe he dreams about it in his sleep—that
he’ll soon have a shot at one of those German fiends.
Yes, I think it would be gloriously exciting,” ended
Grace with a half sigh of envy.
“Gloriously exciting?” repeated Nathalie with a
shudder. “Oh, Grace, I should think you would be
frightfully worried. Suppose he should lose his life
some time in the darkness of the night, alone with
those wounded soldiers? O dear,” she ended drearily,
“I just wish some one would shoot or kill the Kaiser!
Sometimes I wish I could be a Charlotte Corday.
Don’t you remember how she killed Murat for the sake
of the French?”
“Why, Nathalie,” cried Helen with amused eyes,
.pn +1
“I thought you were a pacifist, and here you are talking
of shooting people.” And the girl’s “Ha! ha!”
rang out merrily.
Nathalie’s color rose in a wave as she cried decidedly,
“Helen, I’m not a pacifist. Of course I want
the Allies to win. I believe in the war—only—only—I
do not think it is necessary to send our boys across
the sea to fight.”
“But I do,” insisted Helen, “for this is God’s war,
a war to give liberty to everybody in the world, and
that makes it our war. We should be willing to fight,
to give the rights and privileges of democracy to other
people, and our American boys are not slackers who
let some one else do their work.”
“Our boys! You mean my boy,” said Nathalie,
with sudden bitterness. “It’s all right for you to talk,
Helen, but you haven’t a brother to go and stand up
and be mercilessly bayoneted by those Boches. And
that is what Dick will have to do.” Nathalie choked
as she turned her head away.
“Yes, Nathalie dear,” replied Helen in a softened
tone, “I know it is a terrible thing to have to give up
your loved ones to be ruthlessly shot down. But what
are we going to do?” she pleaded desperately, “we
must do what is right and leave the rest to God, for, as
mother says, ‘God is in his Heaven.’ And Dick
wants to go,” she ended abruptly, “he told me so the
other day.”
.pn +1
“Yes, that is just it,” cried Nathalie in a pitifully
small voice, “and he says that he is not going to wait
to be drafted. Oh, Helen, mother and I cannot sleep
at night thinking about it!” Nathalie turned her face
away, her eyes dark and sorrowful. No, she did not
mean to be a coward, but it just rent her heart to picture
Dick going about armless, or a helpless cripple
shuffling along, with either she or Dorothy leading him.
“Oh, I would like to be a Joan of Arc,” interposed
Grace at this point, her blue eyes suddenly afire. “I
think it would be great to ride in front of an army on a
white charger. And then, too,” she added more seriously,
“I think it takes more bravery to fight than to
do anything else.”
“Perhaps it does, Grace,” remarked Helen slowly,
“but when it comes to heroism, I think the mothers
who give their boys to be slaughtered for the good of
their fellow-beings are the bravest—” The girl
paused quickly, for she had caught sight of Nathalie’s
face, and remorsefully felt that what she had just
said only added to her friend’s distress. “But, girls,”
she went on in a brighter tone, “I have something to
tell you. I’m going to France to do my ‘bit,’ for I’m
to be stenographer to Aunt Dora. We expect to sail
in a month or so. You know that she is one of the
officials in the Red Cross organization.”
There were sudden exclamations of surprise from
the girl’s two companions, as they eagerly wanted to
.pn +1
know all about her unexpected piece of news. As
Helen finished giving the details as to how it had all
come about, she exclaimed, with a sudden look at her
wrist-watch: “Goodness! Girls, do you know it is
almost supper-time? I’m just about starved.”
“Well, jump into the car, then,” cried Grace Tyson,
“and I’ll have you home in no time.” Her companions,
pleased at the prospect of a whirl in the new car,
gladly accepted her invitation, and a few minutes later
were speeding towards the lower end of the street
where Helen and Nathalie lived.
After bidding her friends good-by, Nathalie, with a
tru-al-lee, the call-note of their Pioneer bird-group, ran
lightly up the steps of the veranda. Yes, Dick was
home, for he was standing in the hall, lighting the gas.
With a happy little sigh she opened the door.
“Hello, sis,” called out Dick cheerily,—a tall well-formed
youth, with merry blue eyes,—as he caught
sight of the girl in the door-way. “Have you been on
a hike?”
“Oh, no, just an afternoon at Mrs. Van Vorst’s.
Nita had a lot of the girls there—” Nathalie stopped,
for an expression, a sudden gleam in her brother’s eyes,
caused her heart to give a wild leap. She drew in her
breath sharply, but before the question that was forming
could be asked, Dick waved the still flaming match
hilariously above his head as he cried, “Well, sister
mine, I’ve taken the plunge, and I’ve come off on top,
.pn +1
for I’ve joined the Flying Corps, and I’m going to be an
army eagle!”
“Flying Corps?” repeated Nathalie dazedly.
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, Blue Robin, that I’m going to be an aviator,
a sky pilot,” replied the boy jubilantly. “I made
an application some time ago to the chief signal officer
at Washington. I was found an eligible applicant, for,
you know, my course in the technical school in New
York did me up fine. To-day I passed my physical
examinations, and am now enlisted in the Signal Corps
of the Signal Enlisted Reserve Corps. I’m off next
week to the Military Aëronautics School at Princeton
University. It’s an eight-weeks’ course. If I put it
over,—and you bet your life I do,” Dick ground his
teeth determinedly,—“I go into training at one of the
Flying Schools, and then I’ll soon be a regular bird
of the air; and if I don’t help Uncle Sam win the war,
and manage to drop a few bombs on those Fritzies, I’ll
go hang!”
For one awful moment Nathalie stood silent, staring
at her brother in dumb despair. Then she turned, and
with a blur in her eyes and a tightening of her throat,
blindly groped for the stairway. But no! Dick’s
hand shot out, he caught the hurrying figure in his
grasp, and the next moment Nathalie was sobbing on
his breast.
“That’s all right, little sis,” exclaimed the boy with a
.pn +1
break in his voice, as he pressed the brown head closer.
Then he cried, in an attempt at jocularity, “Just get it
all out of your system, every last drop of that salted
brine, Blue Robin, and then we’ll talk business.”
This somewhat matter-of-fact declaration acted like
a cold shower-bath on the girl, as, with a convulsive
shiver, she caught her breath, and although she burrowed
deeper into the snug of her brother’s arm her
tears were stayed.
“Dick, how could you do it? Think of mother!”
Then she raised her eyes, and went on, “Oh, I can’t
bear the thought of your getting ki—” But the girl
could not say the dreaded word, and again her head
went down against the rough gray of Dick’s coat.
“Well, Blue Robin, I’m afraid you have lost that
cheery little tru-al-lee of yours,” teased the boy humorously.
“You’ve cried so hard you’re eye-twisted. In
the first place, I don’t intend getting killed if I can
help it. And I can’t help leaving mother. You must
remember I’m a citizen of the United States—” the
boy was thinking of his first vote cast the fall before—“and
I am bound by my oath of allegiance to the country
to uphold its principles, even if it means the breaking
of my mother’s apron-strings,” he added jokingly.
“Oh, Dick, don’t try to be funny,” Nathalie managed
to say somewhat sharply, as she drew away from
her brother’s arm and dropped limply on the steps of
the stairs, in such an attitude of hopeless despair that
.pn +1
Dick was at the end of his tether to know what to say.
He stared down at the girl, unconsciously rubbing his
hand through his hair, a trick the boy had when perplexed.
Suddenly a bit of a smile leaped into his eyes as he
cried, in a hopelessly resigned tone, “All right, sis, seeing
that you feel this way about it I’ll just send in my
resignation. It will let the boys know I’ve laid down
on my job, for if you and mother are going to howl like
two cats, a fellow can’t do a thing but stay at home and
be a sissy, a baby-tender, a dish-washer-er-er—”
“Oh, Dick, don’t talk nonsense,” broke in Nathalie
sharply. “I didn’t say that you were not to go, but,—why—oh,
I just can’t help feeling awfully bad
when I read all those terrible things in the paper.”
Her voice quivered pathetically as she finished.
“Well, don’t read them, then,” coolly rejoined Dick.
“Just steer clear of all that hysterical gush and brace
up. My job is to serve my country,—she wants me.
By Jove, before she gets out of this hole she’ll need
every mother’s son of us. And I’ve got to do it in the
best way I can, by enlisting before the draft comes.
I’ll not only have a chance to do better work, a prospect
of quicker promotion, but, if you want to look at
the sordid end of it, I’ll get more pay. And as to being
killed, as you wailed, if you and mother will insist
upon seeing it black, an aviator’s chance of life is ten
to one better—if he’s on to his job—than that of the
.pn +1
fellow on the ground. So cheer up, Blue Robin. I’m
all beat hollow, for I’ve been trying to cheer up mother
for the last hour.”
“Oh, what does mother say?” asked a very faint
voice, just as if the girl did not know how her mother
felt, and had been feeling for some time.
“Say! Gee whiz! I don’t know what she would
have said if she had voiced her sentiments,” replied
Dick resignedly. “But the worst of the whole business
was that she took it out in weeping about a tank
of tears; all over my best coat, too,” he added ruefully.
“You women are enough to make a fellow go stiff.
“Now see here, Blue Robin, don’t disappoint me!”
suddenly cried the lad, as he stared appealingly into his
sister’s brown eyes. “Why, I thought that you would
be my right-hand man. I knew mother would make a
time at first, but you,—I thought you had grit; you,
a Pioneer, too. Don’t you know, girl—” added Dick,
rubbing the back of his hand quickly across his eyes,
“that I’ve got to go? Don’t you forget that. I’m on
the job, every inch of it, but, thunderation, I’m no more
keen to go ‘over there’ and have those Hun devils cut
me up like sausage, than you or mother. But I’m a
man and I’ve got to live up to the business of being a
man, and not a mollycoddle.”
But Nathalie had suddenly come to her senses. Perhaps
it was the brush of the boy’s hand across his eyes,
or the quivering note in his voice, but she roused. She
.pn +1
had been selfish; instead of crying like a ninny she
should have cheered. “Oh, Dick,” she exclaimed contritely,
standing up and facing him suddenly, “I’m all
wrong. I didn’t mean to cry, and I wouldn’t have
either,” she explained excusingly, “if you had only let
me go up-stairs.
“No, Dick, I would not have you be a slacker, or a
mollycoddle, or wash the dishes,” she added with a
faint attempt at a smile, “and we haven’t any babies
to tend. Yes, old boy, I don’t want you to lie down in
the traces, so let’s shake on it, and I’ll try to brace up
mother, too,” added the girl, as she held out her hand
to her brother.
“Now that’s the stuff, Nat, old girl,” cried the boy
with gleaming eyes, as he took the girl’s hand and held
it tightly, “and while I’m fighting to uphold the family
honor and glory,—remember father was a Rough
Rider,—you stay with dear old mumsie. Keep her
cheered up, and see that everything is made easy for
her. Do all you can to take my place here at home.
Yes, Blue Robin, you be the home soldier. Gee whiz,
you be the home guard!” added the boy in a sudden
burst of inspiration.
“The home guard! Yes, that’s what I’ll be,” cried
the girl, her eyes lighting with a sudden glow. “And
then I’ll be doing my bit, won’t I? I’ll cheer up
mother, and do all I can,” she added resolutely; “and
don’t worry any more, Dick, for now,”—the girl drew
.pn +1
a long breath, “I’ll be on the job as well as you.”
And then Nathalie, with a wave of her hand at the
boy as he stood gazing up at her with his eyes fired
with loyal determination, hurried up the stairs, straight
on and up to the very top of the house to her usual
weeping-place, for, oh, those hateful tears would not
be restrained, and if she did not have her cry out she
would strangle!
Ah, here she was in her den, the attic. Dimly she
reached out her hand and pulled the little wooden
rocker out from the wall and slumped into it, and a
minute later, with her face buried in the fold of her
arm, as it rested on the little sewing-table, she was
weeping unrestrainedly.
Presently she gave a sudden start, raised her head
and listened, and then was on her feet, for, oh, that
was her mother’s step,—she was coming up after her.
Oh, why hadn’t she waited until she had a hold on
herself. The next moment the little wooden door with
the padlock opened, and Mrs. Page was standing in the
doorway gazing down at her.
“Why—oh, mother!” Nathalie cried in surprise
and wonder, for her mother was smiling. The girl’s
eyes bulged out from her tear-stained face in such a
funny way that her mother broke into a little laugh.
Then her face sobered and she came slowly towards
her.
“No, daughter mine, mother is not weeping. Yes,
.pn +1
I heard what you and Dick said, and you are patriots,
and have shamed mother into trying to be one, too.”
Mrs. Page took the girl in her arms with tender affection.
“And Dick is a dear lad. Oh, Nathalie, in our
grief at the thought of parting with him,—perhaps
of losing him,—” her voice weakened slightly, “we
have forgotten that he has been fighting a greater battle
than we.
“It is surely a great thing,” continued Mrs. Page
sadly, “for a young man in the buoyancy of youth
and the very heyday of life, to give it all up. For
youth clings more tenaciously to life than older people
do, for to them it is an untried and shining pathway,
flowered with hope, anticipation, and the luring glimmer
of unfulfilled aims and ambitions.
“And then to have to face about,” her voice lowered,
“and silently struggle with one’s self in the great battle
of self-abnegation, to end by taking this glorious
life and casting it far behind you,—this is what makes
a hero. Then to face the dread ordeal of a battlefield,
and go steadily forward, buoyed only with a feeling
of bravery,—the heroism of doing what you believe
to be right,—and, taking your one chance for
life in your hands,—plunge into the unknown darkness
and the horrifying perils of a No Man’s Land.”
There was a stifled sob in Nathalie’s throat, but her
mother went steadily on: “No, Nathalie, we must
.pn +1
not weep. We must smile and be cheerful. We must
inspire Dick with courage and hope, and if it is meant
that he is to give his life, we must let him go with a
‘God speed you,’ his memory starred with the thought
of a mother’s love and a sister’s courage, and with the
soul-stirring song of the victor over death.
“And, Nathalie, Dick belongs to God; he was only
loaned to me,—to you,—and if the time has come for
God to call him home, we must not complain. We must
gladly give him back. Then we must remember, too,”
went on the patient mother-voice, “that, after all, life
is not the mere living of it, but the things accomplished
for the betterment of those who come after.
And if Dick has been ‘on the job,’” Mrs. Page smiled,
“no matter how small his share in this great warfare
for the right, he will be the better prepared to enter into
the Land where there is no more suffering, or horrible
war, but just a glorious and eternal peace.”
The last word was almost whispered, but, with renewed
effort, she said: “Now, Nathalie, let us be
brave, as father would have had us,—the dear father,—and
go down to Dick with a bright smile and inspiring
words of cheer.” Mrs. Page bent and kissed
the girl lightly, but solemnly, on the forehead, and then
she had turned and was making her way towards the
door.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch02
CHAPTER II||GIVING HER BEST
.sp 2
.nf b
“As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.”
.nf-
Nathalie sat in the big rocker on the veranda,
sewing a star on a service-flag. Yes, as soon
as Dick had gone to do his “stunt,” as he called
it, in the great warfare,—gone with all the honors of
war, as his mother had laughingly declared as he kissed
them a noisy good-by,—Nathalie had felt that it was
incumbent upon her to sustain the honor of the family,
and had run lightly up to the attic. Here, in the big
piece-trunk she found a bundle of Turkey red, a bit of
white, and then, after begging a snip of blue from
Helen for the star, she had set to work.
She was sure that star would not come off, for she
had double-stitched into every angle and on every
point. She held up the patriotic square, bordered
with red, and sorrowfully stared at that one lone star,
although a thrill of pride stirred at her heart and caused
her eyes to beam.
She must hang it up. And then she was busy tacking
the little flag to a small staff, which she had fastened
to the roof of the porch so it could be seen.
.pn +1
Ah, the wind had caught it, and it was waving in a
salute to its many mates curling from the neighboring
porches, and to the Red Cross insignias that starred a
window here and there, ofttimes overshadowed by the
graceful sweep of the Stars and Stripes.
But Nathalie’s heart was still sore, for although she
had given up Dick with as good a grace as she could
muster, and had tried to show that she possessed the
true American spirit, yet it did seem as if it was a
needless sacrifice. With a sudden turn on her heel,
the girl burst into a new patriotic air that she had
heard somewhere, as if hoping that it would drive away
the rebellious thoughts that jarred her attempt at
cheer, and hurried into the kitchen.
As Nathalie stepped to the window and stared carelessly
out, her eyes were caught by the gleam of yellow
crocus and purple hyacinth as they peeped up at her
from their beds of green. Somehow their flaunting
colors reminded her of the spring blooms that used to
nod so gayly to her from the flower-beds in her beautiful
city home in the upper part of New York.
She could hardly believe it was a year since her
father’s death. The poignant grief she had suffered
then again caused her eyes to fill with tears, and her
mind dwelt upon the sorrowful circumstances surrounding
her loss, the changes that had followed, in
their financial losses, and the many sacrifices it had entailed.
.pn +1
She again saw the sorrowful farewell to the first
and only home she had ever known; she again felt the
grief that came to her in the giving up of the many
things that had made life so happy,—her schoolmates,
her many enjoyments, and her hope of going to college.
She again experienced the dolefulness that had
assailed her mother, her brother Dick, her younger
sister, Dorothy, and herself, on their coming to the
humble cottage home in Westport, the being associated
with strangers, and the many people who at
first had seemed so different from their city associates.
Yes, there was the tree where she had found the nest
of bluebirds. The girl’s eyes gleamed amusedly as she
peered down the garden at the old cedar tree, and remembered
that she had called them blue robins, thus
giving Dick an opportunity to nickname her, Blue
Robin.
Nathalie attempted to smile, but the thought of
Dick’s going away aroused her slumbering grief, and
once more the tears flowed silently down her cheeks.
But she bravely brushed them away and went on with
her reminiscences,—the remembrance of spraining her
ankle up in the woods, and how it had led to her meeting
Helen Dame, her next-door neighbor, and now
her dearest friend.
How lovely Grace Tyson had looked that day, and
dear old Barbara with her near-sighted eyes, and the
girls’ favorite, Lillie Bell, with her gracious charm
.pn +1
and dramatic poses. The girl smiled again as she remembered
Edith Whiton, the sport, and her harum-scarum
oddities. Yes, they were all dear girls. And
how glad she was that she had become a Pioneer, and
a real blue robin, by joining the Blue Bird group.
And what a dear Mrs. Morrow, the Pioneer director,
was that day the Pioneers called. Oh, that
was the day the “Mystic” had passed. Who would
have thought she would turn out to be Mrs. Van Vorst,
who was so lovely. And that ride with Dr. Morrow
to the big gray house, and then she mentally saw herself,
with that handkerchief over her eyes, talking to
the Princess, Nita, the little hunchbacked girl. And
what good friends they had become through those history
lessons!
The many useful things she had learned from the
Pioneer hikes and crafts, and the joys she had experienced
from their many sports and activities had certainly
proved worth while. And the “overcomes” she
had fought for by adopting the Pioneer motto, “I can,”
had certainly meant something in her life.
But they did have gloriously good times at Camp
Laff-a-Lot at Eagle Lake, with the Boy Scouts, Miss
Camphelia, Miss Dummy, and all the other good sports.
Then, too, there was the surprise, on her return to
learn the good that had come to Dick through the
money so kindly loaned by Mrs. Van Vorst. Indeed,
that one year had brought many new things into her
.pn +1
life, for—O dear, there was all that silver to be
cleaned! For, now that her mother kept no maid, this
duty, with many other menial tasks, had devolved upon
Nathalie. Oh, how she hated that job!
With a resigned air, however, she managed to carry
the basket of silver from the sideboard to the kitchen table,
and then returned to the dining-room for the
tea-service. After getting her cleaning cloths, her
brushes, and the scouring-powder, with vigorous determination
she began to rub and polish.
But somehow everything acted aggravatingly mean,
for she dropped the polish, and the powder flew all
over; then she knocked the tray and the knives and
forks clattered to the floor. O dear! what ailed things
anyway? And how her arms ached trying to polish
those horrid tarnished stains on the teapot! The
tableware had never seemed so obdurate, nor the means
for making it bright so utterly ineffective.
“Oh, I guess I am the one who is ailing,” she exclaimed
glumly, as she suddenly realized that her mind
was not on her task, and that the elation of playing at
being a patriot had departed, with Dick evidently,
leaving her as limp as a rag. Oh, it does seem such a
shame that we had to get into that war—Nathalie
bit off her thought like a thread, resolved not to let her
mind dwell on that forbidden topic. But how angelic
her mother had acted when Dick went. Well, she was
a dear, anyway, so brave. But suppose he never
.pn +1
should come back after all. Something suddenly
seemed to snap in the girl’s breast, and down went her
head on the tray, into a heap of powder, while a great
sob strangled out of her throat.
O horrors! Nathalie’s brown head bobbed up from
the tray, not very serenely either, for she had heard a
step on the kitchen porch. Oh, Helen always came in
that way! “Where is my handkerchief?” The girl
grabbed desperately at something white lying on the
tray, dimly seen through a blur of tears, and began to
scrub her nose energetically with alas, not her handkerchief,
but the powder-cloth with which she had been
polishing the silver! “Ah chee! Ah chee!” sneezed
Nathalie again and again, while groping frenziedly,
but blindly, for her handkerchief. She must have
dropped it. And then Helen’s arms were around her,
and she was kissing the flushed cheek.
“What’s struck you, honey girl?” she asked in that
gentle way of hers. “Have you got the influenza?
But here’s a very necessary article at times, if that’s
what you’re after,” she finished with a laugh, as she
stooped and picked up Nathalie’s handkerchief from
the floor.
“Influenza? No,” blurted out Nathalie savagely,
tortured to a pitch of desperation at her unfortunate
predicament. “I’ve been rubbing my nose with that
dirty old piece of rag I clean the silver with. Serves
me right, I suppose, for being such a fool as to cry
.pn +1
when I should be ‘on my job,’ as Dick says.” She
shamefacedly tried to hide her red eyes from her
friend’s keen gaze.
“Oh, well, it will do you good to cry, Nathalie,
dear,” advised Helen softly, as she stroked the brown
head caressingly, “for you were quite a heroine when
Dick went away, so courageous and cheery. Mrs.
Morrow says you are the nerviest Pioneer she knows.”
“But I’m not,” confessed Nathalie honestly, “in
fact, I’m beginning to think that I’m a bluff. But anyway,
I’m glad to get a bit of praise, something to warm
me up, for I have felt like a congealed icicle for the
last few days. Yes, I have smiled and smiled like the
poor Spartan boy, while the fox of Grief was gnawing
a hole into my internals. That sounds like one of
Lillie Bell’s dramatics, doesn’t it?” she smiled pathetically
into her friend’s kindly eyes.
“But, Helen, you are a dear, anyway,” cried Nathalie
in a sudden burst of admiration for her tried and
trusted friend, who was always such a stanch and
timely comforter. “And do you know,” she added,
swinging about in her chair with the teapot in one
hand and the despised polishing-cloth in the other,
“you grow better-looking every day. Oh, I think you
are just lovely!”
“I lovely?” mocked Helen, opening her eyes in surprise
at this unexpected praise. “Well, Blue Robin,
what started you on that trail? You must have been
.pn +1
kissing the Blarney Stone, for you are handing me out
‘the stuff,’ as the boys say, for fair. Poor me, with
a knob on my nose, a wide mouth, and green eyes—to
call me lovely is a libel on the word.”
“Oh, Helen, your eyes are just lovely—every one
says that, for they are so expressive,” retorted her
friend loyally; “and as for the knob on your nose, no
one would know it was there if you weren’t constantly
telling them about it. But I don’t care what you look
like anyway,” she added determinedly, “for I think
you are a love of a friend. But when do you go to
France?” she finished abruptly.
“I don’t quite know yet,” replied the girl; “perhaps
not until a month or so. But mother is brave about
letting me go. She says it will be a fine experience for
me,—as long as I don’t have to go ‘over the top.’
Oh, you finished your service-flag! It’s a Jim
Dandy!” Helen plunged recklessly into another
topic, again blaming herself for her trick of alluding
to forbidden subjects, for she had seen Nathalie’s lips
quiver as she said “Over the top.”
“Yes, I finished it, and now the neighbors know
where we stand, even if you consider me a pacifist,”
said the girl a little defiantly. “Well, perhaps I shall
think differently some day,” with a quickly repressed
sigh.
“Yes, and that day is coming very soon, too, Blue
Robin,” rejoined Helen; “for I’ll bet you a box of
.pn +1
candy that you won’t be a pacifist after you hear Mrs.
Morrow talk on liberty. Surely you haven’t forgotten
that we are to go to a Liberty Tea at her house
this afternoon?” she inquired as she saw her friend’s
face settle down into an expression of gloom.
“Oh, I don’t think I’ll go,” retorted Nathalie quickly,
“for I don’t feel a bit Pioneery this morning, and then
I have all this silver to clean.”
“But, Blue Robin,” returned her friend cheerily,
“I’m going to help you finish up that silver, and then
I’m going home to dress for this afternoon. Then
I’m coming over here and just make you go to that
Liberty Tea with me. You know, Nathalie, it would
be mean for you to desert Mrs. Morrow,” she added
wisely, “for you are the leader of the band and should
help to entertain the girls.”
Whereupon, Helen caught up one of Nathalie’s
kitchen-aprons, and a few moments later the two girls
were laughing and chatting in the best of spirits, as
they rubbed and polished with youthful ardor, every
bone and muscle keyed to its task.
Yes, it was enlivening to be so warmly welcomed by
her hostess, Nathalie decided, as she greeted her a
little later in the afternoon, and her depression vanished.
And how perfectly lovely Mrs. Morrow looked
in that blue gown; yes, it was just the color of her
blue-gray eyes. Under the fascination of this lady’s
charming personality Nathalie was soon flying about,
.pn +1
showing the girls how to start sweaters, or to purl, as
this task had been delegated to her by the director, who
herself had taught Nathalie.
When the tea was served it was Nathalie who occupied
the place of honor at the little tea-table, decorated
with the United States flag, and who dispensed
the dainty little china cups filled with what was patriotically
called Liberty Tea in honor of the young
ladies who had given it its name over a hundred years
ago, and who the Pioneers had impersonated last year
in their entertainment of “Liberty Banners.”
After the teacups had been removed, and one or two
announcements of coming events had been made, Mrs.
Morrow, with sudden gravity, said:
“We have gathered here to-day, girls, to commemorate
the Spirit of Liberty, the one great principle that
has budded like Aaron’s rod, and brought forth other
qualities as splendid and compelling as itself, as, for
example, the principles represented in our national emblem.
The principle of humanity, which means living
the Golden Rule by taking thought for your neighbor;
democracy, the equal rights of mankind, which in
turn gives rise to justice, loyalty, and unity,—the principles
that have not only given us that wonderful,
mystical something called Americanism, but the principles
that mean the Christianity of Christ.”
After the girls had discussed the meaning of liberty
and summed it up as standing for man’s right to self-expression,
.pn +1
either by words or actions, and made it
clear that it had to be governed by the law of self-control,
as too much freedom would mean license or lawlessness,
Mrs. Morrow continued her little talk.
“Liberty is not something that sprang into being
with the coming of the settlers to America, for it is as
old as man himself; but under the rule of king-ridden
states it has been fighting its way through many long
centuries, because the peoples of the Old World failed
to grasp its meaning.
“Under the stimulus of the Reformation and the
Revival of Learning, induced by the printing of the
Bible and other books, the early comers to America,
as they endeavored to worship God as they thought
right, not only left the intolerant forms and bigoted
narrowness of the Old World, but threw the first light
on liberty by teaching man his right to freedom of the
soul. The Pilgrims and Puritans were the Pioneers
of liberty, for they not only gave us religious freedom,
but, by establishing a government for and by the people
without the aid of king or bishop, laid the cornerstone
of a great commonwealth, and gave us democratic
liberty.
“If you girls would make a study of the history of
the Thirteen Colonies,” went on their director, “you
would learn that not only each Colony contributed to
the principles embodied in every stripe, star, and color
of our spangled banner, but that a universal love of
.pn +1
freedom seems to have animated the settlers. Each
individual group, to be sure, had its own peculiar belief,
but, in the working-out of their cherished ideals
and aspirations, liberty was the bone and sinew of
every colony.
“It was under the influence of these early settlers—the
giving of their best to mankind in their struggles
for freedom—that the ideals and beliefs of the New
World were molded into higher and better institutions,
purified and strengthened by a new significance.
Their ideals and aspirations were essentially different
from anything known before,—ideals peculiar to this
soil, which were absolutely American, not only in religious
freedom, but in the institutions of local government
and the union of all states into one, which gave
rise to the United States of America.
“Now we have come to the great subject of the
hour, the war, and a question I have heard several of
you girls ask, ‘Why are we in the war?’”
Nathalie felt her face redden, and shifted uneasily
in her seat. O dear! she did wish she had not come.
Of course the talk was very interesting, but still she
didn’t want to think of this terrible war.
“I have heard it said,” pursued Mrs. Morrow,
“that we are in the war to avenge the sinking of the
Lusitania, and that we must not allow the Germans to
break the international law by killing our sailors and
seamen. I have heard it said, too, that if they conquered
.pn +1
the Allies they would come over here and fight
us. These are all sufficient reasons in a sense.”
The lady paused, and then, with grave solemnity,
said: “And I have heard it put forth that we are
in the war to maintain our national honor and integrity.
I think I hear some of you girls say, ‘But
we haven’t done any wrong: we have kept neutral; our
principles are not involved.’”
Nathalie’s eyes were aglow as she bent forward, and
with parted lips anxiously awaited Mrs. Morrow’s
reply to this question.
“Now that we realize the depth and grandeur of
the principles given to us by the founders of this
nation, and know that every time our flag is unfurled
it tells the world that religious and democratic liberty
were born on these shores of America, are we going
back on these principles? Are we going to allow
other nations to say that our principles are just in the
flying of our colors, that they stand for nothing but
self-praise and the nation’s glorification?
“No,” cried the lady with grave emphasis, “by our
love for our flag, by our love for our birth-land, by
our reverence for the men who taught us these principles
we swear to defend every time we hoist our
colors, we must get into this war. We must prove
that our flag is in the right place, and that we carry it
in our hearts. We must strive to show with our
.pn +1
soul’s might that we are living these principles by being
true to ourselves and to our nation’s honor, and
carry our feelings into action.
“We must forget self, our desire for selfish ease
and pleasure. We must align ourselves with the suffering
masses of people across the sea, and help them
to rid themselves of the iron-shod heel of one-man
power. We must stand side by side with the Allies
for humanity, democracy, and liberty. We must show
the world that the so-called divine right of kings is a
worn-out belief of savagery, and prove by the principles
back of our flag, prove by the living of these
principles, the sacredness of God’s heritage to man,
the right of the world’s people to know, as we know,
the principles that have made us the freest people in
the world.
“Each one of you girls must not only do your bit,
but must give of your best to your brothers and sisters
over the sea. And if the best means the giving-up
of those who are so dear to us, we must prove that
we are true daughters of liberty, and send them forth
cheerfully, to give freedom and liberty to the world.”
There was an impressive silence, and then Mrs.
Morrow’s voice broke into song. In another moment
the girls had joined their voices with hers, and were
loudly sounding forth the old-time tune and the well-beloved
words:
.pn +1
.nf b
“In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me;
As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
While God is marching on.
“He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before his judgment seat;
Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant, my feet;
Our God is marching on!”
.nf-
Later in the afternoon, as the girls hurried happily
out from the white house on the corner, each one chatting
merrily, intent on telling what she had done or
intended to do for the war, Nathalie alone was silent,
weighed down, as it were, by a strange sense of shame.
Yes, she had been blindly selfish, and had failed to
realize the momentousness of the great questions of
the day. When she had been called upon, to give love
and sympathy to her neighbors, the poor suffering
masses of people over seas, she had selfishly turned her
back to the call—she had failed to show herself a
daughter of liberty. Why, she was not a patriot,—no,
not even an American; and in the spirit, if not in
the letter, she had dishonored Dick, yes, and her
father, who had always been so steadfast and true to
everything that was American.
That night Nathalie could not sleep, but tossed restlessly
from side to side, as parts of Mrs. Morrow’s
speech kept forcing themselves upon her memory.
And just as she had succeeded in driving them away,
.pn +1
and also the remorseful thought that she had not given
her best, that she had failed to show greatness, the
song the girls had sung that afternoon, with the luring,
old-time air and the soul-stirring words, flashed with
vivid distinctness:
.nf b
“As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
While God is marching on.”
.nf-
The girl sat up in bed, and in a crooning whisper
hummed the whole verse through, repeating again and
again,
.nf b
“As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.”
.nf-
The beauty as well as the significance of the words
had made their appeal. Christ had died to make men
holy; she must give of her best to make men free.
She must show herself great, but what could she do?
But even as the question came, so flashed the answer,
and Nathalie was again softly humming,
.nf b
“Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant, my feet;
Our God is marching on.”
.nf-
And then suddenly a thought stamped itself upon
her mind. The girl caught her breath. Yes, she had
given Dick up because she had been forced to do so,
but now she would make the sacrifice, give the best of
herself; she would stop once and forever all useless
repining. She would keep herself cheered by the
.pn +1
thought that she was glad—she gritted her teeth determinedly—that
she had Dick to give to help make
people free.
Yes, but she must do something—she must give her
best; no, it might not be anything very great or big,
but she must show she was a true daughter of liberty.
Ah, she knew what she could do, and then Nathalie
fell back on her pillow, and although she lay very still,
her brain was alert, thinking and planning. Yes, she
could get the girls together; she would begin the very
next morning. She would have every one in it, for
liberty wouldn’t be liberty unless it was free to all.
And then one thought and another kept popping into
her mind, until finally the tired brain went on a strike
and refused to register any more thoughts, and Nathalie,
without a word of protest, tumbled into the
land o’ dreams.
The next morning she was up betimes, and was soon
singing cheerily at her work, every now and then stopping
in the midst of some favored melody, to repeat
softly,
.nf b
“As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.”
.nf-
In such a state of cheerfulness time flew swiftly,
and soon Nathalie was up in the attic writing a note.
Yes, it sounded all right, she decided as she read it
over slowly. And then her hand was again flying
.pn +1
over the paper, and another note was written, and
then another, and still another, until, with a sigh of
relief, Nathalie found that she had them all finished.
No, she wasn’t going to leave any one out. Quickly
gathering up the notes the girl was off, running lightly
down the stairs, and then flying swiftly across the
lawn to see what Helen would think of the thing she
had planned in the stillness of the night.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch03
CHAPTER III||THE LIBERTY GIRLS
.sp 2
“Yes, we must prove that we have the true spirit
of liberty, the spirit of humanity,” Nathalie
spoke very earnestly, “and that is why I
have asked Marie Katzkamof to belong to the club.
She is the little lame girl, you know who she is; she
sits at the news-stand on the corner of Main and West
streets, and sells the papers when her father is at business.
She is always knitting—sweaters for the soldiers,
she says. It makes me feel ashamed when I
realize how hard she works to do her ‘little bit.’”
“You are right, Nathalie,” replied Helen thoughtfully,
“for you have struck something big in your idea
that we are all Americans, and that the club should be
free to all. But hurry over, and see what Mrs. Morrow
has to say. I believe she’ll think the whole scheme
is fine.”
But Nathalie was already at the door, her brown
eyes sparkling with suppressed excitement, and her
cheeks flushed with the soft pink that all the girls admired,
and some envied. And then she was making
her way across the road to the white house on the
corner, still softly humming,
.pn +1
.nf b
“As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.”
.nf-
The Tuesday that Nathalie had designated in her
notes to the invited girls had arrived, and the girl,
somewhat pale from nervousness, was standing before
a small table in the living-room of her home.
Facing her were a dozen or more girls, all more or less
in an attitude of expectant interest as they sat, some on
chairs, others on the couch in the hall, while the Pioneers,
as was their wont when chairs were limited,
were seated in a circle on the floor.
“Now, girls,” cried Nathalie, determined to plunge
ahead and get the thing started before her enthusiasm
and nerves collapsed to a frazzle, as she told Helen
afterward, “I have asked you all here to-day, to form
a club in the interest of liberty. The Girl Pioneers
know just how big a thing liberty is, for they had the
pleasure of hearing Mrs. Morrow, our Pioneer director,
in her little talk on liberty. Oh, Lillie Bell, would
you mind repeating what you remember of Mrs. Morrow’s
speech?” Nathalie broke off abruptly, turning
towards that young lady, one of the most popular of
the Pioneer girls. “I know you have a good memory,
Lillie,” Nathalie pleaded, “and are such a good elocutionist
that you can do it better than any one else I
know.”
This calling upon Lillie Bell was a stroke of finesse
on the part of Nathalie. For Lillie, when she had
.pn +1
learned that the club was to be so democratic that the
daughter of her newsdealer, a Russian Jew, had been
invited, had loftily declared that although she was a
good American, and wanted to do all she could for liberty,
well, she didn’t know that she cared to chum with
all the Jews in the town.
Nathalie had been keenly alive to the desirability of
having Lillie a member, because she was not only
bright and efficient, but because she was such a good
entertainer. This declaration of Lillie’s, however, had
caused her spirits to fall below zero, and she began to
fear that the whole thing would prove a fizzle. But
when so many girls had responded to her invitation,
all keyed to expectant curiosity—Lillie among them—her
spirits had taken a leap into the nineties. Immediately
her alert mind had begun to plan in what
way, and how, she could interest Lillie in the club, so
that she would take an active part in its doings. And
here was her chance.
Lillie Bell, with her usual timely poise, gracefully
and smilingly rose to the occasion. In her most luring
manner she not only repeated Mrs. Morrow’s
speech, but interpreted it with such a stirring American
spirit, that not only was Nathalie electrified, but the
whole audience were inspired to such a pitch of enthusiasm
that they broke into hearty applause.
As soon as the clamor subsided, Nathalie cried
earnestly, “Now that we all know what liberty means,
.pn +1
and the possibilities that lie before us, I propose that
we form ourselves into a club to be known as ‘The
Liberty Girls.’”
Another outburst of approval brought the speaker
to a halt, but only for a moment, and then she went on
smilingly, “Well, I am glad that you like the name,
for it means something.” Then she briefly told of the
seventeen young girls, who, over a hundred and fifty
years ago, had formed a club called “The Daughters
of Liberty.”
“They did their bit,” smiled the girl, “by sewing
all day on homespun garments to prove that the colonies
could be independent of the mother-country, and
swore that they would drink no tea until the tax had
been removed. They also declared that they would
have nothing to do with any of their young gentlemen
friends who dared to drink the detested beverage.
“But, girls,” said Nathalie rather hurriedly, as she
stepped from behind the little table, “if we are to
form ourselves into a club, we shall have to have a
chairman, for although the idea originated with me,
that does not mean that you have got to have me for
a leader,” she ended modestly.
“But we don’t want any one but you,” called out
some one enthusiastically, which cry was so emphatically
echoed by others, that Nathalie stood hopelessly
bewildered, a wave of color dyeing her face a rose-pink.
.pn +1
But in this crucial moment Helen came to her rescue,
and jumping on her feet cried,—even Lillie,
Grace, and Edith bobbed up too,—“Girls, I make the
motion that we form ourselves into a club to be known
as ‘The Liberty Girls,’ and that we elect for president,
Miss Nathalie Page. All in favor of this motion
stand up!”
There was a quick, simultaneous movement of many
feet, and then, as Helen sensed that Nathalie had been
duly elected leader by her mates, she called out, “Well,
Nathalie, you will have to be president, for every one
wants you.”
“Yes, and we won’t have any one else,” added
Edith quickly, with a sudden clap of her hands. This
was the signal for the girls to start up a loud clapping
in approval of the newly elected president, whose rose-pink
cheeks had deepened to scarlet as she stood bowing,
somewhat confusedly, to them.
Whereupon Lillie Bell gracefully came to the fore,
and dramatically seizing the hand of the young girl
while leading her back to her seat, in an impressive
manner cried, “Allow me, Miss Nathalie Page, to
lead you to the seat of honor, as the president of the
club, ‘The Liberty Girls.’”
Nathalie bowed and laughed with embarrassment,
but she determined to carry off the honors bestowed
upon her with a good grace, and as soon as the somewhat
.pn +1
noisy demonstrations of pleasure from the girls
had ended, she said modestly, “Girls, I thank you for
wanting me to be your leader, and only hope I will
make a good one.”
There was more plaudits, and then Nathalie, with
grave seriousness, said: “Girls, now that we have
pledged ourselves not only as a club, but as individuals,
to further the cause of liberty, I would suggest that
our watchword be, ‘Liberty and humanity—our best.’
Humanity means to be helpful and kind to our neighbors,
our best means to work with a strenuous will to
do everything we can to that end. Our neighbors at
the present moment loom very large and big as the
needy and suffering ones overseas, as the sick, the
wounded, the dying, the prisoners, the refugees, and
all those who are fighting on land and sea: yes, and
those in the air, and all those who are helping to care
for the ones I have mentioned, as the doctors and
nurses, for they, too, all need help. If we can’t fight,
we have got to help those who are fighting in our stead.
Yes,” she added solemnly, “and we must be prepared
even to have the desire to do what we can for our
enemies, for as liberty makes no discrimination as to
who shall enjoy it, so in the doing of humane acts we
should remember all.”
As Nathalie, highly elated by the enthusiasm shown
by her audience, stood waiting for quietness, suddenly
.pn +1
her eyes rested on little lame Marie Katzkamof, whose
big black eyes shone like two stars from her pale, sallow
face. Nathalie had another inspiration.
She bent forward and in a low, earnest voice cried,
“Do you think, little Marie, that you would enjoy being
a member of this club? Wouldn’t you like to do
something—yes, your best—to help the poor refugees
in France and Belgium, and the brave soldier
boys who are fighting, so that the whole world can
enjoy liberty?”
“Yiss, ma’am; I have a glad on liberty,” the girl
giggled nervously, “but it’s like this mit me, I likes
I shure I don’t make you no trouble.”
“But it won’t be any trouble to us, Marie,” answered
Nathalie with a smile. “We will all help you;
humanity means to help others.”
“But, Missis Page,” the girl’s face was scarlet, her
big eyes mournful. “It’s like this mit me, I ain’t
stylish like these young ladies; I make nottings mit
them, for I ain’t shmardt, hein? Und this leg it ain’t
yet so healthy. Und, Missis Page, I’m lovin’ mit liberty,
but I ain’t lovin’ much mit Krisht, for I’m a
Jewess.”
Nathalie faltered a moment, for she had seen a smile
creep into the eyes of the girls, which she knew would
become a laugh if she did not say the right thing.
“Yes, you may not love Christ, as we Christians,”
she answered quickly, “but if you love the liberty, perhaps
.pn +1
you may learn to know what it means to love
Him. And then, Marie, that will make no difference,
for as long as you want to help the suffering ones, and
show humanity, that makes you an American, no matter
who, or what you are.”
“Thank you, Missis Page,” the girl’s face had
lighted with repressed joy, “sure I’m an American.
I can’t do nottings mit the fight, like the soldiers, but
you bet yer life I can knit for them, hein?” And the
little daughter of Israel held up a strip of wool with
its two shiny needles. “Shure und my hands are
straight,” she continued pathetically, “even if my legs
ain’t healthy.”
Nathalie’s eyes blurred, but she answered smilingly,
“Why, that will be lovely, Marie.” Then, turning towards
the girls, she cried, “Every one in favor of appointing
Marie Katzkamof captain of the Knitting
Squad, please hold up her hand.” And every hand
went up. “And we’ll call you Captain Molly,” went
on Nathalie, “in memory of that brave young woman,
Molly Pitcher, who, when her husband fell dead at
the battle of Monmouth, during the Revolution, took
his place,—she was carrying water to the soldiers,—seized
the rammer of his gun, and fired it. And she
kept on firing it,” cried Nathalie with glowing eyes,
“with the shot and shell flying all about her, until the
battle was over. And with that name and the bravery
of that Molly—for I know you are brave, Marie—I
.pn +1
know you will do your best for liberty, and for the
soldiers who are on the firing-line, doing their best, as
the Sons of Liberty, for the right of every man in the
world.”
After Lillie Bell had been duly elected vice-president
of the club, and several other club matters had been
disposed of, Nathalie proposed, as an inspiration to
the girls, that they form a circle in the center of the
room, and stand with clasped hands, to show the interdependence
of one upon the other. “Then in
turn,” she explained, “let each girl tell of some woman,
or girl, who, by her bravery in doing what she could
for some one else, or for the world, has given of her
best to mankind, and shown that she was a true lover
of humanity, and a daughter of liberty.”
The girls, quickly grasping Nathalie’s idea, were
soon standing in a circle, hurriedly trying to concentrate
their minds on some one woman who had given
of her greatness to mankind.
“Can we tell about the Pioneer women?” asked a
Girl Pioneer timidly.
“Yes, indeed,” answered the young president, “and
we ought to hear about them first, too, for they were
the ones who really taught us what it means to love
liberty. Although they were not the first women who
did great things for their fellow-beings, they were the
ones who made clear to us that real liberty means humanity,
justice, and democracy for all.”
.pn +1
Helen now started the liberty chain by clasping the
hand of her neighbor on each side of her and telling
of the women of the Mayflower, who, by their acts of
sacrifice, and stern determination to worship God as
they thought right, gave us religious freedom.
Nita told of the coming of the ship, the Arbella,
to Gloucester with John Winthrop, the governor of
Massachusetts Bay Colony, and the two noted Puritan
brides, the Lady Arbella and Anne Bradstreet, the
latter our first American poetess. And gave testimony
of their devotion to Puritanism, and their desire to
benefit mankind.
One Pioneer told of America’s first club-woman,
Anne Hutchinson, portraying her trial and banishment
from Boston, in her efforts to benefit mankind by
teaching them freedom of thought. Another told of
Mary Dyer, the noted Quakeress, and how she was
hanged from an old elm on Boston Common because
she believed in freedom of religion.
Margaret, the wife of John Winthrop, the governor,
and Susannah, the mother of John Wesley, both beloved
for their sweet piety and charity, were cited as
examples of having given of their best in being the
ideal wife and mother. Lillie Bell told of Florence
Nightingale, the young English woman who gave up
a life of luxury to help the soldiers during the Crimean
War in 1854. She became known as “The Lady of
the Lamp,” from a statue of her as she stands with a
.pn +1
nurse’s lamp in her hand, erected in a church in London.
A Girl Scout told of Dorothy Dix, that wonderful
woman who made it her life-work to visit prisons and
insane asylums, in order to institute reforms for the
care and comfort of the inmates. She also did much
for the relief of wounded soldiers during the
American Civil War.
Jenny Lind, the great Swedish singer, was cited as
having given to humanity when she gave her time and
voice to raise thousands of dollars for the benefit of
broken-down musicians and writers. Mrs. Harriet
Beecher Stowe gave of her best, Edith declared, when
she wrote her book, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” and showed
the world the evils of slavery; as also Mrs. Julia Ward
Howe when she wrote that wonderful patriotic song,
“The Battle Hymn of the Republic.”
The two noted women astronomers, Caroline
Herschel and Maria Mitchell, when they studied the
heavens in the interest of science, gave of their best.
Also Charlotte Cushman, the great actress, who raised
large sums of money by her acting, and gave it to the
Sanitary Fund, during the Civil War, was quoted as
a lover of humanity.
The Baroness Burdett-Coutts and Miss Helen
Gould, two of the world’s noted philanthropists, as
well as Miss Louisa Alcott, in her writings for the
youth of America, and other women writers were
.pn +1
added to the growing list of Liberty Daughters. Dolly
Madison, the beautiful First Lady of the Land, showed
herself a true American during the War of 1812.
When the British burned Washington she refused to
leave the White House until the portrait of Washington
was carried to a place of safety, while she herself took
the Declaration of Independence, with its autographs of
the signers, away with her, so that it would not be lost
to America.
Even Marie, alias Captain Molly, caught the inspiration
of the Liberty Chain, and told of a young Russian
girl, who, rather than betray the secrets of a great man,
from a paper that had fallen into her hands, allowed
herself to be exiled to Siberia. Then came the war
stories, as that of the noted Quakeress, Lydia Darrach,
who, during the Revolution, on learning the secrets of
the British officers who were quartered at her house,
endured untold hardship in traveling many miles in
the dead of winter to reveal them to the American
patrol, so as to save the Continental Army from disaster.
Hannah Weston, who filled a pillow-case with pewter-ware
when she heard that a certain town was in
need of ammunition, and carried it many miles through
the woods at night, was cited for her bravery and her
sacrifice, in her effort to help others. The story of
Betty Zane and how she ran from the palisade of a
Western fort to her brother’s hut for a keg of powder
.pn +1
in the fire of a tribe of Indians, although a familiar
one, was listened to with glowing interest.
Ruth Wyllis, who hid the charter of Connecticut
in an oak tree, and Katy Brownell, the color-bearer at the
battle of Bull Run, who stood by the flag in the face
of the advancing foe, and who would have been shot
to death if a soldier had not pulled her away, were but
two recitals of brave deeds for the sake of humanity.
But at last the liberty chain came to an end by Nathalie
telling of Saint Margaret, a plain, uneducated
Irish woman, who, after losing her husband and child,
devoted her life and every penny she made to the
cause of orphan children. A statue, she said, had been
erected in New Orleans to this noble woman, who gave
of her best to humanity when she devoted her life to
these little waifs.
After the girls had returned to their seats, Nathalie
appointed seven squads. She had made it seven, she
said, not only because it was a lucky number, but because
there were just seven letters in the name, Liberty.
Helen was made the captain of the Florence Nightingale
Squad, since she had gained many honors, as a
Girl Pioneer, as an expert maker of bandages.
Nita, with a Girl Scout as a running mate, was made
captain of the Scrap-Book Squad, which meant the
making of scrap-books for the convalescing soldiers in
the hospitals. Lillie Bell and a Camp Fire Girl were
placed at the head of the Garments Squad for the cutting
.pn +1
and sewing of garments for the refugee children of
France and Belgium. Two Girl Scouts were made
captains of the Flower Squad, with the purpose of
raising and selling flowers for the Liberty Loan fund.
Jessie Ford had charge of the comfort-kits for the
soldier-boys, while Barbara Worth, who was an expert
knitter, was appointed to work with Captain Molly,
the Russian Jewess. Nathalie was unanimously
chosen as the captain of the Liberty Garden, with Edith
Whiton and several other Girl Pioneers. They were
not only to raise vegetables and fruits in their garden-to-be,
but they were to do canning as well.
After some discussion it was decided that the club
members wear a uniform consisting of a white shirtwaist,
with the letters L. G. in red on the arm, on the
corners of their white sailor-collars, and on the hatbands
of their white sailor-hats, and to wear white
or khaki skirts.
Nathalie had just appointed a committee to scour
the town for a parcel of ground to use as a flower and
Liberty garden, when a sudden noise was heard. The
girl looked quickly up, to see Mrs. Morrow standing
in the doorway leading from the dining-room, with
her arms filled with flowers. In her hand was a large
bell, which she was jingling softly, while her blue eyes
smiled down upon the girls with radiant good-will.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch04
CHAPTER IV||THE LIBERTY GARDEN
.sp 2
Nathalie stared in amazement, and then, recovering
her usual poise, she cried, “Oh, Mrs.
Morrow, please come right in, for I want you
to meet my Liberty Girls.” As the girl spoke she
advanced towards her unexpected guest, who was coming
slowly forward, as if not assured of her welcome.
But the cordiality expressed in the tones of Nathalie’s
voice and the fact that the girls had all risen on their
feet,—her own girls at attention in the Pioneer salute,—with
their faces aglow with pleasure, quickly assured
her that her welcome was a hearty one.
With a sudden movement she turned to Nathalie
and asked, “May I have the floor a moment, Miss
President?” As the girl assented, although somewhat
mystified, Mrs. Morrow took her place behind
the small table, and with a quick nod of greeting to
the faces upturned to hers, cried: “Girls, I am
greatly pleased to see you here to-day, and to know
that our Pioneer Blue Robin’s little plan to make you
all work with a keener zest for liberty, has succeeded
so well. I also want to assure you of my hearty cooperation,
.pn +1
and my wish that all of you, those who are
Pioneers, and those who belong to other clubs, will be
inspired to better work in your own organizations by
the fact that you have banded together to stand
unitedly as Daughters of Liberty, in order to show that
you are all loyal Americans. In proof of my good
wishes I am going to present the club with a bell. It
is needless to say that it is not the Liberty Bell, but a
facsimile in miniature.
“Wait, I have not finished,” laughingly protested
the lady as she held up her hand,—for some of the
girls had started to clap. “I want you to know before
your president rings it,—it is to be rung to call you
together in the sacred cause of liberty,—that way up
in the top has been inserted a very tiny chip from the
real Liberty Bell,—the bell that was rung over a hundred
years ago to announce that the thirteen colonies
had become the United States of America. I hope,
girls, that when you hear this bell ring you will feel
the same inspiration to do your best as animated the
patriots in the war of 1776.”
As Mrs. Morrow paused, the long-delayed clapping
burst forth with such vigor that she and Nathalie—she
had drawn the girl to her and was pressing the bell
into her hand—had to smile and bow again and again.
But the clapping only halted for a space, for when
Nathalie saw that quietness reigned, she rang the liberty
bell so loudly and determinedly, while a mischievous
.pn +1
twinkle glowed in her eyes, that it broke forth
again.
As soon as the demonstration was over and the bell-ringing
had subsided, Mrs. Morrow’s voice was heard
again: “Now, Liberty Girls, I am going to ask your
president to take a vote to get your opinion as to who
you think told the best story about great women in
your liberty chain.
“Perhaps you do not know,” the gray-blue eyes
deepened, “but I was in the dining-room, although
not purposely an eavesdropper, and had the pleasure
of hearing the stories told. I have formed an opinion
as to the best story-teller, but would like to know if
your opinion coincides with mine.”
But alas, there were so many different opinions as
to the best story, and as to who was the best narrator,
that to even matters Mrs. Morrow had to take her big
bouquet of flowers and divide it into three or four
nosegays. But a smile of satisfaction gleamed in the
eyes of many when Marie, the little Jewess, received a
bouquet and a few words of commendation from the
giver. The little captain’s delight was so genuine, and
her eyes beamed so joyously, that every one rejoiced
with her.
After the flowers were distributed, and the girls had
sung a few patriotic songs, they filed out into the sunshine,
happily aglow with the joy of the meeting and
the inspiration it had brought to them.
.pn +1
Several weeks later we find Nathalie coming slowly
down the garden-walk with its old-time hedge, from
the big gray house. The tall pines—now good old
friends—that bordered the path bowed their tops in
a cheery good-morning, as she walked beneath their
shade.
She had just given her usual morning lesson of two
hours to her young friend, for Nathalie, on her return
from Camp Laff-a-Lot last summer, had found that
her studies with Nita were to be continued. Yes, and
she had banked every penny that she could spare from
her weekly salary of ten dollars. It had seemed such
a big sum at first, but alas, now that her mother’s income
had slowly dwindled, and she had been compelled
to use it for her own personal needs, and to lay
part of it aside every week to repay Mrs. Van Vorst
the loan for Dick’s operation, it seemed a mere pittance.
But to-day she felt unusually joyful, for the last
penny of that haunting debt had been paid, and she
was now free to call her money her own. If there
had been many disappointments in life—the going
to college was still a luring hope—and self-denials,
added to the unpleasantness of doing housework since
their coming to Westport, there had been several compensations
that had cast their rosy shadows across the
darkness.
One was the joy and the profit she had gained from
.pn +1
being a Pioneer, and the other was the great pleasure
that had come to her in the knowledge that she had a
purpose in life. Yes, she had told Helen many times,
“I think it is one of the delights of life to be legitimately
busy, and to know that you are really doing
something that is a help to yourself or some one else.”
And now, added to these compensating joys had come
the thrills and joys from the new organization, the
Liberty Girls, for that little patriotic club now numbered
almost a hundred. And it had thrived so well,
and Nathalie had gained so many honors from being
its founder, that sometimes she feared that she, too,
would become a bird of the air, like Dick, only in a
different way, from sheer conceit.
But if she had been overmuch praised, and had
found it a pleasant diversion to plan and dream over
the club’s future successes, she had also found hard
work and great discouragement. Discouragement,
too, over such small things, when the girl came to
face them in the coolness of after-thought, that she
had felt like throwing the whole thing up, or else just
letting things drift, and taking what pleasure she
could, without so much conscientious worry over doing
her best.
But through all the storm and stress Helen had
buoyed her with the frequent, sensible remark, that if
it had taken the world thousands of years to comprehend
the true meaning of democracy and liberty, she
.pn +1
must expect her girls would be slow in realizing
many things. But it was tiresome to hold the reins
of government, and yet sometimes be unable to stop
their silly chatter, or useless argument over mere
trifles, all the while holding back the legitimate work
by their dallying.
Yes, and it had been an awful strain to manage that
Liberty Garden. Of course the Pioneers were all
good workers, and she had given each one some one
thing to study over, but still she had had to know about
these things herself, so as to be sure they would do
the right thing.
But it was something worth while, she reflected
sagely, to know that there are three kinds of soil, how
to test it with litmus paper to see if it was sour or not,
and, if it was, how to neutralize it, or sweeten its
acidity. Then she had had to know what kind of
chemicals acted as food to the soil, so as to know what
each plant or vegetable required to enrich it and to
sustain life. She had also learned how to draw moisture
from the land and how to fertilize it.
By placing seeds on wet blotting-paper in saucers
she had demonstrated how long it would take them to
germinate, so as to be able to to write her germinating-table
for the girls. How old seeds should be before
planting, how deep to plant each kind, the method of
planting, and how many seeds to plant, and the distance
apart, had all seemed tiresome and trivial things
.pn +1
to many, but it was necessary knowledge to a would-be
farmer.
Ah, she had reached the bank. She was going to
get that ten dollars deposited before it melted away.
Suddenly her eyes became pools of brightness, and the
dimples twinkled in the red glow of her cheeks, for
there, right in front of her, stood Mrs. Morrow, with
a kiddie boy, as the girl called the twins, on each side
of her. There was such genuine pleasure in the lady’s
smiling blue eyes, that Nathalie impulsively cried,
“Oh, Mrs. Morrow, this is just lovely! I’m so glad
to see you! When did you get back?” for her good
friend had been away for several weeks.
“Last night, Nathalie, and I am so pleased to meet
you,” was the cordial greeting, “for I have heard so
many reports about the Liberty Girls’ club that I am
anxious to hear all about it from you.”
“Oh, it is just the dandiest thing, Mrs. Morrow,”
cried the girl jubilantly. And then, lured by the
kindly interest in her friend’s eyes, her tongue unloosened,
and she was soon busy telling about the
club’s many experiences, and the good that had come
from the industry of its members.
“And Helen is a dear,” Nathalie rattled on, “for
she has taught her girls the most wonderful things,
and now they have all enrolled as Red Cross members.
She had been reading to them from Florence Nightingale’s
‘Notes on Nursing,’ and now she has taken
.pn +1
up other works on the same subject. Lillie, too, reads
to the girls at the club meetings about great women,
while I inspect the work. The Garment and Comfort-Kit
squads meet together, and Jessie Ford not only
tells them about the French villages and the towns
that have been destroyed by the Germans, but reads to
them from the ‘Prince Albert Book.’
“We are to have our Liberty Pageant to-morrow,
and all the people who live on the line of parade have
been perfectly lovely, for they have sold tickets for
the seats on their verandas, and are to give the money
to us for the Liberty Fund, so we can buy Liberty
bonds. And the day after,” continued Nathalie, “we
are to have a liberty sale on Mrs. Van Vorst’s grounds,
the Pioneers’ meeting-place, you know. Indeed, we
are almost over the tops of our heads in work, and
we have enough plans to last the rest of the summer.
Mother declares I am the busiest girl she knows.”
“And the Liberty Garden, has that turned out well?
I understand it is the work of my girls, the Pioneers.”
“Indeed, yes,” returned her companion: “it has
been said to be one of the beauty spots of Westport.
We have bordered it with nasturtiums, poppies, marigold,
sweet peas, and all sorts of old-time posies. But
we had a time getting the ground, for this year every
one was hysterically wild to cultivate every inch of
ground for a war-garden, and nobody wanted to loan
any. Finally, however, Edith and Lillie tried their
.pn +1
powers of persuasion on old Deacon Sawyer,—you
know he’s one of the pillars of the old Presbyterian
church, and he let us have an old lot of his on Summer
Street, about a hundred feet or so square.
“And how we have worked over it, for of course
it had to be plowed. Peter, Mrs. Van Vorst’s gardener,—he’s
the kindest-hearted thing alive,—offered
to plow it for us, but we declined with a vote of
thanks, for we felt that wouldn’t be our work. So
Edith scoured the town until finally she borrowed an
old nag from the livery-stable man,—he was just
ready to crumble to pieces,—and Nita got a plow
from Peter, and we plowed it ourselves.
“But the time we had with that old steed,” Nathalie’s
eyes gleamed humorously, “for just as he
would be going nicely across the field, he would be
inspired to take the ‘rest-cure’ and stand stock-still,
and no amount of pulling—we all got behind him
and pushed—or coaxing would induce him to budge
a hair. O dear, we worked over him until we thought
we should expire with the heat, our faces all red and
perspiring.
“Then Edith took to pulling his tail; she said she
had read that would make a balky horse go. Oh, it
was funny to see her!” Nathalie laughed outright.
“But, dear me, it only made him lift one leg, very
slowly, and then the other, and then settle down in
the same old rut, as still as the wooden horse of Troy.
.pn +1
“You know Edith is a stick-at-the-job sort of person,”
commented Nathalie confidentially, “and what
do you think? She actually got a firecracker and set
it off under that beast. But even that fiery commotion
only caused him to wink one lash and then resume
his restful pose. But finally the spirit moved him,
and so suddenly,” laughed the girl, “that Edith went
sprawling on the ground, and Jessie tumbled in a most
humble attitude,—on her knees,—minus the reins,
while our noble steed went careering at a loping gallop
across the field, while we, like a lot of mutes,
stared at him in stupid wonder.
“Well, after we got the land all plowed,” resumed
Nathalie, “we had irrigated it, by making a
little ditch to let the water run down from the hilly
slope at one end, we planted our vegetables in rows.
But alas,” the girl gave a sigh, “when the plants began
to come up we found that the whole field was
filled with coarse rye-grass which had roots, and
which had simply been cultivated, one might say, by
the plow.
“We did not know what to do at first, until we
remembered our Pioneer motto, ‘I Can,’ and then we
set to work with a will, and spaded every inch of that
lot; and it meant hard labor, too, for the grass was like
gristle. When the little plants began to come up and
a girl would pull a blade to see how it was doing,
part of the plant would come up with the roots.
.pn +1
When we planted the different kinds of beans, using
the string and stakes, and pressing down the ground
hard with our feet, on five different occasions a violent
rain came up during the night, and the next morning
we found all the seeds uncovered and washed down
into little piles at the end of the garden, and everything
had to be done over again.
“After we had planted rows and rows of hills of
corn and rejoiced to see coming forth little green
plumes three inches high, we went to the garden in
our uniforms one day, laden with our garden-tools,
ready for work. But alas! we found that the crows
had pulled out the corn from almost every hill; the little
black imps had bitten off the kernels and gulped
them down, and the stalks lay withering on the
ground.
“Oh, I shall never forget the expression on Edith’s
face that day,” said Nathalie thoughtfully, “when she
saw the havoc wrought by those crows; it was such
utter despair. I thought she was going to cry, but
she didn’t—just hurried to the little shed where we
keep our tools and things. When she reappeared her
face was a sunbeam all right, as she exclaimed, ‘Well,
girls, let’s get the better of those crows, and plant all
over again.’
“Really, Mrs. Morrow, Edith inspired me to such
respect for her indomitable courage and pluck,” went
on the girl candidly, “that I shall always keep a very
.pn +1
warm place in my heart for her, notwithstanding that
she sometimes gets on my nerves. Things went on
swimmingly then until that awful drought came. We
had no way of watering the garden except by watering-pots,
and then we couldn’t do our weeding, or cultivating,
until late in the afternoon on account of the
hot sun. But we did our best, and we have been repaid,”
smiled Nathalie, “although we did not produce
as much as I had hoped. Still—well, you’ll see at
the pageant to-morrow.” Nathalie, suddenly realizing
that she had kept Mrs. Morrow standing for some
time, while she rattled on about that garden, now bade
her a hasty good-morning and hurried into the bank.
The young president of the Liberty Girls’ club
passed a somewhat troubled night, oppressed with the
anxiety of her onerous responsibility, knowing that
the following day would be a well-filled one. As the
proposer and planner of the pageant there were numerous
details to arrange at the very last moment,
and she was so afraid that she would oversleep, that
she awakened several times with a nervous start, only
to find everything enveloped in darkness.
Arousing finally, to see the East streaked with red,
and the golden rim of the sun gleaming above a silver
line of clouds, she sprang out of bed with a devout
little prayer of thankfulness that the day at least was
to be a sunshiny one. An early breakfast, a hurried
doing of her customary duties, and then she and
.pn +1
Grace—in the latter’s car—were off to inspect the floats,
eighteen of them, all ready in barns, or garages, awaiting
her word that they were properly equipped for the
liberty parade, which was to set forth on its journey
through the town at two in the afternoon.
And then, with many misgivings, fearing that the
whole thing might prove a fizzle,—for of course, many
things had been wrong,—she hurried home for luncheon.
Then came a hurried dressing, a whirl in an
automobile, and she was dazedly taking her seat, a
post of honor, on the front row of the grand-stand,
erected by the Boy Scouts and Peter, in front of Mrs.
Van Vorst’s high garden-walls.
She barely had time to realize that the notables of
the village were seated to the right and left of her, and
to exchange a few greetings with one or two old-time
friends, when she heard the ringing of a bell, the bell
in the tower of the old Presbyterian church. This
was the signal that the Liberty Pageant, way up at the
other end of the town, was to issue from its shelter of
green trees in front of the brick schoolhouse, and set
forth on its march down through Main Street, the
most important thoroughfare of the sleepy little town,
with its wide, asphalted road shaded by noble old elms.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch05
CHAPTER V||THE LIBERTY PAGEANT
.sp 2
Nathalie was sure that she would never forget
those tense, anxious moments as she stared
with strained eyes, trying to catch the first
glimpse of the coming show, while listening with alert
ears to the oncoming tread of many feet, the noise and
bustle of moving equipages, and the buzz and hum
from the excited voices of the paraders and the onlookers.
High above the tumult floated snatches of
patriotic song, as sung by the Liberty Girls, and the
loud outbursts of applause from the villagers, who
lined the street.
Ah, there it was! The girl’s heart leaped in wild
bounds, she bent forward eagerly, and then she was
sitting with nervously clasped hands, gazing with
wide-open eyes at the slowly passing floats of the
Liberty Pageant. It was heralded by a procession of
small maidens costumed as Greek goddesses, who,
while moving and swaying rhythmically, and holding
festoons of white flowers high above their heads, were
singing Thomas Paine’s “Liberty Tree.” As they
burst out with the old familiar words:
.pn +1
.nf b
“In a chariot of light from the regions of day,
The Goddess of Liberty came;”
.nf-
Nathalie was forcibly reminded of the time when she
had last heard that song. Yes, it was almost a year
ago, on Mrs. Van Vorst’s lawn, when the Girl Pioneers
had held their little playlet of “Liberty Banners.”
But her thoughts were again on the series of living
pictures, and she smiled with her neighbors at the two
small boys, one gowned as a doctor of the law, and the
other as a brass-buttoned, blue-coated guardian of the
peace, mounted on small horses caparisoned in white,
whose trappings were marked in gold with the words
“Law” and “Order.” As the diminutive doctor removed
a pen from behind his ear, and peered learnedly
through his goggles at a ponderous volume of law resting
on a rack in front of him, while his companion on
the neighboring flower-bedecked steed flourished a
somewhat formidable-looking club, in token of the
duties of his office, roars of laughter broke from the
spectators.
But as their eyes wandered on to the snowy chariot,
where the Spirit of Liberty stood with outstretched
hands, one holding a branch of evergreen, and
the other a lighted torch, their laughter ceased, and a
strange hush stilled their noisy clamor. For this
beautiful maiden in loosely flowing garments, with
eyes as bright and shining as the starry chaplet that
.pn +1
wreathed her golden, unbound hair, was the little
hunchback of the big gray house, Nita Van Vorst!
High above the “angel face,” as Nathalie heard
some one designate the girl’s countenance, beautiful
in its inspiration of happiness and patriotism—her
deformity hidden by her white wings—was a large
banner inscribed with the words:
.nf b
“Enter at Freedom’s porch,[#]
For you I lift my torch,
For you my coronet
Is rayed with stars
My name is Liberty,
My throne is Law.”
.nf-
Guarding the Spirit of Liberty, while holding the
streamers that floated from the banners above, were
three more white-robed figures, representing the three
great principles for which the world was striving. The
unbound tresses of each were banded with white, and
the first bore the word, “Democracy,” the girl holding
a white dove on her hand. The second was Humanity,—who
cuddled a little Belgian refugee in
her arms; and the third was Justice, who held aloft
a pair of scales.
Nathalie’s eyes radiated with gladness as she heard
her neighbors voice their commendations in praises of
the snowy chariot, the symbol of freedom, man’s divine
heritage from God. She began to feel that the many
.pn +1
hours that she and Helen had spent in devising and
planning the details of this float and its mates, after
all, might be appreciated.
The second picture was a marriage scene, a float
marked “Virginia, 1607,” and bore the famous words
of its well-known orator, “Give me liberty, or give me
death.” It was decorated with white flowers in honor
of the bride, Pocahontas,—impersonated by a Camp
Fire girl in an Indian deerskin robe wondrously embroidered,
and gay with many-colored beads,—who
stood by the flower-decked pulpit amid a bower of
green, being united in the holy bands of matrimony to
John Rolfe.
The pose of the Indian maiden, the sweet seriousness
of her tawny-dyed face and melting black eyes,
the dignified pose of the Virginia planter, so vividly
portrayed the romantic episode of the first American
colony, that the many onlookers broke forth into
shouts of approval. The quaintly attired figures of
the Jamestown settlers in the foreground, and the group
of Indian warriors with their war-plumes and dabs of
paint were backed by a miniature tower. Some one
inquired if it was a monument, much to the young
president’s disgust, as she considered it a noble work
of art, which had been laboriously built of old bricks by
the Girl Pioneers to represent the ruined tower of
Jamestown.
.if h
.li
“My name is Liberty,
My throne is Law.”—Page 75.
.li-
.if-
.if t
.li
[Illustration: “My name is Liberty,
My throne is Law.”—Page 75.]
.li-
.if-
.pn +1
Massachusetts was identified by the words, “The
Founders of Liberty,” and a simulated boulder, which
Blue Robin watched with great trepidation for fear the
blithesome Mary Chilton, who stood victorious on this
Forefathers’ Rock, in too zealous jubilation would
shake it too much. But the sprightly Pilgrim maiden,
in gray cape and bonnet—it was the Sport—remembered
the perilous foundations, and her scorn was discreetly
tempered with caution as she gazed at the somewhat
crestfallen John, who stood with one foot on the
rock, and the other in a miniature shallop, where the
Pilgrim Fathers stood dismally regarding this forerunner
of the progressive American girl.
New York’s contribution to the cause of freedom
was a float brilliantly rampant with the Stars and
Stripes, and a little white flag with a black beaver on
it, the State’s emblem. This float, which bore the
words, “The Sons of Liberty,” was in commemoration
of the brave lovers of freedom on the little isle
of Manhattan, who, in February, 1770, raised the first
Liberty Pole in America at what is now known as
City Hall Park. To be sure, it was cut down twice,
but Liberty was afire, and it was finally hooped with
iron and set up the third time, this time to stay.
“Liberty Hall,” the name of the home of a one-time
governor of New Jersey, was conspicuously seen on
the next float. The girls had had some difficulty in
getting an appropriate design for this little garden
State that could be conveniently staged on a small-sized
.pn +1
platform. But they had evidently succeeded, for
the quaintly gowned young maiden who acted her rôle
in pantomime was loudly applauded as she flew to an
improvised window, only to exhibit wild alarm, and
then in frenzied haste scurried to an old-time escritoire.
Here she rummaged a moment or so, and then extracted
a bundle of letters, which she hurriedly secreted
behind a loosened brick beside a simulated fireplace.
In explanation of this silent drama Nathalie
told that the young girl was Susannah, the daughter of
William Livingston, the governor, who, when she saw
the redcoats marching towards the house in her father’s
absence, quickly remembered his valuable papers
and hid them for safety.
Five girls in homespun gowns, sewing on a United
States flag, composed the New Hampshire float, which
flew the State emblem, with its motto of Liberty inscribed
on its side. The flag-makers, out of their best
silk gowns, were making, in accordance with the description
in the resolution just passed by Congress,
June 14, 1777, the first Stars and Stripes that floated
from the Ranger, to which Captain Paul Jones had just
been commissioned, and which became known as “the
unconquered and unstricken flag.”
The Connecticut float bore the words, “The Liberty
Charter,” while a Liberty Girl, in a good impersonation
of Ruth Wyllis, stood by a ladder resting against
a somewhat strange simulation of the Charter Oak,
.pn +1
handing the supposed charter to the redoubtable Captain
Wadsworth, who quickly secreted it in the hollow
of the tree.
Terra Marie, the land of Mary, not only blazoned
the words, “The Rights of Liberty,” but portrayed
Margaret Brent, the first woman suffragist, as she stood
before the Maryland Assembly and pleaded with those
worthies, with masculine energy, for her right to a say
in the affairs of the little State, the State noted for its
Toleration Act of 1649. Surely the good woman, as
the representative of the deceased Governor Calvert,
who had given his all to her with the words, “Take all,
and give all,” had a right to demand that she be heard.
The “Daughters of Liberty” made a brilliant showing
in big letters on the little Rhody float, to honor the
seventeen young girls who, in 1766, met at the home of
good old Deacon Bowen, in Providence, and not only
voiced their disapproval of the Colonies’ tax on tea and
on cloth manufactured in England, but formed the first
patriotic organization known in America. It was the
same inspiration of liberty that impelled their emulators
to adopt their name, and to plan and push through
the demonstration of which every one was so proud.
As these Liberty maidens sat and spun at their looms,
or whetted their distaffs on the float before the gaping
crowd, they were guarded by two impersonations,—one
the father of toleration, Roger Williams, who
looked benignantly down upon these devotees of freedom,
.pn +1
and the other, America’s first club-woman, the
learned and martyred Anne Hutchinson.
Ah, but who is this riding astride a horse of sable
blackness, curveting and prancing with chafing irritation
at the tightened rein of its rider, who
.nf b
“Burly and big, and bold and bluff,
In his three-cornered hat and coat of snuff,
A foe to King George and the English state,
Was Cæsar Rodney, the delegate.”[#]
.nf-
Of course there were a few who were not familiar
with this little incident in the history of Delaware, and
how the aforesaid Rodney, a member of the Continental
Congress, spurred his horse from Dover to Philadelphia,
a distance of eighty-one miles, to reach Independence
Hall before night, in order to cast the vote
of Delaware for freedom and independence. It was,
indeed, a great ride, and the townspeople must have
appreciated it, for the horse and rider were heartily
cheered as they read the words on the banner: “It is
Liberty’s stress; it is Freedom’s need.”
North Carolina proved most interesting, with the inscription,
“The First Liberty Bell of America,” on a
big hand-bell resting in the center of the float. The
inscription and the bell aroused so much curiosity as to
why it should take precedence of the old Liberty Bell
at Philadelphia, that Nathalie was called upon by a
group of friends sitting near, to explain that it really
.pn +1
was the first Liberty Bell used in the Thirteen Colonies,
having sounded its peal for liberty when rung by the
patriots of that State in 1771.
“These patriots,” went on the young Liberty Girl,
“were the farmers and yeomanry of that State, who,
in a vigorous protest against the tyrannous acts, misrule,
and extortion during the administration of Governor
Tryon, banded themselves into a company known
as the Regulators. This bell was used to call them together
in their struggle to maintain the rights of the
people. These Regulators were not only hounded, persecuted,
and sometimes executed as if they were rebels,
but many of their number were killed at the battle of
the Alamance,—so named because it took place on a
field near that beautiful river,—when called upon to
defend themselves, when fired upon by the governor
and a company of the king’s troops. This battle has
been called by some the first battle of the Revolution,”
continued the young girl, “and really inspired the
Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, the forerunner
of the noted Declaration signed at Philadelphia.
Some historians claim that ‘God made the flower of
freedom grow out of the turf that covered these men’s
graves.’”
.pn +1
After this little story, the inscription,
.nf b
“And well these men maintained the right;
They kept the faith and fought the fight;
Till Might and Reason both
Fled fast before the oath
Which brought the God of Freedom’s battles down
To place on patriot’s brow the victor’s crown!”[#]
.nf-
on the float was eagerly read and doubly appreciated.
By the bell stood a tiny maid in the long skirt of the
days of colonial childhood, wearing a long white apron.
With the crossed kerchief and two bright eyes peeping
from beneath the golden curls that strayed from below
the little one’s Puritan cap, she looked so sweet
and demure that murmurs of admiration surged
through the crowd, as they recognized that this diminutive
lady represented the first white child born in
America, little Virginia Dare.
Perhaps only a few knew that the white fawn that
she was holding by her side featured the legend of the
white doe that was said to haunt the isle of Roanoke
for many years after the return of John White, who
found only the word Croatan to tell him that his dear
little granddaughter had disappeared, never to be
found. The legend was so suggestive of the romance
of North Carolina that the girls could not forbear giving
it prominence on the float. They had had some
trouble to find a white doe, but they had succeeded,
and as Nathalie gazed at it she was again reminded of
how the legend told that it used to stand mournfully
gazing out to sea, on a hill of the little isle. The Indians,
tradition asserted, had failed to kill it, until one
day it was shot and killed by a silver bullet from the
hand of an Indian chieftain, who claimed that the bullet
.pn +1
had been given to him by Queen Elizabeth to kill
witches, when a captive in England. As the beautiful
doe sank upon the green sward and expired it was said
to have murmured, “Virginia Dare! Virginia Dare!”
South Carolina, glaringly conspicuous with red and
blue bunting, was marked “Liberty” in honor of one
of the most famous flags used in the Revolutionary
War. It was an ensign of blue with a white crescent
in one corner, said to have been designed by Colonel
Moultrie, of Carolina fame, and was declared to have
been the first flag raised for liberty in the South.
In the center of the float a miniature trench had been
raised, on the parapet of which stood a young lad waving
this little blue flag, in honor of that gallant hero,
Sergeant Jasper, who, when the flag was shot down
during the bombardment of Fort Moultrie, June 28,
1776, leaped fearlessly to the top of the ramparts, received
the colors, and held them in his hand until another
staff was found.
.nf b
“Lo! the fullness of time has come,
And over all the exiles’ Western home
From sea to sea the flowers of Freedom bloom.”
.nf-
This little quotation was an apt one, from the Poet
Whittier, but it was not necessary to make known to
those gazing at it, that it stood for the strongest and
proudest of the sisterhood of States, the home of freemen
and heroes, of Robert Morris, Dr. Franklin and
our good brother, William Penn.
.pn +1
This promoter of tolerance, independence, and the
equal rights of men was fittingly portrayed by a Boy
Scout. Benignant of face, mild of eye, with long hair
falling from beneath his broad-brimmed hat, this friend
of the friendless stood surrounded by a group of Indian
warriors, resplendent in all the trappings of their tribes,
making one of the numerous peace treaties.
But the Georgia float, buried in white to represent
bolls of cotton, in memory of Eli Whitney, aroused
such loud and long cries of admiration that Nathalie
feared that after her hard labor the other floats had
not received their due mead of appreciation. But no,
it was the rousing melody of “Marching through
Georgia,” with its telling lines of,
.nf b
“So we made a thoroughfare for Freedom and her train,
Sixty miles in latitude—three hundred to the main;”
.nf-
and the inspiration that always comes to every Northern
heart when they think of that gallant Son of Liberty,
Sherman, and his triumphant march to the sea,
that had created the sudden tumult.
The few men in regimentals of the Union army,—in
real life, boys in brown from Camp Mills,—who
were playing fifes and bugles on the float, and the
straggling darkies in the rear, who were shouting with
verve and gusto, as they followed in the wake of
“Massa Sherman,” intensified the appeal.
Ah, but now comes another edition of Liberty; this
.pn +1
time no less a personage than Lillie Bell, who, in the old
costume worn over a year ago on the lawn of the big
gray house, was standing on a chariot, an old farm
wagon ablaze with the colors of Freedom, driven by
four soldiers, representing France, England, Belgium,
and America. The young goddess with sad and tragic
eyes shining from beneath her helmet, gazed straight
before her as she held a drawn sword clasped closely
to her breast, in a graceful pose beneath the colors of
the Allies floating gayly above her head.
Yes, there was no doubt, as Helen had often said,
Lillie was born for stellar rôles, for somehow she had
the happy faculty of always falling into the desired attitude
and mood of the part she was to portray. A
sudden silence gripped the line of people standing on
the curb, as they saw this familiar figure of Liberty, in
a new and strange rôle. On a beflagged chair of state
good old Uncle Sam was seated, driving America’s
symbol of Freedom with reins of roses. Yes, roses to
typify that the good protector of the United States’
joys and interests was on the job,—as the Sport expressed
it,—but doing it with the silken reins of love.
In the rear of this float a very small one appeared,
but it was large enough to display a cannon and a
pile of cannon-balls, and also a member of the United
States Marines’ crack quartet of machine-gunners.
As he was the genuine article, as one of the girls declared,—being
one of the town’s boys home on a leave
.pn +1
of absence, and held a Lewis gun, he was received with
wild cheers. A Jackie was perched on what was supposed
to be a conning-tower, apparently on the watch
for a submarine, while another soldier of the seas was
ramming an old cannon, which created much laughter.
It wasn’t much of a naval display, Nathalie thought
regretfully, but it was the best they could do with their
poor equipment, for these Daughters of Freedom were
resolved to give due honor to these brave guardians of
the sea.
A contingent of husky young chaps from Camp Mills
were lionized as soon as their khaki-clad figures were
sighted on the next float, which was marked, “Liberty
Boys.” A somewhat crude representation of a
trench, piled with sand-bags, with a few boys in tin
hats, with guns in their hands, clambering over it, represented
to the spectators an “Over the Top” scene.
In the rear of the trench a few soldiers were grouped
around a camp-fire, presumably in a rest billet, having
“eats.” Every moment or so a soldier on this float
would break forth into some war-song, which was
quickly taken up by his comrades, and which helped to
make the scene very realistic.
A small float with the Red Cross insignia, bearing
the words, “The Cross of Liberty,” with a few nurses
seated around a table making bandages, now appeared.
A white cot, with a soldier boy in it, suddenly silenced
the cheers,—it was so suggestive of what every heart
.pn +1
held in silent dread and fear, ever since the United
States had buckled to the fray.
But the sudden quiet was broken as the next, and
last, float hove in sight. It was so artistically gotten
up as a Liberty Garden, and represented so much freshness
and beauty with its Liberty Girls, each one dressed
to represent either a fruit or a vegetable, that it was
wildly cheered. Masses of fruit piled up here and
there peeped from bowers of green leaves, or hung in
festoons across the float. Potatoes, green and red peppers,
onions, cucumbers, and many other products of
the garden were lavishly in evidence. Carol, the Tike,
was arrayed as a pumpkin, a row of yellow leaves
standing above a bunch of green ones. Carrots, cucumbers,
turnips, even beans, beets, and strawberries
were ingeniously represented by crêpe paper.
But the love of every heart were the Morrow twins,
standing in the front of the float in blue overalls, wide-brimmed
hats, and blue shirts, with rakes and hoes in
their hands, as farmerettes, each one vigorously waving
a flag. This float completed the series of pictures
that Nathalie now felt had been duly admired, and she
smiled happily at the many plaudits that again burst
forth. But when the farmerettes and these living
representations of fruits and vegetables broke into[#]
.pn +1
.nf b
“Yes, we’ll rally round the farm, boys,
We’ll rally once again,
Shouting the battle cry of ‘Feed ’em.’
We’ve got the ships and money
And the best of fighting men,
Shouting the battle cry of ‘Feed ’em.’
“The Onion forever, the beans and the corn,
Down with the tater—it’s up the next morn—
While we rally round the plow, boys,
And take the hoe again,
Shouting the battle cry of ‘Feed ’em!’”
.nf-
it captured every heart present, and such prolonged applause
rent the air that Nathalie was duly satisfied.
As she turned to leave the grand-stand it seemed to
the tired girl as if every one in town stopped to shake
hands, and to congratulate her on the huge success
of the Liberty Pageant. When she finally arrived
home, it was some hours before she reached her
couch, for she found the family unduly excited, all
eagerly talking; no, not about the pageant, but about
a rather strange letter that had been received by Mrs.
Page that afternoon.
.fm
.fn #
“Liberty Enlightening the World,” E. C. Stedman.
.fn-
.fn #
“Rodney’s Ride.” Poems of American History. B. C. Stevenson.
.fn-
.fn #
“The Mecklenburg Declaration,” Wm. C. Elam.
.fn-
.fn #
“Patriotic Toasts,” Emerson Brooks.
.fn-
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch06
CHAPTER VI||THE STRANGE LETTER
.sp 2
“Oh, Helen, mother received the strangest letter
last night,” cried Nathalie suddenly the following
day, as she stood with her friend and
Nita in the Red Cross booth at the Liberty Sale.
“And I am afraid it means,” the girl’s eyes shadowed,
“that I shall have to resign as president of the club.”
“Resign?” exclaimed Helen and Nita simultaneously.
“Oh, Nathalie, you must not do that.”
“Well, I fear it will be necessary,” sighed the girl
dolefully, “for the home duties come first, especially
the duties to mother, and she wants to go—she really
needs the change—and—”
“Go where?” questioned Helen sharply. “Oh,
Nathalie, you are talking Dutch to us, and—”
“Sure she is,” voiced Nita quickly, “jumbling letters
and resignations all together in a very queer way.
Now suppose, young lady,” she commanded imperiously,
seizing her friend by the arm impulsively, “that
you unravel our tangled brains and tell us what you
are aiming at.”
“Well, I guess I shall have to, from the stew you
two girls have sizzled into,” replied Blue Robin laughingly.
.pn +1
“Well, as I said,” she continued more soberly,
“mother received a letter last night. But I shall have
to tell you a bit of family history, if you want to understand,”
she added hesitatingly.
As the two girls laughingly assured her that that
would only make her explanation more interesting,
Nathalie gathered up her threads and went on with
her story. “Father had an older half-sister, whose
mother—who came of very wealthy people in Boston—left
her all of her money, so that she was quite
wealthy, and in due time became very eccentric.
Father said she was spoiled with her pot of gold.
“She married when quite young and had one son,
who, shortly after the death of his father,—as soon as
he was graduated from college,—went to Europe, fell
in love with a pretty girl, and married her. I have
never heard the details of this marriage, but I believe
the girl was French. No, she may have been English;
anyway it was quite a romance, and the young couple
were quite happy.
“My aunt, however, was deeply wounded to think
that her only son, her idol, had spoiled all her plans
and married some one whom she considered beneath
him. So when Philip came to America with his young
wife, my aunt refused to see her. This angered him
so deeply that they quarreled, and Philip rushed from
his mother’s presence, declaring that she should never
see his face again.
.pn +1
“And she never did,” asserted Nathalie with grave
emphasis. “Presumably he immediately returned to
Europe with his young wife, for although Mrs. Renwick
soon repented of her folly, as father called it,
and wrote her son again and again, she heard nothing
from him. After employing detectives by the score
with no result, she finally went abroad and endeavored
herself to find some trace of him, but was not successful.
She finally returned to America and started to
seek him here, but found no clew to his whereabouts.
“As time passed—I think the matter preyed on
her mind—she began to have queer spells. No, she
wasn’t crazy, or anything like that, but just worried
and unhappy, going off alone by herself for months at
a time, presumably still trying to find her boy. After
a time she would return from one of these erratic journeys,
but she never told where she had been, and never
mentioned her son’s name.
“Now we have come to the letter mother received
yesterday. It was from my aunt’s lawyer, who summers
in Littleton, New Hampshire. You see, Mrs.
Renwick had considerable property in Boston and other
places, but she was very fond of the White Mountains
and always summered on Sugar Hill, where she had a
lovely place called Seven Pillars, only a few miles from
Littleton, and just a short distance from the mountain
village of Franconia.
“The lawyer,” continued Nathalie, who by this time
.pn +1
had quite an interested audience, “writes mother that
Aunt Mary went off on one of her queer jaunts over a
year ago and has not returned. In accordance with
her wishes,—she always leaves a letter of instruction
when she goes off this way,—mother and two cousins
of mine from the West have been invited to spend the
summer at this place on Sugar Hill. Mother wants to
go, and I feel that she needs the change, so I shall have
to go with her, and give up being a Liberty Girl.”
“But why should you have to go?” questioned Nita
insistently. “Couldn’t your cousin, Lucille, or your
sister, Dorothy, go with her? And then, oh, Nathalie,
you could stay with us! Oh, that would be the dandiest
thing! Oh, say yes, Nathalie; say yes.”
“Yes, Nita,” smiled Nathalie teasingly, as she
placed her arm affectionately about the young girl, “it
would be just dandy, as you say, for indeed I would
like a rest myself this summer, because when the warm
weather comes, housework does drag on one so. But
Lucille is going to California to visit some cousins of
hers, and has planned to take Dorothy with her. Dorothy
is wild to go, and mother would not disappoint the
child for the world. And then, too, the lawyer wrote
mother that I was to come with her, as my aunt had
given instructions. Oh, I just hate to give up my Liberty
work!”
“But you will be back in the fall, Nathalie,” suggested
Helen, “so why not let Lillie Bell take
.pn +1
charge—she is vice-president—for the summer? It will
give her something to think about, too, for she is possessed
with the idea of going on the stage, and her
mother is worrying herself ill over it.”
“Lillie wants to go on the stage?” repeated Nathalie
in surprise. “Why, I didn’t know she had aspirations
in that line. But do you think she would care to take
charge of the club? O dear!” she broke off abruptly,
“we had planned to do so many things this summer.”
The girl’s voice was almost a wail.
“Why not carry your plans to the mountains with
you,” inquired her friend, “and form a club of Liberty
Girls up there? I am sure there will be some one who
will be glad to belong, and you have such a fine way of
getting people interested in things, Nathalie.”
“Possibly mother may change her mind and decide
not to go,” returned Nathalie, brightening a little, “for
she wants to be near Dick; you know he is now stationed
at the Aviation Camp, Hazlehurst, at Mineola,
near Camp Mills. And then, too, she says she hates
to leave the house alone for so long a period.”
“Why don’t you rent the house for the summer?”
suggested Helen practically. “You know that Westport
is getting to be quite a summer-resort since the
new hotel was built on the bluff.”
“No such good luck for us, I’m afraid,” answered
Nathalie dejectedly, “but I’ll look up Lillie and see
what—” But Helen had hurried away in answer to a
.pn +1
call for the captain of the Red Cross Squad. Nathalie
stood a moment watching her friend, as she helped one
of the “white-veiled” girls into her white head-covering,
starred with its cross, and then went slowly out of
the booth.
As her eyes swept over the lawn in search of Lillie
her glance fell upon the little flag with its Red Cross
insignia floating cheerily from the top of the booth she
had just left, as if in a salute to its companion cross
placed below on the front, so that its arms stretched
outward, dividing the booth into two sections.
Ah, here was the poster drawn by Barbara Worth
representing a Red Cross nurse standing by an invalid chair,
in which sat a soldier boy with bandaged eyes.
The girl’s face saddened at its implication, and then she
had bent forward and was reading the placard persuasively
held forth by the nurse, on which was written:
.nf b
“Please buy a Liberty bond of me,
It’s for the soldiers across the sea,
Bravely fighting to make the world free,
Wounded, and dying, for you and me.”
.nf-
But now her eyes were held by the poster of a white-robed
figure,—representing the Spirit of Liberty
which had heralded the pageant of the day before,—waving
a flag victoriously above her head, while holding
a shield with the Biblical quotation:
.nf b
“I have fought a good fight ... I have kept the faith.”
.nf-
.pn +1
The face of this water-color sketch of Freedom,
although bearing no resemblance to Nita’s, was so
bright with hope that it thrilled the girl’s heart with
the suggestion that the Allies, by their faith in God
and their desire to do right, would finally win a victory
over sin and wrong.
At this moment she heard the voice of Nita as she
called her to come and see the display of small dolls,
miniature Red Cross nurses, to be used as weights,
door-holders, or pincushions, which were on sale.
But some real dolls, as Nita called them, proved more
interesting to Nathalie, because they were the work of
a shut-in, as her bit towards winning the war, and because
they were impersonations of some of the crowned
heads of the allied nations. They were queer little
things, stiff and stilted-looking, although several were
excellent imitations, especially those of their majesties,
King George and Queen Mary, and the little Princess
Marie of Belgium.
The girl could not forbear giving Shep—a big,
tawny-colored collie belonging to the Morrow twins—a
love-pat, as he stood in front of the booth with
red-hanging tongue and patient resignation in his
brown eyes, while several young nurses fussed over
him. They were trying to fasten a strip of white cloth
around the center of his body, with a red cross on each
side, in imitation of a war-dog who had served with a
Red Cross hospital in France, and who had become
.pn +1
famous by his acts of bravery, running into shell-holes
and dug-outs in search of wounded soldiers.
But Shep was no patriot, and evidently did not realize
the honor of that big red cross, for suddenly he gave
his huge body a shake, slipped from beneath the fussing
fingers, and bounded away after his young masters,
leaving a gentle friend to humanity lying sprawling on
the grass.
As Nathalie turned, her eyes traveled slowly from
one booth to another. There were seven of them,
three on the left and three on the right of the Red
Cross booth, which was in the center of the lawn, at
one end, fronting its sister booths. The war booth,
on the left, ablaze with the flags of the Allies, was
curiously decorated on its front and posts with the
paper coverings from magazines and books. On its
counter were displayed the latest war books,—all donated
after a sharp drive by the hostesses, the Camp
Fire Girls, who wore embroidered deerskin robes aglisten
with many-colored beads, and trench-caps stuck
jauntily on one side of their heads, which gave them
a very coquettish and natty appearance.
Scrap-books, in which were pasted funny verses, tidbits
of news from all over the world, with many-colored
pictures, and songs and rhymes to amuse the convalescents
in the hospitals, were also on sale. Little
candles of paper added to the attractiveness of this
booth’s display, while one or two Camp Fire Girls were
.pn +1
in attendance, who, on the payment of a nickel, taught
the uninitiated the knack of making these trench-candles.
But the booth that held the first place in Nathalie’s
heart was the Liberty-Garden booth, a leaf-embowered
tent. Here were brilliant splashes of color from the
vegetables piled on wicker mats, as carrots, turnips,
beans, onions, beets, and other products, artistically
softened by the light green of lettuce, the red of beet-leaves,
and the delicate, lacy leaves of the carrot.
Here and there herbs tied in bunches, as thyme, caraway
seeds, catnip, sweet lavender, and other herbs,
suggested the days of long ago, when these little garden
accessories held a higher place with the housewife
as necessities of the day. Unwieldy tomatoes and potatoes,
lazily resting on plates, added to the picturesque
effect of the display, as well as the festoons of peppers,
radishes, parsnips, and vegetables of similar character
that were hung from side to side of the tent.
This booth was certainly a brilliant showing of the
work done by the Pioneers. Oh, how they had
scrubbed and polished those vegetables to bring out
their colors, so they would not be messy or huddled-looking!
And the time it had taken to print the little
labels so neatly fastened to each exhibit!
Yes, through the sweat of her brow Nathalie had
come to realize that gardening was not merely a matter
of digging, plowing, or even planting or weeding,
.pn +1
but that it meant straying into many paths of
knowledge that hitherto had been closed to her. Then,
too, there was the trench warfare, as she called the unceasing
onslaught against the bugs, insects, and garden slugs,
by a constant fire of hand-grenades and bombs, as
the girls had come to call the spraying and powdering
of the plants.
Ah, there was Lillie, with a number of Girl Pioneers,
who, in bright-colored overalls and shirt-waists, and
coquettish little sunbonnets tied under their chins,
were rather gay editions of farmerettes, as they stood
in picturesque attitudes, with their rakes and hoes.
But a moment later Lillie was forgotten, for as Nathalie
reached the booth she burst into a sudden squeal of
delight on suddenly perceiving, on the top of a wall of
canned vegetables, a little green imp, ingeniously made
from a string-bean. He not only had a most rakish
air, with his tiny soldier-hat cocked on one side, as he
stood at attention with a flag for a gun, but he held
forth a little placard on which was written:
.nf b
“Little Beans, little Beans, whence did you come?”
“We came from the ground at the sound of the drum.”
“Little Beans, little Beans, why are you here?”
“We were scalded and canned by a Girl Pioneer.”
.nf-
“Oh, who wrote that?” merrily inquired the girl of
one of the Pioneers, for it was something she had not
seen before.
“Why, one of the Pioneer directors,” answered the
.pn +1
farmerette smilingly, pleased at the young president’s
surprise.
A moment’s inspection of the fine display of canned
goods, and Nathalie turned to seek Lillie, but that
young lady had mysteriously disappeared. One of the
girls, suggesting that Lillie had gone to the Liberty Tea
booth to regale herself with a cup of tea, Nathalie hurried
on to that booth, where the Daughters of Liberty,
attired in quaint, old-time costumes, dispensed that beverage.
But Lillie was not drinking tea, and again Nathalie
hurried across the lawn, on her way to the opposite
booth, a mass of vines and flowers, the result of the labors
of the Girl Scouts in their garden, which they had
named the Garden of Freedom.
Ah, here was Lillie talking to a brown-clad soldier-boy
by the big Liberty pole that had been erected in the
center of the lawn, facing the Red Cross booth. It
flew the Stars and Stripes and the club’s ensign, a little
red banner blazoned with the white stars of hope, while
a big liberty bell was hung from a cross-beam. On its
flag-bedecked platform Carol Tyke was stationed as the
bell-ringer, for later in the afternoon she was to strike
the big bell to announce some patriotic speech, or fiery
oration, to be made in a sharp drive to sell the Liberty
bonds.
Lillie, seeing Nathalie coming in her direction, advanced
towards her, and immediately presented her
.pn +1
soldier-friend, and in a few moments the three young
people were having a sprightly chat. But Nathalie,
soon recalled to the business on hand, turned and told
the young vice-president why she was so anxious to see
her.
“Yes; yes, indeed, Nathalie,” cried the girl quickly.
“I am Hooverizing this summer, and as I do not expect
to leave town until late in the fall, I shall be most
delighted to accept the office of acting president for the
summer.”
A few moments later, relieved of her anxiety as to
what would become of the Liberty Girls in case she
went to the mountains, Nathalie thanked her friend,
and hastened over to the Garden of Freedom, where
nasturtiums, pink poppies, sweet peas, phlox, and other
old-fashioned blooms peered at her in a riotous flaunt
of color.
The Girl Scouts, who were charmingly gotten up to
represent flowers, beamed with pleasure as their president
complimented them on the splendid display they
made, and the honor they had won by their hard labor.
They not only sold cut flowers, but potted plants, as well
as toothsome sweets, made without sugar, they declared,
as they coaxingly tempted Nathalie to sample
a few.
But she had time only for a nibble or two, and then
she was off to the knitting booth, where a bewildering
assortment of sweaters, helmets, mufflers, socks, and
.pn +1
other knitted articles stared at her in a “homespuney”
sort of way that reminded her of her grandmother.
She remembered how, as a child, she used to watch her
as she sat by the fire knitting, and the fun it was when
the ball went rolling under the table and she scrambled
after it.
No, she could not hurry by this booth, for Marie’s
eyes, big but shy, and bright with a beautiful soft blackness,
shone so pleadingly from the clear pallor of her
ivory-tinted skin, that they could not be resisted.
“Oh, Mees President,” cried the girl in her soft musical
voice, “I shall tell somethings on you. I likes that
you look at mine table—iss it not shmardt, hein? My
mamma she says it iss stylish. Shure, und the peoples—oh,
they buys und buys lots and lots of sweaters,
und mufflers, und the helmets—yiss, ma’am, they have
a glad on them, for they go fast mit the wind.”
“Yes, isn’t it lovely, Marie,” returned Nathalie, smiling
into the limpid eyes, “to think that every one is so
patriotic, and so anxious to make the soldier-boys who
are to fight for us, happy and comfortable?”
“Shure, Mees, that iss because they are lovin’ much
mit the liberty. Oh, here comes mine papa. He buys
sweater of me. I likes that you speak mit mine papa,
Mees,” exclaimed the little Jewess shyly, as her eyes
again pleaded with Nathalie.
The young president turned, to see a rather
crumpled, mussy-looking little man by her side, who
.pn +1
stared at her with sudden embarrassment as she
quickly extended her hand in a cordial greeting to him.
Mr. Katzkamof seized the outstretched hand and
shook it nervously, while his bright black eyes beamed
with good-natured surprise. “I be glad to meet young
Mees,” he cried hurriedly, “who makes mine little girl
be so happy. She sing, she smile all the day mit the
liberty that you gives to her.”
“But I didn’t give it to her,” answered Nathalie
quickly. “God gave it to her. I am only trying to
show her how to give it to those who haven’t learned
what liberty means. But you,” she added quickly,
“you are an American,—you love the liberty, too?”
The girl raised her eyebrows inquiringly, somewhat
frightened at her temerity, for she suddenly remembered
that she had heard Edith say that the newsdealer
was a fiery socialist.
“Yes, Mees, I be an American. I vote for the
President. But I no like the war,” the black eyes
hardened. “It makes me cold in mine heart. I think
it no right for the people to fight mit one und the other,
likes the cat und the dog. They spill much of the
blood. I am lovin’ mit the peace. I no fight.”
“Yes, it is a terrible thing to have to fight and kill
one another,” replied the girl sadly. “And the mothers,—oh,
I feel so sorry for them, when they have to
give up their boys to go and fight. But it must be
done,” she added valiantly, although there was a catch
.pn +1
in her breath as the thought of Dick came to her.
“Oh, no, Mees, if all the people say no fight, they be
no soldiers, they be no war, we have the peace.”
“Yes, but what kind of a peace,” exclaimed the girl.
And then a sudden thought looming big. “Ah, Mr.
Katzkamof, you love the Christ. Did He not die to
make men free? Shall we not die to give liberty to the
world?”
“No, Mees, I ain’t lovin’ mit Krisht. I make nothings
mit Him.” The man’s tone was surly, although
he shrugged his shoulders carelessly.
“I beg your pardon,” cried Nathalie with reddening
cheeks. And then, as if to recover lost ground. “But
you believe in God, your God, the God who brought the
Israelites dry-shod over the Red Sea? And did He
not command you to fight and drive out the enemies of
God, the heathen, who did not serve him, and who
were in the Promised Land? And is not the Kaiser a
Hun, a heathen, when he tortures and kills little children
and women? Yes,” continued Blue Robin, impelled
by some indefinable feeling to rush blindly on,
“this is God’s war. He has commanded us to fight, to
do away with tyranny and oppression. They must be
overcome, so that all the world shall have liberty, and
then,—why then we shall have peace, a peace that the
Germans can’t destroy.” And then Nathalie smiled,
although her heart was leaping in great bounds at her
sudden boldness. But another thought had come, and,
.pn +1
turning towards her companion, for she had turned to
leave him, she added smilingly, “And I am sure that
you are big-hearted enough to be willing to fight, so
that you can give to others the liberty that gives so
much happiness to you.”
The man’s eyes had brightened with a sudden
strange light, and he opened his mouth to reply, but
Nathalie had passed on, angry at herself for being so
outspoken. But O dear! she felt so sorry for those
poor ignorant people, who thought and did violent
things just because they couldn’t reason, and didn’t understand.
But she had reached the Love booth, the name given
by the girls to the tent where the comfort-kits were
sold. By a pile on a seat in the rear she knew that
business had been brisk, and that people had not only
donated kits and then bought them back again, but had
patriotically returned them to the sellers, so that they
could be given to the soldier-boys.
Blue Robin stood a moment and watched the girls,
who, busy as bees, were selling their wares, as they
chatted merrily over their sales, and then she turned to
cross the lawn to the Red Cross booth. She had not
gone more than a step or so, however, when a sudden
clang of the liberty bell brought her to a halt. Oh,
some one had bought a Liberty bond; yes, three bonds,
for the three clangs of the bell announced the number
sold. Oh, it was still ringing! What did it mean?
.pn +1
She started to rush towards the booth where the
bonds were being sold, and then glanced back at the
booth she had just left, to see that the girls, in their
eagerness to know who was buying so many bonds,—for
the bell was still clanging,—had dropped their
work and were rushing in frantic haste towards the
booth.
Nathalie smiled, and turned to follow after the group
of girls who were speeding past her, when a sudden
thought leaped into her mind. She halted and again
glanced back at the Comfort-Kit booth. Not a girl
was to be seen. Ah, now was her chance to get rid
of that letter. The next moment she had turned and
was flying back to the now deserted booth.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch07
CHAPTER VII||THE VISIT TO CAMP MILLS
.sp 2
As Nathalie reached the booth she glanced quickly
about; no one was in sight. With a hurried
movement she drew a letter from the bag that
hung from her wrist, and after glancing at the written
words, “To whomsoever this Comfort Kit may come,
greetings and good wishes,” she slipped out the enclosure
and slowly read:
.in +4
.ll -4
“Dear Mr. Soldier Boy:
“Please remember that you are going to fight under
the banner of the Cross, which means that you belong
to a Christian nation whose motto is, ‘In God we
Trust.’ Hold to the feeling that you are a gentleman
by the culture—not ‘Kultur’—that comes from kindliness,
courtesy, and consideration for all people, so
please don’t kill anybody unless you have to.
“Don’t forget that you are an American patriot, and
that your heart is seared with the Stars and Stripes,
which means the red of courage, the white of purity,
and the blue of royal devotion to the right, and starred
with the divine fire of liberty.
“Remember you are fighting for the mothers and
children: yes, fighting so the mothers and children of
all nations may have liberty and peace. Be strong and
.pn +1
brave in the thought that this war is to maintain the
principles back of our flag, the ideals given to us by the
founders of this nation. As Christ died to make men
holy, so these men suffered and shed their blood that
you might have the joy and independence that comes
from the liberty which God has given to us. Be happy
with the thought that no matter what comes to you
you will not have lived in vain, but will have fought
for the grandest and greatest things in life,—liberty
and humanity. The best of luck to you,
.rj
“Blue Robin.”
.in -4
.ll +4
Nathalie returned the letter to the envelope, and then
rummaged under a pile of kits that had been filled and
fastened, ready for the boys at camp, until she found
one way down beneath the pile. She quickly opened it.
Then something stayed her hand.
“No, it will not be a wicked thing to do, for it can’t
do any harm,” she reasoned doubtfully; “and yet I
just hate to do it, but I feel that I must do something
to try to help some boy, who, perhaps, has a lagging
spirit, whose heart may fail him when he thinks of
what is before him, or who, perhaps, fails to realize the
greatness of what we are fighting for, the way I did.
This letter may spur him on, give him courage to do
his best, perhaps, when he realizes the truth. And no
one will know who Blue Robin is, and yet it will do for
a name, as mother always says it is not considered fair
to send an anonymous letter to any one, and I surely
would not sign my own.”
Nathalie heaved a deep sigh, and then, as if she
.pn +1
would not let herself have any more misgivings, she
seized the letter and dropped it into the bag. A moment
later she was on her way to the Red Cross booth,
to learn who had won the prize for buying the first Liberty
bond.
“Oh, Nathalie, Dr. Morrow bought fifteen bonds!”
came in an excited chorus from a group of girls, who
were standing in front of the booth, chatting excitedly
over this unlooked-for event.
“Fifteen? Oh, isn’t that just too lovely,” answered
the girl. And then she hastily made her way towards
the Morrow group, where the doctor, with the twins
clinging excitedly to his coat-tails,—trying to climb up
his back, he declared,—was signing the bond-certificate
that made each one of them the possessor of five
bonds, and his wife the owner of five more.
A Liberty button was now fastened to the doctor’s
coat as a guarantee that he was a good patriot, and
then he was presented with the prize, a box of Liberty
candy from the Girl Scouts’ booth, something he never
indulged in, he laughingly asserted, as he stood with
the box in his hand, lookingly helplessly at it. But the
twins did, and they quickly relieved him of it and were
soon blissfully happy as they munched on the sweets.
A good beginning must have brought the girls good
luck, for as soon as Mrs. Van Vorst heard of this sale
she followed the doctor’s example and invested in ten
bonds, five for herself and five for Nita. A few more
.pn +1
followed suit, some buying two or three, while others
only took one, but every little helped, the girl delightedly
cried, jubilantly happy at the many sales they were
having. And then a surprise came, as her cousin Lucille
pushed her way through those surrounding the
booth, and bought three bonds,—one for herself, one
for Dorothy, and one for Nathalie.
“Oh, Lucille, don’t do that!” cried distressed Nathalie
with flushed cheeks. “It is too much to give
me.”
“Indeed, it is not,” insisted Lucille smilingly, who
could be very generous at times, as her cousin knew by
the gift of her Pioneer uniform. “I think you have
worked hard enough for these Liberty Girls to have
that much at any rate.” And several must have agreed
with her,—judging by the nods and claps that came
from those who were standing near and heard this remark.
As Nathalie, sometime later, sat gathering up her
certificates,—she had been kept busy all the afternoon
making out the little blue and pink receipts that certified
as to her many sales,—Lillie came flying up.
“Oh, Nathalie, hasn’t it been a big success!” she
cried with gleaming eyes. “And the patriotic speeches
and recitations have been just fine. But, O dear!” she
added with a sudden note of disappointment in her
voice, “there are a lot of things that have not been
sold. Of course they will all go to the boys at camp,
.pn +1
but I was in hopes that everything would be sold, so
as to add to our fund for the bonds.” For those who
had purchased that afternoon had patriotically returned
the things they had bought, as their donation for the
boys at camp, thus giving the girls an opportunity to
use the purchase money for Liberty bonds.
“Yes, we have several sweaters and mufflers left,”
announced Barbara, who had been talking to Nathalie,
“and poor Captain Molly is quite disappointed, as she
was so sure that we should sell everything we had.”
“And we have a number of flowers and potted plants
that have not been disposed of,” added a Girl Scout in
a disappointed voice.
“But we can give those to the hospital,” answered
Nathalie quickly, “and give some sorrowful heart a
bit of cheer.”
“Well, we have some boxes of candy, too,” added
the Girl Scout dolefully, “and they won’t do for the
sick ones for—”
“And we have some books left over,” interrupted
another bystander.
“Oh, I have an idea, a big one, too,” broke in
Helen, her eyes all of a glow. “Why could we not
have an auction sale? Of course a good many will return
what they buy,—and I think it will be lots of
fun.”
This idea was voted a good one, and a few minutes
later Dr. Morrow announced from the Liberty platform
that he was to act as auctioneer. A few brief
.pn +1
words of explanation and the auction was on. First a
box of candy was bid for, which, after much laughter,
was finally knocked down for one dollar, a much
larger sum than it would have brought earlier in the
afternoon. A few books were now disposed of, a
pile of canned vegetables, a number of comfort-kits,
and so on, until everything, even to the posters and
decorations, had been auctioned off.
As the girls were counting up the proceeds of this
expected sale, old Deacon Perkins came up, and,
after a few hems and haws, told the girls that if they
wanted to make a raid on his cherry-trees the next
morning, they could do so, and carry the fruit to the
boys. They were to visit Camp Mills the following
afternoon, and present their many donations to the
young soldiers.
“Oh, isn’t that jolly good luck!” “Oh, that’s just
glorious!” and many similar outbursts of joy caused
the old deacon to beam with complacent benignity.
The Sport, with a little giggle, whispered to Lillie that
she knew old Perkins had never felt so goody-goody in
his life before,—he was called the meanest man in
town.
“Yes, girls,” admonished Nathalie, after the old
deacon had been overwhelmed with thanks, and had
gone smilingly on his way, “you will all have to get
up very early to-morrow morning if you want those
cherries, for you know we are to start for Mineola at
.pn +1
an early hour, for it is some drive. Mrs. Morrow
kindly offered me her car, so I asked her to be one of
the chaperons. Mrs. Van Vorst is the other, and then
Grace, you know, will take some of the party in her car.
“I am sorry,” her face sobered a little, “but there
will only be room in the three cars for the officers of the
Club, and,—yes, I think we ought to ask Marie, Captain
Molly,” she explained, “to ride with us, for you
know, of course, that she can’t walk far. The rest of
you girls will have to go by train, that is, those who
want to go.”
“But we all want to go,” called out several voices
eagerly, “and we expected to go by train, for Lillie
and Helen have given us a time-table, so we shall know
just what to do, and we’ll meet you at the camp.”
The raid on the cherry-trees proved “a lark,” Edith
declared, as, an hour or so before the girls started in
the cars, she and Grace whizzed up in the car, filled
with several baskets of cherries. A little later the
three cars started for the camp, passing two or three
groups of the girls on the road, en route for the depot.
But they were soon left far behind as the cars whirled
along the Merrick road, every one in the best of spirits,
the little newsdealer so buoyantly happy to think that
she was riding in the same car with the young president,
that it did one good to look at her face, keenly
aglow with delight.
.pn +1
Nathalie’s eyes were sparkling, too, for the little
Jewess had just cried, “Bend down your head, Mees
President, for I likes I shall whisper mit you in your
ear.” And then, as the girl had smilingly complied,
she heard the happy announcement, “My papa, he says
like that you iss my friend, und so my papa he buy me
a Liberty bond, for he says you are loving now mit
me.” The owner of the pink ear into which these
words had been loudly whispered, dimpled with pleasure,
and then came the thought, “O dear, I wonder if
my little liberty lecture had anything to do with papa’s
buying the bond?”
There was a short stop at the Military Police guardhouse,
to learn the way around the encampment, where
several soldier-boys, with the big letters M. P. on their
arms, were viewed with much curiosity by the girls. A
call at the hostess house now followed, where the gifts
for the soldiers—the knitted articles, the books, candy,
and fruits—were left, the girls reserving the baskets
of cherries to distribute to the boys themselves.
The slow ride through the encampment, with its
streets flanked by brown and white tents, reminded
Nathalie somewhat of an Indian encampment, and she
gazed about with eager interest, as this was her first
visit to an army post. The girls were specially interested
in the prisoners,—two or three men here and
there guarded by a soldier-boy,—who were acting as
.pn +1
White Wings by gathering up flying papers, or débris
of any kind lying about, while other groups were digging
ditches or performing similar duties.
“But see,” cried one of the girls, “the prisoners
carry clubs, while the guard in the rear hasn’t any.”
“No, but he carries an automatic pistol in his trousers’
pocket,” answered Mrs. Morrow quickly, who had
visited the camp many times; “and if he should fire it,
a crowd of soldiers would immediately surround the
prisoners and disarm them. And then, too,” she
added, “you must remember that these prisoners, as a
rule, are not real jailbirds, but just young, thoughtless
lads who have probably been punished for what we
would consider a very slight misdemeanor.”
But they were now in what Mrs. Morrow called the
“chow” quarters, that is, where the mess-tents were.
It was quite an interesting sight to see a long line of
soldiers, with their plates, cups, and pans in their
hands, standing waiting for the “eats” at one of these
tents.
The girls, alert-eyed, watched them with more than
the usual curiosity, for when they were supplied with
food they came straggling out of the line with their
“chow” and sat down here and there in groups, while
others sat down on the street-curb and began their
meal, using their laps for a table. This elicited many
exclamations of surprise, especially when their director
told them that Uncle Sam’s soldiers were not
.pn +1
allowed to sit at tables, but had to dine standing.
Their denunciation of this system and their expressions
of pity were loud, but when they were told that it was
these very hardships to which a boy had to be inured
that made him a well-trained soldier, they became
somewhat reconciled to what they had seen.
Just at this moment a sudden inspiration came to
Nathalie, and, leaning forward, she whispered softly to
Mrs. Morrow. That lady smiled and nodded approval
evidently, and immediately brought the car to a standstill
so that Nathalie and Helen could alight. Going
swiftly towards a couple of boys who were sitting on
the curb, their eyes bright and keen, and their faces
tanned to a rich brown, Nathalie said, somewhat timidly,
“I beg your pardon, but wouldn’t you young gentlemen—er—soldiers—”
she hastily corrected herself
laughingly, “like to have some cherries to eat with
your dinner?”
“Most assuredly we would,” responded one of the
lads, a tall broad-shouldered chap with dark hair, from
whose sun-tanned face two dark-lashed eyes looked
down at her, with a half-smile in their blue. The boys
had courteously risen and were standing at attention
when the girl spoke.
Nathalie’s cheeks took on a deeper pink, and then she
turned, and the two girls walked back to the car with
the boys in their wake. But unfortunately, as she attempted
to lift one of the heavy baskets over the edge
.pn +1
of the car, something jarred her elbow, and the next
moment the basket had fallen to the ground with the
cherries rolling all over the road.
There was a loud shout from the boys, and then a
dozen or more khaki-clad figures had rushed to the
girl’s assistance, and presently soldier-boys and girls
were all scrambling about in the dust of the road, gathering
up the fruit. Indeed, by the time it was replaced
in the basket,—for, of course, the girls had to polish
off the dust from the luscious red fruit—they had all
become very merry with one another.
Several minutes later, as the car whirled around the
corner of the long street, they saw the soldier lads
gathered about the basket, while laughing and joking
with one another in good-natured banter. Suddenly
one of the boys looked up, and as he spied the now disappearing
car he took off his cap and waved it in a
parting salute. Nathalie smiled back, for she recognized
this good-by as coming from the boy with the
dark-lashed, blue eyes.
“Wasn’t that young solider a handsome boy?”
queried one of the girls admiringly, as the car flew
along the level road. “And what lovely blue eyes he
had.”
“Yes, and that boy with the light hair was nice-looking,
too,” chimed in Helen. “He had such a frank
way of looking you right in the eye. I’ll warrant you
he’s no coward.”
.pn +1
But the cherries and the boys in the “chow” quarters
were forgotten as the girls drove by a group of
buglers, who were sitting on the grass near a large
tent, practicing on their bugles. Every eye was curiously
watchful as the three cars went slowly past, for
Mrs. Morrow, who was driving, had slowed up as she
saw “the camp alarm-clocks,” as she called them.
Every head was bent forward and eyes grew big with
alertness, for had the girls not set out that morning
with the avowed intention of not missing anything
worth seeing, and surely a group of soldier buglers was
an interesting feature of the camp.
They were a merry-eyed crowd, those boys with
their happy, care-free faces under the brown hats with
their gay-colored cords. All on undress parade, Helen
declared, as she noted their brown flannel blouses and
belts, as they knelt or stood upon the grass, blowing on
their golden horns as Captain Molly called their brass
instruments.
Evidently they were not worrying about going overseas,
or losing their lives in No Man’s Land, but were
good examples of live-wire American lads, with the
grit inherited from their ancestors, the Yanks, inspiring
them to make good when called by Uncle Sam
to the job of making war.
The girls were alert and watchful, as they spied into
open tents, or behind flying flaps, at the rows of tiny
white cots, or at a few stray articles of clothing seen
.pn +1
here and there, yes, even a pair of shoes set out in the
sun to dry were objects of their silent adoration as
they swung along the road.
But now the scene had changed as they whirled
along, for, instead of tents, the streets were lined with
little wooden houses, or cabins, the barracks of the
United States Aviation School at Mineola, which adjoined
Camp Mills. A stop at the hostess house was
next in order, where a call was sent in for Dick.
Twenty minutes later Nathalie was blithesomely
happy, as she and her brother, over in a corner of the
little wooden building, chatted about home news,—how
mother was getting along, yes, and about the wonderful
events that had occurred in the last few days.
Then Nathalie turned inquisitor, and Dick was subjected
to a series of questions in regard to his life as a
war-eagle. In fact Nathalie’s questions were so many
and so swiftly put that her brother declared that one
would have thought that he was being interviewed by
some expert reporter.
Yes, reveille was at five in the morning, followed in
half an hour by breakfast. His sister immediately
asked, somewhat anxiously, if he got enough to eat.
“You bet your life I do,” was Dick’s laughing rejoinder.
“The ‘eats’ are O. K.—nothing to be
added. At six,” he continued, “I report at headquarters
for flying, and then, with an instructor, learn a
few flying stunts. I return to barracks at ten, and
.pn +1
from eleven until two-thirty have a ‘do-as-you-please
time,’ which includes luncheon, and, generally, a nap,
for, by Jove!” exclaimed the young aviator, “this
flying business makes a fellow feel drowsy.
“Then we drill for a while, listen to a lecture,” he
went on, “and then again for a space I am a bird of
the air. We dine about half-after eight, and at ten
comes taps, or ‘lights out.’ Anything more you would
like to know, young lady?” he inquired teasingly.
But Nathalie was satisfied, for surely her brother’s
ruddy cheeks, tanned skin, and glowing eyes attested
to what he called the “joy-time of his life,” and a few
moments later the little party started for the aviation
field.
Here Dick conducted them around the field and
showed them many kinds of aircraft, as aëroplanes,
dirigibles, kite-balloons, serviceable in war; in fact,
they were so well instructed as to the uses and
mechanism of so many different machines that Mrs.
Morrow declared that they would be well-versed in
aëronautics. But the little personal stories that Dick
told about the heroism of well-known war-eagles over
in France made a stronger appeal to the girls, especially
when he explained the several varieties of aviators and
their special work.
To the girls’ disappointment there was no flying going
on while they were on the field, but they were partly
appeased when Dick showed them a group of students,
.pn +1
aviation observers, he called them, who were learning
to sketch from a miniature battlefield, and in this way
learn how it would look from the air. As they were
about to leave the field they saw some students bringing
out a machine, to get it ready for flying, as testing the
motor and so on.
At this particular moment one of the girls uttered
a sudden cry, and as all eyes glanced upward with
newly awakened eagerness, they were rewarded by seeing
an aëroplane returning from a training flight.
As Nathalie gazed eagerly at the machine that flew like
some strange monster above their heads, the perils of
flying in space came to her with a sudden, keen realization,
and, with a sickening pang as to what might happen
to Dick some day, her eyes darkened with apprehensive
terror and she turned hastily away. But Dick,
catching sight of the girl’s pale face and fear-haunted
eyes, as if to divert her mind from dismal forebodings,
called attention to the camp mascot, a little yellow police-dog,
who was standing by his master, equipped,
like him, with goggles. The girls were soon laughing
heartily as Dick told of the dog’s alertness in doing
“stunts,” and the eagerness he showed when waiting
to take a flight in one of the machines.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch08
CHAPTER VIII||SEVEN PILLARS
.sp 2
Nathalie, seated in a low chair at one end of
the broad white veranda, gazed with rapt intentness
at the sun-hazed landscape, rising in
green, undulating waves against the purple blur of the
towering mountain-heights, that stretched in wide expanse
before her, with a strange, mystical beauty.
Into her eyes, city-tired, came rest, as they swept
over the velvet green of the meadow, splashed with the
bloom of wild flowers, its scrubby bushes aglow with
pink spires, and its spruces and maples standing upright
with the slimness of youth, as it sloped gently down to
the glen below. The trees of the glen, closely massed
in a rich, feathery green, sombered by the darker line
of the pines and firs, to the girl seemed weird and mysterious.
Her eyes quickly gathered in the stillness of the sunny
slopes that rose from the darker hollow in squares of
yellow cornfields, or the light green of unripe wheat or
grain, and the brown of mountain meadow-land, dotted
with browsing cows. Here and there a lone farmhouse
.pn +1
stood forth on some higher knoll, or, from a
background of forest land, came the bright red of a
solitary barn; while still higher, a hotel, its gables and
chimneys spying upward, glimmered picturesquely
from the green. And beyond all, high and dark, with
majestic brooding silences, rose the jagged ridge of
mountain blue, its peaks looming with a strange distinctness
against the clear, soft blue of the sky, while
sweeps of white cloudlets trailed like films of spun silk
across their tops.
The girl closed her eyes as if to imprint upon her
subconsciousness the rare loveliness of the scene, and
then, as if fearful that in some passing, whimsical
mood the picture would flash out of view, she opened
them quickly. At that moment a passing breeze fluttered
the pages of a letter lying on a table by her side.
With sudden recollection she caught them up, and then
as if to impress upon her mind what she had written, in
a soft, low tone read:
.in +4
.ll -4
“Dear Helen:
“I presume you are now in glorious La France, wondering
why you have not heard from me. But my excuse
is this magnificent mountain scenery, and my new
duties, which have taken every minute of my time until
to-day. We came up on the fifteenth from New
York. Mother knitted and read during the ten-hour
ride, while I wished inexpressibly good things for
Mrs. Van Vorst for renting our little dovecote, and
planned liberty work. I have decided to adopt the
.pn +1
club’s motto, ‘Liberty and Humanity—our best,’
for the summer’s watchword. As it means to try and
be helpful and kind to people, whether I like them or
not, wish me success, for I have undertaken something
big.
“Mr. Banker, my aunt’s lawyer, met us at the Littleton
station with his car. He is a tall, lean man, but
his brown eyes have a quizzical gleam in them that
makes you feel that you are affording him some amusement.
The seven-mile ride up one mountain slope and
down another, in the shade of the woods that gloomed
dark and weird on each side of the road, with the hush
of the gloaming in their moist depths, was most enjoyable.
“From out of their rustling shadows the white
birches and poplars peered at us like ghosts, while the
resinous aroma from the pines made us sniff with delight.
Mountain villages with a straggle of white cottages,
and grizzly gray churches in a setting of purple
mountain-peaks, strangely somber and still, as they
stood forth from feathery masses of clouds tinted with
sunset’s glow, with gossamer wreaths of mist floating
above them, stilled us to a mute ecstasy of sheer joy.
“Stone gate-posts, beds of old-time posies, backed
by cobble-stone walls with hedges of green, and a little
white house, like a keeper’s lodge, peered curiously out
of the silver shadows of the rising moon as we whizzed
up the roadway to Seven Pillars, and came to a stop under
the porte-cochère of a large, white mansion, set on
a green knoll, facing the rocky heights of far-distant
mountains. Here square glass lanterns threw yellowish
gleams on the wide, low veranda, with its seven
magic pillars,—round, fluted columns reaching high
above the second-story windows, as with lofty stateliness
they held the pointed dome above the portico.
.pn +1
“Passing through the quaint, white-columned doorway,
with its tiny panes of glass and shiny brass
knocker, we stood, dazed and tired, in a broad, gloomy
hall, where, in the flare from a snapping log-fire, numerous
trophies of the hunt eyed us glassily, as we
were welcomed by my cousin, Janet Page, and her sister,
Cynthia.
“Janet is a winsome thing. We have already become
great chums, although she is a few years older
than your lonesome. She is short and plump, with a
white, satiny skin, and apple-blossom cheeks that make
you feel that you want to kiss the pink of them. Her
eyes fairly beam with kindliness as she looks at you
from under her short, wavy brown hair. She’s a pacifist
and a suffragist, and aims to be a farmerette. Although
she has decided ideas on the war and voting
questions, they are rather vague on farming, but she
goes about saying, ‘God speed the plow and the
woman who drives it.’
“Cynthia Loretto Stillwell—she always insists on
the Loretto, as it is the sole heritage from some Italian
ancestor, famed for his noble birth and deeds of valor—is
not my own cousin, as she is the daughter of my
uncle’s wife, who was a widow when they married.
She is distinctively tall, somewhat angular, with sharp
features, a drooping, discontented mouth, and a sallow
skin which she endeavors to hide by dabs of white
and pink powder. Her eyes are large and dark, and
would be handsome, if they did not repel you at times
by their hard, metallic glitter. Her coiffure is a wonderful
combination of braids, curls, and puffs, and
made me wonder how she did it. She greeted us effusively,
but somehow its warmth seemed cold and artificial,
and—well, I don’t believe I’m going to like her.
“After our hunger was appeased,—Janet said she
.pn +1
got the supper, as we shall have to be our own maids up
here,—Mr. Banker ‘personally conducted’ us through
many high-ceiled rooms with recessed window-seats,
big doors, and dark closets, up winding stairways and
through rambling corridors. The antique furniture,
carved and black-looking, musty-smelling and stuffy,
made one feel as if long-ago-dead people were peering
at you from the eerie shadows of the hide-and-seeky
nooks.
“Mr. Banker then read my aunt’s letter of instruction,—an
odd document, as it stated that each one of
‘we girls,’—as Cynthia calls us,—she’s almost as old
as mumsie,—during our stay is to search the house for
the most valuable thing in it. And the lucky finder of
the ‘mysterious it,’ as Jan and I call the valuable
thing, is to inherit something. Whether this something
is property, or money, or just some personal
effects of my aunt’s, I don’t know, for that letter was
so queer it made me feel creepy. And once when I
glanced up, it really seemed as if her eyes were glaring
menacingly at me from a large portrait of her which
hangs over the library mantel.
“Each one of us is to keep a diary, and if we have
not looked for ‘It’ each day, we are to state what
particular thing prevented us. We can search every
nook and corner in the house but one room, the mystery
room, as we call it, which is on the second floor, and
barred and locked so that no one can enter. Mother
only laughs when Janet and I talk about ‘It,’ and declares
that the whole thing is just my aunt’s eccentric
way of doing things. You know mother spent a summer
up here with her when I was a wee tot, and my
aunt grew very fond of me.
“Although I have had no time as yet to search for
the mystery of mysteries, my first entry in my diary
.pn +1
reads: ‘Arose at 7 A. M. and prepared breakfast.
Cooked three meals and did housework all day, and
am too tired to do anything but go to bed. Jan
meant to help me, but she had to hurry with her
plowing, and Cynthia Loretto says she never does
housework, as it makes her hands rough.’
“You would laugh if you could see Jan scratching
the earth with a baby rake. She was going to plant
before she plowed, and hadn’t the slightest idea as to
the proper time and way of planting her seeds. But
she looks a dear in a smock and a big pink sunbonnet
that matches the pink in her cheeks and on her nose,
for her dear little snub has burned to the same color.
“It is great sport to see her take the stump, as I
call it, and hold forth on woman suffrage. She talks
beautifully, is so earnest and looks so sweet, and, as
mumsie says, knows so little about it from a commonsense
point of view. But when Cynthia Loretto suddenly
appears and squelches her eloquence by witheringly
ordering her to do something for her,—she
bosses her dreadfully,—poor Jan drops from her pedestal
and crawls about with the meekness of a mouse
for the rest of the day.
“I was afraid my dreams of teaching liberty were
doomed to oblivion, for there don’t seem to be any girls
about to form a club, when one day, while reading the
paper, an inspiration came. Fi-fo-fum, I have written
to Mrs. Van Vorst, and she is going to send me
three little slum boys, and I am not only going to give
them the joy-time of their lives, but teach them ‘Liberty
and Humanity—your best.’ When I asked Mr.
Banker if there would be any objection to having these
little waifs, he not only consented, but said he would
pay their way up here. Isn’t that the dandiest thing
going?
“Mother objected at first, but when I said I would
.pn +1
teach them to wash the dishes—how I hate that job!—and
to do chores about the house, she only said,
‘Well, you will have to make the bread then, for three
hulking boys will eat a cartful,’—you know mother is
the bread-maker. Then her eyes twinkled, and I had
to hug her good and tight, for I knew she was just testing
my ‘I can’ motto.
“Janet thought the idea fine, but when Cynthia Loretto
heard of it she declared that she hated boys, they
were such horrid, smelly things,—one would have
thought they were weeds,—and that she would not
have them in the house. Well, I was not going to be
bossed by her, so promptly told her in my bestest manner—I
am always very cool and sweet when awfully
mad—what Mr. Banker had said. Well, that silenced
her, but I can foresee that she will make trouble for my
little liberty kids, for that’s what they’re going to be.
“Did I tell you that Cynthia is an artist? Her
studio is up in the little square cupola, or tower that
crowns the house. Here she paints, and sleeps until
all hours of the morning, for she slumbers in a beauty-mask—Janet
let that out—and it has to be kept on
until noon. Janet has to bring up her coffee every
morning. At dinner my lady with ‘the manner’ and
artistic temperament appears in a freakish get-up.
Yesterday she was a Neapolitan maiden in a red skirt
and blue bodice, with a rug for an apron, and a white
cloth on her head. She dresses this way to create atmosphere,
she declares, as she is her own model, and
paints herself in a big mirror, that she got Sam to lug
up from one of the lower rooms.
“She can be extremely disagreeable, for yesterday,
while I was on one of my mountain prowls—mother
was taking a nap—she was sitting on the veranda in
one of her outlandish costumes, when an odd, little old
.pn +1
lady came along in a black poke-bonnet, carrying a basket
on her arm. As soon as Cyn saw that basket she
jumped up and ordered the old lady off the premises,
saying that we could not be bothered with peddlers.
“The poor old soul immediately turned about and
hobbled away, muttering and mumbling to herself, for
Jan heard her as she came up the path from her miniature
hillside farm. Mother was quite annoyed when
she heard about it, for she said that she was undoubtedly
one of the neighbors, and had brought us something
in a basket to be friendly, as country people
do. I think Cynthia should have allowed her to rest
on the veranda, even if she was a peddler.
“I must close my letter if I want to get it in this
mail, as I have to walk almost a mile to post it. So,
with a bushel of kisses and good wishes, I am as ever
your friend
.rj
“Nathalie Page.
“P. S. Be sure you tell me all about your work,
and if you are anywhere near the front-line trenches.
I am wild to know. Again, with love,
.rj
“Blue Robin.”
.in -4
.ll +4
As Nathalie stood by the window putting on her hat
in front of the old-fashioned dresser, her eyes suddenly
widened. “Why, isn’t that the strangest?” she queried,
as she stepped nearer the casement and stared
down at the farther end of the lawn, where, from between
the fringe of woodland on the side dividing their
garden from their neighbor’s, came the glimmer of a
little red house, fronting the road.
“Why,” said the girl, almost wonderingly, “that
red house glimmers through the trees in the form of a
.pn +1
cross.” Then her eyes brightened with the sudden
thought, “I do believe it has come that way on purpose,
and, yes, I am going to let it be my Red Cross insignia,
warning me that I have work to do this summer by not
losing my temper, and by being kind to people, even if
it is that irritating Cynthia Loretto.
“I wonder who lives in that little red house,” soliloquized
the girl. “I must ask Sam. Ah, I remember
now. I saw an old lady with silver-gray hair, the
other day, poking about in that little flower-garden;
she seemed to be weeding. Well, those flowers certainly
repay her for her care, for they are a mass of
bloom and color.” And then Nathalie, humming a
snatch of melody, turned away and hurried down the
stairway.
Some time later, on her way to the post-office at the
near-by village of Sugar Hill, as she passed the red
house she again saw the old lady with the silver hair,
in a flopping sunbonnet, digging in the garden. She
raised her head as she heard Nathalie’s footsteps, and
the girl, with smiling eyes, pleasantly bowed a good-afternoon.
But, to her surprise, the old lady stared at
her rudely for a moment, and then, without returning
her greeting, went on with her weeding.
“What a disagreeable old lady!” was the girl’s sudden
thought, the blood rushing to her cheeks in a crimson
flood. “Why, I always thought country people
were pleasant and chatty with their neighbors. Well,”
.pn +1
she murmured ruefully, in an attempt to ignore the
slight “perhaps the poor old thing is near-sighted.
No, I won’t worry, for, as mumsie says, it is just as
well not to be in a hurry to think that people mean to be
rude to you.”
So the little incident was forgotten, as she wended
her way along the road, cool and dark with the moisture
and shade from the woodland that fringed it on
each side. On one side the trees screened green hills
and sloping meadows, while on the other they guarded
Lovers’ Lane, a narrow footpath, skirting the base of
Garnet Mountain, that rose upward in scrubby, brownish
pasture-land to its summit, crowned with dense
masses of green foliage.
Nathalie hummed softly, in tune to the ripple of a
tiny brooklet from a spring near by, that trickled and
splashed in a low murmur over its pebbly bed in the
ditch fringed with straggling wild flowers in flaunting
July bloom. They were too luring to be resisted, and
presently the beautiful dull pink of the Joe-Pye weed,
saucy black-eyed Susans, yellow buttercups, wild carrot,
and blue violets, nodded gayly from the nosegay
pinned to her blouse.
A short walk and the woods had been left behind, as
the girl stood on a wide-spreading knoll with the rock-lit
eyes of Garnet Mountain peering down at her on
her right, while on the left grassy meadows stretched
away into velvety slopes. Their green was crossed
.pn +1
by low stone walls, patched with the gray of apple orchard,
and ribboned with avenues of stately trees, or
fringes of woodland, but always ending in the rugged
grandeur of craggy summit.
Nathalie drew a deep breath of the sweet-scented
mountain breezes, as her eyes dwelt on the scene before
her, for to her every blade of grass, or feathery fern,
as well as each peeping floweret, wide-spreading tree,
or gray bowlder, were but details that added to the
charm of each day’s mountain-picture. The rare
splendor of the scene inspired her, as it were, to new
thoughts and feelings, vague and undefined, but the
shadow of things to come, in the birth of ideals and
words that were to find expression later on.
But now she was strolling along under an avenue of
stately maples, bordered by a stone wall almost hidden
with clambering vines, until presently she had
passed by another silent greenwood, to arrive at a little
white church, set on rising ground. A swift turn
and she was walking down the flagged street of the
mountain village, sheltered with friendly old trees, and
lined with the usual straggle of white cottages, blurred
with the red of an old barn, while just beyond, against
the pearl gray of the horizon, rose the jagged line of
the Green Mountains.
She glanced admiringly at the tiny Memorial Library
perched conspicuously on a terrace opposite, and then
she was at the post-office, once a small white cottage,
.pn +1
but now used by Uncle Sam as a mail distributor, the
lounging-resort of aged mountaineers and sons of the
soil. Here, too, the village gentry, as well as the citified
summer folk from the boarding-houses and hotels
on the upper slopes of Sugar Hill, lingered for a chat
or a word of greeting when they came for the mail.
After slipping her letter into the box, Nathalie found
that although the mail had come in it had not been
distributed, so she decided to wait for it. With ill-concealed
impatience, for she hated to linger in the
stuffy little store, she leaned idly against a glass case,
in which one saw the yellow-brown of maple-sugar
cakes, the red and white of peppermint sticks, as well as
post-cards of mountain views, and pine pillows. As it
was the only store within a radius of some miles its
wares were numerous and varied, as almost anything,
from a loaf of bread, a lollypop, or a case of needles, to
a bottle of patent medicine, was on sale.
Suddenly, as if impelled by some unknown power,
the girl raised her eyes to encounter the bold stare of a
tall young man in a gray Norfolk jacket, knickerbockers,
and high leather boots, who was nonchalantly
leaning against the opposite counter, with his cap
pushed on the back of his head, smoking a cigar.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch09
CHAPTER IX||THE LITTLE OLD LADY IN THE RED HOUSE
.sp 2
The girl turned her head quickly aside, for there
was something in the ill-concealed admiration
in the man’s black eyes that caused the color
to rush in a wave to her cheeks. Several minutes later
a careless glance in the man’s direction, as she casually
surveyed the other occupants of the store, impelled her
to stare curiously, as she perceived a rather peculiar
motion,—a sudden twitching shake of his head, repeated
every moment or so. Realizing that the man
was the victim of some nervous affliction, her eyes involuntarily
softened with pity, and then noting that
there were several letters in her box, she hurried forward
to get them.
Slipping them into her bag, she hastened from the
store, drawing quickly back, however, as the man who
had been staring at her brushed rudely against her.
Nathalie glanced up with annoyance, but as he begged
her pardon, with a sweep of his cap in an exaggerated
bow, and another bold, somewhat mocking glance from
his eyes, the pink in her cheeks deepened angrily.
.pn +1
Nathalie, irritated at the incident, walked slowly
down the narrow path leading to the flagging, but suddenly
remembering her determination to explore the
little village set in the hollow of a hill, the unpleasant
occurrence passed from her mind. Attracted by the
many flower-beds that bloomed so luxuriantly with
such vivid coloring in the door yards of the little New
England cottages beyond the post-office, she turned
about and slowly strolled in that direction.
Presently she came to a sudden pause to gaze admiringly
across the road at a white, gable-roofed house,
with bright green blinds, on a grassy terrace, peeping
from beneath a mass of vines and leaves. It was surrounded
by a garden from which came the gleam of
many colors, in the tall, flowering rows of sweet peas
that flanked its sides. But it was not so much their
beauty that held her eyes as the small east wing of the
building, where a wide, roomy porch was surmounted
by the sign,
.nf c
The Sweet Pea Tea-House
Come in and have a cup of tea
.nf-
Nathalie would have enjoyed going over and having
a sip of that social beverage, lured by the daintiness
of the house and its sweet-pea garden, but, on discovering
that she had left her purse at home, she continued
her walk. A few steps down the road, and she
.pn +1
was staring up at a timeless clock—looking as if its
hands had been swept away in the mad rush of the
hours—in the steeple of a church some distance back
from the road. Then she was watching a horseshoer
pounding with a noisy “Clank, clank” on the hoof of
a horse, patiently standing in front of the blacksmith
shop.
A half-hour later, as she stood in front of a little
neglected cemetery at one end of the village, staring in
melancholy mood at its time-scarred stones, gleaming
with a dulled whiteness from the rank and overgrown
shrubbery, she heard the purr of an automobile.
Turning carelessly, she noticed a bright red car, with
the glossy, shiny look of newness, coming slowly in her
direction, and quickly perceived that its only occupant
was the bold-eyed man who had annoyed her in the
post-office. She quickly glanced in another direction,
but, to her surprise, the car came to a sudden stop, and
as the man threw away his cigar, while doffing his cap,
he said, pleasantly, “You have chosen rather a dreary
place to linger, have you not, on this beautiful afternoon?
Would you not like a little ride,—just a help
up the hill, you know?”
For a moment Nathalie was tongue-tied with astonishment,
and was about to walk quickly away, when
sudden resentment at the man’s impertinence overwhelmed
her. Swinging about, with marked emphasis
she answered in stiff formality, “Possibly I
.pn +1
might—with friends.” The next second she was hurrying
down the road, without waiting to see the man’s eyes
darken with annoyance, as he emitted a low whistle.
With the peculiar motion of the head already referred
to, he started up the car, and a moment later whirled
around the bend out of sight.
Nathalie in her haste, caused by her anger and annoyance
at the man’s impertinence, was oblivious to
the fact that the clouds had been gathering for a
thunderstorm, until she heard a loud clap of thunder
and a drop of rain swirled into her face. She was
tempted to start and run, for she was an arrant coward
in a thunderstorm, but remembering that a swiftly
moving object is apt to attract the lightning, she curtailed
her speed, trying to make as much headway as
she could by extra long strides.
Oh, it was coming down in great big drops! What
should she do? But with her heart thumping nervously,
she kept resolutely on her way, covering her
face with her hands in a spasm of terror every time a
streak of lightning zigzagged before her eyes. Oh,
she had reached the tea-house! She would take refuge
on the wide veranda.
The next instant she was racing across the road; but
before she gained the desired haven, a deafening clap
of thunder, followed by a blinding glare of red flame,
came bolting through the trees, causing her to utter a
loud, frightened scream, as she stumbled blindly up
.pn +1
the steps. Another instant and the door of the house
was flung wide, as a sweet-faced lady, with pleasant,
smiling eyes, hurriedly beckoned for her to hasten in.
Nathalie, with a little cry of relief, made a wild rush
for the door. As the lady closed it, with shaking limbs
and white lips, but with an attempt at a smile the girl
cried, “Oh, you are very kind to let me come in, for
I am just about drenched”; quickly pulling off her hat
as she spoke, and then shaking her wet, clinging skirts.
“Oh, my dear child! you must come in and take off
your wet things,” at this moment came in sudden call
from an adjoining room, whose door was standing
ajar. Nathalie started in surprise, for the voice was
singularly low and sweet, in strange contrast to the
somewhat high-sounding, rather unpleasant voices of
the few villagers whom she had heard conversing,
when waiting for her mail in the post-office.
Fearing she would be intruding,—she had noticed
that the lady who had opened the door for her, although
she smiled pleasantly, had not seconded the invitation,—she
shook her head. “Oh, no,” she protested
with evident embarrassment, “I shall not take
cold. I can stand here until the storm is over. I am
sure I shall be all dry in a moment or so.”
But as the voice insisted that she come in, and the
woman with the smiling eyes laid her hand on her
arm as if to lead her into the room, she reluctantly
entered. As she attempted to stammer forth her
.pn +1
thanks, and her fear of trespassing upon their kindness,
she saw that the owner of the voice was an elderly lady,
evidently an invalid, for she sat in a Morris chair by
the window, propped up with pillows. As she motioned
for the girl to come nearer, and slowly and awkwardly
put forth her hand to feel her wet skirts, Nathalie
noticed that her hands were swathed with white
cloths.
“Dear me,” she murmured worriedly, “you are wet.
I am afraid you will take cold. But just take off your
blouse and skirt, and Mona will dry them for you in a
few moments by the kitchen fire.”
Then, with a few strange motions of the bandaged
hands to the sweet-faced woman,—which immediately
revealed to Nathalie that she was deaf and dumb,—the
wet garments were quickly removed and taken out
to the kitchen to dry. Presently the girl, with humorous
amazement, found herself snugly wrapped in a silk
Japanese kimono, seated in a big chair by the invalid
lady, gazing at her in silent admiration.
It was a face that could lay no real claim to beauty,
and yet to Nathalie there was a singular charm in the
clear-cut outlines of the delicate features, and the soft,
warm tints of a complexion that, although many years
past youth’s fresh coloring, resembled a blush-rose.
But it was the eyes that held Nathalie, black-lashed,
deep-set, with a calm, peaceful expression in their
deep blue; and the brown hair, slightly threaded with
.pn +1
gray, parted in the middle, and curling in a natural
wave on each side of her face, gave it the quaint sweetness
of some old-time miniature.
Fascinated, as it were, by the charm of the lady’s
personality, the girl was soon chatting volubly, as she
told how she came to get caught in the storm. “I
am sure I should have reached home before the rain
came,” she cried in an aggrieved voice, “if it had not
been for that horrid man. For I intended going home
by the road he took, which is much shorter, but he had
made me so nervous by his rudeness that I took the
longest way back, for I was afraid I should meet him
again.”
“Oh, you must not feel annoyed at receiving an invitation
to ride in an automobile when trudging up
these mountain roads,” laughed the lady, “for it is
quite the customary thing to give a pedestrian a lift
up the hills. But I think, in your case,” she added
more soberly, “that you did right in refusing the man’s
offer, for he was rude, as you say, and all young girls
should be careful.”
Won by her companion’s sympathetic interest, Nathalie
told that they were spending the summer at
Seven Pillars, up near “Peckett’s on Sugar Hill,” but
she was cautious not to tell of the peculiar conditions of
their stay, or of her aunt’s strange letter. Miss Whipple,
as that proved to be the lady’s name, said that she
had known her aunt, Mrs. Renwick, and considered
.pn +1
her a very interesting woman, although, to be sure, she
was somewhat eccentric. Nathalie also told about her
Liberty Girls, a subject that was always close to her
heart, and how she was going to try to teach liberty
to the little settlement-boys, who were coming up to
stay with her for a few weeks.
The invalid, and also her sister, were both greatly
interested in Nathalie’s merry chatter; for Mona had
come from the kitchen and seated herself on a low
stool by the feet of her sister, who would interpret to
her as the girl rattled on. In return for Nathalie’s
confidences she told how she and her sister, although
having been born in the White Mountains, had lived
since childhood in Boston. On the death of their
parents, after meeting with some reverses, she explained,
they had determined to come up to the old
homestead and start a sweet-pea farm, as her sister
was passionately fond of flowers.
It was delightful work, she said, and it meant so
much that was beautiful and joyous to her sister, who,
of course, on account of her infirmity, was deprived of
many pleasures that other people enjoyed. They had
an old farm-hand who had lived with them when they
were small children, who did the rough gardening, and
who made the farm pay by selling the flowers to the
mountain hotels.
“The tea-house was my sister’s inspiration,” continued
.pn +1
Miss Whipple, “and has always been a source
of great enjoyment to us both, as so many of the young
people from the hotels and boarding-houses would
drop in of an afternoon for a cup of tea, or a little
dance, as I always used to make it a point to be on
hand to play for them. My sister,” she added a little
sadly, “although deprived herself of the joys of girlhood,
has always been passionately devoted to the
young, and has spent any amount of labor in trying to
make our little tea-room attractive.
“But now, as I cannot play any more,—you see I
am the victim of inflammatory rheumatism,”—she held
up her bandaged hands pathetically,—“the young people
do not come in as much as they did. It is a great
disappointment to us both,” concluded the invalid dolefully,
“although perhaps my sister is partly compensated
by her work among her flowers.
“But I am wrong to complain in this way,” she
hastened to add, a sudden expression of contrition
darkening the sweetness of her glance, “for every one
has to endure disappointment and sorrow, sooner or
later, as my mother used to tell me when I was a girl;
and, after all, ours might have been much worse. I
try to comfort myself with the thought that all these
little jars of life are just ‘helps’ to fit one for the
greater life beyond. Indeed,” she added softly, “I
grow ashamed of myself for thinking I am even disappointed,
.pn +1
when I think of the renunciation, the sufferings,
and the agony of the Man of Sorrows, that we
might have joy.”
Nathalie made no reply, not only because she was
at a loss for words to express her sympathy, but stilled,
possibly, by the beautiful look of calm peace that had
crept into the sweet eyes.
“But I am wearying you,” smiled the invalid, her
eyes lighting with a warm glow, “making you think
I am a great martyr because I am deprived of a few
things that I think needful to my happiness. Perhaps
I am in a particularly rebellious mood to-day, for I am
so anxious to read a book a friend sent me, but with
my poor hands I cannot hold it, and it makes my neck
ache to read from the bookstand. But here comes
Mona with your dried clothing; yes, and to bring me
off my cross of martyrdom by her sweet patience, for
she is always cheery and smiling under her great deprivations.”
“Oh, and she can’t even read to you!” lamented
Nathalie impulsively, suddenly reminded of what it
must mean to live with a person who could not talk to
you.
“Yes, and that is one of the nails in the cross,”
said the shut-in, with whimsical sweetness, “for I not
only want some one to talk, to read to me, but sometimes
I just yearn for the sound of a human voice.
.pn +1
Oh, but I am getting selfish again—for,—Yes, as
soon as you get your gown on, you must go with Mona
to see her sweet peas; she would love to show them to
you.”
“And I would love to see them,” replied the girl as
she dropped the kimono and slipped into her skirt,
“for I, too, adore flowers.” And then, as Nathalie
fastened up her blouse, and put on her belt, Miss Whipple
made her sister understand that their guest wanted
to see her bunches of sweet peas.
Mona’s face lighted happily as she comprehended,
and in a few moments she and Nathalie were standing
in an outer shed, where masses of the dainty flowers
were piled in heaps, waiting to be tied into bunches,
their delicate odor filling the place with quite perceptible
fragrance. Nathalie watched the deaf-and-dumb
woman tie a few bunches, dimpling in gratified
embarrassment as she softly touched the blossoms.
She held a beautifully pink-tinted one against the girl’s
cheek, to indicate that they were of the same hue, and
then smilingly fastened a big bunch to her waist.
By this time the worst of the storm was over, and
Nathalie, seeing that it had settled down to a slow drizzle,
decided that she must hurry on, for fear her
mother would worry. So, after thanking her kind
hostesses, and declaring that she would return their
umbrella very soon,—she had promised to make them
.pn +1
a real visit, as Miss Whipple called it, in answer to
their repeated urgings,—she hurried out into the rain
and was soon on her homeward way.
It was not a pleasant walk, this plodding over a road
deep with mud, and in some places running in tiny
rivulets, for the girl had no rubbers on, but she kept
up her cheer by whistling softly, for not a person was
in sight until she reached the road through the woods,
leading to Seven Pillars. Here she spied a queer-looking
little figure in black, hobbling on ahead of her
with a cane, but no umbrella.
Something, perhaps it was the basket the woman
carried, suggested that she might be the old lady who
had called the afternoon before, so the girl hurried
her steps, hoping, by the proffer of her umbrella, to
atone for the seeming rudeness of her reception of the
previous day.
As she reached the black figure, she pantingly cried,
“Oh, won’t you come under my umbrella, for I am
sure you must be wet.” As she spoke she peered at
the woman’s face, almost hidden by the wide brim of
an old, rusty-looking black bonnet. But the bright
blue eyes in the withered face, under its halo of black,
only stared coldly, stonily, while the drooping mouth,
seamed with a network of fine wrinkles, and deep lines
of worry and disappointment, narrowed into a tightly
compressed slit of red.
But Nathalie, notwithstanding the disdainful glare,
.pn +1
and the woman’s oppressive silence, pushed her umbrella
over her head, and, somewhat to her own amusement,
after a shuffle or two, was soon walking in step
to the old woman’s hobble.
“It has been quite a storm, hasn’t it?” ventured the
girl, although her cheeks were flushed with embarrassment
under the ill-timed silence of the woman, who
acted not only as if she could dispense with the shelter
of her umbrella, but with her company as well.
The only reply to the girl was a sniff,—sounding almost
like a sneer,—but, determined not to be daunted
by the old woman’s surliness, Nathalie kept up her chatter,
telling how charmed they were with the mountains,
especially with Seven Pillars, with its magnificent view,
and expressed her regret that they had not been at
home the afternoon before, explaining that her mother
had been lying down and did not know of her call.
Presently, with a sudden movement, the old lady
came to a halt. Before Nathalie could understand
what she was stopping for,—her umbrella was held so
closely over her companion’s head that she didn’t perceive
the splash of red peeping from between the trees,—she
had turned in at a little gate and the girl suddenly
realized that the queer old lady was her neighbor
of the little red house!
For a moment she was speechless; then a smile
dawned in her eyes, as she suddenly understood why
her greeting had not been returned when passing by
.pn +1
earlier in the afternoon. Quickly recovering her wits,
however, she stepped forward, and as she held the
gate open for her new-found neighbor to pass through,
she cried, “Oh, I am so glad I met you, and know that
we are near neighbors. Mother will be very pleased to
meet you, I am sure, and will soon run over to see
you.”
But no reply was forthcoming, and Nathalie, her
patience at a boiling point, hurried on, inwardly vowing
that she was never going to speak to that cantankerous
old woman again, for had she not done her best
to apologize for an unintentional slight? As she
reached the veranda with its magic seven pillars her
eyes gleamed humorously, as she suddenly realized how
funny she must have appeared, hobbling along with
that old woman. What a funny way she had of
sniffing, and that old black poke-bonnet. Then she
wondered if the rest of their neighbors were as peculiar
and queer as the old lady in the little red house.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch10
CHAPTER X||THE SWEET-PEA LADIES
.sp 2
Nathalie, with girlish eagerness, hurried into
the house, and was soon telling her mother
about her “adventure day,” as she called it,
dwelling at length upon her experiences at the Sweet
Pea Tea-House, and, with some show of resentment,
on her encounter with their neighbor in the little red
house.
Mrs. Page became intensely interested in the Sweet-Pea
ladies, as her daughter designated them, but cautioned
her against cherishing any resentment at the
rudeness of the little old lady in black, as, naturally,
she was offended that her overtures of friendliness
had been slighted by the city folks. She and Nathalie
would go very shortly and call upon her; she did not
doubt but that her apologies would be accepted, and
that the unpleasant incident would be forgotten.
The next morning, while Nathalie was gathering
some lettuce in the garden near the barn, she met Sam,
the tow-headed young farm-hand, who looked after
the place, and who, with his buxom young wife, lived
in a small white house a short distance down the road.
.pn +1
He was a thick-set, sturdy, young fellow, with a broad,
good-natured face, from which white-lashed, piglike
blue eyes peered bashfully out above his shiny red
cheeks. When he met any of the city folks, as he
called the inhabitants of Seven Pillars, he would grin
bashfully, and slowly drag off his old straw hat in a
greeting, growing very red from embarrassed shyness
if called upon to engage in conversation with any of
them.
But Nathalie, who had had to depend upon Sam for
a certain amount of necessary knowledge in relation
to the house and garden, had not only grown to depend
upon him in many ways, but had become quite friendly
with him. She had learned that he was a level-headed,
well-meaning young man and that his eyes could
twinkle responsively, even if he was somewhat slow of
tongue.
As he began to show Nathalie how to select the
heads with the soundest hearts, she told him how she
had been caught in the thunderstorm the afternoon before
and the kindness of the inmates of the Sweet
Pea Tea-House.
“Sure, Miss, they be nice ladies,” assented Sam.
“I’ve knowed them this long time. They were born
in that old house, but when the old man Whipple
growed rich—some relative or t’other left him a pile
o’ money—they went skylarking down to Boston—thought
we country folks weren’t smart enough fur
.pn +1
them, I reckon. But when the old man’s luck went
agin him and he died, them gals come home to roost.
I feel right sorry for them, for the Lord knows they
don’t have no stuffin’s to their turkey these days. Too
bad about the tea-house er goin’ to shucks, for sure
it use ter bring in er penny er two in the sellin’ o’ them
posies.
“I see ole Jakes, with his old flivver a wheezin’ and
blowin’ up these ere hills, er takin’ them to the hotels
er pile er times. By Gosh, that Jakes sure is ole, fer
he’s been er luggin’ round these parts with one foot
half-buried fer the last ten years. When he goes off
the handle what’ll become of the poor ole ladies—the
folks hereabouts are er guessin’. That deaf-and-dumb
one—she makes me feel sort er lonesome.”
Sam suddenly confided, “with no gift of gab to er,
and t’other one with the rheumatics, sure they do be
afflicted.”
Nathalie also told Sam about meeting their neighbor
in the little red house. But when she questioned him
as to who she was, and if she lived there all alone, his
face became impassive and he grew evasive in his answers.
Surmising that he might possibly be a relative
of hers—as she had seen him working about the
place, she said no more, but hurried into the house, her
mind intent on the Sweet-Pea ladies and their pathetic
little story, as told by Sam.
“What a misfortune,” she mused, “to be poor, an
.pn +1
invalid, and with only a deaf-and-dumb sister to depend
upon. O dear! what terrible things people have
to suffer when they grow old. Well, I shall have to
go this afternoon and return that umbrella, and—yes,
I just wish I could do something to help them in
some way, for Miss Whipple is a dear!”
But, as she hastened to her room to make her customary
entry in her diary, the two ladies were forgotten.
This daily duty the girl found quite irksome,
especially when she had forgotten, and had to make
her entry at night when she was tired and wanted to
tumble right into bed; and then, too, she did not see
how the everyday doings of her life could interest any
one. And as for searching for the most valuable
thing in the house, this she had never found time to
do. Possibly she had not tried very hard to find time,
as deep within her heart she considered the whole thing
sheer nonsense. And how was she going to judge the
value of the things in the house, anyway, she questioned
rebelliously, for was it not just an old curio
shop filled with strange, odd junk, that her aunt had
brought from the other side?
But when she hinted this to her mother, she had been
duly rebuked, although Mrs. Page agreed with her
daughter that it would be a difficult task to determine
the value of anything she might select. She said,
however, that she considered that Nathalie, as a courtesy
to her aunt, who was giving them such a delightful
.pn +1
summer up in those beautiful mountains, should do
all that she could to comply with her request, even if
she thought it absurd.
“I doubt if the finding of this very mysterious valuable
thing would bring either money or property to
any one,” continued the lady, “as I understand that
Aunt Mary left the bulk of her estate to some
charitable institution as long as no near relative or
heir appeared. But she was, as I have told you before,
very queer in some ways, and probably took this
method of giving away some of her personal effects.
It is not at all likely, Nathalie, that you will be the
lucky finder,”—there was a smile in Mrs. Page’s eyes,—“but
still you should make it a point to search for
it, no matter how you feel.”
“Oh I intended to hunt for the old thing, anyway,”
returned Nathalie excusingly, “but I have been a little
slow, perhaps, because Cynthia has been so obsessed
with the idea, that I hate to be as silly. Jan says she
spends most of the day hunting in the attic and through
the house when we are down-stairs. She is wild to
get into that mystery room, for she thinks it is hidden
there.
“But you should have seen her last night, mother,”
giggled Nathalie. “I was coming through the hall
and suddenly saw a flash of light on the stairs. And
there was Cynthia, down on her knees, peering under
the stair-carpet and poking about with her flash-light.
.pn +1
She seemed quite annoyed when she saw that she was
discovered, and, jumping up quickly, scurried down
the hall. Dear me! she is the queerest thing.”
“Well, let her look,” replied Mrs. Page kindly.
“Perhaps her efforts will be rewarded, for, as I understand,
she is engaged to a Mr. Buddie, and he is
very poor, Janet says. I presume it would make them
both very happy if Cynthia came into a little money,
or found something of value, for perhaps they could
be married.”
“But, mother, Janet hasn’t looked once. She hates
this mystery prowl, as she calls it, as much as I do,”
emphasized Nathalie, “and I have hard work making
her write in her diary. She is busy writing a speech
on suffrage, which she expects to deliver this fall.
Just imagine, mother, Janet making a speech,” and
Nathalie smiled at the thought.
Later in the day, dust-begrimed and with her hair
all of a frowse, Nathalie came trudging wearily up
the staircase. She had been searching for two hours
in the library, a great dark room, lined with bookcases,
and whose wainscoted walls were hung with family
portraits,—Nathalie called them the Renwicks’ Honor
Roll,—interspersed with medallions of great authors
and musicians, and valuable etchings.
The girl had laughed at Cynthia for prowling about,
but as she threw herself on her bed, tired and aching
from stretching her arms and climbing step-ladders,
.pn +1
in order to peer behind the pictures and cornices, she
felt that she would never laugh at her again. For the
more she had searched, the more her interest had increased,
and with it the conclusion that her aunt, for
contrariness, had really hidden something of great
value, in order to try the patience of the searchers, in
some eerie corner or nook.
But was Mrs. Renwick really dead? This was a
question that assailed the girl whenever she passed the
mystery room, whose door loomed big and dark, with
its heavy crimson curtain, in the long hall. Somehow,
she had confessed to Janet, whenever she hurried by
that door she had a strange feeling, a feeling of nearness
to some one,—the way one would feel, she imagined,
if they looked up suddenly and found some one
watching them with a strange, fixed stare.
Could it be that some one was hidden in that room?
But she always dismissed the thought with a half-laugh,
as being very silly. Nevertheless she always
raced by that door, especially at night, when the hall
was wrapped in an uncanny gloominess from the dark
shadows that came from the big grandfather’s clock,
the heavy, black-looking wardrobe at one end, and
other ponderous and carved pieces of mahogany resting
against the wall.
The following afternoon Nathalie set forth to return
the umbrella to its owners, laden with a basket of fruit,
in appreciation of their kindness to her. As she
.pn +1
walked cheerily along, a sudden thought loomed big in
her mind; she had been thinking how she was going
to live up to her watchword, “Liberty and humanity—our
best,” when it had occurred to her that one way
would be to offer to read to Miss Whipple every day.
The girl’s eyes glowed, and then she wavered. “Oh,
no, I don’t see how I can do that, for I have so much
to do at home, and I do not want to miss my walks.”
Her face clouded as she silently struggled with herself,
divided with the desire to cheer her new friend,
and yet not to have to forego her walks.
She found the invalid lying back in her chair, looking
pale and wan, but when Nathalie inquired if she
was suffering, she hastily answered, “Oh, no, I am
just pure tired, for I have been trying to read my new
war-book, and it has made me ache all over.”
“Oh, Miss Whipple,” broke from the girl impulsively,—somehow
she could not be selfish,—“wouldn’t
you like to have me come and read to you
for a little while each day?”
“Oh, you dear child, that is most kind of you,” the
lady’s eyes brightened. “Indeed, I should be delighted,
but it would be selfish to keep you indoors on
these beautiful mountain days.” A little sigh ended
the sentence.
“But you would not be keeping me in,” insisted her
companion, “for I should just love to read to you,
and I know I shall find plenty of time to walk somewhere
.pn +1
every day.” And then, as an added plea to her
request, she told of her mornings with Nita Van Vorst,
and how their taking turns at reading to one another
had been a source of great instruction to them both.
In a short time Nathalie was happily reading to her
friend, who listened with keen enjoyment. After a
time, fearing the girl would tire, they stopped for a
little chat, and it was during one of these chats that
Nathalie told of meeting their queer neighbor who
lived in the red house, and how rudely she had been
repulsed by the old lady, when she had tried to atone
for her reception of the day before.
“A little old woman in a black bonnet, with a basket?”
repeated Miss Whipple in a puzzled tone.
“Why, that is strange, for I didn’t know that any one
lived in that little red house. Some years past Mrs.
Renwick allowed a poor old woman to live there rent
free, but she died a few years ago. I shall have to ask
Jakes about it, for he knows every man, woman, or
child who lives on these mountains.”
During one of these pauses Mona came in, and her
sister, noting the wistful look in the patient brown
eyes, surmised that she, too, would like to enjoy Nathalie’s
youth and charm. And so, in a few moments,
the girl was out in the sweet-pea garden, delighting
Mona with her enthusiastic interest in the delicately
tinted flowers that grew in tall, long lines on each
side of the house.
.pn +1
Here, too, she met Jakes, an old white-haired man,
bent almost double with age. He made up for her
companion’s enforced silence, by showing the many
different varieties of these exquisite flowers, which,
on their rough stems, with their tendril-bearing leaves,
peeped coyly at her, in almost every tint of their varying
colors.
But the girl glanced up with quick surprise, when
she heard the old man, in his quavering, broken voice,
softly repeat:
.nf b
“Here are sweet peas, on tiptoe for a flight;
With wings of gentle flush o’er delicate white,
And taper fingers catching at all things,
To bind them all about with tiny rings.”
.nf-
As the old man saw Nathalie glance up at him in ill-concealed
astonishment at his aptness in repeating the
poetic quotation, he smiled and said, “Ah, Miss, I
have planted, transplanted, trained, tended, and
watched these sweet posies for many a long year as
carefully as a mother-hen tends her tiny chicks. But
it was my dear lady, herself, who taught me that
verse, and sure I have never forgotten it, although I
do not know the name of the poet-man who wrote it.”
Nathalie, with her hand in Mona’s, who seemed to
love to hold it, was now led by her into the little shed,
where she was soon busily employed in helping her
tie the sweet peas into bunches, to be delivered the
next morning to the hotels by Jakes.
.pn +1
From the making of bouquets she wandered into
the tea-room, where Mona had hurried, on seeing a
couple of young ladies come in, who wanted to buy
some post-cards. While they were selecting them
the deaf-and-dumb woman hastened into the kitchen
for her tea-tray. Nathalie, meanwhile, waited by the
little glass case in one corner of the room, carelessly
studying the mountain-views that lined it, and where
boxes of maple sugar, pine pillows, and various knick-knacks
that Miss Whipple said she had made before
her hands had become so helpless, lay scattered about
for sale.
As she turned restlessly away from the case, her
glance fell on the two girls, who stood examining the
cards on the wall near, and she half smiled at their
grotesqueness, as she called their modish style of apparel.
For the girls, fair samples of the average fashionable
summer girls, wore their hair plastered down
on the sides of their faces in deep scallops, while their
cheeks were carmine-tinted, and their noses whitewashed
with powder. With their long, thin necks
rising in kangaroo fashion from their turn-over, low-necked
collars, and with their short-waisted belts and
narrow skirts, high above their high-heeled, white
boots, they reminded Nathalie of some funny French
dolls that she had seen once in a museum in New York.
She was wondering why so many girls of the present
day thought it improved them to make themselves so
.pn +1
ungainly and painted-looking, when one of the girls
suddenly turned her face to her. A sudden exclamation,
and she had stepped towards Nathalie, who
was now staring at her in puzzled recognition.
“I declare, if it isn’t Nathalie Page. Why, don’t
you remember me?” she shrilled excitedly. “I’m
Nelda Sackett. You remember we used to be deskmates
at Madame Chemidlin’s?”
“Why, Nelda, how do you do? Yes, I remember
you now,” smiled Nathalie cordially. “How stupid
of me not to have recognized you before. But dear
me, you have changed!” And then, fearing that the
girl might detect her lack of admiration for her modish
appearance, she hastily added, “Oh, you have grown
to be quite a young lady.”
“Young lady! Well, I should say that I was,”
flashed the girl in a slightly aggrieved tone. “Why,
I’m eighteen, and Justine,—you remember Justine
Guertin,—she is nineteen.”
By this time Justine had joined them, and after
greeting Nathalie with condescending graciousness, the
three girls were soon chatting about their school-days
and former friends. The girls were both very curious
as to their old schoolmate’s life in her new home. Nathalie
determined to hold her own and not be cowed
by their ultra-fashionableness, and, despite the jarring
realization of the fact that they knew of her changed
circumstances since her father’s death, bravely told
.pn +1
about her new life in their little home on Main Street,
in the old-fashioned Long Island town. She not only
dwelt with persistent minuteness on the many details
of her more humble life, but told of her connection
with the Girl Pioneers, the pleasure it had brought her,
the fineness of its aims and purposes, and the wholesomeness
of a life lived in the open, with its knowledge
of bird and tree lore, and the many new avenues of
knowledge it opened to a girl.
This sort of thing, however, did not seem to appeal
to these New York girls, and they stared somewhat
coldly, although a bit curiously, at Nathalie during her
recital, and then abruptly changed the subject by telling
of their own gay life in the city. Oh, and what a
time they were having at the Sunset Hill House, playing
golf and tennis, and dancing in the evening with
gay college boys and other young men.
By this time Mona had returned, and, as Nathalie
saw her trying to wheel a small tea-table into the room
with both hands full, she hastily flew to her aid. And
later, when she returned for some needed articles in
the kitchen, the young girl arranged the teacups and
saucers on the tray before the girls, as they had asked
that they might be served with a cup of tea à la Russe.
The girls continued to chatter in a desultory fashion
for awhile, although Nathalie, whose intuitions were
keen, sensed that they had grown a little less cordial
in their manner towards her. Presently, finishing
.pn +1
their tea and paying for it, they nodded Nathalie a
careless good-by and hurried out, somewhat to the
girl’s surprise, who had naturally supposed that they
would invite her to come and see them at the hotel, or
express a desire to visit her at her home.
With reddened cheeks and a disappointed expression
in her eyes Nathalie watched them as they crossed the
road to the flagged walk opposite. It was true, she was
lonely up there in her new surroundings, with no special
friend to run in and chat with, as she had been
accustomed to do with her friend Helen. She wanted
young company, and the meeting with her former
schoolmates had revived old memories and worn-out
longings.
Although she did not approve of their style of dress,
or their airy manners, still they were something that
belonged to her former life in New York, and she
would have enjoyed having a chat with them once in
a while for the sake of “Auld Lang Syne.”
With the quick thought that they were not worth a
pang of regret, for they had shown that they had become
very snobbish, she turned away, and aimlessly
wandered over to an old piano that stood on one side
of the room. As if to ease the hurt feeling that still
jarred her sensitiveness, she sat down and carelessly
ran her fingers over the old yellow keys. A sudden
call from the invalid in the adjoining room,—the door
.pn +1
stood open,—for Nathalie to play something, brought
the girl to herself with a sudden start.
“Oh, I do not know anything to play,” she weakly
pleaded, “for I am no musician.” Nathalie spoke the
truth, for she not only had no special talent for music,
but the little accomplishment that she had acquired in
that line had been sadly neglected since she had taken
up housework.
But as the invalid’s plea was insistent, and the girl
did not want to be disagreeable, she again swept her
hands over the keyboard, this time unconsciously falling
into one of Chopin’s waltzes, something that she
supposed she had forgotten. From this she wandered
into a few rag-time airs, and then came snatches of
old-time melodies, until finally she was playing a well-known
reverie by a noted composer.
But suddenly realizing that she had heard nothing
from the next room, and fearing that she had wearied
Miss Whipple, she hastily arose and hurried to her
side, to find her lying back in her chair with a strange
restful expression on her face, but with closed eye lids,
through which tears were slowly trickling.
“Oh, Miss Whipple, I should not have played so
long,” exclaimed the girl remorsefully. “Perhaps I
have made you feel sad.”
“No, no, my child! Your playing has brightened
me up.” The invalid sat up quickly, as she shamefacedly
.pn +1
wiped away the stray tears. “Indeed, my
dear, I pay you a compliment when I cry, for if the
music did not go right to my heart the tears would not
have come. No, I would never regret being an old
shut-in if I could hear music once in a while. But
that was a lovely little thing you played last; it is one
of my favorites.”
“Oh, I must try to get Janet to come down and
play for you,” cried Nathalie with a relieved sigh,
“for she is a real musician, and plays for us every
evening as we sit on the veranda in the moonlight.
But it is getting late and I must go, for I have supper
to get. When my boys come, perhaps I shall have
more time, for, you know, I am going to put them
through their paces and teach them to be helpful.”
After a hasty good-by, Nathalie was hurrying across
the road, while waving her hand to the sweet, patient
face smiling at her from the window. Some twenty
minutes later she arrived at Seven Pillars, her eyes
happily aglow, as she told her mother of the readings
to be, to help lighten the burdens of her new friend,
the shut-in.
Several days later Nathalie, with her mother, walked
slowly down the garden-path, with its border of oldtime
hollyhocks and peonies and white stones, to the
gate-posts. A step or two, and they stood before the
door of the little red house, as the girl, with pleased
eyes, cried, “Well, mother, she’s in, for I saw her
.pn +1
sitting at the window as we came up the path, so we
can get this ordeal over.”
But unfortunately she reckoned without her host,
for although they knocked and knocked, Nathalie even
pounding on the door with her parasol-handle, for she
had planned to take a walk after the call, no one came
to the door. After a time she peered at the window,
but some one had drawn the shades down so that nothing
was to be seen.
“Mother, she is so angry she just won’t let us in,”
cried the young caller with flushed cheeks. “Oh, I
think she must be a very disagreeable old lady, and I
do not think there is any use in trying to be nice to
her.”
Mrs. Page had evidently come to the same conclusion,
so they slowly turned and retraced their steps
back to the house, and in a short space she was seated
on the veranda with her darning, as Nathalie started
for a walk. As she passed the red house, and caught
sight of the silver-haired old lady knitting at the window
she quickly turned her head away, determined to
ignore her in the future. “And so this is the end of
our acquaintance with our next-door neighbor,” she
mused ruefully, as she passed on down the road. “Well,
it certainly did not prove very progressive. Of course
I don’t really care,—she’s just an old lady,—but still
I do wish Cynthia Loretto had stayed up in her old studio,
and not made trouble for us by her unkind ways.”
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch11
CHAPTER XI||THE RIDE THROUGH THE NOTCH
.sp 2
Notwithstanding that the inmates of
Seven Pillars were neighbored by a disagreeable
old lady, as Nathalie had mentally dubbed
the occupant of the red house, the time passed pleasantly
to the girl, although she had days when she
longed to see Helen, to open her heart to her in confidential
mood. But the lonesomeness gradually lessened,
occupied as she was with her manifold household
cares, her exploring trips, her visits to the Sweet-Pea
ladies, and the sometime prowl for the mysterious
It. To her satisfaction she soon found that by hurrying
a little over her morning tasks, she not only had
time to read to her friend, and to help Mona at her
work, but that she did not have to miss her walks.
She finally succeeded in getting Janet to go with
her to the tea-house, and that volatile young woman
was so won by the charming personality of the invalid,
and the sweet patience of Mona, that she not only
played during her call, but made arrangements to
come down twice a week and give them a musical afternoon,
to the great joy of the invalid.
.pn +1
On one of these days a party of ladies from the
Hotel Look-off, out for an afternoon constitutional,
dropped in for a rest and a cup of tea. They were so
pleased that they told others about these musical afternoons,
so it soon became quite the fashionable thing to
drop in at the Sweet-Pea Tea-House, especially on
Wednesdays and Saturdays. On these days a score of
ladies, old and young, could frequently be seen having
a social chat over the teacups, while listening to some
popular ragtime air, or a classic from one of the old
composers, while knitting for the soldiers.
There had been one unpleasant occurrence that had
jarred Nathalie extremely, and that was that Cynthia
Loretto, when she learned of the Sweet-Pea ladies and
the musical afternoons, was quite insistent that Blue
Robin take some of her paintings and etchings down,
and hang them up so that they could be seen, in the
hope of making a sale.
Nathalie, at first, had refused to accede to this request,
and then she began to argue with her conscience,
giving for her refusal many reasons that only existed
in her imagination. Finally, Mrs. Page, with her
motherly intuition, perceiving that her daughter was at
war with her better self, one day led the conversation
to the subject, by saying that she thought it was almost
pathetic the way Cynthia yearned to make money
so she could marry Mr. Buddie.
“You must remember, daughter,” she persuaded,
.pn +1
after listening to the girl’s objections in regard to the
paintings, “that even if you are not attracted to Cynthia,
she has feelings, hopes, and disappointments as
well as you. Some day, perhaps, you may be old and
alone in the world with your living to earn, and will
be almost willing to make a bore of yourself if you
can only earn a little money so as to give yourself
some pleasure.” Nathalie made no reply, but somehow
she began to question if she were really trying
to live up to her motto to be helpful and kind, or was
it just a make-believe thing with her, as she called it.
The next day she reluctantly broached the subject to
Miss Whipple, and, to her surprise, found that she
would be very pleased to have the paintings and etchings
on the wall. “The room really needs papering,”
the lady explained, “and they will help to hide such
disfigurements as stains and tack-holes on the faded
paper.” This conclusion settled the matter very satisfactorily
to Cynthia, and made Nathalie rejoice that
she had, after all, come out conqueror in her fight with
self.
The girl had begun to wonder why she did not hear
from Mrs. Van Vorst as to when her boys were coming,
when a letter arrived. To her great joy it announced
that they would be due at the Sugar Hill station
the following Saturday, as they would leave New
York in the White Mountain express, probably reaching
their destination about seven in the evening.
.pn +1
Nathalie was somewhat disappointed that the boys
were not to go on to the Littleton station, where Mr.
Banker had planned to meet them. But alas, she
could not ask him to come all the way over to the
Sugar Hill station, and then, too, she knew that he
and his wife generally took little outings through the
mountains every week-end.
Deeply perplexed, she pondered over the matter with
no little anxiety, and then suddenly it came to her
that she would see if Miss Whipple would not let her
hire her machine, and then go for the boys herself.
She had learned to know the mountain roads in riding
with Jakes when he went to the different hotels to
deliver the sweet peas. He had often let her drive,
as she had previously learned to handle a car from her
many rides with Grace, and had even secured a license
through the insistence of her friend.
Hurrying through her work, she hastened down to
the tea-house, where she found the two ladies in a
state of unusual excitement, for Jakes, Miss Whipple
explained, was quite ill, and they were at a loss as to
how they were to get their flowers to the various hotels
the following day. And the Profile House had sent
in a special order, for there was to be some kind of a
festivity there that evening, and they wanted the
bunches of sweet peas for prizes.
“Oh, don’t worry over that,” cried the girl quickly,
as she perceived their distress, “for I can deliver the
.pn +1
flowers for you. I can drive and I know the roads,
for I have been about so much with Jakes and Mr.
Banker.”
After some little hesitation the two ladies consented
that Nathalie should deliver the flowers, insisting, however,
in return for her kindness to them, that she
should have the car for her own use in the afternoon,
to drive to the station for the boys.
To Nathalie it was quite a new experience, to get
up in the cool gray of early dawn, dress hurriedly,
swallow a hasty breakfast,—her mother was to act
as housekeeper for the day,—and then hurry down to
the tea-house. It did not take her long to load the car
with its flowery burden, and then she was speeding
through Sugar Hill village, and on to the Long Green
Path, as she called the road through the woods that
led to Seven Pillars and Franconia. The air was so
cool from the moisture of the night dew that still lay
in glistening gems and silvery cobwebs on the hilly
greens, the leaves, ferns, and wild flowers, and bracing
from the ozone of the mountain breezes that heralded
the new-born day, that the girl’s pulses throbbed with
buoyant exhilaration.
There was a moment’s stop at Seven Pillars for
Janet, who had consented to accompany her, and then
they were off, Nathalie happily waving her hand to
Sam as he came through the pasture with the cows.
A few moments later they were whirling past Roslinwood
.pn +1
Farm, with its big white barn, and then past a
long, low, white-gabled, red-chimneyed building, with
the old-time hostelry sign, “Peckett’s on Sugar Hill,”
swinging from its porte-cochère, with its flower-garden,
riotous with many-colored blooms, across the
road, almost under the shadow of Garnet’s sloping
meadow.
Now they were flying down the long sloping hill,
around the tiny white schoolhouse at the cross-roads,
and then they were passing Garnet’s grassy hillside,
as it nodded a greeting to its taller fellows, the Franconia
Range, that towered on the girls’ right. Its
verdant meadows were squared with cobble-stone
ledges, and awave with the glossy plumage of stately
trees, as it rose upward from the road, until its slope
was lost in a tangle of feathery treetops which crowned
its summit like a cap of green.
“The Echoes,” a homey little hotel nestling at the
base of the green hill, with its square white tower,
peeped picturesquely from the protecting sweep of
graceful willows and silvery poplars. Here they had
a magnificent view of the mountains as they rose from
their mists of gray, their rugged crests, spires, and
domes sharply outlined against a glorious riot of sunrise
color.
Lafayette, the king of the range, towered his grizzly
head in blue-hazed grandeur far upward, standing like
some giant up from the mists that covered the
.pn +1
valleys below like a silver lake, while Lincoln’s rounded
summit, with its twin slides, was almost hidden by
trailing wreaths of pearly gray. The gaps between
the Sleeping Infant, sharp-peaked Garfield, the North
and South Twins, and the Sleeping Giant, were so
thickly silvered with mist that the peaks of these mountains
looked like islets of green on a shimmering gray
sea, with their tops scarfed with pink and violet
streaks, that floated mistily against the golden splendor,
reflected from the crimson-hued ball in the east.
Directly before them rose the undulating slope of
Breakneck Hill, bowing in gentle humility to the more
rugged beauty of the lofty range opposite, while between
the widening gap, far in the distance, loomed the
Presidential Range, their tops white-wreathed with
cloud. Mount Washington, with majestic stateliness,
soared far above his comrades, while the smaller
mountains below and on the left, scattered here and
there through the cleft between the two ranges,
gleamed gray, purple, and pink, as they peered at them
from their hoods of gray.
It was a swift whirl down the half-mile hill, and
then they were passing through the little mountain village
of Franconia, with its white cottages, its stone
sidewalks, its beautiful Gale River, with its bush-fringed
banks and little stone tower, surrounded by
level stretches of green pasture-land, merging into the
low foothills that skirted the higher range. It was a
.pn +1
wonderful ride through that five-mile Notch, in the
glint of the rose-tipped sunlight, with the ever-changing
flash from one mountain-picture to another, each one
gripping you with the witchery of the illusive charm of
Nature in her varying moods, now frolicsome, gay,
or blithe, or strangely stilled in the grandeur of a sunrise
calm.
As the girl came down the steps of the Profile House,
her first stopping-place, she paused a moment and
peered up at Eagle Cliff, a precipitous wall of rock
opposite, rising to the height of fifteen hundred feet
above the road. It was thickly set with evergreens,
climbing birches, maples, and spruces, and intermingled
with patches of a softer green, from where purple-tinted
bits of rock, like giant’s eyes, looked down upon
the wayfarers that traversed the road beneath.
Nathalie had heard that the cliff had received its
name from the “Arabs of the air,” which at one time
had lodged in its airy heights. But evidently they
had long since departed, and after a disappointed
glance, as her eyes swept the tall steeps, she rejoined
Janet in the car, and was soon guiding it through the
green-wooded road to her next halting-place, some few
miles beyond.
This was the Flume House, a long, low, yellow
building, grouped about with mountain crags,—the
gateway to the Flume, a remarkable fissure in Liberty
Mountain, over fifty feet deep, and several hundred
.pn +1
long, where an ice-cold cascade dashed with snowy
spray, to flow in more quiet mood over ledges of granite
rocks between perpendicular walls.
After leaving their flowers at the office the girls
started on their homeward way. The distance was
soon traversed as they chattered of the scene before
them, sometimes hushed into stillness by the sudden
surprise of some wonderful trick of Nature as they
flew swiftly past.
As they reached the little schoolhouse at the crossroads
Janet descended from the car to walk up the hill
to the house, while Nathalie continued on her way.
She had soon passed the artist’s bungalow, with its
studio, on her left, and Hildreth’s maple-sugar farm,
with its big barn, coming out shortly at the little red
Episcopal church, with the deserted, falling-to-pieces
hotel, the Marimonte, just beyond on a knoll.
It did not take her long to ascend the long hilly slope
to the Hotel Look-off, where a basket of sweet peas
were left, and then she had swung her car around and
was speeding down the declivity to the Sunset Hill
House, where she again brought her car to a halt.
As she neared the big entrance-door, heavily burdened
with her flowers, she came face to face with her
two New York friends, who were sauntering carelessly
from the office, evidently having lingered over a
late breakfast. As the girl sighted the familiar faces
she forgot their apparent slight of a few days before
.pn +1
and nodded pleasantly, her cheeks dimpling with pleasure.
But, to her surprise, a rigid stare was their only
response to her greeting, and, with a sudden start of
shocked dismay, the girl hastened past them into the
office, where she was relieved of her flowers by one of
the bell-boys.
Smarting from the rankle of the insult, but still
dazed at the suddenness of it, she walked slowly down
to the car and mechanically stepped into it. As she
glided down the road she sat stiff and erect, her mind
apparently on the steering-wheel, although in reality
her senses were in a maze of dumb bewilderment.
A half-hour later, after running the car into the
stable, for she was to use it again later, she made her
way into the house, up to her room, and to her closet.
Here, with her face buried in the blackness of hanging
skirts and coats, she stood silently for a few moments,
trying to argue herself out of the hurt feeling that
would not be downed.
“Oh, what a little ninny I am,” she exclaimed at
last. “What do I care if they did give me the ‘go
by,’ as Dick says.” She gave a half laugh, that quickly
merged into a long sigh as the thought came, that,
after all, the girls had not really hurt her as much as
they had hurt themselves. “No, I will not allow myself,”
she closed her mouth determinedly, “to be so
small as to let it hurt me any more.”
She had a very restful afternoon, with a good long
.pn +1
nap, and a nice time reading out in the hammock, and
then, a little before six, she set out on her ride to the
station in a tense state of expectancy, for she was
anxious to see her Liberty boys, as she had elected to
call them.
The drive was a delightful one after the burden
and heat of the day, and she bowled swiftly along,
slackening her speed every now and then to admire
an unusually fine landscape view, or the golden, violet-tinted
clouds that drifted up from the west. She had
just turned into her last lap, as she called it, for she
knew that she must be very near the station, when, with
a sudden skidding motion, her car came to a standstill.
She got out and cranked it, but although there was
plenty of gasoline still on hand, it refused to go. She
poked about, here and there, to see what had caused
the stoppage, but although she cleaned out her carburetor
and saw that her spark-plugs were all right,
she failed to discover what was wrong. Her heart
began to beat feverishly, for she was well aware that,
although she could drive a car, in reality she knew
little about its mechanism, and therefore could not remedy
any very serious trouble. She got down and
crawled under the car, to examine first one part and
then another, but alas! it was exasperatingly useless,
for she could see nothing wrong, and she finally
crawled out again, covered with dust and grime. At
this moment she heard the far-distant whistle of an
.pn +1
oncoming locomotive, realizing with a pang of despair,
that it was the White Mountain express, and that she
would not be at the station to meet the boys.
Suddenly her face gleamed hopefully, for at that
moment she heard the near hum of an automobile,
and the next second saw it whirl around the curve in
the road. “Oh, perhaps it will be a man who can
help me,” quickly flashed through her mind, as she
peered intently at the nearing car. And then she almost
laughed aloud from sheer joy, for, yes, the car
was driven by a man, who, with one quick glance at
the girl’s flushed face, and the stranded vehicle, brought
his car to a standstill and jumped quickly out.
As the man came towards the girl, who had begun
to pleadingly explain her mishap, and the hurry she
was in, Nathalie caught her breath with a startled
gasp, as she suddenly was made aware that he was
the bold-eyed man who had accosted her in the post-office
a week or so before, and who had spoken to her
near the cemetery. But she was so distressed and
fearful that she would miss the boys—poor little
things, what would they do if there was no one there
to meet them!—that this fact was submerged in the
greatness of her need.
In a moment or so she had regained her customary
poise, as the young man, after a cursory glance over
the machine, discovered what was wrong. Ah, it was
a short-circuit. With a wrench he took from his
.pn +1
pocket, he soon adjusted the difficulty, and then turned
smilingly towards the girl, and with another of his
bold stares assured her that her car was all right.
Nathalie involuntarily stepped back, and then, half
ashamed of her timidity when the man had been so
kind, cried hastily: “Oh, I am so much obliged to
you! I do not know what I should have done, if you
had not come along. Thank you, very much,” she
ended abruptly, then, pleading that she must hurry,
she cranked her car, and, with a little stiff bow, stepped
into it, and a moment later was whirling down the
road.
But she had not gotten rid of her helper as quickly as
she thought, for it was only a second, as it seemed to
her, when, on turning her head as she heard the throb
of a machine in her rear, she saw, with a sudden qualm
of fear, that the man was following her. “Oh why
does he do that?” she thought in nervous apprehension.
“Yes, he must be following me,” she mentally decided,
“for he was going in the opposite direction when I
hailed him.”
But sensibly determining to pay no attention to him,
she kept on her way, although an aggravating dread
assailed her that she could not account for, that the
man might waylay, and try to rob her, the bold
glance of his eyes having filled her with a feeling of
distrust.
Ah, she was at the station. As she glided up to the
.pn +1
little wooden platform she peered anxiously around,
but no one was in sight. Bringing her car to a halt,
she jumped hastily out and scurried around to the
other side of the platform, only to see the ticket-agent
locking up the waiting-room, as he prepared to depart
on his nightly journey home, as the station was only
open for certain trains.
“Did you see any little boys get off the White
Mountain express?” inquired the girl breathlessly.
“Why, yes,” replied the man, as he slipped the
door-key into his pocket, “I saw three,—no, four
boys. They waited around here for some time, and
then they went away. They looked like foreigners;
one little chap must have been an Italian, for he carried
a violin under his arm, and wore a queer embroidered
vest.”
“Did you notice in what direction they went?” cried
the girl, while a chilled feeling swept over her as to
the fate of the boys. Oh, suppose they should get
lost in those mountain woods!
No, the man had not noticed, and Nathalie with a
dejected attitude, turned away, nervously wondering
what to do, and where to look. Well, she must do
something, for those boys must have been the ones
Mrs. Van Vorst had sent to her. Once more she was
in her car, and then, in sudden desperation, she determined
to try every road in succession,—for there were
several leading from the station,—until she found
.pn +1
them, for surely they could not have gone very far, as
they were walking. Buoyed with this thought, she
plunged into the graying shadows of the road nearest
to her, dimly conscious that the bold-eyed man in the
automobile, who had been circling around the little
square of green in front of the station, was close behind
her.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch12
CHAPTER XII||NATHALIE’S LIBERTY BOYS
.sp 2
On and on she rode, peering through the gloaming
until her eyes ached, ever conscious of the
“throb, throb,” of the car directly behind her.
What a mistake, she thought dismally, to have ventured
on these lonely roads alone. And, O dear! how
her mother would worry when she failed to arrive
home on time.
Suddenly she stopped and stared fixedly through the
gray light, and then her heart leaped, for down the road
a little distance, trudging slowly and uncertainly beside
the mountain-ditch, were four little figures. Oh, they
must be those boys, but she had sent for only three.
With a glad thrill of hope urging her forward, the
machine responded to her touch, and in a moment she
had reached the boys, one of whom, at the sound of
the oncoming car, had swung around, and was staring
at her with large, liquid brown eyes. The girl suddenly
decided that he must be the Italian lad, who
the ticket-agent had said wore an embroidered vest,
and carried a violin under his arm. Yes, there was the
violin!
.pn +1
Nathalie brought her car to a sudden stop, and called
out, “Hello there, boys; hello!”
At the sound of the girl’s call all four swung about
and faced her, while a boyish, gruff voice answered:
“Hello yourself. What do you want?”
Nathalie laughed happily, for a sudden intuition told
her that her search was over. And then she said:
“Why, I am looking for some little boys, who were
to have come from New York on the White Mountain
express. Are you the ones?”
A chorus of trebles piped excitedly, “Yes, mum; we
comed off the train,” while the tallest lad, to whom a
smaller child of six or seven was nervously clinging,
stepped forward. As he lifted his ragged cap he cried
politely, “Be you Miss Nathalie Page?” The girl,
as she stared down at the questioner, saw a close-cropped
head of reddish hair, and a freckled face of
an unhealthy pallor, from which two sharp blue eyes
were anxiously peering.
“Yes, I’m Miss Nathalie Page,” responded the girl,
with a note of relief in her voice, not only glad that
she had found the boys, but at the sudden thought that
her tormentor would now let her alone, for, with four
boys to keep her company, he would not dare to molest
her.
“I’m awfully sorry not to have met you at the
station,” she went on regretfully, “but something
happened to my machine and I was detained on the
.pn +1
road. But I did not know that there would be four
of you,” she added a little doubtfully. But before she
could finish her sentence, the lad who had constituted
himself the spokesman for the group, silently handed
her a letter.
Nathalie tore it open, and then hastily read it. She
was so excited, however, by the many events that had
crowded one upon the other that she did not sense its
full meaning. Recognizing the signature, “Elizabeth
Van Vorst,” she cried hastily, “Well, it’s all right,
boys; jump into the car,” as she stuffed the letter into
the pocket of her coat. Nathalie immediately saw that
a second invitation would not be needed, as the boys
made a wild lunge forward, scrambling and pushing
each other, as if to see which one would get there first,
all but the little chap, who stood whimpering by the
side of the car.
“Now, boys, no pushing or pulling,” cried Nathalie
with a laugh in her voice, “for there’s plenty of room,
and you’re all going home with me. But here, you big
one, get out and put that little kid up by me, for the
poor tot must be hungry and tired.”
“Sure, he is, Miss,” replied the older lad, who evidently
was his brother, jumping down and lifting him
up into the seat by Nathalie, despite his kicks and
protests that he wanted to sit with Danny.
“Ah, there, kid,” coaxed the bigger boy softly,
“don’t be a girl. Show you’re a boy. Sit up there
.pn +1
nice-like. Sure the leddy won’t eat yer.” This suggestion
of being a girl had a magical effect upon the
child, for he immediately ceased to whimper, and settled
back in the seat with a repressed sniffle.
Nathalie turned the car around,—the man who had
been following her had long since disappeared in the
darkness,—and was soon speeding towards home.
She glanced every now and then at the three figures
on the back seat, who sat as still as three blind mice,
snuggling up to each other for warmth, while the little
chap at her side clutched her frantically as he lurched
forward every time the car swung around a corner,
or bumped over a “thank-you-ma’am.”
“Here, kiddie,” cried the girl presently, suddenly
looking down at the child, whose big, reddish-brown
eyes were staring up at her half fearfully from out
of a wan, white face. “Put your head on my lap!
There, that’s it,” as the child, to her surprise snuggled
up to her, and then silently obeyed. “Now look up,”
she added laughingly, “and count the stars.”
Although this injunction brought forth a chuckle
from the back seat, it sufficed to keep the little one
quiet, and the girl, as she drove rapidly on, could hear
him droning, “One, two, three,—” until, with a
drowsy little sigh, the counting ceased, and the girl
saw that he was asleep.
It was almost nine o’clock when Nathalie whirled
under the dimly burning lantern of the porte-cochère at
.pn +1
Seven Pillars, where, on the veranda, Janet and her
mother were anxiously watching for her.
“Oh, Nathalie, I have been so worried about you,”
began her mother plaintively. “I will never let you
go off this way again.” But her lamentations were cut
short as her daughter cried, “Oh, it’s all right, mumsie;
something happened to the car and detained me. But
do help me get these hungry boys into the house, for
the poor things are just dead with the long ride and
for something to eat.”
Several minutes later, as the girl came hurrying
from the kitchen, where she had been to see if the
boys’ supper was ready, she found them lined up in the
hall, four pathetically weary little figures. Their pale
faces were smeared with railroad dust, and their foreheads
oozed perspiration, but their eyes were bright
and expectantly keen, on the alert for the something
good that they knew was coming.
As her eyes swept smilingly down the line, the smile
suddenly wavered, as her glance was arrested by the
thin, emaciated face of a strange grayish whiteness,—of
a peasant lad, who, bewildered with dumb amazement,
was staring at her with a dogged look, his dark
eyes haunted, as it were, by an expression of fear.
He was huddling something in his right arm, a yellowish-brown
thing that squirmed and twisted uneasily,
while the left sleeve of his soiled shirt-waist,
strapped with one suspender, was pinned to his shoulder
.pn +1
in an empty, flat way that was infinitely pathetic,
for the little lad had only one arm!
The girl stared back at the boy with a suppressed
cry, as into memory flashed the many stories she had
heard of the Belgian and French children who had
been so mercilessly ill-treated and maimed by the German
soldiers. Oh, this must be one of those refugees.
Yes, she dimly remembered now, seeing the word
“Belgian” in Mrs. Van Vorst’s letter, which she had
read so quickly. With sudden effort, her natural kindliness
coming to her aid, she smiled into the fear-haunted
eyes, crying gently, as she softly touched him
on the one arm, “Is that your dog? Oh, I love dogs.
What is his name?”
A sudden flash of joyful relief radiated from the
boy’s face, momentarily driving away that dulled, cowlike
bewilderment from his eyes. It was a look that
caused Nathalie’s heart to quiver with pain, for it was
the look of some dumb animal that had been wantonly
punished or brutally hurt by the hand it loved; a look
that haunted her for many days, constantly urging her
to try and say something, or do something, so as to
drive it away.
The next moment a little yellow-brown terrier was
crouching on the floor at his master’s feet, while thumping
the floor with his tail, and licking his hand, then
trying to crawl up his trousers’ leg, as if to get back to
the shelter of that one lonely arm.
.il id=i03 fn=i05.jpg w=353 link=i05f.jpg
.ca “Is that your dog? Oh, I love dogs!”—Page #184#.
.pn +1
“Oh, the poor animal must be hungry,” exclaimed
Mrs. Page, just as the boy had given his name as Tige.
“But come, children,” she added, “and get your suppers;
and the dog, too,” patting the brown head of the
refugee, while a look of infinite pity shone from her
kindly eyes.
The boys needed no further urging, as Danny, with
a wild hoot of delight, yelled, “Come on, fellers; it’s
eats.” And then, notwithstanding Nathalie’s well-laid
plans that each one should have a good wash-up before
eating, they made a straight run for the kitchen.
Here they were soon putting down everything in
sight in a way that almost frightened the girl, as she
suddenly realized the care and responsibility she had
taken upon herself. And that one-armed boy! O
dear! she had never thought of such a thing as that.
But if they didn’t have their wash before supper,
they had it very soon after, as the girl marched each
one separately to the washbowl in the bathroom, and,
after making him duck his head in the water, proceeded
to give it a vigorous shampoo, notwithstanding sundry
squirms and twists, for Nathalie believed in taking
things by the forelock, and they just must be clean.
Then the scrubbed one, after being supplied with
towels and soap, was informed that he must give himself
a good scrubbing in the tub, and if he failed to do
it properly, he would have to do it all over again.
Nathalie’s somewhat severe admonition was met with
.pn +1
stony silence on the part of her victims, unless it was a
rather loud, “Gee whiz, fellers; here’s me for a
swim!” that involuntarily escaped Danny, the older
boy, when he found himself before the well-filled bath-tub.
When it came to the little chap’s turn, Nathalie’s
young heart revolted at letting him go through the
washing process all by himself, as he was so little, tired,
and sleepy, so she said that she would give him his bath.
To her surprise he began to whimper, while his older
brother protested most vehemently that he could bathe
him.
“Oh, no,” returned the young lady decidedly; and
a few moments later her charge was standing in the
bath-tub, ready for his scrubbing, Nathalie meanwhile
talking to him gently, as if to quiet his fears.
Some time later, with a red, heated face, the young
girl emerged from the room, dragging a little white-robed
figure by the hand, whose face was, strange to
say, wreathed in dimples. “Here, dear, you get into
Miss Natty’s bed,” said the girl, leading the child into
her room, “and brother will stay with you until I return,”
motioning to Danny, who had been waiting outside
the bathroom, with a strange, worried look on his
face.
“Oh, mother,” exclaimed Nathalie a moment later,
as she came rushing out to the porch. “What do you
think? Oh, I never was so surprised in my life!”
.pn +1
“Why, Nathalie, what is the matter with you?”
ejaculated Janet, as she placed her arm caressingly
around the girl. “You are as white as a ghost, and
you’re all of a tremble.”
“Oh, I’ve had such a scare,—such a terrible surprise,”
stammered the girl. And then she broke into
a little laugh as she cried: “Oh, mother, you know
the littlest chap? Well, he isn’t a boy at all; he’s a
girl!”
“A girl!” echoed three voices simultaneously, and
then Mrs. Page gave a laugh, a laugh in which every
one joined.
It did not take Nathalie long to relate her experiences
in the bathroom, and then she remarked: “I
wonder if Mrs. Van Vorst knew he was a girl. It’s
awfully funny. Oh, I’ll read her letter again.”
The next moment, with the letter opened before her,
she was slowly reading aloud:
.in +4
.ll -4
“Dear Nathalie:
“I am sending you four boys instead of three. The
fourth lad is a one-armed Belgian refugee, and his story
is so pitiful I am sure, when you come to learn it, you
will be glad I sent him to you. A Buffalo lady sent
word to the Belgian Relief Committee that she would
take one of a number of refugees recently arrived from
France. But when she found that the poor lad had
been mutilated by the Germans, her heart weakened.
She claimed that she could not stand unpleasant things—what
about the sufferings of the boy?—and returned
him to the committee.
.pn +1
“A member of the committee, hearing that I was
looking for some boys, and being greatly distressed
over the cruelty of the case, begged me to send him
to you, if only for a little while, so as to give them a
chance to place him later. I, of course, will be responsible
for any expense he will be to you. I am sorry,
but I had no opportunity to clothe him. He seems a
strange, docile child. I think he is still living in the
horrors of hell, from those terrible eyes of his. Oh,
it is heart-breaking, but I know that you love children,
dear, and I am sure that you are just the one
to bring something of the child in him back to his face
again.
“His story is one of many. His village was
overrun by the German soldiery, and the brave little
lad, while trying to defend his mother from the atrocity
of a German officer, was bayoneted, and finally lost
his arm. His mother was carried away into Germany,
but the boy believes her dead. I will not tell you the
rest of the story, for some day he may want to unburden
his child mind and tell you his pitiful take himself.
His little yellow dog has been his comrade through all
of his weary wanderings, the only thing that remains to
him of his once happy home, and no one had the heart
to take it from him.
“The Italian lad was found wandering in the streets
on the East Side, making an effort to support himself
by playing on his violin, as his aged grandfather,—he
seems to have been an orphan,—who was a hurdy-gurdy
man, had just died. The two brothers were
found living in a cellar, where Danny, the older one,
had been trying to support his brother, after the death
of the aged woman who had had charge of them. He
sold papers, but, when sick and unable to do so, was
found half-starved in the cellar. It is hoped that the
.pn +1
bracing breezes of the mountain air, with good healthy
food, will make new children of these boys.
“Dear Nathalie, if you could only realize the bigness
of the work you have undertaken in taking these slum
children into a wonder-land of healthy living, the beauties
and wonders of which will mean to them a new and
glorified world. God bless you, dear, is all I can say
and pray.
.rj 2
“Your friend,
“Elizabeth Van Vorst.”
.in -4
.ll +4
“No, this letter proves that Mrs. Van Vorst did not
know that the child was a girl,” said Nathalie, as she
tucked the letter in her shirt-waist. “But, mother,
what shall I do about it?” she continued, in such a dejected
voice that her mother burst out laughing.
“Don’t do anything about it, daughter,” Mrs. Page
replied, still laughing. “A girl is as good as a boy any
day, and we will just set to work, this very minute, and
rig up some clothes from some of your old things, for
the child to wear.”
“Oh, I think she will make a lovely girl, with those
great brown eyes of hers,” cried Janet, enthusiastically.
“And she has dimples, too. I know we can make the
sweetest thing of her, and—”
But Nathalie didn’t wait to hear the rest. She was
so overjoyed to think it had turned out all right, that
she was in a hurry to reassure Danny, whom she realized
had been greatly worried over the circumstance.
But how did they come to dress the child as a boy?
.pn +1
she queried as she hurried into the room, where the
now little girl had fallen fast asleep in Nathalie’s bed,
while her brother watched beside her with a white,
frightened face.
“Tell me, Danny,” inquired Nathalie gently, as she
laid her hand on the boy’s head, “how did you come
to make a boy of your sister?”
A quick sob broke from the lad. And then, with a
stiffening of his chin, as if with the resolution that he
would not give way, while furtively wiping his eyes
with the back of his hand, he told how, when Granny
Maguire died, and his little sister’s clothes, after a time,
wore out, he had been compelled to clothe her in his
cast-off rags, because he had no others, and he didn’t
know where to get them.
“She didn’t like it no way at first,” the lad’s blue
eyes twinkled, “but she got kind o’ used to it, an’ then
I promised that when she growed big I’d let her be a
girl. And whin the leddy that does the settlement
work comed round and wanted me to go ter the country
I couldn’t leave the kid, and when she said he
could come too, I didn’t squeal on meself, but jest kept
mumlike, for they wouldn’t have let her come wid me if
they knowed she was a girl. Sure, marm, we’ll have
ter wait till morning to go back,” the lad tried to
steady his voice, “fur the boss wid the brass buttons
on the train told me there ain’t no train till then.
.pn +1
Can we walk to the station, do yer think?” he inquired
pleadingly.
“But you’re not going back, Danny,” replied Nathalie.
“You’re going to stay right here with me, as
long as you’re good and mind me. It doesn’t make a
bit of difference if your sister is not a boy. I wrote
for three boys, for I thought boys could take care of
themselves in a way. Then, as we have no servants
here, and I get tired sometimes with so much to do, I
thought that boys would be more of a help. But we’ll
dress your sister as a girl, and—Oh, don’t cry,
Danny,” for the boy had turned his head aside, and
was silently struggling with his sobs.
But they were sobs of joy, as Nathalie soon discovered,
as, with a final shake of his thin shoulders, he
faced about and cried: “Oh, thank you, ma’am. No,
I ain’t no blubberin’ calf, but sure I just couldn’t let
the kid go back alone—and—But Gee, leddy, it
sure is heaven up here with these big hills—and the
green trees—and the flowers—And, leddy,” he
pulled at Nathalie’s sleeve as she turned to go away,
“I kin be a sight o’ help ter yer, for I knows how to
wash dishes, and I kin cook too, a good bit.”
“Oh, that will be just fine, Danny,” enthused Nathalie,
“for I am wild to have a man chef, and I’ll let
you wash all the dishes you want to, for that’s a job
I hate. And, Danny,” said the girl, patting the boy’s
.pn +1
shoulder gently, “we are going to make it as near like
Heaven up here as we can. But come, son, you must
be tired.” And then she led the boy up-stairs to the
upper floor, where, in a large corner-room, she had
taken the other boys, who were undressed and ready to
tumble into the three beds.
After directing Danny to sleep in the double bed,
as he was the largest, so that each one of the smaller
boys could have a bed to himself, she showed them the
closet and how to hang up their clothes,—what little
they had, they had brought tied up in handkerchiefs, or
on their backs,—she turned to go. “Yes, and you
must be sure to get up, every one of you, when you hear
the big bell ring in the morning.”
She had reached the door, after bidding them goodnight,
when a sudden thought turned her back. And
then Nathalie had her first solemn moments with her
boys, as she told each one that, before getting in
bed, he must say his prayers, so as to thank God for
the good things that had been given them that day.
The little Italian lad immediately drew out his rosary
and began to say his beads, but Danny scratched his
head in a dubious sort of way, and mumbled that it was
so long since he had said his prayers that he couldn’t
remember what he was to say.
But this forgetfulness on Danny’s part was soon
remedied, as the girl made him kneel by her in the
moonlight that streamed through the window, and solemnly
.pn +1
repeat, “Now I lay me down to sleep,” adding a
few words as a suggestion to the boy as to what he
should add to the prayer. Danny, with a brighter face,
now began to prepare for bed, and Nathalie, as she
again turned to leave the room, stopped to speak with
the refugee. And then the girl’s eyes grew moist, for
he had stolen into the darkest corner of the room, and,
with his one hand solemnly upraised, was repeating a
prayer softly to himself, while the little yellow cur
stood at attention by his side.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch13
CHAPTER XIII||“THE MOUNTAINS WITH SNOWY FOREHEADS”
.sp 2
It was something of a surprise the next morning to
Danny’s companions, to see a little maid, clothed
and in her right mind, as Janet expressed it, come
shyly into the dining-room,—a little maid who bore
a very strong resemblance to the brown-eyed, curly-haired,
whimpering little lad of the day before. The
black eyes of the Italian boy, Tony, widened, and then,
with a shy gleam of humor in their liquid depths, he
nodded at the little girl, crying under his breath, “Oh,
Boy!” But the little maid proved herself competent
to manage the situation to her satisfaction, as she
quickly made a face at him, for which she was properly
rebuked by Nathalie, who, however, was on the
verge of a laugh, while a ripple of amusement gleamed
in her mother’s eyes.
Jean, the Belgian refugee, stared with some perplexity
at the small girl, and did not comprehend the curious
situation until the children had left the breakfast-table,
when Nathalie made it plain to him.
The girl found that the morning hours were well-occupied,
as she started right in to put her boys through
.pn +1
their paces, as she called her drilling, so as to prepare
them not only for a very happy, but a useful, summer’s
stay. She had noticed, during the morning meal, that
the children, with ready sympathy for the maimed boy,
had been rather officious in trying to help him, and
that his thin, sickly face had flushed with embarrassment
and over-sensitiveness at the fact that to them he
was an object of pity.
Instantly divining how she would have felt under
like circumstances, Nathalie managed to get Danny
and Tony together, when Mrs. Page, whose mother-heart
had gone out to the boy, had taken him down to
the barn to show him where he could keep his dog, and
Janet had taken possession of the little maid.
In a few words she told them the tragic story of the
Belgian, and, after gaining their interest, made it clear
to them how they themselves would have felt if they
had been different from their mates, and warned them
about being too open in their method of helping him.
She suggested that little acts of subtle kindness would
be more appreciated, as they would not offend his sensitiveness.
Danny was now installed, with a big apron tied
around his waist, in front of the kitchen sink, taking
his first lesson in Nathalie’s method of washing dishes,
with Tony, the second helper, as the dish-dryer.
Divining that it would not only be better for Jean, the
refugee, to have employment so as to fill his mind with
.pn +1
something besides his sad experiences, and realizing
that he would naturally want to do as the other children,
Nathalie made him her right-hand man, as she
called it, and showed him how he could assist her in a
number of ways. In a few moments he was laboriously
carrying out, with one hand, the food to Nathalie,
who quickly placed it in the ice-box, or closet,
while little Sheila removed the soiled dishes to the
kitchen, happy at being on the job, as Danny said.
From dish-washing, preparing the vegetables for
dinner, sweeping the kitchen and shed, and dusting the
dining-room, it was bed-making. Jean was made captain
of the Working Squad, eager to help by doing
what he could with his one hand, while seeing that the
boys did their work as Nathalie had instructed them.
Fortunately for Nathalie, she was a fair French
scholar, and as the Belgian lad had lived in one of the
Walloon provinces, where French is generally spoken,
she had no difficulty in conversing with him. He could
speak a little English, but in a queer, hesitating way
that made him shy over it.
When the morning duties were finished, and they
were not done with a magician’s wand by any means,
but with the exercise of great patience on the part of
their young instructor, and a good deal of drilling on
the children’s part, they all hurried out into the sunshine.
Here they raced about, enjoying the fresh air,
the green trees and the flowers, and the beautiful
.pn +1
mountain views, and then they made the acquaintance
of Sam, who not only introduced them to the fascinations
of the barn,—as the cows, pigs, and chickens, the
soft cooing doves who flittered over the barn-roof,—but
to the one dray-horse. This animal proved a
source of unfeigned joy to the boys, as Sam taught
them how to harness it, and then allowed each one to
ride it bareback, even Jean, whose pale face glowed
with a strange joy, as he held the reins with his one
hand, and rode up and down on the road in front of
the house.
From the barn there was an inspection of the farm,
going down a green slope to watch the sheep as they
quietly browsed, and then on to the orchard, where
they had their fill of fruit, while in the vegetable garden
many hands proffered willing assistance to Nathalie,
as she gathered what was needed to replenish the
vegetable larder. From here they all trooped down to
pay a visit to the farmerette, whereupon Janet set them
all to weeding. Strange to say, Jean pulled up the
greatest number, to Nathalie’s surprise, who, by this
time, began to understand that real industry, even if
one-handed, can accomplish a good deal.
Finally Nathalie lined her charges up under the
trees on the lawn at attention, and undertook to teach
them the military salute, but before she was through
she was somewhat puzzled as to whether she or the
boys was the instructor. After they had saluted the
.pn +1
flag, which Sam had run up on the top of the barn
for that very purpose, and which was to be the boys’
duty in the future, they had a little soldier’s drill.
A few words were then read, very softly, by Nathalie
from the Bible. She had concluded that this
would be a good way to give them a bit of religious
instruction, especially for a beginning. She had begun
the reading by getting them interested in the book,
on whose fly-leaf was written the name, Philip Renwick,
by telling them how she had found it in a little
room on the upper floor of the house. She then told
them about this boy who had left his mother to travel
abroad, how he had married, and had then come home,
only to leave his mother and return to Europe, never
to be seen by her again. They were much interested
in the story, especially when she showed them the picture
of the young man in the library, and from that
time onward the little Bible seemed to possess a peculiar
interest to them, and thus led them to become
more interested in the every-day Scripture lesson.
After the “Star-Spangled Banner” and several patriotic
songs had been sung, and the “Marseillaise”
had been given with much spirit by the boys, Janet,
who had just come up from her farm, appeared, and
patriotically kept time with her rake. She became so
interested in the little singers that she volunteered, to
Nathalie’s delight, to drill them in the national anthems
of the Allies.
.pn +1
Whereupon Jean, with a new eagerness in his bewildered
eyes, up with his hand, and made Nathalie
understand that he could sing, too. Nathalie smilingly
encouraged him, and in a few moments the lad’s
thin, quavering voice, that grew deeper as he caught the
spirit of the words, gave them Belgium’s song of cheer.
This inspired Tony, and he became the soloist, and
sang Italy’s national anthem.
There was a “do-as-you-please time” after dinner
down on the lawn for an hour or so, and then the boys
were mustered in the bathroom and initiated as to how
to manipulate a tooth-brush, in a tooth-cleaning drill,
Nathalie having supplied herself with three new
brushes in anticipation of this procedure. Sheila, who
was not one of the drillers,—only three brushes having
been provided,—looked with envious eyes upon
this performance, and, when Danny had finished, in
a plaintively aggrieved voice complained to their young
teacher that he would not let her have his brush so that
she could clean her teeth, too.
Explanations were now in order. Nathalie smiling
amusedly at the idea of loaning a tooth-brush, and then
they were all made as presentable as possible, considering
their ragged clothes, which had begun to prey
upon Mrs. Page’s mind, as well as Nathalie’s. But
the clothes part was something that had not presented
itself to the girl when she had planned the boys’ coming,
and she was at a loss to remedy the trouble.
.pn +1
Certainly something must be done to do away with
Tony’s old velveteen embroidered vest, his greatest
treasure, and Jean’s soiled white shirt, which seemed
to be the only one he possessed. Danny’s clothes, although
they had been queerly darned and glaringly
patched, and were miles too small for him, were clean,
and he did have a change of underclothing, to Nathalie’s
relief.
However, the general shabbiness of the boys’ apparel
had not affected their merry spirits, the girl decided,
as she sat knitting on the veranda, and heard the
happy, joyous voices that floated up from the lawn, as
they played leap-frog, ran races, and turned handsprings.
Even Jean, caught by the contagion of the
moment, turned a somersault, to her breathless amazement.
She was beginning to realize what Mrs. Van Vorst
meant when she spoke of what the glorious wonders of
these mountains would mean to the half-fed, sickly little
waifs of humanity from the East Side of New York.
Yes, it meant a new world, with no more squalid,
stifling two-by-two rooms, or damp, moldy cellars.
No more nauseating smells, odors from the backyard
garbage-can, the rattlety-bang of heavy trucks and
milk-wagons, or the jarring creak of the Elevated.
For, as Sheila expressed it, they were in a “big green
world, with high blue walls, with flower stars a-peepin’
at ’em from the grass, and little teeny birds a-singin’
.pn +1
and rockin’ their babies to sleep in tall trees, that
nodded to ’em with a swishy whisper.”
Suddenly the serenity of Nathalie’s cogitations received
a shock, as a horrible swear-word came, no, not
floating, but yelling, its way across the green. The
girl jumped up and rushed down under the trees, to
see Tony, with his soft, appealing ways, and Danny,
with the blue eyes that she had already begun to trust
for the frankness of their gaze, rolling on the lawn,
locked in a vice-like grip, as they pommeled and
pounded each other in a way that made Nathalie gasp.
Sheila, with squeals of delighted glee, was circling
about the combatants, piping shrilly. “Give ’im a
plug in the snoot, Danny! Pound ’im in the mug!”
to the accompaniment of big, forceful oaths that rolled
from the mouths of the fighting boys. As the little
maid sighted Nathalie, she ejaculated, with a broad
grin, “Ain’t them kids fierce!” which caused poor
Nathalie to gasp again.
“Oh, boys, you mustn’t fight!” the agonized girl
cried, as she reached down and tried to separate the
young pugilists, with her limbs all of a tremble. But
her efforts were useless, and, regardless of her screams
and expostulations, the punching and scratching continued,
punctuated by defiant yells, and such horrifying
language that the girl shivered.
As she stared as if fascinated by this new and revolting
experience, she saw a little trickle of blood oozing
.pn +1
down Danny’s face, for Tony, who was the underdog,
was an expert at nail-digging. It was a fearsome
sight, and Nathalie, appalled by the thought that he
might dig out an eye or so in his blinded wrath, in
frenzied horror screamed, “Oh, Tony, you’re killing
Danny!” But the only result of her cry was, “Yer
bet yer life he ain’t!” and the hair continued to fly, as
Danny yelled triumphantly, “Gee! I knew I could
lick yer wid one hand!” and the gory battle continued.
Then, in sheer desperation, hopelessly wringing her
hands, she started in the direction of the house to call
her mother. Suddenly she stopped. Oh, no; her
mother would send them away, and then—O dear!
Ah, she knew what she would do. Terror speeded her
feet, and two minutes later she reappeared on the lawn,
and with one swing of her arm there came a terrific
“Clang! Clang!” as the girl, with big excited eyes,
thrust the still clanging bell between the faces of the
boys.
The effect was magical, for the lads, with screams of
terror, unlocked their arms, hands, and legs, and rolled
apart, while gazing with dilated eyes, as if they had
heard the crack of doom, at the bell that Nathalie had
thrust into their faces.
A few moments later, almost unclothed, dust-begrimed,
blood-besmeared, and both sniffling from
nerve-shock, but still breathing out dire vengeance one
upon the other, Nathalie led her two charges up-stairs
.pn +1
and thrust one into the bathroom and the other into a
dark closet. Jan, at this moment, appeared in the hall,
and the girl excitedly dragged her into her bedroom,
and, in a hushed, nervous whisper, made known the
proceedings of the last few moments.
But Jan, who at home was a district nurse, and had
witnessed many slum fights, burst into a peal of laughter.
And then, with her face still red with mirth and
laughter, demanded, “Well, young lady, what else did
you expect if you will take ragamuffins and street
Arabs to your bosom?” Nevertheless Janet’s sympathies
were aroused, for Nathalie, if not for the boys,
and in a few moments the two girls were industriously
making the boys presentable once more.
And then Nathalie led the culprits into a chamber
apart, and began to upbraid them, trying to impress
their young minds with the enormity of the wrong-doing
of which they had been guilty.
But the spirit of the cave-dweller was not yet subdued,
and, notwithstanding the girl’s persuasiveness,
and her pleading attitude in her endeavor to make them
see the error of their way, they kept up a wrangling
duet of recriminations, each one accusing the other of
punching him first, while stubbornly crying, “Now, ye
didn’t lick me.”
Presently Nathalie, under the strain of overwrought
nerves, and the sudden realization of the unforeseen
responsibility of her position, burst into tears. Lo, to
.pn +1
her amazement, her tears acted like oil on troubled
waters, for the next instant a grimy hand tugged at her
sleeve, as Danny, with troubled eyes, in a sudden wave
of contrition, cried: “Oh, Miss Natty, don’t take on
like that. Sure and I’m never goin’ to fight no more.”
Meanwhile Tony’s black eyes, in dumb entreaty,
grew bigger and bigger, until he, too, in sudden repentance,
began to stroke her hand caressingly as his soft,
musical voice pleaded, “Please Mees Natta, Tonee, he
lova you—he fighta no more.”
Peace was making its way into each heart, when the
purr of an automobile was heard, and as Nathalie hurried
to the window, she saw Mr. Banker whirling under
the porte-cochère. As the boys, paroled on their
honor, a little later hung around the car, discussing its
many merits, they were duly presented to the newcomer.
That gentleman evidently liked small boys, for
he immediately made arrangements to call for them
some day, and take them to Littleton for an all-day
good time.
The following afternoon Nathalie, holding Sheila
by the hand, with Jean by her side, and the two boys
in front of her, started to show them the mountains.
At the post-office at Sugar Hill village Jean, who had
been delegated to act as postman the coming week, was
duly initiated into the business of opening the mail-box,
an office he accepted with a sudden lighting of his dazed
.pn +1
eyes, which Nathalie began to fancy were already losing
some of their fear-haunted expression.
A short visit was paid to the Sweet-Pea ladies, where
they were treated to some maple sugar, Mona very
earnest in her endeavors to show sympathy for the little
refugee, and her admiration for Sheila. As they
hurried away, a bunch of sweet peas was seen on each
little breast, pinned there by that gentle lady.
A walk on the long, curving board-walk up the hill,
with a rest on one of the benches under the maples, to
Hotel Look-off, now followed. The three boys were
anxious to start that very minute to climb Iron Mountain,
but were soon persuaded that it was too warm a
day for a mountain hike. From the long veranda of
the hotel they were lured to admiration of the hilly,
wide-spreading green sward, and the magnificent views
of the mountains, as they rose and fell, receded and
advanced, with their jutting pinnacles of rock,
gloomed with the green of mountain forest.
After slacking their thirst at the little spring-house in
the grove, they sauntered down the board-walk to the
Sunset Hill House, and as they interestedly watched
the golfers in their bright-colored coats on the velvety
green links, Danny proudly informed them that he
knew how to caddy. But their enthusiasm grew tense
when they stood on the little observation tower in
front of the hotel, and Nathalie pointed out the Presidential
.pn +1
Range, with Mount Washington towering six
thousand feet up among the clouds.
She then showed them the Franconia Range, explaining
that the great mountains were divided into
clefts, or notches, from which flowed four long rivers
and many smaller ones, several of them being named
after the Indians, who, in the early times, lived on the
mountain passes.
With the help of the chart they soon learned that
Lafayette was the highest peak of this smaller range,
and that Pemigewasset, seemingly the nearest peak to
the hotel, had been named after a great Indian chieftain.
The adjoining peaks, as the Kinsman and the
Three Graces, proved of interest; also Cannon, or
Profile Mountain, when the young girl explained that
it not only had a stone, shaped like a cannon, on its
top, but that from one of its sides a great stone face
was to be seen.
Nathalie now told her young listeners how the mountains
were first seen, over four hundred and fifty years
ago, a cluster of snowy peaks, by John Cabot, from
the deck of his ship when sailing along the New England
coast. They were called Waumbekket-meyna,
the White Hills, and sometimes “The mountains with
the snowy foreheads,” by the Indians.
The first white man to ascend these heights, she related,
was an Irishman named Field, who, two hundred
.pn +1
years after they had been seen by Cabot, with a few
white companions, climbed to the topmost crag of the
highest peak. “Field found a number of shiny crystals
which he thought were costly gems,” laughed the
girl merrily, “but, alas, they proved to be only beautiful
white stones, but, on account of this occurrence,
the mountains came to be called Crystal Hills.
“The Indian guides who had accompanied Field
part way up the mountains,” continued Nathalie, “refused
to go any farther, for fear that the Great Spirit,
who they believed lived in a magnificent palace on the
highest peak, would destroy them if they ventured too
near him. They were so surprised to see Field return
in safety a few hours later that they decided he
was a god, for during his absence a great storm had
arisen, which they believed had been sent by the Indian
Manitou to kill him. The redmen not only believed
that the Great Spirit sent forth the frost and snow, as
well as the rain and fire,—the lightning—but declared
that the thunder was his voice.”
The Indian legend of Pawan was eagerly listened to,
as Nathalie told how the Indians asserted that when the
earth was covered with water and every one was
drowned, he and his wife, carrying a hare, had ascended
to the highest peak. When the waters began to
abate, Pawan sent forth the hare, and when it did not
return he and his wife descended to the earth and dwelt
.pn +1
there in safety, for the waters had dried up from off
the land. From this man, the Indians declared, every
one on the earth had descended.
During the recital of these stories, Sheila’s red-brown
eyes darkened to black, and every mountain
peak assumed a weird and wonderful personality to
her imaginative mind, fed, as it had been, by stories of
fairies, pixies, and gnomes, as told to her by Danny,
when playing the little mother.
But the tourists now found that their appetites had
been whetted by the keen mountain air, and gladly
started on their homeward way to enjoy the supper that
awaited them. After tea they gathered on the veranda,
and Tony entertained them by playing on his violin.
Nathalie soon discovered that he not only played
with considerable skill, but that Danny could whistle
like a bird, while Jean and Sheila could pipe forth
snatches of song in clear, childish trebles.
The boys were rendered exuberantly happy a few
days later at the unexpected arrival of Mr. Banker,
who had come to give them a day’s outing at Littleton.
Morning chores, military tactics, and other occupations
were quickly forgotten, as Nathalie and her mother
made them tidy for the trip, Danny, by the way, having
kindly washed Jean’s one shirt the day before,—a
housewifely occupation that he had become proficient
in, from sheer necessity,—and Nathalie had ironed it.
It was long past tea-time when the boys returned
.pn +1
from their pleasure jaunt, and told in high good spirits
of the “bully” time they had had, what they had seen
at the movies, and many other sights. Nathalie’s joy
almost equaled the boys’ when they descended from
the car, and she saw three smartly equipped lads, each
one in a khaki suit, with brown shoes, a brimmed hat, a
knapsack, and, the most prized possession of all, a gun!
The girl’s eyes filled with tears, and she had rather a
tremulous time of it as she thanked Mr. Banker for his
kindness, and especially for those much-needed clothes.
Nathalie, with her brown-suited boys,—Tony with
his violin and his embroidered vest, as he had soon discarded
his khaki suit, Jean with his empty sleeve, and
yellow-brown terrier,—and Sheila, in a pink sunbonnet,
soon became familiar objects on the mountain
roads. They were always greeted with pleasant smiles
and nods from the passing tourists, Jean being regarded
with more than the usual curiosity, as his story
had been rumored about.
Many of them would stop and give him money, until
he had so many silver coins that Nathalie had to make
him a bag to keep them in, as he had declared that he
was going to save them to take him back to France,
so he could find his father. It was not long before
they had not only become hardy mountaineers, but
familiar with all the near-by walks in and around Franconia
and Sugar Hill. Jean, too, had begun to show
a decided improvement, not only having gained flesh
.pn +1
and color, but having a brighter and more cheerful expression
in his eyes.
And so the sunny days passed, cementing the bond
between Nathalie and her charges, and each one learning
something that would be of help in the days to
come. And then, one day, Nathalie had an inspiration!
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch14
CHAPTER XIV||“SONS OF LIBERTY”
.sp 2
One day Nathalie led the boys to a terrace, a few
feet back of a brown-shingled cottage across the
road from Peckett’s, and which stood on a lower
spur of Garnet Mountain, facing the Franconia Range.
Here, on this grassy ridge, gently sloping down to a
green meadow below, skirted by a tree-fringed road
edging the rocky pasture-land which gradually merged
into the lower slopes of the range, she pointed out King
Lafayette, and his lower mate, Lincoln, with his two
slides. The Sleeping Infant, lying between the latter
and Garfield’s sharply defined peak, was immediately
heralded by the little maid, Sheila, as the long-lost infant,
which some kind-hearted fairy some day, with
her magic wand, would awaken. The Twins, and the
huge Sleeping Giant, and some of the lower peaks, all
came in for a share in the mystic doings of the little
girl’s fanciful imagination.
The atmosphere was so translucent that each shaggy
crest, pointed dome, and spire of the range, sharply
defined against the sapphire-blue of the sky, stood
forth with a strange lucidity, seemingly so near that
.pn +1
one had the inclination to put forth a hand to touch
them.
Lafayette’s craggy foretop, standing up from the
deep green-verdured gorge that cleft one side of it,
was startlingly like some huge elephant’s head, with
a mouse-colored, wrinkly and baggy-skinned trunk.
The boys accentuated the resemblance by locating two
big rocks, which, they declared, were the beady eyes of
the animal, while Sheila insisted she could see the eyes
move.
As they rested on the ledge of a little circling wall of
cobble-stones, evidently the unfinished foundation of a
stone tower, Nathalie told how Lincoln’s rounded dome
had been named in honor of a great American named
Abraham Lincoln. “Some people used to call him
‘Old Abe,’ or ‘Father Abraham,’ not from any disrespect,”
continued the girl, “but because he was so
kindly in his nature, his heart so filled with love for
mankind, that it was a title of honor, and showed the
love of the people for him.”
“Ain’t he the gink that got to be President of the
United States, and made the darkies free?” inquired
Danny eagerly.
Nathalie nodded, and then led the boy on to tell
how Lincoln, from a long-legged, ungainly pioneer
youth, brought up in a log cabin in the wilds of
Indiana, ended his career as the hero of the greatest
republic in the world.
.pn +1
The little newsie told his story importantly, proud
to think that he had remembered these odd bits of
knowledge from the little schooling he had received.
And what he didn’t remember Nathalie did, dwelling
at length on the part this leader of men took in freeing
the slaves, and what slavery meant to the negroes
of the South.
As the little group listened with wide-eyed interest,
the girl suddenly cried, “Oh, children! think what it
would mean to you if you were not allowed to move
about as you pleased, but were forced to do what you
did not want to do, although you might be tired and
hungry, and were driven about like cattle, and lashed
if you disobeyed your master!”
She then explained that all men were born free and
equal, and that God never intended that any man should
be a bond-servant to his fellow-men. “Every one,”
she emphasized, “has the right to enjoy the beautiful
things of life without being subjected to cruel treatment,
and forced to hard labor, as the slaves had been,
just because their skin was black instead of white.
“But there is another kind of slavery.” said Nathalie
earnestly, “which, although it may not mean the slavery
of the body, like that of the negroes on a plantation,
is the slavery of the will. That is, a man may
not be lashed on his back, but his will is made subject
to another man’s will, and he has to obey and direct
his life the way this man says, whether he wants to
.pn +1
or not. All over the world, for centuries, the people
of different nations have been forced to obey the will
of one man, that is, the ruler, or the king, of the nation
to which they belonged. The peoples of the world
have not been free; they have not had the right, or the
liberty, to do as they thought or felt.”
She then tried to make the children understand
that liberty was something as high and wide, and as
vast, as the beautiful mountains which rose before
them. “It is like the air,” she said, “or the atmosphere,
which stretches about you on every side,
and around the great earth like a gray blanket. It is
so big it can’t be seen, like the mountains, or measured,
and yet it can be felt. For if you were shut up in a
box without any air, or atmosphere to breathe into
your lungs, you would die. So liberty, God’s special
gift, is so dear and sweet to man, that without it he
can’t grow or expand, for he is like a man shut up
in a box without air. He is like a little Tom Thumb,
for he can only grow just so high.”
Nathalie now interested the children in the story of
the Pilgrims, the pioneers of liberty in America, telling
how, because they were not allowed to have liberty
under the rule of the English king, they came to this
new world and sought to worship God as they deemed
right. In doing this, she explained, they not only
founded a colony where they had the right to worship
God as their conscience dictated, but they made religious
.pn +1
freedom possible for the people who came after
them. By the signing of the Compact in the cabin of
the Mayflower, they gave this nation democratic liberty,
by giving every man the right to express his
thoughts and feelings, thus giving him a say as to
how the people should be ruled, which meant a government
for and by the people.
Nathalie now told of the patriots, and how, in the
War of the Revolution, they fought the mother-country,
England, in order to maintain the liberty given
them by the founders of the nation. “By uniting the
thirteen colonies into one, they not only added unity to
justice and liberty, but gave us the United States of
America.
“These lovers of liberty also organized a society, in
New York, which became known as the Sons of Liberty,
all the members determined to defend with their
lives the liberty and principles given them by their
forefathers. As liberty means the right to express our
thoughts and feelings, it also means that these thoughts
and feelings must be good and pure, the best within
us,” added the girl with sudden gravity. “And these
Sons of Liberty were so called not only because they
fought for liberty, but because they gave of their best
to mankind.”
Danny added another link to this story of liberty
by telling about the Declaration of Independence, and
how the Liberty Bell was rung from the old State House
.pn +1
in Philadelphia, so that every one should know
that a new nation had been born. The ride of Paul
Revere was described with spirited impressiveness by
the boy, as well as what had occurred on Lexington
common, and the famous battle by the old North
Bridge at Concord.
Whereupon Nathalie pointed out Mount Washington’s
cone-tipped crest, majestically rising above a
wreath of silver-gray clouds, and explained that, although
the Indians had named it Agiochook, in later
years the white people had named it Mount Washington,
in honor of the great man Danny had been telling
about.
After dwelling upon Washington’s magnificent character,
and recalling little incidents from his life, Nathalie
said that, like the great mountain that towered so
far above its fellows, so George Washington, the first
President of this great nation, was known to civilization
as one of the greatest men in the world, because
he had given of his best to help his fellow-men, and
proved that he was a true Son of Liberty.
Jefferson Mountain, its crest rising in low humility
near Washington’s greater height; Adams, whose
stony front stood forth in rugged grandeur on the left;
and Madison, Monroe, Franklin, Clay, and Webster, as
well as other peaks, were pointed out to the children,
each one named for some great American, who had
proved his right to be known as a Son of Liberty.
.pn +1
To be sure, some of the peaks were shrouded in a
veil of mystical haze, while others were but dimly discerned,
as they peeped between the gaps made by their
nearer mates, but each and every one served to illustrate
in whose honor it had been named, and why he
was a lover of what every one loved—liberty.
Nathalie now drew the children’s attention to Mount
Lafayette, and said that this peak had also been named
in honor of a great man, also a Son of Liberty, although
he was not an American. The children had
heard the name of Lafayette mentioned so often in
connection with the present war, that they listened with
greedy avidity as the girl told about this “Boy of Versailles,”
as some one had called him, when, as the young
Marquis de Lafayette,—a mere boy,—he used to lead
the revels at that famous French palace in helping the
girl queen, Marie Antoinette, make merry at her garden
parties, when her boy husband was too busy in his
workshop, taking some old clock apart, to entertain his
guests at court.
She told how the little marquis loved to walk behind
the brave soldiers of the day, the one ambition of his
life being his longing to be a soldier. She told, too,
of his life in the lonely castle among the southern
mountains of France, where his only companions were
governesses and masters, all intent upon drilling him
to dance, to bow with courtly grace, to pick up a lady’s
handkerchief, and other accomplishments of the court.
.pn +1
After leaving the College du Plessis, where his education
as a courtier was completed, he returned to his
estate, now the heir to great wealth, where he used to
spend his time making friends with the peasants,—the
people who lived on his lands,—thus becoming acquainted
with their mode of life. In this way he
learned the need of liberty, the liberty that gave people
the right to think and feel, and to express their
thoughts and feelings, and the great need that the people
of the nations in the world should have a voice in
their own government, and thus learn to govern themselves.
Nathalie then told how, when the patriots of America
began to fight against King George in order to gain
their rights, that the young nobleman, now tall and
slender, with reddish hair and bright eyes, heard of it,
and, although an officer in the French army, he determined
to go to America and help these people of the
colonies to win their liberty. He had a young and
lovely wife,—they had been sweethearts when children,—and
yet so inspired was he to help the Americans
that he left her. With a friend, the Baron de
Kalb, he eluded the spies and officers of his own country,
and in various disguises finally reached Spain,
whence he embarked for America, and gallantly fought
with the American patriots during the War of the Revolution,
winning fame not only for his bravery, but for
his great friendship for Washington.
.pn +1
“Indeed,” said the girl, as she finished her recital,
he was a real Son of Liberty, and it is a splendid
thing to think that these two grand old mountains, facing
each other in such magnificent grandeur, should
now be the monuments to these two wonderful men,
monuments, too, that can only perish when the mountains
turn and flee away at the command of the Most
High God.
“Lincoln, whose life-story you know,” Nathalie
pointed to the green-wooded heights of Mount Lincoln,
“also proved himself a Son of Liberty when he gave
of the noblest and best that was in him to the people, in
his great struggle to free the slaves. In fact,” the girl
spoke a little sadly, “this great man was not only a
Son of Liberty, but he was a martyr to Liberty.” And
then she told how he had lost his life because of his
heroic determination to do what he thought was right.
“Children,” cried the girl suddenly, facing the row
of intent, eager faces regarding her, “can any of you
tell me who to-day are proving themselves true Sons of
Liberty?”
“The soldiers who are fighting in the trenches!”
burst from Danny quickly.
Before Nathalie could assent, a thin, quavering voice
burst out with the ringing cry, “Vive la Belgique!
Vive la Belgique!”
“Good for you, Jean,” cried the girl, as she enthusiastically
clapped her hands in approval. “It is long
.pn +1
live Belgium. Yes, Jean, the soldiers of Belgium, of
France, England, and America, too, now, are proving
themselves Sons of Liberty, because they are all fighting
to give liberty to the world. And brave Belgium,”
patting the shoulder of the refugee, whose pale
face was strangely illumined, “every man in that
little country has proved that he is a Son of Liberty,
when, rather than dishonor the great principles of liberty
and justice, he took up arms and defended it
against the Germans when they made their mad rush
to Paris. They not only saved France, but every nation
as well, saved it so that each man in it could fight
and thus give liberty to the world. Now, children,
let us cry with Jean, ‘Vive la Belgique.’”
When this cry ceased, Tony’s velvety black eyes,
with a sly gleam of humor lurking in their shadows,
became scarlet flames, suddenly remembering that his
native land was also in the war, and, with dramatic
fervor, he yelled, “Viva l’Italia!”
Danny, not to be outdone in this burst of patriotism,
immediately started in with the lusty shout of, “Hurrah
for the United States! Hurrah for the United
States!”
Altogether it was a very patriotic little company that
stood by the old stone ledge facing those blue-hazed
mountains on that sunny afternoon and “yelled their
heads off,” as Danny said, in honor of the Sons of Liberty,
.pn +1
who were fighting in the trenches across the sea
to give liberty to the world.
After the shouting and demonstration of the patriots
had begun to wane, Nathalie put up her hand for
silence, and then, in her simple way, the way that somehow
always seemed to go right to the heart of every
child, said very softly, “And now, children, let us
show that we, too, each one of us, want to do what is
right, to give of our best to make others happy. Let
us show that, although we cannot go and fight in the
trenches, we are still Sons of Liberty, by keeping a big,
deep place in our hearts for the boys in the trenches,
not only our American boys, but the boys of the Allies,
every soldier of every nation who is fighting for the
victory of peace and right.
“I know you all want to belong to the Sons of Liberty,
that you would like to show that you are real soldiers,
fighting for the right; and so, will you not bow
your heads for a moment, and down in the big, deep
place in your hearts, silently say a little prayer? Just
ask God that He will bless the soldiers, these Sons of
Liberty across the sea, who are fighting for you and me,
and give them a great victory in this world’s battle for
the rights of men, a victory that means happiness, love,
and peace for every one in the world.”
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch15
CHAPTER XV||THE GALLERY OF THE GODS
.sp 2
There was a frightened look on the faces of
the children for a moment or so, and then
Sheila cried in a distressed tone, “But, Miss
Natty, I don’t know how to pray that way.”
Danny immediately flung about and flashed an annihilating
look upon the little girl, but Nathalie, drawing
the child close, explained what a silent prayer meant.
Then, as she solemnly bowed her head, every little head
went down, and for the space of a moment or so, up
there on that high mountain,—that Nathalie always
felt must be very close to God,—there was a reverent
silence, a sacred moment, as from each child-heart went
up a prayer. Perhaps it was only a dumbly spoken
word, or a reverent desire, but surely God heard.
As Nathalie raised her head, and the children followed
her example,—evidently there had been some
peeping eyes,—all but Jean, who still kept his head
down, his pale lips slowly moving, there was a moment’s
quiet, and then Nathalie exclaimed, “Oh, boys,
what do you say to calling these rocks a fort?”
“Crackie! that will be dandy!” responded Danny
quickly. “And, Miss Nathalie,” he added, his face
.pn +1
lighting with sudden thought, “why can’t we call it
Liberty Fort?”
And so the round ledge of cobble-stones was named
Liberty Fort, and then, before Nathalie realized what
the suggestion carried, Tony proposed that the path at
the foot of the terrace on which the fort stood, on the
summit of the lower slope leading down to the meadow,
be a trench.
Other suggestions followed, which culminated in a
lengthy discussion, leading the children the following
afternoon to the woods, where they gathered dried
leaves, and little pebbles and twigs, to fill some bags,
which Janet and Nathalie had made out of some old
potato-sacks, to represent sand-bags to pile on top of
the trench. The two girls meanwhile sat in the fort
and not only made epaulettes for the young soldiers’
shoulders, but also gas-masks, which these Sons of
Liberty vociferously declared that they must have, or
they would be gassed.
After the Stars and Stripes, with the various flags of
the Allies, had been fastened to a pole and mounted on
the fort, the battle of the Marne took place, represented
by these small soldiers, with guns held high,
leaping over the sand-bags and rushing madly down
the slope to the meadow below, which had been named
“No Man’s Land.” Here, with eyes aflame and hair
all tousled, they fought frenziedly with the imaginary
gray uniforms of the German soldiery, who were supposed
.pn +1
to have rushed towards them from their entrenchments,
the stone wall by the road just beyond the
meadow.
It was great sport, notwithstanding that their helmets—old
tin pails—would insist upon falling over
their faces just when some very wonderful capture was
about to be made. But they soon learned not to mind
a little thing like that, as Danny observed with officer-like
brusqueness—he was the general-in-chief of these
liberty forces—that only slackers or mollycoddles
would stop fighting for a hat. So they fought most
furiously, imitating in every way possible the maneuvers
and tactics of the soldiers in France.
They took possession of a rustic seat on the ridge
near the woods for an outpost, and here Sheila, with
a big paper soldier’s cap on her head, was posted to
parade with military precision before it as a sentry.
Danny, meanwhile would climb a tree, to watch a make-believe
enemy’s aëroplane, or to play the rôle of a bird-man,
getting ready to fly in a patrol over the enemy’s
entrenchments.
The parts the little girl played were numerous, sometimes
acting as a canteen girl, selling lemonade and
make-believe “smokes,”—twigs trimmed to represent
cigarettes,—or again, playing the part of a captured
Boche, always insisting that she was a prince, or some
high German official. She entered into the playing of
holding up her hands in token of surrender, while calling
.pn +1
“Kamerad” with dramatic fervor. Then, as if
suddenly reminded that she was a scion of royalty, she
would take to fighting and kicking furiously to be released,
bringing her teeth into action, and inflicting
sundry bites on her captor with such energy that Nathalie,
or Janet, tricked out with a white head-gear,
starred with a red cross, would hurry to the scene, and
bind up with soft rags the wounds of the afflicted one.
Jean, who had begun to prove that his real self was
only lying dormant beneath a shroud of sorrow, was
triumphantly happy as the bugler, and one day suggested
that they have a tank,—he had seen one on a
battle-field. An old tin can was then procured from
Sam, which had done duty in holding chicken-feed.
It was now made to roll, in a horribly queer way, down
the slope and over No Man’s Land, maneuvered by
Jean, who was inside of it, and who proved that he was
a keen trailer of the Boches, as the lad always called
the Germans.
The boy frightened Nathalie, sometimes, by the intense
hatred he displayed whenever the Germans were
mentioned, as his face would grow tense and a sudden
fire would flame up in his eyes, while his one hand
would clench rigidly and his little form trembled with
the force of the passion within his breast.
But the children did not always play at war in
France, for sometimes they were Indians, and would
wriggle over the grass snake-fashion. They were all
.pn +1
sachems, or big chiefs, named after some red-skinned
hero of some Indian tale Nathalie had told them, each
one intent on scalping some white man. Sometimes
Jean would teach the boys how to play some of the
games played in Belgium, as jet, a game which seemed
to be played with a stick on a stone, and which they
all seemed to enjoy. Then again they would play hopscotch
in Jean’s way, and which he called “Kalinker.”
But always at the end of their play they would line up
in the circling ledge of stones, and, as if inspired by
Nathalie’s suggestion on the day of their first visit
to the fort, stand very still as they again bowed their
heads in a silent prayer for the boys who were fighting
“over there.”
Then, one morning, a telephone message came from
Mr. Banker that he would be up that afternoon and
take the children to the Flume. Whereupon they all
became so exuberantly happy that Nathalie had rather
a hard time pinning them down to their usual duties.
After a delightful drive, in which Nathalie and Mr.
Banker were kept busy answering the many queries
propounded by the sightseers, as they gazed in awed
wonder at the strange rock formations with their
purple and green tints, the silvery waterfalls, and the
many natural beauties of the Notch, they arrived at
the Flume.
Here, opposite the Flume House, they climbed a zigzagging
path up a hill backed by two massive mountains,
.pn +1
and then went through a belt of woodland to
inspect the Pool. This was a mountain freak, a great
basin over a hundred feet wide and forty deep, hollowed
out by the Pemigewasset River’s age-old tools,
sand and water, as they flowed over its rocky bed.
The lustrous green of its waters rippling between
lichen-covered cliffs, and canopied by overhanging trees—that
looked as if they would fall from age—was so
transparent that the children could see the shiny pebbles
at the bottom of the Pool.
On returning to the road they started for the Flume,
passing over a wooden bridge, and then up an incline,
a sort of up-hill-and-down-dale road, as it followed the
mountain brook flowing from the cascade that dashed
over the rocks at the head of the gorge. The wild
picturesque beauty of this “Gallery of the Gods,” as
Mr. Banker called it, not only elicited many exclamations
from the children, but brought forth more weird
fancies from Sheila, which challenged the humorous
gleam in that gentleman’s eyes many times.
The child’s mind was so rich in imagery, that every
hooded mountain or queer-shaped cliff, every passing
cloud or glint of sunlight as it filtered down through
the leaves in the forest, and the soft patter of the raindrops
as they danced on the window-pane in a storm,
were sources of constant delight. In childish prattle
she would tell Nathalie what the wind said as it swept
through the trees, or came with a soft rustle around the
.pn +1
corner of the veranda on a breezy day. The soft twirl
of a leaf, the trill of a bird in the silent forest, were all
pixie-whispers.
She would pick up a leaf from the road, beautiful to
her in its satiny greenness, or some gay-petaled flower,
and talk to it as if it were her dolly, or some tricksy
creature from fairy-land, always giving it some fanciful
name that was keenly suggestive of its nature.
Animals she caressed and fondled with the fearless
confidence and love of trusting childhood.
They finally reached the remarkable rock gallery in
the very heart of the mountain, which Nathalie now
introduced to them as Liberty Mountain. She explained
that it was cut in two by the deep gorge, or
fissure, known as The Flume, whose walls reached to
a perpendicular height of fifty or seventy feet, while
at its farther end a mountain-brook came dashing down
with great splashes of white foam.
The children were hushed to profound wonder at
the frowning gloom of the great wall that reached so
high and dark above their heads, with its patches of
green moss, and where, from its many crevices, young
birches had fastened their roots, and ferns and vines
clung to soften its harsh gray. Every now and then
a tiny white mountain-flower could be seen peeping
down at them, like a fairy, Sheila declared, from a
mossy bed of green.
They climbed up and up, stepping from rock to
.pn +1
rock, to clamber at last over the slippery smoothness
of the granite ledges. Here the cascade had simmered
to a lazy flow, to eddy with a silver tinkling into the
many hollows that perforated the rocks, making tiny
glistening pools, which gave the children unfeigned
delight as they dipped their hands in its soft trickle.
But when they reached the narrow foot-bridge,
sometimes only railed by a single birch pole, or a rope
that clung tremblingly to one side of the steep wall,
and looked down into the gorge below, they came to
a sudden halt. With a haunting fascination they
watched the brook as it now dashed with a mad plunge,
splashed with patches of snowy foam, over the masses
of green-embossed boulders, that looked as if they had
been tossed, helter-skelter fashion, into the narrow slit
of rock, in angry mood, by old Father Time.
With strange awe they glanced up the gorge, through
the weird gloom of the scene, at the pearly glitter of
the falling water, with its blur of green background,
that appeared as if some miraculous hand had suddenly
wrenched the earth apart to send forth its flashing
spray. And then they grew curiously still as they
spied the eerie shadows on the high black wall, where
the sunlight, as it glinted down into the glen in wanton
sport, played hide-and-seek with golden glimmer.
But the silence was broken as Mr. Banker pointed
out a huge tree-trunk that had fallen across the stream,
reaching from side to side of the gorge, making an
.pn +1
aërial pathway high above their heads. When the
gentleman said it was called “The Devil’s Bridge,” and
that sometimes people had walked on it across the
gorge, their tongues began to clatter.
Fired by curiosity, the boys regained their nerve
and pushed manfully up the foot-bridge, barred with
slats, like a horse’s plank, while Mr. Banker, holding
little Sheila by the hand, followed close behind. Nathalie,
with a strange timidity, hesitatingly followed,
always being oppressed by an odd, queer feeling when
ascending any great height, a feeling that she wanted
to cling to something more tangible than space. But
there was nothing to cling to but that shaky old railing,
and little Jean was hanging to it fearsomely with his
one hand, his little form shaking tremulously, and his
eyes black with an odd fear.
Stirred to pity, Nathalie drew the child to the other
side of her, near the high wall, away from that gaping
rut in the earth beneath, and then caught him firmly
by the shoulder. Then suddenly, perhaps it was a
quick glance down into the depths below, she felt a
strange, indefinable sensation pass through her. A
deathly faintness seized her; she closed her eyes, and
then she felt herself falling, falling——
But a pitiful cry from the boy, “Oh, Mademoiselle
Natty! No, you not fall! Jean will hold you,”
aroused her, and she opened her eyes to see the white
.pn +1
face of the boy, as he stared up at her while clutching
her frantically with his one hand.
“Oh, no, Jean; I’m all right now,” but even as she
spoke that same old sensation again thrilled her. She
felt sick and faint again, and then——
“Rather steep just here, isn’t it? But cling to that
rail, and you’ll be all right; you can’t fall.”
The girl turned quickly, once more roused from the
sudden fear that had assailed her, and found herself
gazing into the sun-tanned face of a young man in
khaki. He had slipped his arm back of her, against
the railing, as if to prevent her from falling, while
from under the shadow of his wide-brimmed hat two
dark-blue eyes, heavily lashed, smiled down at her reassuringly.
Nathalie heaved a deep sigh. Oh, it was such a relief
to see that strong, brown hand grasping the rail.
And then, with a quick little smile, in sudden realization
of her foolish fancy that she was slipping down into
the gorge below, she cried, “Oh, I don’t suppose I
could fall, but something—— O dear! I know I am
very foolish, but I always feel so queer when I stand
on any great height, especially when I look down.”
“That is a sensation that is shared by many people
when they get up in the air, I guess,” was the kindly
response. And then, as if to give the girl time to regain
her poise, he turned to Jean. “Do you see that
.pn +1
place between the walls?” directing the child’s gaze
to a place midway between the top of the gorge and the
brook below. “Well, ever since the Flume has been
known to white men,” he continued, “a great rock, or
boulder, was wedged, or suspended, between the two
walls. It was like a nut in a cracker, a most curious
sight.
“I remember it as a child, when up in the mountains,”
he related, “and always had a strange fear that
it would tumble down. But every one asserted that it
was an impossibility, for it would take an earthquake,
or some great convulsion of nature, to dislodge it.
Nevertheless I always fought shy of it, and would
scurry by as if a witch was after me. But, strange
to say,” continued the young man, smiling, and showing
his even white teeth, “the prophets were away off,
for it fell just a few years ago, and without the aid
of an earthquake.”
“Oh, did it fall on any one?” gasped the girl
quickly.
“No, luckily for the wise-alls; for it fell in the middle
of the night, and no one was hurt.”
Nathalie drew a relieved sigh. “What an escape!
Oh, suppose it had fallen when some one was passing
beneath it!”
.il id=i04 fn=i06.jpg w=350 link=i06f.jpg
.ca The girl found herself gazing into the sun-tanned face of a young man in khaki.—Page #231#.
.pn +1
“Well, they would have been pulverized,” laughed
the young man. “I beg your pardon, Miss, but would
you not like to have me help you to the top? For I
see you have the little boy with you, and, as you are
timid, I do not think I would risk it alone.”
“Oh, thank you; you are very kind,” replied the
girl hastily, her face dimpling, for she had begun to
feel like her old self. “But no; I don’t think I will
venture any farther. I guess I am too timid. I will
go back.” She glanced down at Jean, who was gazing
up at the young soldier with worshipful awe in his
eyes.
“Let me assist you down, then, to where you will
not be affected by the height.” And Nathalie, glad to
think that she did not have to turn back and go down
that plank alone, allowed the young man to pilot her
down, firmly grasping her by the arm, until she stood
where she asserted she felt no fear. She would wait
there on the rocks, until the rest of her party came
down, she said, after thanking her rescuer.
The young man bowed silently, lifted his hat, and
turned to ascend the foot-bridge again, while Nathalie
sought a rock where she and Jean could sit down. But
in a moment he was back at her side, crying, “I beg
your pardon,” Nathalie noticed that he had a pleasant
voice that somehow had a familiar ring to it, “but
perhaps the little boy would like to go up to the top,
as every one likes to see the cascade as it plunges over
the rocks. I will take good care of him if he would
like to go,” glancing at the little empty sleeve with a
compassionate expression in his eyes.
.pn +1
Nathalie was on the verge of saying, “Oh, no; I
think Jean would rather stay with me,” when she
caught a sudden expression in the boy’s eyes that
caused her to say, “Jean, would you like to go to the
top with this gentleman? Mr. Banker and the boys
are up there, you know.”
There was no doubt as to the child wanting to see
and to do as the other children, or his evident trust in
the young soldier, and a minute later the young man,
with Jean’s hand held firmly in his, was guiding the
child’s steps up the foot-bridge.
Some time later, as the car glided along the road
on its homeward journey, a short distance from the
Flume House, Mr. Banker showed the party a singular
rock-formation, caused by the undulations of the
topmost ridge of Liberty Mountain. The outlines
were those of a huge recumbent figure, wrapped in a
cloak or shroud, and bore such a close resemblance, especially
the contour of the forehead and nose, to those
of General Washington, as after his death he lay in
state, on view to the public, that it had been called
“Washington in State.” Many people, he asserted,
claimed that the great American’s body should lie at
rest on this mountain ridge, named for what the great
man had striven so hard to maintain, liberty, and thus
be his everlasting mausoleum.
A six-mile ride and they descended from the car, to
.pn +1
walk to the shores of Profile Lake, a few feet from the
road. But it was not to look at the sunlit sheen of
silver water, embedded like a gem in a green and purple
forest setting, but to gaze with awesome wonder at a
huge stone face. It was the Old Man of the Mountain
that gazed forth with a stony stare from a steep and
craggy setting, twelve hundred feet high above the
lake, on the battlemented spires of Profile, or Cannon
Mountain.
It was another weird formation created by Father
Time, that Mr. Banker claimed looked as if it had been
stuck on the huge mountain-cliff, like the head of some
criminal of medieval days, when spiked on the stone
gateway of some kingly stronghold for some dastardly
deed.
“But this face is not that of a felon, for note the
calm majesty, the beautiful benignity of its expression.
To me,” commented the gentleman, “it is an unchangeable
token and an everlasting confirmation that there
is a Creator, and bears witness to the account in Genesis
where it says that God created man in His own
image, ‘in the image of God created he him.’”
Mr. Banker explained that the face was composed
of three masses of rock, one forming the forehead and
helmet, another the nose and upper lip, and the third
the chin, and that the whole length of the rock-face
was eighty feet from the top to the bottom. When
.pn +1
viewed at a close range it lost its contour, and seemed
but a few huge rocks tumbled one upon another, with
no regularity of form or feature.
After the boys had studied the gigantic “face in
air,” as Sheila called it, and deciphered many oddities
upon it, evoked by her imagination, Nathalie told
them the story of “The Great Stone Face.”
They were all greatly interested in Hawthorne’s
tale, and readily grasped its meaning, that, after all,
it was goodness and greatness gained by studying the
great and good in others, the giving of our best to
our fellows as Sons of Liberty, Nathalie tried to explain,
that helped one to become godlike.
Mr. Banker then told the legend called Christus
Judex, which told of an artist, who had resolved to
paint a picture of Christ sitting in judgment, and how
he wandered up and down the world from one place
to another, seeking in art galleries, palaces, or
churches, a face that would serve him as a model for
his great masterpiece. But alas, it was not to be found,
not even among the paintings of the old masters, and
finally, lured by some wayfarer’s tale, he crossed the
sea, and in this great stone face found the countenance
that embodied the features and the expression that
satisfied his ideal.
After walking a short distance around the lake, to
view its beauties, and picking out the stone cannon on
the top of the mountain, they drove to the Basin, another
.pn +1
rock-wonder, a miniature edition of the great
Pool. Giant’s Heel, a rock-formation of a human leg
and foot, seemed to possess a luring charm to the children,
and after they had studied it, and then discussed
it with curious wonder and awe, the little party started
on their homeward drive.
On the way Mr. Banker pointed out various stone
formations, among them the Elephant’s Head and the
head of a dog, while Echo Lake, alight with the calm
glow of a setting sun, revealed so many tempting bits
of lake-wonders that the children begged that they
might spend a day there, as it was not far from Franconia
village.
Nathalie was unusually quiet on the homeward ride,
not only feeling almost too tired to talk, but pondering
with a puzzled air over the young soldier-boy. She
had a vague feeling that she had seen his face before,
but where? She finally determined to push the matter
from her mind, when a sudden smile leaped to her
eyes. Oh, what a ninny she was, for he was one of
the soldier-boys she had met at Camp Mills, to whom
she had proffered the cherries! And he had not only
helped to gather them up from the dust of the road,
but he was the boy who had waved his hat to them in
a parting salute as the car whirled out of sight!
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch16
CHAPTER XVI||BUTTERNUT LODGE
.sp 2
One afternoon, as Nathalie was preparing to
take the children on a tramp to Butternut
Lodge, an old farmhouse on the opposite side
of Garnet Mountain, that had been fitted up for picnic
parties by the proprietor of a near-by hotel, her mother
called her.
“Nathalie,” she said, as the girl appeared in answer
to her call, “I wish you would run over to the little red
house and see Mrs. Carney. Sam tells me she is ill,
and that his wife, who generally looks after her, is
visiting some relatives. It would be only neighborly
if you would take her some fruit custard; there is
plenty in the ice-box, left over from dinner.”
“But mumsie,” pleaded the girl in an annoyed tone,
“I can’t go this afternoon, for I have promised to
take the children to Butternut Lodge. And then,” she
added rebelliously, “I don’t want to go to see that
horrid old woman. Why, I thought that you had decided
not to have anything to do with her, after the
disagreeable way she acted!”
“Yes, that is so, daughter,” replied Mrs. Page with
.pn +1
a slight smile, “but, like a good Christian, I changed
my mind, a privilege I reserve to myself when occasion
warrants. When I heard from Sam that the poor
creature was alone in the world, I made up my mind
to play the part of the good Samaritan. We can well
overlook the oddities of the aged, and it must be trying
to lie there all alone, with no one to give you a helping
hand or a comforting word.”
Nathalie was not conquered, as she had a stubborn
will, and she had been rudely repulsed so many times
that she felt her duty did not require her to accept any
more humiliations. She was about to argue the case,
when suddenly the motto that she had vowed to make
her own that summer, flashed before her mental vision
with a vivid distinctness.
Making no reply, she slowly walked out on the lawn,
where the children stood waiting for her. After explaining
her reasons for giving up the afternoon hike,
she turned to hurry into the house, determined to get
the disagreeable task over as soon as possible. Halfway
up the steps she paused, her eyes lit up with an
amused thought evidently, for, with a half-laugh, she
turned and hurried back to the group standing with
woe-begone faces, trying to think what they could do
to ease their disappointment. A moment later they
were crowding about her, listening eagerly as she
talked, their faces keen and bright, as if with the inspiration
of a novel appeal.
.pn +1
Some time later, Nathalie, with a queer little smile
dimpling the corners of her mouth, knocked softly on
the screen-door leading into the little red house. As
she heard a faint “Come in!” in answer, she gently
pushed the door open and entered. In her hands she
carried a bowl, while behind her, all cautiously tiptoeing,
as if afraid of making the slightest sound, came
four small figures, each one carefully holding something
for the invalid, whom they found lying on a
couch in the front room.
“Good afternoon, Mrs. Carney,” said Nathalie, and
then, in a distressed tone, “Oh, I’m afraid we have
disturbed you, but Sam said you were not feeling well,
and mother sent me over with the boys, to see if we
could not help you in some way. We have brought
you something, too, that may possibly make you feel
better.”
The girl was in the throes of despair, as no reply
came from the recumbent figure, only the slow-moving
of a big fan. O dear! she thought, perhaps her little
ruse to relieve the awkwardness of a most curious
situation was not going to succeed.
But at this instant, Sheila came forward. Her sympathies
had been aroused on learning about the curious
old lady, and on finding that there was nothing for her
to carry to the sick one, she had gone out to the roadside
and gathered a big bunch of wild flowers, to her a
panacea for every ill.
.pn +1
These she now thrust towards the figure on the
couch, crying, in her sweet childish treble, “I’m sorry,
lady, you’re sick, but here’s some flowers; I picked
’em for you.” The child spoke in a half-frightened
tone, somewhat at a loss to understand the silence beneath
the handkerchief-covered face.
Suddenly the handkerchief was withdrawn, and the
old lady sat bolt upright, with a startled exclamation,
gazing in amazed wonder at the four small figures,
with their pleading eyes and offerings of sympathy,
standing in a row before her.
“Bless me!” she cried, a half smile dawning in her
sharp eyes. “Where did these children come from?”
“Oh—why—they’re my Liberty boys,” answered
Nathalie quickly, with a sudden flash of relief that at
last the old lady’s silence was broken.
“Your Liberty boys?” she questioned with some
bewilderment, as she peered keenly at the slim young
figure. “But you’re too young to have these boys.”
“Oh, but they’re not mine! I’m not married.” exclaimed
Nathalie, a merry note in her voice. “Why,
I’ve just adopted them for the summer, so I call them
my boys. I suppose they’re what you call Fresh-Air-Funders;
that is, they live on the East Side in New
York, and I’m afraid the poor things wouldn’t have
had any outing if I hadn’t brought them up here to get
a breath of this mountain air, and—”
But at this point, Jean, scrupulously faithful to Nathalie’s
.pn +1
drilling, took a step forward, and, holding out
his plate of fruit, in his fright forgetting the little English
he knew, cried, “Voici du fruit!”
The woman peered at the boy, and then, with a
slight cry as she saw the little empty sleeve, drew him
to her, as she took the plate of fruit carefully from his
hand. “Why, you poor lad!” she exclaimed in sudden
tenderness. “So you have some fruit for me.
Is he a refugee?” she queried softly, turning inquiringly
towards Nathalie.
As the girl nodded dumbly, Tony pushed forward
his offering, a covered dish of milk toast. Quickly
removing the cover, he smacked his lips with gusto,
while his velvety eyes glanced in a smile, as if to say,
“Here’s something nice for you, too!”
By this time Nathalie saw that the atmosphere had
cleared, and after she and Danny had proffered their
gifts,—some chicken soup and custard,—with the help
of the boys she drew a table to the side of the couch.
Deftly unfolding a napkin for a covering, she spread
out the toothsome dainties before her hostess, while
Sheila, in childish prattle, entertained her new friend
by telling about the fairies, whom she insisted lived in
the flowers.
As the old lady partook of the edibles that had been
prepared for her, the children, won by her seeming interest,
with childish confidence told her about their
lives in the city, how they liked the beautiful mountains,
.pn +1
all about their many battles down at the old
stone ledge, and how they were all learning to be Sons
of Liberty. This drew Nathalie into the conversation,
and she was soon animatedly telling how she
happened to become a Liberty Girl, and how she was
not only trying to carry out her plans in regard to
liberty up there in the mountains, but was anxious to
help the children know what it meant to become good
Americans, and to understand why our nation had sent
soldiers across the sea to fight the Hun.
Tony needed but one invitation, and the violin was
brought forth from under his arm,—he always carried
it,—and presently he was playing some little
Italian airs, after which Jean sang Belgium’s national
anthem, at Mrs. Carney’s request, and Danny recited a
war-poem that Janet had taught him. Even Sheila
contributed her quota to the impromptu entertainment
and recited “Betsy’s Battle Flag,” as she, too, was a
pupil of Janet’s, that young lady having become so
interested in the children that she had not only helped
her friend to teach them to sing, but had taught them
to recite.
But now it was time to go, as Nathalie did not want
to weary Mrs. Carney, although, to the girl’s surprise,
that lady insisted that her sick headache had disappeared,
cured, she laughingly confessed, by the young
visitors, who had entertained her so charmingly.
With the promise to call again with her charges,
.pn +1
Nathalie hurried them away, happily content that she
had followed her mother’s suggestion and tried to be
helpful and kind to her seemingly odd little neighbor.
“It pays to be pleasant with people,” she remarked
sagely, as she related the results of the visit. “For
even if you don’t like them it gives you a pleasant feeling
to think that you have done ‘your bit’ in keeping
the chain of brotherly love well oiled.”
Mrs. Page sat knitting on the veranda the following
morning when Nathalie came hurrying out of the house
with an angry light in her eyes. “Oh, mother, what
do you think?” she exclaimed irritably. “Cynthia
has set the children all looking for that mystery thing.
Did you ever hear of anything so absurd? And they
have gone wild about it, and are running around the
attic and the upper floors, pulling things about in a
most disorderly fashion. Oh, I do think she is the
limit!”
Mrs. Page looked at Nathalie in silence for a moment,
and then said, with some amusement in her
eyes, “It is absurd, but don’t get wrought up about it.
Cynthia hasn’t stopped to think. She is so anxious to
find it that it has become an obsession with her. But
it won’t do to let the children get mixed up in anything
of that kind.” Her face sobered, and for a space the
only sound was the clicking of her knitting-needles,
while Nathalie, with a frown on her face, pondered
how she was going to undo the mischief that Cynthia
.pn +1
had wrought, keenly realizing what would follow if the
children were not stopped in looking for something
that she knew they would never find.
“Go and tell the children to come here, Nathalie,”
said her mother, “and we’ll have a little talk.” The
girl, with a brighter face, complied, as she always felt
greatly relieved, when anything went wrong with her
boys, to have her mother straighten things out.
In a moment they were on the veranda, looking very
much bedraggled and dust-begrimed, as, with faces
eagerly alert, they told what they had been doing, after
a little adroit questioning on the part of Mrs. Page.
It did not take the good lady long to make it clear to
the mystery-seekers that this valuable thing that they
had been searching for was something that only concerned
Nathalie and her cousins.
She now made it clear to them that the searching
was undoubtedly a whim on the part of the former inmate
of Seven Pillars, and that the finding of it simply
meant a reward to the one of the three girls who had
proved the most industrious in looking for it. She
ended by saying that it would not likely be of any great
value, adding, “And, children, it would not be yours
even if you found it.”
“Oh, but we’re going to give it to Miss Natty!”
came a chorus of determined little voices. “And Miss
Cynthia said it was something awful rich,” added
Sheila, “and I just guess that it must be a great big
.pn +1
jewel, or a pot of gold.” “Sure, and we want Miss Natty to
have it,” ended Danny, with big, disappointed eyes.
This was not the first time that Mrs. Page had had
to do away with a seeming mystery connected with
Mrs. Renwick’s peculiar instructions. For the mystery-room
had proved a source of morbid curiosity to
the children, as they questioned as to what was behind
that great, dark red curtain. They would scurry by
the door with bated breath and big, excited eyes, in
whose depths lurked a latent fear of some unknown
terror, until Mrs. Page had ordered the curtain down,
declaring that the door simply closed, and barred,
would end the mystery.
Fortunately the children’s attention was now turned
to other matters, but Nathalie, somehow, could not put
the incident from her mind. She had a vague, conscience-stricken
feeling that she would never gain the
reward for being industrious, for although she had
not failed to make an entry in her diary, she had failed
to search as diligently as she should have done.
Whereupon, with a silent vow that she would put aside
an hour every day for this disagreeable task, she
hastened upstairs to put her plan in execution.
Nathalie was lying in the hammock in the moonlight
a few evenings later, half-drowsing. She was more
than usually tired, for they had spent the day at Butternut
Lodge. It had been an all-day hike, setting
.pn +1
forth in the forenoon with a climb up old Garnet,
starting in at the log gate-posts opposite Peckett’s
flower-garden.
Ascending a grassy incline studded with rocks,
where mountain-sheep and a gray donkey meandered,
nibbling the coarse grass, they entered the cool damp
of the forest gloom, where hundreds of trees confronted
them. Age-ringed and gnarled, their limbs
twisted in eerie contortion to grotesque shapes, they
stood in the dim cathedral light bristling with shadows,
a battalion of ghoulish-looking sentinels, guarding the
rock-crowned heights.
But on they climbed, up the pine-needled path, stepping
from lichen-covered rocks to gnarled tree-roots,
or clambering deftly over blackened, flame-licked tree-trunks,
that barred their way like yawning chasms.
Every now and then they would stop to gather some
tiny wood posy peeping coquettishly from the crevice of
a broken crag, or a crimson-dyed leaf on a mossy patch,
or to brush aside the black loam to burrow among
dead leaves for feathery ferns, or one of the tiny umbrellas,
as Sheila called the many-colored toadstools
that grew by the path. But when the little maid spied
a fleur des fées, a daintily-colored anemone, her delight
was beyond bounds.
Sometimes they would pause to listen to the mountain-wind
as it swayed the tops of long rows of trees,
that, with the daring recklessness of new life, stretched
.pn +1
their bare-limbed trunks upward to catch the golden
sunlight on their glossy leaves. But the sweetest
melody, perhaps, was the wind that swept in solemn-toned
harmony through the twisted boughs of the old
mountain-guard.
But the wind was not the only musician that sunny
morning up there in the stilled hush of the green wood,
for sometimes it was the soft note of a belated bird’s
warble, coming with a haunting sweetness from the
dim recesses of the shadowed gloom, or the hammer
of a woodpecker as he plied his tool of trade.
But feathered songsters and musical wind were forgotten
when the children struck the Red Trail,—splashes
of red paint smeared at intervals on the bark
of the trees to keep travelers in the path. The boys,
as they scurried ahead, soon discovered a Yellow Trail,
and then a Blue Trail, sign-posts to the lone woodchopper,
perhaps, as he comes down the woodland path
in the deep snows of winter. The Yellow Trail, they
discovered, led down the mountain, coming out on the
road near Lovers’ Lane, the wooded path opposite
Seven Pillars. Nathalie now showed them how to
blaze a trail that belonged exclusively to the Girl
Pioneers, and their interest became tense with excitement
as she became their leader and deftly bent the
twigs in the shapes that meant so many things to the
Pioneers.
A little log cabin nestling beneath a clump of pine
.pn +1
trees, on the edge of a slope, just below Agassiz’s
Rock, tempted the children to wander from the beaten
path. But they soon returned, and, in wide-eyed wonder,
declared that they had seen a pair of shoes by the
door. Sheila was quite insistent that some fairy godmother
lived there, whereupon she was rudely told by
the boys that fairies never wore shoes. The children,
however, were loth to leave the spot, curiously wondering
as to who lived in the log hut.
But as no one was to be seen, either within or without
the cabin, they followed Nathalie, and were soon
standing on a jagged rock on Garnet’s top, in a wonderland
of views that made them feel that they were
indeed birds of the air, skimming swiftly through a
dim, mystical atmosphere. With hushed breath and
wide-seeing eyes they gazed down upon low-lying valleys,—dabs
of green between craggy rocks and lofty
steeps, gemmed with silver water, yellow corn-fields,
and brown pasture-land. And above all, in picturesque
grandeur, towered a rim of battlemented crests and
ridges, silhouetted against curtains of crystalline blue,
where sweeps of white cloud drifted in gossamer veils.
On the wide green slopes surrounding the farmhouse
the children reveled in a summer-land of daisies
and buttercups, that jeweled the softly creeping grass.
While Sheila wove a wreath of mountain posies Nathalie
told how, some years before, a bag of gold had
been found in a log of wood in the old farmhouse.
.pn +1
This added a new glory to the scene, and there were
many surmises in regard to this find, while the
Girl Pioneer plied her craft and showed them how to
make leaf-impressions in their little note-books, as each
one had gathered a leaf from many trees on their way
up the mountain.
After Danny had made a camp-fire and they had
had a hike lunch of frankfurters, roasted potatoes,
and many toothsome edibles found in their lunchboxes,
they hurried back to the old farmhouse, and
while the children peeped into the old-fashioned brick
ovens in search of another pot of gold, Janet played on
the yellow-keyed piano. Then came a stroll to a
weather-beaten barn, where an old coach was stored,
which had once been the mountain’s only method of
conveyance, some decades ago, and on which was the
name “Goodnow House.” Of course they all had to
mount the rickety steps and crawl inside on the wide
leather-cushioned seat, large enough to hold almost a
dozen children. Danny and Tony, however, soon
clambered out and mounted still higher, up to the two-step-driver’s
seat, where they pretended they were
driving a tally-ho, with Sheila and Jean sitting back,
within the railed top, as outside passengers, while Nathalie
and Janet, on the wide old seat within, acted the
part of tourists traveling to the top of Mount Washington.
Wearying of these childish sports, Nathalie and
.pn +1
Janet hied themselves back to the farmhouse, where,
after resisting the inclination to drowse, induced by the
lulling hum of the bees as they darted busily
about in the sweet-scented, sunny air, they sat down on
the little porch and took out their knitting.
Suddenly the deep silence that they had drifted into,
lured to thought by their active fingers, was broken by
loud squeals, mingled with boyish shouts of laughter.
And then a thrill came, as Nathalie suddenly perceived
the old stage-coach, drawn by Danny and Tony as
horses, while Jean, as the driver, was exultantly happy,
perched up in the driver’s high seat. Sheila, meanwhile,
bewreathed and betwined with wild posies, sat
within the coach, posing as a beautiful white princess
who had been captured by bandits.
Nathalie’s heart swung in wild leaps as she saw the
one-armed boy’s perilous position, as the ramshackle,
clumsy coach rocked like a cradle, and realized what
it would mean if anything happened to it, as it was a
most valuable relic to the proprietor of the hotel.
With a sudden cry she jumped to her feet, and a
moment later was excitedly explaining to the would-be
bandits the wrong they had committed. In disappointed
silence Jean was helped down from the top
of the coach, and Sheila, in whimpering protest, was
hauled out. Then, amid a profound and tragic stillness
to the children, they managed, with the help of
the two girls, to get the stage back in the barn.
.pn +1
Whereupon, Nathalie closed the door and marched her
charges off in another direction, while pondering how
to amuse them, for she had learned that their active
brains and nimble fingers must be kept busy or mischief
would brew.
A low cry from Sheila roused her, to see a few feet
away, on the outskirts of the wood, a baby deer, gazing
at them with mild eyes of wonder. But the cries from
the boys caused it to leap wildly into the woods.
Such had been the events of the day.
Nathalie stirred uneasily, as a ray of moonshine fell
athwart her face. She rubbed her eyes, and then sat
up in the hammock, staring about in a bewildered,
sleepy fashion. “Why, I must have been dreaming,”
she thought, vaguely conscious that she had been living
over again the long day with its many adventures.
“But it must be late; the children should be in bed.”
She could hear Danny and Tony down on the lawn,
their voices in loud and excited argument. O dear!
she hoped they were not going to fight again, and then
she gave a hurried “Tru-al-lee!”
At the familiar call the boys came hurrying across
the lawn, when, to her surprise, she saw that Sheila
was not with them. As she questioned them sharply
as to her whereabouts, they insisted that they supposed
that she was with her. The girl, somewhat
alarmed, for the little lady was inclined to wander off
by herself, instituted a search. The barn, grounds,
.pn +1
Lovers’ Lane opposite, and even the little red house
were peeped into, but all to no purpose.
As Sam was in Littleton for the night, the boys were
dispatched to Sugar Hill village to make inquiries,
while she and Janet, who had just returned from a
stroll in the moonlight with Mrs. Page, started to look
on the road leading to “The Echoes.” Some time
later the searchers returned to Seven Pillars to report
that no clews as to the child’s whereabouts had been
discovered. Suddenly distracted, conscience-stricken,
Nathalie gave a low wail.
“Oh, I do believe she has gone to the top of Garnet
Mountain!” The girl had suddenly remembered that
for several days Sheila had been telling how one of
the boarders at Peckett’s—a lady as white as snow—had
told her that every moonlight night at twelve
o’clock the fairies came out of the woods and danced
on the top of Garnet. She had even suggested that if
Sheila could see them, she might be rewarded by receiving
some of the beautiful garnets that were hidden
in the rocks, and which only the fairies knew where to
find.
There was a grim silence at Nathalie’s cry, as each
one stared at the other with a white, dismayed face,
while Nathalie, with clasped hands, nervously swayed
herself to and fro.
A sudden scuffle of small feet caused them all to
swing about, to see Danny hurrying towards the door.
.pn +1
“Oh, where are you going, Dan?” cried Nathalie
in a choked voice, staring at the lad with bewildered
eyes.
“I’m going to find my sister—Sheila—” came in
a strangled sob from the boy.
“But don’t go alone. I will go with you,” exclaimed
Nathalie, quickly springing to his side, as he
stood with his face buried in his elbow, while his slim
body heaved convulsively.
It was soon decided that Janet and Dan would climb
the mountain-trail that came out near Lovers’ Lane,
Mrs. Page and Tony would hurry in the direction of
Hildreth’s farm, while Nathalie and Jean would follow
the Red Trail of the mountain, opposite Peckett’s
hotel.
Twenty minutes later Nathalie and Jean, breathless
from their hurried climb, paused for a moment by a
big tree that stood ghoulishly somber by the path. As
the girl, still panting, leaned against it, a ray of moonlight
filtering through the canopy of leaves overhead
showed that it was the Seat Tree, as they had named
it on their climb that morning, on account of its singular
formation.
By some freak of nature, from its main trunk, a
short space from the ground, another trunk had sprung,
giving it the appearance of two trees in one, and in
this hollow some kindly-intentioned person had placed
a seat. As the girl perceived the seat she sat down,
.pn +1
and feeling Jean’s soft breath come puffing against her
cheek, drew the tired boy down on her lap. Tige, the
yellow terrier, crouched at their feet, his red tongue
hanging out of his mouth like a signal-light in the
weird darkness.
Fortunately the darkness of the ascent had been
lightened at intervals by the moon, which was at its
full, so that the girl had not been compelled to use her
flashlight except in the deeply shadowed places. When
they had begun to climb, Jean had whistled, his customary
way of calling Sheila, while Nathalie had not
only called the child by name, but had given her
Pioneer call of “Tru-al-lee.”
But these calls had only re-echoed through the cathedral
arches with such a dismal, dirge-like sound that
they had desisted. Feeling sure that the child would
keep near the path, Nathalie had kept her eyes busy
peering on all sides of her, thinking that she could
easily discern Sheila’s white dress if she was anywhere
near.
All at once a low cry escaped the girl, as, with a
convulsive clutch of Jean’s slight body, she bent forward,
and peered through the eerie tree-shadows to a
dim, flickering light that shone some distance beyond
in the deep recesses of the forest. As the boy’s eyes
followed her glance, in a tense whisper he cried, “Oh,
Mademoiselle! see, there is a man digging in the
ground!”
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch17
CHAPTER XVII||THE CABIN ON THE MOUNTAIN
.sp 2
Yes, it was a man digging in the ground. The
quivering, yellowish glare from a torch that had
been stuck in the ground by his side—as it
flickered and flared, sometimes almost extinguished by
the night air, and then suddenly blazing to a vivid
flame—silhouetted his form in sharp outline against
the high rock by which he was standing.
As the girl’s eyes dilated in puzzled wonder as to
who the man was, and why he was digging in the
woods at this hour of the night, a queer, odd quiver,
or twitching of his head at times, as he bent over the
spade, aroused within her a vague consciousness that
she had seen some one before who had that same peculiar
motion.
Tige, the little yellow dog crouching at their feet,
at this moment gave a low growl, a warning that he
might betray their presence. Nathalie, quickly pushing
Jean from her lap, grabbed the dog, and snuggled
him close to smother the growl, afraid that the man
would discover that he had been seen. Assailed by a
nameless fear, she seized Jean’s hand and pushed on
.pn +1
up the incline, stepping cautiously, almost noiselessly,
on the fallen leaves and stones, ever and anon glancing
back, as if fearful that the man would pursue them.
Recalled to herself at Jean’s wide, frightened eyes,
and the tremor of his slight form, she whispered with
assumed courage, “Oh, I guess the man is only burying
some dead animal, or something of that kind up
here in the woods.” Nevertheless she was almost as
frightened as the child, and was devoutly thankful
when they reached a little clearing nearer the top,
where the moon shone down with the brightness of
day.
Yes, it would be about here that Sheila would come,
for it was not far from the jutting rock where they
had seen such beautiful views that morning. With
keen eyes the girl peered around, but only craggy rocks,
scrubby bushes, tree-stumps—weird black objects in
the moonlight—here and there, backed by a forest of
heavily-branched trees met her gaze. Oh! what was
that tiny glimmer of light over by the tree yonder?
Was it a light held by the man who had been digging,
and who was perhaps watching them from behind the
tree?
Nathalie’s heart gave a wild leap, again shaken by
that nameless fear, and then, to her intense relief, she
saw that the light came from the little log cabin the
children had found that morning in prowling about
the clearing. Yes, some one must live there. But
.pn +1
suppose it should be the man they had seen? Ah, they
would hurry on, and gripping Jean’s hand in a closer
pressure, she started forward. But no; Jean stood
obstinately still, with low-bent head, as if listening.
What was it? Oh, it was a noise,—a low sound
like a moan. Could it be Sheila? Was she lying
somewhere there in the woods? Why, it sounded as
if it came from the little cabin! Nathalie’s head went
up as she peered resolutely through the gloom. No,
she would not allow her foolish fear to master her.
She would go forward and see what it was—perhaps.
A moment or so later the girl, still frenziedly clinging
to the little boy’s hand, her heart leaping with anxious
agitation and nervous fear, tapped loudly on one of
the log posts of the open doorway, which was hung
with what appeared to be a large dark-colored shawl
that waved dismally in the wind. Almost immediately,
in answer to her rap, the shawl was pushed
hastily aside and a man stood in the doorway.
From the weird red gleam of a lantern that hung
from the center of the cabin, Nathalie perceived that
the man was young, with a strange pallor on his lean,
brown face, which was lighted by large, densely black
eyes, that were peering down at her from beneath a
tangle of soft, wavy black hair.
Inwardly quaking, but determined not to show her
fear, Nathalie inquired, “Have you seen anything of
a little girl about?” Without answering, the man
.pn +1
turned and was pointing towards a log couch built up
against the wall, spread with an old army-coat. Nathalie
gave a hurried glance, and then made a wild
rush forward, for the little form lying so strangely still
on the coat was Sheila!
But the man’s hand stayed her as he said in a low,
but pleasant-sounding voice, “Sh-sh! I would not
awaken her. Poor little thing, she cried herself to
sleep.” He then briefly explained how he had been
awakened by the low whimpering of a child, and, on
going out to the clearing, had found her sitting on a
rock, crying piteously for the fairies to come and get
her. He was moved to question her, and then, by a
little coaxing, and the explanation that the fairies had
all gone back to fairyland, as it was long after midnight,
he had coaxed the child into the cabin, and
finally she had fallen asleep. As Nathalie bent over
her in anxious solicitude she saw the undried tears
still on her lashes, while low, whimpering moans—the
sounds that had arrested her attention—came at
intervals from between the soft, red lips.
As the girl pondered as to how she was to get Sheila
home, Danny’s policeman’s whistle, as he called it,
followed by Janet’s shrill “hoo-hooing,” announced
that the rest of the party of searchers had arrived. In
a short space they were all in the little cabin, animatedly
discussing how to carry the little girl down the mountain.
Danny, meanwhile, had hastened to the couch
.pn +1
and was down on his knees, softly kissing the little
hand thrown over the side, in the abandon of sleep,
while the young man stood at one side, quietly watching
the little group.
It was soon decided, at his suggestion, that they
leave the little girl there in the cabin with Danny until
morning, when there would be more light to get her
down the mountain. This difficulty settled, with relieved
hearts they were about to set forth on their return
journey down the trail, when Nathalie, whose
eyes had been wandering about the rustic hut, cried,
“But do you live here all alone up on this mountain?”
The young man’s eyes lighted. “Why, yes, I live
alone up here. It is not much of a summer-resort,”
he said, with a rarely winning smile. “Still it answers
my purpose, for I am guaranteed plenty of pure air. I
am an English soldier,” he volunteered somewhat
slowly, “and have recently come over here from England.
I was wounded,—” he glanced down at his arm
with its gloved hand, and which Janet had been eying
rather sharply, for it hung down in a strangely stiff
way,—“and I thought the mountains would benefit
me. But I am very glad I found the child,” he broke
off abruptly, as if he had been revealing something he
did not care to talk about. “I hope she will be none
the worse for her adventure,” he continued kindly,
“even if she failed to find the fairies.” Nathalie had
explained how the child had come to wander away.
.il id=i05 fn=i07.jpg w=350 link=i07f.jpg
.ca Nathalie bent over in anxious solicitude.—Page #259#.
.pn +1
Early the next morning Danny and Sheila appeared,
the little girl now quite wide-awake, but she
grew very shamefaced when Mrs. Page scolded her
gently for giving them such a fright, dwelling upon
the deep anxiety she had caused Miss Natty, when she
had been so good to her, too. The tears came into the
brown eyes at this rebuke, and, impulsively running
to the girl, she protested with a stifled sob that she
would not run after any more fairies.
Of course Nathalie had to kiss the woeful little
damsel, but perceiving that the auspicious moment had
arrived to impress her with a fact that she should
know, she took her out on the porch, and then gravely
and carefully made clear to the little mind that there
were no fairies, but just beautiful fancies that existed
in the brains of people, who put them in stories so as
to make them interesting to children.
But Danny, apparently greatly distressed, now drew
Nathalie to one side, and confided to her that he believed
that the young man must be hungry and very
poor, for there seemed to be no food in the cabin.
And he had heard him mutter,—when he thought the
boy was asleep,—as he counted some loose change he
had taken from his pocket and thrown on the table,
“Well, that won’t get much food.” And then he had
sat very quiet for a long time, as if thinking.
Nathalie immediately rushed to impart this news to
her mother, with the result that, a half-hour later,
.pn +1
Danny and Tony, each with a basket filled with food,
started up the mountain-trail. In his pocket Danny
carried a note written by Mrs. Page, in which she not
only thanked the young man again for his kindness to
Sheila, but made it clear that the food came from the
child, a thank offering to him, and that she hoped he
would find it acceptable, as she knew that it must be a
difficult matter to obtain much food up there on the
mountain top.
Some time later the two boys returned in a state of
great excitement. They claimed that they had found
the young man asleep on the couch, and although they
had tried to awaken him, and had “hollered and hollered
right into his ear,” as Danny expressed it, he
had not even stirred. The faces of the listeners grew
grave as they heard this, and Janet, with a sudden
sharp exclamation, turned and rushed up-stairs, to reappear
in a moment with a medicine-case and her hat.
Her training as a district nurse was now to be put
to a real test. “I just believe that boy has been
starved to death,” she ejaculated, her blue eyes luminous
with sympathy, “for I could see by the look of
him last night that he was in a bad way.”
Of course Nathalie would not let Janet go alone,
and so the two girls and the boys again hurried up the
mountain to the cabin, where they found the young
man not dead, as Nathalie had vaguely feared, but in
a state of unconsciousness. Under Janet’s able ministrations
.pn +1
he was finally brought to, and after Nathalie
had warmed some broth—Danny had made a fire in
the open—it was gently fed to him by Janet. As
Nathalie watched her, she opened her eyes in amazement
at the girl’s deftness and gentleness in handling
her charge, for this indeed was a new phase of her
cousin’s character.
Won by the girls’ sympathy and interest, Philip
de Brie—as that proved to be the young man’s name—said
he had been wounded at the battle of Loos, and
then wounded again and taken a prisoner at the battle
of the Somme. After many months, under most harrowing
circumstances, he had made his escape, and
finally reached England, only to find that his mother
had died in the meantime. “As I was alone,” there
was a perceptible quiver in his voice,—“my father had
died when I was a lad,—I decided to come over
here.
“My father was an American,” he continued. “I
was born in America, and, as I knew that I had a
grandmother living here, now my only relative, I felt
that I wanted to see her. But I found that she, too,
had died,” the young man’s eyes saddened, “and, well,
once up on these grand old mountains, somehow I
wanted to stay, they seemed so restful after the nerve-shocked
life of a battle-field and my prison experience.
I found this old shack up here one day in wandering
about, and, after finding its owner, hired it for the
.pn +1
summer. You see, my arm was bayoneted by a German,”
his mouth set in a hard line, “and was never
properly treated in the German camp. Sometimes I
fear I will lose it altogether. But you have been very
kind to me—I shall get along now.” He attempted
to rise, but Janet, forcing him back, insisted upon ripping
open the sleeve covering the bayoneted arm, notwithstanding
his protests, and here she found a condition
that made her eyes grow very grave.
After cleaning the wound and applying what remedies
she had on hand, she rebandaged the arm, which
made the patient feel much better, he affirmed. After
giving him a soothing draught, and fixing him as comfortably
as she could with the meager bed-clothing in
the cabin, so he could sleep, she and Nathalie withdrew
outside.
Under the trees the two girls sat and discussed the
situation with much perplexity, for Janet maintained
that it was a serious case,—that the young man’s temperature
was not only rising, but that his arm needed
a surgeon’s care. But what were they to do? And
the girls’ eyes grew tragically grave as they realized
that the young man was an object of much solicitude,
alone and ill in a strange country, and evidently without
any means.
It was finally decided that they take turns in caring
for him, with the help of Danny, who was not only
sympathetically interested, but who was quite a handy
.pn +1
man in many ways. He said he had learned to care
for Sheila, and for the old woman whom he called
his nurse, who had cared for them, and who was not
only very aged, but miserably ill for some time before
she died.
But the next morning, unfortunately,—Janet and
Danny had remained during the night,—the patient’s
condition was worse and Janet, with tears in her eyes,
besought Nathalie to go to the village and see if she
could get help.
As the girl hurried down the trail her mind was active.
Oh, she did hate to make the young man a public
charge, as he looked so refined, and had such a noble,
winning way with him. And he was a soldier, too;
yes, a “Son of Liberty,” as she confided to Tony, who
was by her side. For had he not been fighting in
France to give liberty to the world? “Why, there
isn’t anything too good for him,” lamented the girl,
“and yet there he is up there alone, perhaps at the
point of death for want of proper care.” And yet
where was she to get the money to call a physician,
and where could she find one, were perplexing questions.
As these thoughts ran rapidly through the girl’s
brain, sometimes spoken aloud in her stress, inspired
perhaps by Tony’s unspoken sympathy, as he gently
patted her hand, she caught her breath quickly, and a
bright flash illumined her eyes.
.pn +1
“Yes, I will do it,” she muttered aloud, absent-mindedly
returning the boy’s caresses. “I will take
the money. I was saving it. O dear!” Nathalie almost
wailed, “shall I ever be able to save even a sou
towards going to college? Well, it can’t be helped.
I’ll just have to take it and see if I can’t get some one
to tell me where I can get a physician.”
Hurrying into the house, Nathalie informed her
mother as to the patient’s condition, and then told that
she intended taking the money she had saved and call
a doctor. Mrs. Page kissed the girl softly with
troubled eyes, saying gently, “Never mind, Nathalie,
you are investing your money at a greater per cent of
interest in giving it to this unknown stranger, than if
you used it for yourself. And then, who knows,
dear? Something may turn up some day——”
“Oh no,” cried Blue Robin in a discouraged voice,
“nothing will ever turn up.” And then, with a feeble
smile, she cried, “But, as you often say, mumsie, things
are foreordained, and so perhaps it wouldn’t be for
my good to have my wish. And then, anyway, I shall
have the satisfaction,” the brown eyes were sparkling
again, “of knowing that the ‘drop in the bucket,’ is
going to do some good to some one.”
After finding Sam, who was rarely ill and could give
her no information as to where to get a physician unless
it was at Littleton, she started for the village.
As she passed the little red house she ran in for a
.pn +1
moment to tell Mrs. Carney about the man in the cabin,
as she had become much interested in the young man’s
story. The queer old lady and the girl had become
very good friends since that visit with the children, for
Nathalie had learned that the sometimes sharp gray
eyes covered a kindly nature, notwithstanding the old
lady’s brusque, queer ways.
“Yes, it just breaks my heart to take my college
money,” she dolefully confided. Then, half-ashamed
of her repining, she tried to explain how college had
been the dream of her life, and how many times she
had been disappointed. A kindly gleam in Mrs.
Carney’s eyes, however, assured her that the old lady
understood how she felt, and after a hurried good-by
she was on her way to the post-office.
Nathalie feared she was going to get no more information
here than what Sam had imparted, when
suddenly a lady, who had been standing near, and who
had been interested in her story, informed her that
there was a famous surgeon from New York up at the
Sunset Hill House, and that possibly she could get him.
Thanking her warmly, the girl hurried up the board
walk to the hotel,—the children tagging on behind
her,—feeling extremely nervous as she realized her
boldness in asking a big physician, who had probably
come to the mountains for a rest, to be bothered with
a poor patient. And then, too, who knew what terribly
high prices he might ask for his services? Nathalie
.pn +1
began to feel that her “drop in the bucket”
might not prove of any help after all.
But, bracing to the ordeal, she told the children to
wait at the little Observation Tower, as she called it,
in front of the hotel, and hurried to the office. She
had just nervously cleared her throat to question the
clerk when the sudden cry, “Oh, Nathalie! Nathalie!
where did you come from?” caused her to swing about.
The next moment Nita Van Vorst had her arms about
her, and was hugging and kissing her excitedly, while
her mother stood by with pleased, shining eyes.
After a hearty greeting from Mrs. Van Vorst, Nathalie
cried laughingly, although the sudden revulsion
from nervous anxiety had brought tears to her eyes,
“Oh, where did you come from, and when did you get
here?”
“We arrived last night,” replied Nita, bubbling
over with delight at being with her friend again.
“Our coming here is a surprise for you, and we were
just going to see if we could get some information as
to where Seven Pillars was, so as to motor there.”
“Oh, I’m so glad to see you, and now you can see
my boys!” And then, after Mrs. Van Vorst had led
them into one of the little side-rooms opening from the
long hall, where they could converse without being
heard, she told all about her boys,—Sheila, the boy-girl,
as she called her, the good times they were all
having, and about the young man who was lying so
.pn +1
ill up on the mountain, and what had brought her to the
hotel. “I am so nervous,” sighed the girl, as she
finished her story, “for I don’t know this big man,
and I dread to speak with him, for fear he will be
brusque and sharp with me, but something must be
done for that poor soldier boy.”
“Excuse me a moment,” exclaimed Mrs. Van Vorst
after she had conversed a while; “I want to go
and see if I have any mail.” But, to Nathalie’s surprise,
she did not go in the direction of the desk, but
hurried after a tall, rather stout gentleman who at
that moment passed through the hall.
But the little incident was forgotten, as Nathalie and
Nita had so much to say to one another that they both
talked at once, as if their tongues were hung in the
middle. Nita insisted that her friend would have to
remain to dinner with her, as she had so much news to
tell, especially about the Liberty Girls, that it would
take hours to tell it.
In the midst of these many bits of enjoyed information,
Nita’s mother returned, and Nathalie in a moment
was dazedly bowing to the tall gentleman, whom
her friend presented as Dr. Gilmour. “He is the
surgeon, Nathalie,” she added smilingly, “whom you
came after. As he is a very old friend of mine, and a
good American to boot,” she nodded at the gentleman,
“he has consented to go with you up the mountain to
see your Son of Liberty, as you call him.”
.pn +1
“Oh, I am so glad! I am so glad!” burst from the
girl with a joy-thrilled voice. “And, oh, I thank you
so much; it is so kind of you,” she added with misty
eyes, turning impulsively towards the physician.
But the big man, with an amused smile in his keen
gray eyes, patted her on the shoulder as he said, “My
little lady, I think that every true American should
stand ready to do anything to help any man, or boy,
who has been brave enough to face those fiendish
Huns.”
“Oh, I think so, too,” cried the relieved girl, a wave
of color flushing her cheeks, “and I think it must have
been that thought that gave me the courage to come
and ask you.”
“Oh, isn’t it just dandy!” enthused Nita, as Dr.
Gilmour hurried away to get his little black case, while
Nathalie led her friend down the steps of the veranda
to where three little figures sat patiently waiting for
her on the tower-steps.
But the girl’s eyes widened as she suddenly perceived
that they were not alone, for a brown-clad
figure with soldierly bearing, but with a golf-bag
slung over his shoulder, with one foot on the steps,
was bending down and talking to the children. And
then a sudden thrill stirred her as she recognized the
soldier lad who had helped her down the foot-bridge
that day at the Flume, and who had so kindly taken
Jean to see the cascade.
.pn +1
As Nathalie reached the children, she became embarrassed,
as she suddenly realized that she did not
know the name of the young soldier. But her embarrassment
was momentary, as Nita called out merrily,
“Hello, Van. Is that what you are doing, making
love to the kiddies? I thought you were going to
play golf.”
“That was my intention,” replied the boy, straightening
up and lifting his hat, and then his dark blue
eyes brightened quickly, as he perceived Nita’s companion.
Nathalie was now introduced to Mr. Van Darrell,
the son of a friend of Nita’s mother, and then the
little group were chatting merrily as they waited for
Dr. Gilmour, and Mrs. Van Vorst, who had gone to
order the car to take them to the foot of the Trail that
led to the top of Garnet Mountain.
All at once young Darrell turned towards Nathalie
as he said, “But, Miss Page, have we not met before?
Were you not one of the girls at Camp Mills one day
last month, who asked a party of us if we did not
want some cherries? And then, if I remember rightly,
we all helped you to gather up the fruit after you had
knocked the basket from the car.”
“Oh, yes, I remember you,” dimpled Nathalie.
“No, not when I met you that day at the Flume, although
your face haunted me as being familiar, but it
all came to me on the ride home.”
.pn +1
“But I knew you right away,” said the boy half
shyly, “although I did not like to make myself known,
for, of course, I did not even know your name.”
“Or I yours,” laughed Nathalie. And then, with
her mind filled with thoughts of the young English
soldier, she told his story to Mr. Darrell, who immediately
became so interested in Tommy Atkins, as he
called him, that he begged Nathalie to let him go with
her, quite assured, he declared, that he could be of
some assistance to him.
Before the girl could reply a new voice suddenly
shrilled, “Oh, Nathalie, how do you do? Did you
come up here to call on us?”
The girl, thus addressed, stared with some bewilderment,
to see her two New York schoolmates hurrying
towards her. They looked very fetching in their modish
golf-costumes, with their bags slung carelessly over
their shoulders, as each one seized her hand and shook
it cordially, while smiling down upon her in a most
friendly and chummy way.
For a full second the girl simply stared, dazed and
confused, as it suddenly flashed into her consciousness
that the last time she had met these girls they had
snubbed her, deliberately turning their backs upon
her, when she greeted them, the day she had come to
the hotel to leave the sweet peas. Ah, a sudden red
leaped into Nathalie’s cheeks, her eyes flamed angrily,
and she was about to return their snub by turning her
.pn +1
back upon them, for she had intuitively divined that
they were nice to her because they wanted to be introduced
to her friends. Yes, they wanted to know the
soldier-boy.
But something deep within the girl, her finer nature,
whispered, “Never mind, ignore their slight, and show
that you are above them by acting the lady.” With
simple dignity the girl coolly returned their effusive
greeting, and then, with cold formality, introduced
them to her two friends. Oh, how delighted they
were to meet Miss Van Vorst; they had heard all
about her from a friend of hers,—Nita never was
able to discover this friend. Then, turning from Nita
as quickly as possible, they made an onslaught upon the
soldier lad. Oh, how pleased they were to meet him,
they had been just wild to know him ever since they
had sighted his uniform. Was he a New York guardsman?
What regiment did he belong to? These and
a score of similar questions were quickly hurled at the
young man, somewhat to his embarrassment. Nathalie
could not hear all they said as she chattered with
Nita, but vaguely realized, as they rattled on, with an
angry flutter of her heart, that they were again ignoring
her, as she heard them urging Mr. Darrell to join
them at a game of golf.
But a few moments later, when Nita waved a
good-by to her mother from the car, she was seated
between the soldier lad and Nathalie, with the children
.pn +1
crowding upon their laps, and the doctor in front with
the chauffeur.
As the car whizzed away from the hotel Nita gave
Nathalie’s sleeve a sudden twitch as she cried, “Oh,
look, Nathalie; there’s the Count!”
“The Count,” repeated her friend in mystified wonder,
as she bent forward to gaze after a young man
who had just flashed by in an automobile. But suddenly,
with a curious gleam in her eyes, the girl drew
back, a slight flush on her cheeks.
“Oh, no, he’s not a real Count,” informed Nita with
some amusement in her eyes; “but every one calls him
that because they think he’s so Frenchy-looking, with
his dark skin and big black eyes. The girls seem quite
wild about him, for he takes them riding in his car.
Some one told mother that he was from Chicago, and
was quite wealthy.”
But Nathalie manifested no further interest in the
gentleman whom Nita had dubbed the Count, although
she immediately recognized the young man as the one
who had repaired her car the day she had gone after
the children. But, alas, she felt that he was no gentleman,
for had he not stared at her rudely in the post-office,
and then accosted her near the cemetery a short
time later?
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch18
CHAPTER XVIII||THE LIBERTY CHEER
.sp 2
After Nita’s arrival the two Pioneer-Liberty
girls were so occupied with things to see and
do, that at the week’s end it was hard to realize
it was not a month since her coming.
In the order of events had been the anxious moments
waiting to know the doctor’s decision as to the
condition of the young English soldier. This had
been followed by Nathalie’s deep joy when she realized
that her “drop in the bucket” was doing its bit.
Yes, the doctor announced that the young man’s condition
was serious, induced by his gangrenous wound
and the life he had lived for the last two years. Still,
as he had a good constitution, and youth is a ready up-builder,
with proper care and food,—emphasizing the
word “food,”—he would be all right in a short time.
Yes, Janet had sensed the situation when she had proclaimed
that she believed the man was more than half
starved.
Under the care of the skillful surgeon, with Janet’s
good nursing, assisted by Nathalie and Nita, who had
.pn +1
begged hard to be allowed to help, the patient soon began
to improve. Possibly the atmosphere created by
having three young nurses, the soldier-boy as orderly,
Danny as handy man, with the other children as servitors,
with nourishing food, had done as much as medicine
and skill in giving renewed ambition to a man who
had been dragging out his life on half-rations, in the
solitude of a friendless existence.
The most important aid to the convalescent’s recovery,
undoubtedly, was the thought of being able to
refill an empty pocketbook, for Mrs. Van Vorst, as
soon as she learned that he was a proficient French
scholar,—he had lived in France, his mother being a
French woman,—and was graduated from Oxford,
had immediately made the suggestion that he give Nita
French lessons. With her usual tact the suggestion
had been so delicately made, pleading it as a personal
favor to her, so as not to offend the fine sensibilities
of the young man, that it had been soon arranged.
The young soldier’s peculiar situation had been
noised about, and general interest and sympathy being
awakened, many of the guests from the near-by hotels
had climbed the mountain trails, with offerings of
fruit or some delicacy for the invalid.
When the fact became known that Nita was to take
French lessons from him, other young ladies at the
hotels were eager to be his pupils, among them Nathalie’s
two New York schoolmates, who ardently
.pn +1
sounded the praises of the handsome English soldier,
whose refined scholarly face, tall, athletic figure,
his romantic story, bade fair to make him a possible
rival of the Count, who was considered the most
eligible parti at the hotel. But the fact that the young
man up in the cabin had played a soldier’s part in the
present war, was an asset that carried more weight
than mere wealth, in the minds of the ladies, particularly
when it was fashionable to be patriotic.
Possibly Nathalie’s two friends seized upon this opportunity
to make themselves one of a very happy party
of young people, who somehow managed to have a
most enjoyable time in ministering to their charge. As
soon as the sick man was able, he was made comfortable
in a hammock under the trees, on a clearing near
the cabin, where each one vied with the other to cheer
him.
Sometimes there would be a reading, then again just
a merry chat, but as the meetings gained in numbers,
stories became the vogue, the story-teller generally
relating some tale about the mountains, or an Indian
legend, while the listeners sat and knitted for the soldiers,
as even Sheila and the boys,—all but poor Jean,—had
become expert knitters, under Nathalie’s tutelage.
As the patient had brightened so perceptibly at
these little mountain-top gatherings, Nathalie had
dubbed them Liberty Cheers.
When Blue Robin saw that her two schoolmates had
.pn +1
foisted themselves upon the party, she felt indignantly
grieved, as the snub they had administered to her still
rankled. She had been on the point of revealing the
incident to Nita, in one of their little confidential chats,
when that young lady had remained at Seven Pillars
over night, as she loved to do. But second thoughts
stayed her, as she knew her friend’s loyal devotion to
her, and her vehement way of disposing of people when
they displeased her, the result of her spoiled childhood.
Nathalie, also, was afraid to offend the two girls, for
fear they would not continue to take lessons of Philip
de Brie, and she knew that would mean a loss to him.
Van Darrell, the Camp Mills soldier, and Philip had
fraternized as “mates”; for the latter, by his life on
the battlefield, and in the trenches, and with his experiences
in a German prison-camp, had a stock of information
at his command that Van was greedy to devour.
With the wholehearted patriotic enthusiasm of our
young American boys when called to the colors, he was
keen to be on the “firing-line,” so as to get a chance,
as he expressed it, “to get a few jabs at the Big Willie
gang.”
Philip’s deep appreciation of Nathalie’s kindness to
him, and also that of her friends, was not only expressed
in words, but by the warm, eloquent glances of
his dark eyes. His deferential courtesy to all, his
chivalrous manner towards her and Janet, and his
kindly, winning way of making friends with the children,
.pn +1
had won the girl’s admiration. Nevertheless she
had noticed that it was Janet who had won his deepest
regard. It was to her that he turned with questioning
eyes when anything of moment came up, on her that his
admiring, ardent glances fell when that young lady appeared
in some simple, but fluffy, bewitching little costume,
which she had taken to doing lately, somewhat
to Nathalie’s surprise.
When he grew tired and showed a restlessness, a desire
to be free of the merry-makers, a pleased look
would dawn in his eyes when they left him to the ministrations
of the head nurse. The somber shadows in
his eyes would light with a strange glow as she hovered
about him, trying to make him comfortable, or giving
him the medicine that he probably would have forgotten
if she had not been there to give it to him.
And Janet? Well, she had been, as it were, curiously
transformed into a new creature, seemingly, by
the sweet pity in her soft eyes, and the flush on her
winsome face, as, with tireless patience and quiet diligence,
she performed her duties. Evidently, for the
nonce, her vocation of mingled pacifist, farmerette, and
suffragette had been relegated to the past.
Oh, no, the girls did not spend all their time with
Philip, for, as this was Nita’s first visit to the White
Hills, there were many things to see. One of the first
places she had been taken by her friend was to the
Sweet Pea Tea-House, to meet the invalid and the
.pn +1
deaf-and-dumb lady. She was not only charmed with
their garden of gardens, but enthusiastic in her warm
admiration of the charms of its owners. And it was
not long before she was alternating with Nathalie in
reading to Miss Whipple, for Nathalie had managed,
with her many duties and joys, to keep up the readings
to the shut-in.
Mrs. Carney, of the little red house, also received a
call, and the young girl had come away curiously impressed
with the oddities of the queer little old lady,
whose small black figure, with her basket of yarn for
knitting, always in that funny poke-bonnet, was a
familiar sight on the road.
Janet, Nita declared, was “just lovely,” and that this
admiration was reciprocated was evidenced by Janet
taking her down to her farm, although sadly neglected
at present. Here Nita not only did her share of weeding,
but returned with such glowing accounts of the
farm’s luxuriance, expatiating so glowingly upon its
fertility, and what wonders Janet had been able to
accomplish so late in the season, that Nathalie forebore
poking fun at it, as she generally did.
Nita had gazed at the mystery room with a keen
desire to peep within, had read Nathalie’s diary of each
day’s doings, and had prowled all over the house, intent
on selecting what she thought was the most valuable
thing for Nathalie to select, as she, too, was
anxious that she should “win the prize,” as the children
.pn +1
called it. She had even visited Cynthia in her sanctum
sanctorum, to Nathalie’s astonishment, the artist apparently
having taken a great fancy to the hunchback
girl, being particularly cordial to her, and returning
Mrs. Van Vorst’s call, to the amazement of Mrs. Page,
before that lady had had a chance to do so.
But the reason therefor was apparently explained,
when it became known that she had suggested to Mrs.
Van Vorst that she allow her to paint Nita’s portrait,
insisting that her golden hair and violet eyes would
show up beautifully on a canvas. Nathalie was still
more surprised when that kind-hearted lady, whose income
was amply sufficient to allow her to indulge in
many whims, consented, and Cynthia was in a glorified
state at the success of her plan.
Liberty Fort had proved a good inspirer of patriotism,
as Nita not only became, for the time, a most
valiant Son of Liberty, entering with great zest into
the children’s sham battles on the meadow below, but
she introduced an element of war that was hailed with
delight. This was a battery gun, which she contrived
to make, with the help of Jean, out of an old lead pipe
found in the cellar, and which was placed on wheels,
the remains of an old hayrack, and installed at the top
of the terrace in front of the fort.
She had also helped the boys to make wooden swords
out of sticks, and also hand-grenades of thick paper
filled with gravel, which would have had a most disastrous
.pn +1
effect upon the enemy if the latter had not been
imaginary.
It was here one afternoon, as the boys were having
a battle with all the horrors of war, that young Darrell
appeared, and as he and the two girls sat on the stone
ledge, he told them how he was “all in” by having had
a boxing-match with a prisoner when on police duty.
“The chap was a foreigner,” he explained. “He
could only speak a little English, and I had heard him
mutter to himself several times in rather a queer way.
Suddenly, when I was off my guard, he let his club fly
at me and gave me a whack on the head that knocked
me silly. I saw stars for a moment, and then I let out
on the chap,—he was a big fellow, as strong as an ox,—and
was just about to use my automatic when the
Military Police rushed up and in a few moments they
had him as tight as a drum. It turned out that he
was off his nut, and I believe he is now in some asylum.
Anyway he put me in the hospital with a cracked skull
for a while, and then I was granted a furlough, and
came up here with mother.”
The girls, under the spell of the military, were inclined
to make a hero of the soldier-boy, with the long-lashed,
merry blue eyes and cheery laugh, in their
minds at least, if not openly. Later, when he was sitting
alone with Nathalie, in a burst of confidence, with
sudden gravity, he lamented that he feared that he
would never reach the “firing-line” overseas. When
.pn +1
Nathalie expressed her surprise at his fears, he explained
that he had been detailed to sanitary work in
the hospital, and then he added, with gloom-shadowed
eyes, “And it looks to me as if it would be steady
company; but it is up to Uncle Sam, and a soldier is
no soldier if he kicks at his job.”
“Oh, I just wish I were a man, so I could go over
there,” sighed Nathalie a little dolefully. “Sometimes
I wish I had a million lives so I could give them to my
country, and go over and fight.”
“Ho! ho! Blue Robin! You have changed your
mind then, haven’t you?” good-naturedly jeered Nita,
who had just come up behind them. Her blue eyes
gleamed mischief as she continued laughingly, “Surely
that was not the way you felt a short while ago.”
“No, that is true,” replied Nathalie with reddened
cheeks, “but I was selfish then, and failed to read the
handwriting on the wall.”
As Nathalie looked up in a shamefaced way at
the young soldier she saw a strange expression flit
across his face as he gazed down at her.
“Did you call Miss Page Blue Robin?” he asked
hurriedly of Nita, with a sudden, strange interest.
“Oh, that is just a nickname,” began Nathalie,
“and——”
“No, it isn’t a nickname,” returned Nita, with a
defiant toss of her head. “It is just your own particular
name. Shall I tell Mr. Darrell how you came by
.pn +1
it?” And then, without waiting for permission, she
told their companion the story of how Nathalie found
the nest of bluebirds in the old cedar tree and thought
they were blue robins. And when the Girl Pioneers
claimed that she must become one of them, she had
to join the Bluebird group. “Because, you see, she
was a real bluebird,” ended the girl.
It was then that Nathalie, who hated to be the subject
of a conversation, began to tell the young soldier
of her many trials in training her boys in military tactics.
To her joy he offered to give them a lesson,
whereupon the young Sons of Liberty were lined up,
Nita and Sheila with them, and drilled in a simple manual-of-arms,—how
to stand as a sentinel on post, how
to salute an officer or civilian, and how to stand at attention
when the national anthem, the “Call to the
Colors,” or “To the Standard,” were played, and
when the flag went by.
There was a drill in calisthenics, and then the young
military instructor explained to his youthful audience
the necessity for a Son of Liberty—he had caught the
phrase from Nathalie—to have clean hands, face,
teeth, and finger-nails. “No boy or young man,” he
emphasized, “will ever make a good soldier who will
not discipline himself in these small things. It is also
essential for a soldier not only to be clean, but to be
courteous, helpful, and kind, especially to the aged and
weak.”
.pn +1
The drill was conducted in such a masterful, soldier-like
way, and the little talk made significant by so many
points that Nathalie was laboring to teach her boys,
that the girls were greatly impressed, and also the children,
if one were to judge by their alert attention and
the worshipful glances they cast upon the young soldier
as they went through their war maneuvers.
Nathalie and the boys were anxious to show Nita
their mountain walks, and so, with young Darrell, they
spent many an afternoon, from glen and vale, in studying
the mountains, with their rugged crests and beautiful
cloud-effects. Their ever-changing beauty, their
gigantic immensity, their awe-inspiring silences lifted
the newcomers to a reverent calm, as they gazed at
these everlasting memorials to the omnipotency of the
Creator.
Sometimes the little party would walk four or five
miles, something that the little hunchback had never
been able to do until she became a Pioneer. The visit
to the Flume was not only repeated, but they visited
the Lost River. The weird mystery of the silver
stream, as it gleamed luringly between massive gray
bowlders, tempted them down the little ladder, to slide
over rocky ledges, and climb stony declivities, until at
last they were standing beneath the rocks in Shadow
Cave. The Giant’s Pot Hole, with the shiny water
peering at them from between the stone walls, so suggestive
of giants and strange dragons, with its weird,
.pn +1
mystical stream, made the underground trip to Mother
Nature’s caverns a revelation and a delight to all of
the party.
They ascended Mount Agassiz at Bethlehem, where
they tried to signal to Philip and Janet on the top of
Garnet, through the sun’s rays shining on a mirror, but
although this method of signaling was greatly enjoyed,
it was not very successful. With all of the merry
times, however, the young invalid on the mountain was
not forgotten, although he and Janet—with Mrs.
Page for company sometimes—passed many hours
in each other’s company.
Then came a cool, sunny afternoon in August, when
they all gathered around a trench camp-fire on the top
of Garnet, for Philip had convalesced sufficiently to do
a little climbing, and had a luncheon in the woods.
And it was the two young soldiers who boiled the potatoes
in a pot that hung from a green pole, fastened in
crotches on two upright saplings over the fire-pit, from
which a trench a foot deep branched out on each of its
four sides. This new kind of fire, as Sheila called it,
was a real soldier’s fire, for it was where Philip had
cooked his meals before he was visited by Nathalie and
Janet, his good angels, as he called them.
With keen satisfaction the children watched Philip
toast the sweet, nutty bacon for his guests, while Van
showed the girls his way of making flapjacks, as he
.pn +1
tossed them so high in the air that a shrill, “Oh, you’ll
lose it!” almost unnerved the would-be cook.
But no such dire catastrophe happened, and soon
they were all enjoying the brown cakes spread with
maple sugar, and war-bread sandwiched with bacon between.
After the edibles had been disposed of and
the fire was banked, as Philip called it, for a later meal,
Danny and Tony made a Pioneer Camp-fire, and
around its glowing embers—for the wind was keen
that cool August day up there on those craggy heights—they
held a Liberty Cheer.
As they were about to cast lots as to who should tell
the first story, Van, who never tired of listening to
Philip’s experiences, begged him to tell the girls something
of his life as a soldier fighting in France.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch19
CHAPTER XIX||“THE WHITE COMRADE”
.sp 2
Philip, who sat leaning against a tree, with his
arm around Jean, softly stroked the lad’s dark
head. Somehow he had shown more than the
usual interest in the little refugee, undoubtedly drawn
to him in recognition of the fact that he was also a victim
of German barbarity, and because they both spoke
the same language. Nathalie, with a thrill of joy, had
noticed his tender, protecting watchfulness over the
boy, and how Jean’s big eyes would gaze up at the
young man with a gleam in their depths like that of
some adoring dog, who yearns for the hand of his
master in silent caress!
“There is not much to tell,” returned Philip after a
pause, with the hesitancy of one who dislikes to talk
about himself, “for you must know I am no hero.”
He smiled at the girlish faces so eagerly watching him.
Suddenly he sat bolt upright, unconsciously pushing
Jean from him. “I am an American,” he exclaimed
abruptly, “for my father came of good old New England
stock, although I was born in the South. But my
heart has been strangely stirred since I came over here,
for the Americans are asleep,—they do not sense what
.pn +1
they are up against in this war of the nations.” His
dark gray eyes flashed into flame. “Sometimes I feel
I would like to be another Paul Revere, and ride like
the wind, knocking on doors and windows, shouting to
the slumberers, ‘The Huns are coming!’ They
must be roused to the truth that this war is their war,
and that they have not buckled to their job.”
He paused a moment, the fire dying out of his eyes
as he continued, “I was feeling in unusually good
spirits that summer of 1914, for I had just formed a
partnership with a well-known architect, and business
gave assurance of giving me a very comfortable income,
and place me in a position to repay my mother,
who had denied herself in order to put me through
college.
“Into this mood of complacent satisfaction with
myself and world in general, came a jar one day in
June when the newspapers announced, in glaring headlines,
the assassination of the Archduke Ferdinand.
And, almost before we had digested its portent, came
Austria’s ultimatum to little Serbia. People began to
grow restive, alarm-fired, keyed to a tense state of expectancy
that something was in the air, but—what?
Then tongues were loosened and eyes flashed fire as
the Prime Minister’s scathing denunciation of Germany’s
‘infamous proposal’ was bandied from mouth
to mouth, followed by Great Britain’s ultimatum that
Belgium’s neutrality must be respected.
.pn +1
“Then came hours of anxious suspense, a harrowing
waiting-time, with every one’s heart aquiver, while a
little group of men in Downing Street held their
watches in their hands as they awaited Germany’s reply.
It came. The deep-toned clang of Big Ben told
to English hearts that the world’s decades of peace had
been shattered, and that the Prussian barbarians had
struck their first blow at civilization.
“From every corner and window now glared forth,
‘Your King and your Country need you.’ Those
words seared my heart like fire, but no, I argued, I
must make good with mother. But no matter how I
tried to cajole myself, the words seemed to follow me
around like an accusing finger. No, he wasn’t my
king. I was an American by right of birth, but still
they blazoned at me until I could see them with my eyes
shut. They starred the darkness of night; why, even
in my sleep they clutched me in a ghostly dream. The
next day and for many days I saw them aflame on the
pavement, they were written on the sky in white letters,
but still I fought.
“When England’s young manhood sprang, as it
were, from the earth, armed to the teeth, and marched
shoulder to shoulder in regular beat,—it seemed like
the pulsation of my own heart—as they swung along
through the streets of London, my head swam, my
throat tightened, and—But when I read of heroic
little Belgium so nobly holding out against the ruthless
.pn +1
destroyer of justice and honor, I gave in and became
one of Kitchener’s mob.
“Those were not pleasant hours,” continued Philip,
“waiting at the Horse Guard Parade to read when I
must report at the regimental depot at Hounslow, for I
felt I was a misfit, in with a lot of men that, to my
inexperienced eyes, seemed the scum of England,
and I sickened of my job.
“But when the news continued to pour in that
Liège had fallen, that the Germans had entered Brussels,
that the British Expeditionary Forces were retreating,
heroically fighting, that Namur, Louvain, and
other towns were being ruthlessly seized and devastated
by the enemy, and their hellish atrocities began to be
rumored about, the past, together with all hopes and
desires for the future, were wiped out as clean as a
slate in a spirit of forgetfulness. I lived in the moment,
buoyed by the grim determination to fight like
hell to down the oppressor of men’s rights, to lose my
life if need be, in order to give freedom to those who
were to come after.
“My spirits took a leap when I registered at the
Hounslow Barracks as a Royal Fusileer, although I
grinned humorously, for if I had felt like a misfit in
London I was a guy now, appareled like a bloomin’
lay-figure in the cast-off rags of some old-clothes shop,
and had sensed that I was only a steel rivet in a big
machine. I was no duck either, taking to the drills
.pn +1
like water, for I would stand hopelessly bewildered at
the sharp orders, ‘Form fours! One-one-two! Platoon!
Form Fours!’ and similar commands, that
were like kicks on a befuddled brain. But I gritted my
teeth and stuck to my guns.
“As soon as my rawness wore off and I began to
get the hang of it, the martial spirit asserted itself. I
began to be obsessed by the desire to show that I was
the right stuff, that the heroism of my American ancestors,
the spirit of ’76, was in me. Through all my intensive
training I was feverishly eager to know every
detail of company and battalion drill, musketry and target-practice,
and all the daily grind of the other sundry
factors in military discipline.
“When I began to ‘matey’ my comrades, I soon understood
why a Tommy Atkins is not like an American,
who is born with a fine sense of personal independence,
and who feels that he is as good as any Lord or Duke;
or like a volatile Frenchman, with his easy grace of
manner and buoyant spirit. I realized that although
there may be a ‘Sentimental Tommy’ here and there,
the average Tommy Atkins is a stolid chap, humdrum
and prosaic, but with as kind a heart as any rookie in
the world.
“As spring came along, after months of soldiering
in many different quarters, which meant roughing it in
leaky tents where cold, rain, and mud played a large
part, and poor equipment a larger, we were no longer
.pn +1
raw rookies, parading or drilling before an unadmiring
public,—a target for pretty girls’ laughter, or the ire of
a berating sergeant,—for our battalion had acquired a
high degree of efficiency.
“Our arms were one with us, we had done with
squad, platoon formation, and company drills, had
shown our metal at the rifle-range at Aldershot, taken
part in field maneuvers, bayonet charges, and mimic
battles. We had become experts at trench-digging,
bomb-throwing, and sniping, while the machine-gunners
were quite up to the mark in that important
weapon; in fact, we had become familiar with all
branches of the army service.
“Then when every man was ‘in the pink’ the
marching orders came, and we assembled on the barrack-square
at Aldershot. Not only were we physically
fit, fine specimens of the trained soldier, but we
were completely equipped, even to the identification
tag, which registered your name, regimental number,
regiment, and religion; besides, we carried the first-aid
field dressing,—an antiseptic gauze pad and bandage,
and a small bottle of iodine. Also, each soldier carried
a copy of Lord Kitchener’s letter, as to what was
expected of every British soldier. The words ‘Do
your duty bravely. Fear God. Honor your King,’
meant much to me, although I was an American.
“And then we were off, merry and blithe, no matter
what our hearts registered, cheering like fiends when
.pn +1
some of the boys in khaki chalked the gun-carriages
‘at Berlin,’ a new challenge to each Tommy to do his
stunt in making the Huns pay. Then came a drifting
period when we were herded like cattle from one train
to another, or made long, weary marches in the blind,—for
nobody seemed to know our destination. But at
last we were in the shadow of the great battle, down in
the earth, in one sector of a long line of a serpentine
trench, zigzagging from the sea to the Alps.
“This burrowing underground like a mole, digging
trenches, or holes, in No Man’s Land, to string up
barbed wire entanglements, or to pile sand-bags on the
parapet, or to clean out the wreckage of a trench that
had been battered by German gunners, or a trench-mortar—sometimes
to gather up the pieces of some
‘matey’ whom you had chummed with,—all meant
new activities. They were experiences and sounds—the
sounds of hell—and sights that cut deep, with an
impelling remembrance haunting you like grewsome
shadows.
“Yes, it was a strange new life,” the young soldier
paused musingly, “for this kind of fighting is no battlefield
with glittering helmets and bayonets, the furling
of colors, the prancing of horses, the roll of gun-carriages,
but stinging eyelids and a choking in thick gray
smoke, with the roar of cannonading, the sharp screech
of shrapnel, the bursting of star-shells, or the whir of
strange, queer monsters above your head.
.pn +1
“There was the turning of night into day,”—Philip’s
face had a weary expression,—“the daily mental
strain, the danger constantly facing you, the learning
to know the sounds of the different shells and in
what direction they were going to fall. Involuntarily,
with stilled breath, you waited, and then came the
sinking of your heart when you sensed that it was your
turn now, and then to find yourself still there, but to
realize that some of your mates had ‘gone West.’
“And the gas. Oh, the horror of the great, greenish
balls that came rolling towards you, close to the
earth, the celerity of getting into your gas-masks, and
the horrible thing that a comrade became if he failed to
accomplish this job on time, and lay writhing in an
ugly, venomous atmosphere of green.
“Then there were the cooties, the parasites that feed
on you, and with whom you maintain a constant warfare,”
Philip smiled as he saw the girls squirm; “and
the rats, as big as cats, with sharp, ferret-like eyes,
darting from some dark crevice, or playing leap-frog
over your legs at night, or mistaking your head for
their nest. Ugh! But the dead-and-gone feeling—exhausted
nature asserting her rights—which assailed
you at some critical moment, perhaps when you were
trying to be a man at your job, just got you through
and through.
“Ah, there was the first ‘over-the-top’ experience,
when you stood on the fire-step with gun in hand, palefaced,
.pn +1
but with clenched teeth, in an oppressive silence,
waiting to hear the command come down the line,—whispered
from mouth to mouth. Then you leaped
wildly over into long-anticipated perils, to become
entangled in barbed wire, or perhaps to get your first
shock, as the man next you dropped like lead at the first
‘ptt’ of a German sharpshooter’s bullet.
“But on you rush in a mad frenzy with red-misted
eyes, in the face of a heavy artillery fire and a pitiless
gale of shrapnel, through a dense smoke-screen, split
with lurid flashes of flame, over a ground pitted with
shell-holes—to stumble over some dead Tommy,
whose glazed eyes stare up at you as if in mockery of
your determination to play the man in this crusade for
humanity.
“Then my adventure came,—a raid on a German
trench, an undertaking attended with great peril.
With blackened faces, each man, with his bag of bombs
and automatic, at the flicker of a white light crawled
stealthily into the sable blackness of ‘dead man’s yard,’
and, in a downpour of drenching rain, crept on hands
and knees, sometimes wiggling on his stomach,—quickly
rolling into a shell-hole if a sound was heard,—until
the German trench loomed menacingly only a few
feet beyond.
“Everything was deadly still. Then the signal
came, and with a rush we clambered stealthily up and
peeped over, to see a yellow-haired Heinie asleep in the
.pn +1
little alcove back of his gun-emplacement, the head of
the sentry-on-post tipsily nodding on his chest, and two
big fellows snoring like porpoises on the floor near.
In just one minute we had slid into that trench and had
our men with hands up. Sure it was a surprise-party
for Fritz, for the Germans came running out of their
dug-outs, wrapped in blankets, noisily demanding to
know what was up. They soon knew, and then came a
riot of a time as we let our hand-grenades fly, and our
bayonets too, aided by a lively fire from our machine-guns.
And then we were out, making a quick run for
our own trenches with our trophies, and several of the
surprised ones, with the German guns thundering in
our rear.
“Yes, I had captured my first Hun, and mighty
proud I was of my achievement, and pictured my delight-to-be
when retailing my adventure to my comrades,
when Zipp! and I was downed by the pieces of a
bursting shell that got me in the hand and foot. And
the prisoner? Oh, the dirty Boche saw his chance. I
saw his hand go up,—he must have had a stiletto hidden
somewhere,—but I was too quick for him for I
let fly a hand-grenade, and—well, he bothered me no
more.
“For hours I crawled, or wiggled, along, dropping
into a chalk-pit or a shell-hole every few moments, for
it was like hell under that liquid fire, Fritzie’s aërial
bombs and the machine-gun fire; in fact, it seemed as
.pn +1
if every kind of projectile had been let loose, for now
the Germans were mad clean through. Finally, being
too exhausted to make any further headway, I crept
into a shell-hole, where I lay for a day and a night,
lying on my face most of the time, playing dead, for the
German fiends would sneak out into No Man’s Land
at night after a bombardment, and kill every wounded
enemy soldier they could find.
“What did I think about, you ask, Miss Nathalie,
while lying in that shell-hole?” Philip smiled a little
sadly. “Well, at first I was crazed with thirst and
hunger, and the cold—oh, it was something fierce.
And then the doubts and misgivings that had assailed
me at times, as to whether there was a God in heaven,
returned with renewed force. I dumbly felt that my
faith was leaving me, for why this useless slaughter of
men’s bodies, this agonizing devil’s gas, this torturing
of the aged and weak, this violating of womanhood,
this maiming of little, innocent children? Ah, the
agony of body was nothing compared to the agony of
my soul, as I lay in that hole.
“Then that night—there was no moon, and everything
was a dead calm, for a lull had come in fighting—I
turned over, face upward, to ease the aching that
racked my body. As I lie gazing up at the stars,—they
seemed unusually bright,—something white suddenly
flashed before me, and then I saw a face bend
down and gaze at me. It was a marvelously beautiful
.pn +1
face, with such calm serenity of expression as the
eyes smiled into mine, that a strange peace came into
my soul, my pains were eased, I was filled with a wonderful
joy, and—then I knew;—it was the face of
the Great White Comrade,—the face of Christ!
“It may have been a delusion from overwrought
nerves,—I may have been dreaming,—I don’t know,
for there had been great talk among the soldiers of seeing
the white apparition of Christ on the battlefield.
He was said to have appeared to the soldiers, showed
them His bleeding side and hands, and then the suffering
ones had felt a wonderful peace come into their
souls, and their very agonies had made them triumphant
in the thought that as He had died to make
men holy, so He had given them the great privilege of
suffering and dying to make men free. No, I didn’t
see any bleeding side, or the nail-prints on the hands,
but I saw Christ’s face, and, oh, it was Heaven!
“Then my brain cleared. I realized that I had been
groping in a great darkness, but that a wonderful light
had come, and I knew God was in His Heaven. That
smile had brought revelation. It had told me that we
were no better than Christ, and He had suffered,—He,
an innocent soul. And as He had agonized on the
cross, and God had suffered with Him, so every moan,
sob, and cry had reached His ears in this great wail
from humanity. It told me that this bruising of
bodies, this rending of women’s hearts, this wringing
.pn +1
of men’s souls, had wrung His heart with a suffering
greater than men could know.
“It told me that it was all the working-out of God’s
great plan for the good of mankind. It told me that
the men, women, and children, who had passed through
these seas of blood were to come forth with white garments,
to be a great host led by the Angel of His Presence,
and that their deeds were to live after them, to
bring light into the dark places in men’s souls. It told
me that these blood-soaked battlefields were to become
gardens, where flowers would spring, the glorious flowers
of freedom, and that every tear shed was to become
great waters, to flow like a river of peace to all nations.”
As Philip ceased speaking, the faces of his young
listeners became very grave, and for a moment there
was an impressive stillness, as if each one had been
hushed to a reverent silence. “Well, after that, I was
strangely happy,” continued the young man slowly.
“I think I must have fallen asleep, for I was suddenly
aroused by the cold snout of a dog nosing into my face.
He was a little beast, not much bigger than Tige here,”
softly stroking the refugee’s yellow dog as he spoke, at
which Jean’s eyes grew soft and bright, for with the lad
it was “Love me, love my dog.”
“Yes, it was a Red Cross dog, whose beautiful eyes
seemed almost human as they told me that help was
near, and—” Philip stopped abruptly. He had had a
.pn +1
weary, tired look for some time, but now a sudden pallor
overspread his face, and Janet, who had been watching
him nervously, stepped quickly to his side, crying,
“And now you must stop talking, Mr. de Brie, for you
are overdoing.”
Philip smiled into her blue eyes, but waved her aside
as he cried, sitting up with sudden resolution, “But no,
you must let me finish my story.”
“Oh, yes, do let him finish his story!” came a
chorus of eager voices.
But at this moment Nathalie, whose face had suddenly
brightened, cried, “Oh, no; let’s wait, for a big
idea has suddenly come to me, and,” the girl’s eyes
sparkled, “if it turns out all right it will add to our
enjoyment if we wait to hear Mr. de Brie’s story some
other time.”
“A big idea,” cried Nita, all aquiver with curiosity.
“Oh, Nathalie, do tell us what it is!”
“No, not now,” answered the girl. “It will keep;
but in the meantime let us have a story from Mr. Darrell.
You know he promised to tell us about Lovewell,
the Ranger, and now is his chance, and we are not going
to let him off.”
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch20
CHAPTER XX||THE LIBERTY TEA
.sp 2
As Nathalie was ably seconded by the rest of the
Liberty Cheerers, Van—he claimed he was a
chump at story-telling—began the story of
Lovewell, the Ranger, by saying that it was like one of
the old Norse Sagas, for it had been told and retold by
the mountaineer’s fireside for many generations.
“When the white settlers were being harassed in the
early times by marauding bands from the neighboring
tribe of Sokoki Indians,” said the young soldier, “John
Lovewell, a hardy ranger, set out from the Indian village
of Pigswacket, now Fryeburg, near North Conway,
and made his way, with forty-five of his followers,
to Ossipee. Here they built a fort, and his scouts
having found Indian tracks, they pushed farther on to
a lake by whose shores they encamped for the night.
The following morning, while trailing an Indian in the
woods, Paugas, an Indian chieftain, whose name was
a terror to every white settler on the frontier, stole up
behind the rangers, to their encampment, which unfortunately
they had left unguarded, and counted their
packs. Finding that they were only thirty-four in
.pn +1
number, the Indians placed themselves in ambush in
the woods near, and when the rangers returned it was
to be surrounded by the redmen, while the air was
filled with their deadly fire and hideous warwhoops.
“Here, by this little lake, under the very shadow of
Mount Kearsarge, fifty miles from any settlement, was
fought one of the bloodiest battles in Indian warfare,
as the loyal rangers fought for their lives. They finally
compelled the Indians to flee, but not before Lovewell
and many of his men had been killed. The survivors
made their way back to the fort at Ossipee, only
to find it empty, for the guard, on hearing that Lovewell
and his band had been killed, had deserted it.
“After many incredible hardships,” continued Van,
“twenty emaciated men finally reached the white settlement,
many of them only to fall dead from wounds, or
from hunger and exhaustion. But, practically, Lovewell’s
band had won a great victory, for Paugas had
been killed, and the remainder of the tribe forsook their
strongholds among the foothills, and the white settlers
were molested no more.”
Van also related how a ranger, the only remaining
one of three brothers who had set forth with Lovewell,
when one of his brothers fell dead at his feet
from the wounds inflicted by the savages, had started
for their village, only to find his other brother’s body
riddled with bullets.
“Determined to be revenged, he pursued the Indians
.pn +1
to the mountain fastnesses, where the defeated tribe,
under the chief Chocorua, still lingered. He finally
sighted the chieftain, who had ascended a high mountain
to see if the white men had departed. As he
started to descend he was confronted by the ranger,
who, with his gun in hand, slowly forced the Indian
back, step by step, until he stood on the verge of the
precipice where he had been standing. As the chieftain
saw that his end had come,—as he had no alternative
between the precipitous cliff and the white man’s
weapon,—with a cry of bitter defiance he leaped from
the pinnacle, to be dashed to pieces on the rocks below.
Hence the name, Chocorua Mountain.”
A mountain romance was now told by Janet, in the
story of Nancy Stairs, a native of Jefferson, who had
fallen in love, and become engaged to a farm-hand.
On the eve of the wedding the girl’s lover disappeared,
carrying with him a small sum of money, her dot.
How Nancy set forth, to overtake him at a camp many
miles away, walking at night through the dark woods,
clambering over rocks and fording the Saco, finally to
reach the place where he had encamped, to find it deserted,
aroused the sympathies of all. “Finally,” continued
Janet, “the girl sank exhausted on the banks of
a brook, to be found some time later in the calm repose
of a deathless sleep, almost buried under the snow, under
a canopy of friendly evergreen that stretched above
her.
.pn +1
“But Nancy had her revenge,” smiled the storyteller,
“for when the farm-hand heard of her fate he
lost his reason, and tradition tells us that, on the anniversary
of her death, the mountain-passes through
which she pushed, in her weary pursuit of her lover,
resound to his cries of grief.”
Nita’s contribution to the Liberty Cheer was a little
tale of an Indian maiden, who was so beautiful that no
hunter was found worthy of her. Suddenly she disappeared,
and was never seen again, until one day an
Indian chief, on returning from the chase, told how he
had seen her disporting in the limpid waters of the
river Ellis, with a youth as peerless as she. When the
bathers saw the chieftain they had immediately vanished
from sight, thus showing the girl’s parents that
her companion must have been a mountain-spirit.
From now on they would go into the wilds and call
upon him for a moose, a deer, or whatever animal they
chose, and lo! it would immediately appear, running
towards them.
Danny’s story was about some white settlers captured
by the Indians on their way to Canada. When
they came to the banks of a beautiful stream, one of
the captives, a mother with several children, from a
babe in arms to a girl of sixteen, gathered her little
ones about her in dumb despair. She had toiled
through trackless forests, forded swollen streams,
climbed rocky heights, slept on the cold, bare earth, and
.pn +1
then, when she had refused to obey the commands of
an Indian chieftain, from lack of strength, she had been
goaded with blows, or the gory scalps of two of her
children, which still hung from his belt, had been flourished
menacingly before her eyes.
As she stood on the banks of the river, feeling that
her reason would forsake her from anguish, she suddenly
heard one of the Indians ask her oldest daughter
to sing. The girl stood speechless with amazement,
not knowing what to do for a moment, and then there
floated out through the vast solitudes of these lonely
mountains a curiously fresh young voice, as the girl
chanted the sublime words of the psalmist in the plaintive
river-song.
There was a slight pause, and then Danny’s voice,
sweet and clear, to the accompaniment of the soft
strains of Tony’s violin, was heard as he chanted:
.nf b
“By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, yes, we wept,
when we remembered Zion.
“We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst thereof.
“For there they that carried us away captive required of us a
song; and they that wasted us required of us mirth.”
.nf-
Tony’s hands lovingly fingered his bow, and the
music, like the rippling flow of the river Ellis, continued
its sweet low murmur, as the little newsie told how
the magic charm of these beautiful words must have
touched some chord in the savage breasts, for, as the
girl ceased, the fiercest Indian caught the babe gently
.pn +1
from the mother’s arms and carried it across the river.
One of his companions also softened, and, picking up
another child, bore it safely over the stream.
Nathalie chose the familiar Willey story, about the
family who lived in an inn on the side of Mount Willey,
at the entrance to the great Notch. “In 1826,”
said the girl, “one evening in June they heard a queer,
rumbling noise, and hurried out to see an avalanche of
stones and uprooted trees making its way with great
speed down the mountain. Fortunately, before it
reached the house it swerved one side, and the Willeys,
believing it quite safe, returned to the house, and, as
time passed on, carelessly forgot the warning that had
been given them.
“In August a severe storm occurred, which raged
with indescribable fury for a day and a night, the rain
falling in sheets, while the Saco overflowed its banks,
thus creating a state of general upheaval. Two days
later, a tourist traveling through the Notch arrived at
the inn, to find it uninjured, but deserted, with the exception
of a half-starved dog who was whining dismally.
He made his way to Bartlett, and the mountaineers,
hurrying to the scene, finally discovered the
bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Willey and two hired men,
who were buried in a mass of wreckage not far from
the inn. The bodies of the children were never discovered.
“It is supposed,” explained Nathalie, “that they had
.pn +1
all rushed out on again hearing the rumbling noises,
and had evidently tried to seek the shelter of a cave
near. But they were too late,” she ended with a pathetic
sigh, “for the avalanche was upon them before
they reached it. If they had only remained in the
house they would have been saved.”
A little later, as Philip and Van became engaged in
a conversation about the war, a topic of which they
never seemed to weary, Nathalie and Nita, with arms
intertwined in long-cemented camaraderie, wandered to
the high, jutting rock which Nathalie called “Heaven’s
window.” Here in awed silence they gazed at the faraway,
scintillating blue peaks, huge escarpments, and
yawning mountain crevasses towering above the alpine
meadow, that, rich in many shades of verdure, darkened
with cloud-shadows, and cut with ribbon-like
trails of forest foliage, were a
.nf b
“Wondrous woof of various greens.”
.nf-
In the sun-dyed splendor it was like a cloth of gold, a
wondrous tapestry woven by Nature in her most majestic
mood, a picture that held them with the calm of
its infinite beauty.
Suddenly Nita, who never was quiet very long, cried:
“Oh, Nathalie, you must tell us what you meant when
you said that you had a big idea. Don’t you remember,
it was when Janet made Philip stop his story?”
“I don’t know as it is a very big idea,” replied her
.pn +1
companion, “for its bigness depends, as Dick says, on
whether we make a go of it or not. I spoke of it then,
not only because I had just thought of it, but because
I wanted to second Janet, for Philip was as white as a
ghost.
“You know,” she continued slowly, “the afternoon
teas at the Sweet Pea Tea-House have not been very
well attended lately. I presume the minds of the people
have been diverted by some new form of amusement.
I’m awfully sorry, too, for I think my dear
Sweet-Pea ladies need the money. Now what do you
think of having Philip tell the rest of his story some
afternoon at the Tea-House? We’ll get Jean to tell
his story, too, and the boys can sing patriotic songs;
and then, there’s Tony, with his violin. I think we can
get up a real good entertainment, and we can call it a
Liberty Tea.”
“Oh, Nathalie, that’s a peach of an idea!” Nita’s
blue eyes glowed enthusiastically.
“You see,” returned her friend, “it would attract
the people to the Tea-House again, and also bring
Philip into notice. I think his story would interest
every one, and it might get him a few more pupils.”
As the little party wended their way down the trail,
they were busy making plans and devising ways to
make Nathalie’s “big idea” feasible. They had
broached the subject to Philip,—Nathalie being careful
not to make it appear as if he would gain by the
.pn +1
performance,—and he had readily consented to do his
part. Janet, too, was won over, and as for the children,
they were in a beatific state at the idea of appearing
on a platform, and “speaking a piece,” as Sheila
called it.
Miss Whipple, when the idea was suggested to her,
Nathalie making it appear that Philip would derive
great benefit from it, heartily favored the plan. So,
for the next two days Nita and Nathalie were as busy
as bees, drilling the children, making posters to feature
the event at the different hotels, and then motoring to
each one, and tacking them up, after getting the desired
permission, so that the affair would be well advertised.
The boys and Van Darrell, with the help of some
friends of Nita’s at the Sunset Hill House, the morning
of the event decorated the Tea-House with greens,
goldenrod, and flags. Sam assisted by erecting a
small platform so gaudily festooned with red, blue, and
white bunting that Nita said it was a regular “call to
the colors,” as she stood off and surveyed his work.
Chairs, rustic seats, in fact, everything that could be
used for a seat was now brought into the room, while
the veranda was not only decorated with bunting and
Japanese lanterns, the posts being twined with the national
colors in crêpe paper, but filled with small tea-tables
and chairs.
At the hour designated for the performance to begin—to
the girls’ delight, the room was crowded—Janet
.pn +1
began to play softly on the piano, suddenly breaking into
“Hail Columbia,” then a patriotic march, following
these selections with “The Royal March of Italy,” the
“Lorraine March” and several other well-known favorites
either of the Americans or the Allies, ending with
France’s adored march, “Sambre et Meuse.”
The boys, in their khaki suits, each one carrying his
gun, now marched before the audience. They were
headed by Sheila, who, as a little Goddess of Liberty,
acted as the color-bearer. As she stepped to one side
of the stage and stood at attention, the boys saluted the
flag and then repeated the oath of allegiance.
Sheila now fell in line, and they went through a
manual-of-arms, and then, amid loud applause, broke
into the “Red, White, and Blue.” This was followed
by a number of patriotic airs, and the national anthem,
when all rose to their feet and joined in the singing
with patriotic fervor. After a short pause Danny
started to whistle “La Marseillaise”—Janet playing
the accompaniment on the piano very softly—as the
children joined in, coming out with startling effect with
the words:
.nf b
“To arms! Ye warriors all!
Your bold battalions call!
March on, ye free!
Death shall be ours,
Or glorious victory!”
.nf-
Van Darrell now appeared in front of the little platform—he
had modestly refused to ascend it—and
.pn +1
introduced Mr. Philip de Brie as a British soldier, a
member of “Kitchener’s mob,” known as the greatest
volunteer army in the world. As Philip stepped forward
in response to an enthusiastic ovation he bowed
courteously, but with a certain diffidence of manner
that showed that this was a more trying ordeal than
being under fire at the front.
The personal part of Philip’s story was quickly told,—how
he came to join the army,—the audience cheering
lustily when he claimed he was an American, while
a tenseness seized them as he related his strange experience
while lying in a shell-hole, and the revelation the
apparition of the White Comrade had brought to him.
Their interest continued as he told how, in the British
offensive south of the Somme, he and his company,
with four machine-guns, had cleaned out a Prussian
machine-gun nest that had been making havoc with
their men. They peppered the enemy so severely, he
asserted, while playing a crisscross game with their
guns, that the only remaining German gunner was
captured, surrounded by his dead comrades.
When their ammunition failed, and they attempted
to return to their lines under a fierce artillery fire, with
bursting shells and shrapnel flying around them, they
were compelled to take refuge under a bridge, where
they remained for four hours under a fierce gas attack.
He was again cheered as he told how, in another attempt
to regain the firing-line, a bomb exploded, killing
.pn +1
several of their men, and how, when their lieutenant
was missed, noted for his bravery and daring, he
started out to find him.
This recital was made graphic as he told of crawling
on his stomach to dodge a bomb, or wiggling along to
peer into shell-pits, and how, when a flare was thrown
up by the enemy, illuminating the battlefield like some
big electric show, he suddenly found himself, as it
were, back to the wall,—for he had no ammunition,—desperately
fighting a big, husky German who
was fumbling in his pocket, evidently for a hand-grenade.
Another cheer, and then almost a groan went
through the room as Philip continued, and told how,
as he tried to get him by the throat, he made a lunge at
him and thrust his bayonet through his arm. The German
finished off his work by knocking him on the head
with his rifle, finally leading him, dazed and blinded, behind
the German lines, a prisoner.
The neglect he received in the field and base hospital
and the horrible treatment he was compelled to witness,
as endured by the wounded prisoners, was received
with a storm of hisses. How he was pronounced
cured, although he had been rendered dumb, either
from nerve-shock or the force of the blow on the head,
and then taken to a German prison-camp, and crowded
in with hundreds of men in a wooden shed, with a
flooring of mud four inches thick, aroused renewed indignation.
Here, with no blankets, no ventilation,
.pn +1
overcoat, or personal belongings, he slept on a straw
tick, with insufficient food, and that of such a horrible
quality that he grew emaciated and covered with boils.
When some of the prisoners were transferred to another
camp Philip told how he had the good luck to be
one of them, and how, when the train was struck by a
bursting bomb, crashing in the roof when going at a
speed of thirty miles an hour, he, with two other prisoners,
climbed up and jumped to the ground, one man
being killed.
This was the beginning of his race for life, in which
he dodged guards and sentries, cut his way through
barbed wire, and hid in a forest for three days, and,
after many other thrilling adventures, finally came
to a field within a few miles of the British lines.
“Here,” Philip continued, “as we lay concealed in a
dugout under a bank, we heard a familiar whirr, and
looked up to see an air-battle taking place between a
French and Boche plane. With taut breath I watched
the planes circle round and round in the air, while keeping
up a steady fire at one another, until the French
plane began to drive its enemy back and back, until
they were directly over the British entrenchments.
Then we heard the rat-tat-tat, and knew that one of
the planes had been fired upon from below. Suddenly
it burst into flames, lunged to one side, and then, in a
long sweep through the air, began to circle downward
like a great flash of fire, sending forth a shower of
.pn +1
sparks as it fell. And then I screamed from sheer joy,
for I recognized that it was the Boche plane that had
fallen. It is needless to say that my speech had returned.”
After telling how they had regained the British lines,
and how he had finally reached a hospital in London,
where he remained for some weeks in a miserably depressed
state of mind, on learning that his mother had
died during his absence, Philip finished his story by telling
how he came to sail for America. He told of his
search for his grandmother, and how he came to live in
the little cabin on the mountain. From the plaudits
that greeted him, as he bowed and retired from the platform,
it was evident that his story had been greatly enjoyed
by his listeners.
When Tony a moment or so later, in his old velveteen
vest, with his violin under his arm, and his velvety
black eyes aglow in a beatific smile, bobbed a
funny little bow to his audience, he was warmly received.
But a sudden hush succeeded as the little violinist,
with his instrument tucked under his chubby
chin, fingered the bow lovingly as he moved it over the
strings, evoking such sweet, rich music that the violin
seemed like some enchanted thing.
Surely this little slum lad, with no training to guide
him, of his own volition could not have produced such
ravishing melody as floated through the room. As he
played his face lost its smile, and there came a play of
.pn +1
expression, now tender and sad, now dreamy or grave,
in accord with the varied moods of the music, as he
played on and on with a passion, a rich tenderness,
every note in tune, that seemed almost marvelous.
When he ended with a vehement little shake of his head—that
sent his waving hair flying about—in much
the same manner that great musicians affect, it brought
down the house in loud applause.
As an encore he played several Italian airs, weird,
dreamy music, finally ending with “Traumerei,” Schumann’s
“Dream Song.” No, he didn’t play it all, only
snatches, and these were not always rendered according
to the score, but he held his audience in a hushed stillness,
until, with a little shake of his bow, and a low
bow, he turned and ran quickly from the platform.
Sheila hid her face in Nathalie’s skirt when her turn
came to ascend the platform and speak her “liberty
piece.” Nathalie was in the throes of despair, for fear
that she was going to fail her, when Tony leaned forward
and teasingly whispered, “Oh, Boy!” This
reminiscent remark caused the little lady’s head to go
up, and her chin, too, and in angry defiance she
marched up on the platform. As Nathalie, who was
sitting down in the front row of chairs, gave her the
cue, her little treble was heard repeating James Whitcomb
Riley’s poem “Liberty,” her voice ringing out
loud and clear when she came to the stanza:
.pn +1
.nf b
“Sing for the arms that fling
Their fetters in the dust
And lift their hands in higher trust,
Unto the one Great King;
Sing for the patriot home and land,
Sing for the country they have planned;
Sing that the world may understand
This is Freedom’s land!”
.nf-
It was pathetic to see the little empty-sleeved Jean,
as he straightened up his slender form, and, in an attempt
at bravery, hurried on the platform. Without
waiting for the accompanist,—forgetting to greet his
audience in his fright,—he burst into the words of Belgium’s
national anthem, “Brabanconne,” singing it
with a verve and spirit,—as he stood, with his one
hand nervously clinched in front of him and his eyes
uplifted,—that showed that the soul of Belgium was
not dead.
This impassioned appeal from the boy as he ended,
and stood in mute bewilderment, his eyes again haunted
by that look of hopeless terror, aroused the audience to
prolonged applause. Philip now stepped to his side,
and, as he laid his hand reassuringly on the little shoulder,
the refugee began his pitiful tale.
His arm had been cut off, he told, by a German soldier,
who had made his mother cry, when he had rushed
up and pounded him with his fists to make him desist.
The soldier had dragged his mother away, and then he
had been told that she had died. There was a quiver
.pn +1
to the lad’s voice as he related this sorrowful incident,
but he winked his eyes together to keep back the tears.
Two days later, with his aged grandparents, he had
been driven to the town square, and there a soldier had
shot his grandfather because the old man had rebuked
him for dragging the boy’s grandmother roughly
about. She had shrieked and fallen, to be trampled in
the crush, for when they picked her up she was very
white, and had never opened her eyes again. When
all the women and children were herded together like
cows, and driven along a road, with a big German
soldier pointing his gun at them, Jean had suddenly
run away, as fast as he could, and he had run and run
with his eyes shut, for he was afraid of the bullets that
came whistling on all sides of him.
Finally he had fallen from exhaustion, and then he
had crawled into the dark cellar of a shelled house.
Here he had remained for a long time, going out at
night to a battlefield near and taking what food he
could find from the knapsacks of the dead soldiers.
At last he could find no more food, and then he had
wandered on, walking wearily along for miles and
miles, until he had become part of those fleeing throngs
of refugees that blocked the roads for many long miles,
sleeping on the roadside at night. Sometimes he
would have a little bread, or a piece of cheese given to
him, and then for days he went hungry. Finally he
reached a town, where a lady with a red cross on her
.pn +1
white cap had cared for him in a hospital. But the
Germans shelled the hospital, and they said the lady
was killed, and then— Well, he had gone on again,
walking at night, alone, from place to place, when no
one could see him, while hiding in the woods by day.
On learning that he was not far from the French
army, he had struggled on until he was within a short
distance of their lines, where he hid in a forest.
When a dark still night came, he stealthily crept into
No Man’s Land, and, on his hands and knees, worked
his way from hole to hole, quickly wiggling into one
if he heard the slightest sound, until he reached the
French sentry, who pointed his gun at him and told him
to halt.
He was so frightened when he saw that gun aimed
at him that he burst into tears, but a moment later attempted
to sing “La Marseillaise,” so as to let the
soldier know that he was not a German. The soldier
took him behind the front, where a regiment of artillery
not only fed and cared for him, but adopted him
as their “kid mascot,” as Philip interpreted it, when it
was learned that his father, who was fighting in the
Belgian army, had been captured and carried a prisoner
to Germany. When the regiment had left for
service at the front he was delivered into the hands of
Father Belloy, a French priest, who finally gave him
to a kind lady, who had brought him, with a number
of other children, to America. As the little lad finished
.pn +1
his story, he turned to rush from the stage, and
then, as if inspired by a sudden thought, he threw up
his one hand and lustily cried, “Vive la Belgique!”
A second more and the audience, caught by the contagion
of this cry, and the appeal to their sympathies
by the Belgian’s story, broke into enthusiastic clapping
and cheering, mingled with loud hurrahs for Belgium.
It was at this point that a guest from the Sunset Hill
House jumped to his feet, and proposed that a silver
collection be taken up, to be divided between the American-British
soldier, the little Sons of Liberty, and the
ladies of the Tea-House, who had so kindly given it
for the entertainment of the guests.
This suggestion was heartily seconded, and while
Van and the gentleman were passing the hat, into
which flowed a goodly collection of silver coins, the
little Sons of Liberty appeared, and, as a finish to the
entertainment, gave them a sing-song. The old, sweet
songs, the songs that lie very near to the heart of every
Anglo-Saxon, were sung by these clear childish voices,
Danny either singing or whistling, while Tony accompanied
them on his violin, with Janet, Nathalie,
and Nita,—even the audience at times,—proving good
seconds in this musical song-feast. “Annie Laurie,”
“The Blue Bells of Scotland,” “Wearing of the
Green,” “My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean,” “Mother
Machree,” “Dixie,” were given, followed by the new
war-songs, as, “Keep the Home Fires Burning,”
.pn +1
“Pack up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag,”
“There’s a Long, Long Trail,” “Over There,” and, as
a grand finale, “The Star-Spangled Banner,” when the
audience rose and joined in with patriotic fervor.
And then Miss Mona, Janet, Nathalie, Nita, the
two soldiers, and even the little “Sons of Liberty”
were all busy serving tea, out on the veranda, to the
many guests, who all declared that they had not only
enjoyed Philip’s and Jean’s stories, but the children’s
singing.
Two days later, Nathalie was darning her boys’
socks on the veranda, when Nita drove up in her car.
She was so excited that she began to shout that she had
good news to tell, as soon as she caught sight of Nathalie’s
brown head.
“Oh, Nathalie,” she continued, all out of breath, as
her friend hurried to meet her, “what do you think?
The manager up at the Sunset Hill House,—you know
he is a dear—has asked Mr. de Brie and the whole
crowd who took part at the Liberty Tea, to come to the
hotel next Saturday night and repeat the performance.
And he says there will be another silver collection.
And, oh, isn’t it just the dandiest thing that lots of the
girls want to join the French class!” And then the
young lady, in the exuberance of her joy, fell upon the
neck of her friend and began to kiss her with hearty
unction.
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch21
CHAPTER XXI||THE FUNNIES
.sp 2
Nathalie, with a limpid brightness in her eyes,
and a deep pink in her cheeks, was whirling
about—doing a one-step—with her soldier
friend, Van Darrell, who she had discovered was
“a love of a dancer.” It was the night of the second
Liberty Tea, this time held at the Sunset Hill House.
The affair had not only proved a glorious success, each
one of the performers doing his or her part even better
than at the Tea-House, but it had also netted quite a
pile of silver coins, to the delight of the children, and
added several new pupils to Philip’s French class at
the hotel, besides giving him a few private ones.
The informal little hop at the end of the performance
contributed to the pleasure of the evening, proving
a real joy-time to Nathalie, who loved dancing.
The girl had laughingly asserted to Nita that she had
fairly worn her slippers to a thread.
Compelled from sheer fatigue to rest, the young
couple, in order to escape from the heat of the ballroom,
had sought refuge in one of the little card-rooms
opening from the long corridor. It was here, as they
happily chatted, that Van suddenly made the announcement,
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somewhat regretfully, “Do you know, Miss Blue
Robin, that this is my last evening with you and the
mountains, for I leave for Camp Mills to-morrow
morning?”
“Oh, I’m so sorry,” exclaimed the girl with a note
of disappointment in her voice, for she was disappointed
as well as surprised, for, somehow, she had
taken a liking to this soldier-boy, with the frank, open
gaze, who could be very merry at times, and then again
unusually silent and grave. “We shall miss you at
our Liberty Cheers, and Mr. de Brie, I know, will be
lonely without his soldier ‘matey.’”
“I shall miss you all,” rejoined Van slowly, “for
you girls have given me the joy-time of the summer,
and I shall be sorry to say good-by to you all, especially
you.” Van looked appealingly into the girl’s
brown eyes, as if he wanted her to assure him that
she would miss him.
Nathalie flushed a little, as she replied, “Well, it
has been a great pleasure to meet you. I can assure
you, however, that I never thought of meeting one of
Uncle Sam’s soldiers when I came up here to these
White Hills.”
“I would like to tell you,” continued Van,—he gave
his companion an odd look as he spoke,—“that I know
a girl by the name of Blue Robin. She’s an awfully
good sort,—” again that funny little gleam in his eyes.
“I had a letter from her a short time ago. It was the
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kind of a letter to set a fellow thinking. I would like
to show it to you sometime,” he added hesitatingly.
“Why, isn’t that funny! Are you sure her name
is like mine?” questioned Nathalie in a whirl of
amazement. Van nodded and smiled with some
amusement, as he assured Nathalie that he was quite
positive her name was Blue Robin. But, as the girl
continued to ply him with questions about this girl
who, he insisted, bore her name, his answers grew
evasive, until finally Nathalie desisted from her questions,
in a maze of mystery.
Presently they were in the ballroom again, and while
taking another turn Van asked his partner if she would
answer his letter if he wrote to her. Nathalie grew
red with embarrassment at this direct question, for, as
she had been whirling about, it had suddenly occurred
to her what a queer thing it was for Van to say he
would show her another girl’s letter.
Somehow the thought jarred her serenity, and, not
knowing what reply to make, she finally settled the
doubt in her mind by saying that if he wrote to her she
would answer him if her mother thought best. For,
happily, Nathalie was a real mother-girl, and, when in
doubt about anything, always went to her for advice.
On the way home—Mrs. Van Vorst had sent
them in her car—she had a disappointed feeling.
She wished Van had not asked her to write to him,
or told her about that other Blue Robin, for—O
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dear! she had heard of boys who would coax a girl to
write to them, and then show their letters and make
a boast of them. Ah, well, she sighed regretfully,
she had not supposed he was that kind.
A few days later Nathalie was sitting under the
trees before a small sewing-table, writing a letter to
Helen. Presently she laid down her pen, and glanced
over at her mother, who, while resting in the hammock
near, had fallen asleep. Then, so as not to awaken
her, almost in a whisper, she read:
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.ll -4
“Dear Helen:
“I am going to call this letter ‘The Funnies,’ for
I have some awfully funny things I want you to know,
but first, I must tell you about my liberty kids, as I
have promised to do many times. Danny is fourteen,
a regular street-gamin, steeped and double-dyed in
the ways of the slums and the habits of a newsie.
There is an alert sharpness about him at times that
baffles me, and yet his freckled, peanut face, with its
twinkling blue eyes, has an open, merry expression that
assures me he has the makings of a splendid man in
him. I call him my handy man, for he not only does
all the laundering for the children, but can cook, and
wait on the table in fine style.
“He is a loyal little chap, so watchful of Sheila, and
always tells the truth. He used to belong to the Junior
Police Force,—he’s awfully proud of that,—and I
think that has kept him on the square. I have an idea
that his parents must have been refined people, for,
when cleaning his room one day, his bag flew open—it
was standing in a corner—and a little blue book fell
out, scattering a lot of letters about, and a picture.
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The picture was a miniature of a young woman. She
had a lovely face, it reminded me of Sheila, and her
eyes had the same laughing glints in them that Danny
has in his. The blue book seemed to be a diary, for
on it in gilt letters was the name, Sheila Gloom.
“I have told you how quaint and interesting Sheila
is, and lots about Jean, so I am going to tell you about
Tony. He reminds me of one of Raphael’s cherubs,
with his soft, liquid brown eyes, his red lips and ivory-tinted
skin, and his wavy black hair that is always in
a frowse. He adores me, and has an odd, sweet little
trick of taking my hand, and then bending down and
kissing it, in such a gallant way that he makes me
think of the knights of mediæval days, who knelt to
their ladies fair. And I love to hear him say, ‘I lova
you, Mees Natta,’ for his voice is so soft and musical.
But alas, he is not as open as Danny, and will tell
teeny, teeny white lies, while looking right up into your
face with such a cherubic, innocent expression, that
you have the feeling that you are the guilty one, and
not he.
“Did I tell you in my last letter what good friends
the little old lady in the red house and I have become?
I run in there quite often. Sometimes I read to her,
or hold her yarn, and for two days I nursed her when
she was ill. I am a great chatterbox, for, O dear!
I just talk about everything to her, but she says my
chats cheer her up. But, you see, she keeps asking me
questions, first about one person of our household,
and then another. She loves to have me tell her about
Janet, but she doesn’t seem to like Cynthia very much.
“I am getting used to her queer ways now, and
can tell, by the gleam in her gray eyes,—sometimes
they snap with humor,—the mood she is in, for,
frankly speaking, at times she is most cantankerous.
I feel sorry for her then, for I imagine that some great
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sorrow has come into her life and soured the sweetness
of it. She is always greatly interested in Mr.
de Brie, and I have promised to take him in sometime
to see her.
“Oh, I must not forget to tell you that Dick is with
us for a few days—on a furlough. And mother,—well,
she goes about like a glorified saint. Now come
the funnies. Cynthia Loretto’s young man is here.
His name is Buddie, but he looks anything but a bud,
although Cyn always speaks of him as if he had just
gone into long trousers.
“He is queerly interesting, for he sits and looks at
Cynthia in a meek, adoring way, while his big solemn
blue eyes keep up a blinking that have made the kiddies—you
know boys always feature peculiarities—dub
him, ‘The Blink.’ As to other details, he’s insignificant-looking,
with a shock of yellow hair that gives
him an unkempt, Hunnish appearance, and a sharp,
ferret-like nose with an inquisitive tip on it that is
sunburned to a bright red. Imagine!
“Now for funny number one. The Blink—we all
unconsciously call him that—and the make-believe
lady—that’s the boys’ name for Cynthia—have
monopolized the hammock on the veranda ever since
the gentleman’s arrival. It has been annoying, for
they—Well, they spoon, and it gets on one’s nerves,
and after a while these lovers are the star performers
on the stage.
“The other morning I caught Danny and Tony
fooling with the hammock. They said they were fixing
it so it wouldn’t slip down. That evening every
one had disappeared but your lonesome and the
lovers, who were in the hammock with arms intertwined,
with the usual turtle-dove cooing.
“All at once I heard a queer sound, and looked in
the direction from which it proceeded, to see two pairs
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of legs sweeping through the air with a wild, frantic
clawing, while shrill cries and a swear-word informed
me that the hammock had turned over, and that the
pair of love-makers were standing on their heads. I
tried not to laugh, but a wee little giggle slipped out,
and then I flew to the rescue and turned down, or
turned up, Cynthia’s skirts, and then gave a helping
hand to The Blink, who rose to his feet with a wild,
bewildered stare in his blinking eyes. Then I flew,
for if I hadn’t, I should have collapsed with merriment,
for, as it was, I was stuffing my handkerchief in my
mouth to keep in my laughter.
“As I flew through the hall queer sounds arrested
my flight, and there, on the floor, were those two kids,
Danny and Tony, rolling about in exultant joy, while
emitting squeals of delighted glee. And then I knew
why they had been fooling with the hammock that
morning. I was smothering with laughter, but
grabbed each one by an ear and marched them to
mother, with appropriate explanations, leaving her to
administer the punishment they deserved. Naturally
Cynthia blamed me, insisting that I had encouraged the
boys in their mischief, and hasn’t spoken to me since.
“Funny number two. I have told you of Cynthia’s
obsession for searching for the valuable thing.
Well, evidently she has imparted her obsession to her
lover, for we find him poking around into all sorts of
out-of-the-way places, that annoys mother extremely.
The other morning Mrs. Van Vorst sent me to the
studio with a message for Cynthia. The door was
open, and, to my amazement, I saw the lady in question
hoisted up on a ladder,—The Blink was holding
it,—poking about among the rafters of the attic.
“As I stood wondering what she was doing, I saw
her suddenly duck her head, and then, to my stupefaction,
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the Make-believe Lady was perched up there on
that ladder like a poll-parrot, for her head was as bare
as a billiard-ball, while her hair that was, was swaying
gracefully on a nail some distance above.
“Suddenly discovering her nudity, she made a
frenzied grab, not at the suspended wig, but at her
skirts, hurriedly throwing them over her head, as if
to hide its bareness, and then made frantic attempts
to unhitch the black hairy thing that wiggled and wobbled
just out of reach of her arm. At this moment
Mr. Buddie—patience was written in his drooping
pose, as he clung to that ladder—raised his head.
His face immediately became the hue of his nose, for,
alas, Cynthia, in her hurried endeavor to cover her
denuded poll, had raised not only her dress-skirt but
her under-skirts, and two black-hosed legs, lean and
lank, stood forth from beneath her short, beruffled
skirt. I waited to see no more, but hastily made my
exit, to explode my mirth in the depths of my pillow
on the bed in my room.
“Funny number three. My bedroom was next to the
mystery-room, and then comes Cynthia’s,—she and
Janet room together. There is a door between, which
is generally closed, unless it is very warm. The other
evening we were just getting ready for bed, when I
suddenly remembered something I wanted to tell Janet,
so stepped to the door, which was open. The room
was dimly lighted by a single candle, and Cynthia,
who likes to undress in the dark, was on her knees by
the bed, saying her prayers, while Janet sat near,
taking off her shoes.
“As I turned away so as not to disturb Cynthia at
her devotions, I suddenly spied a man’s face peering
in the transom over the door. Before I could cry
out, Cynthia arose, and, carelessly glancing up, saw
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the face. With a wild scream she seized one of
Janet’s shoes lying on the floor, and sent it flying at
the head peeping over the door.
“I gasped, for it struck the man square on the
nose. Then I heard a suppressed expletive, followed
by a jarring crash, a general smashing sound, and then
a dead silence. I gave one prolonged scream and
rushed to the door. You can guess the rest, for Dick,
mother, and even the boys had heard the racket, and
a moment later, when they appeared on the scene, it
was to find me trying to extricate the figure of a man,
in a bath-robe, with a somewhat dazed expression on
his meek, bewildered face,—that would have been
pitiful if it had not been so ludicrous—from the
débris of broken chairs and a turned-over table.
“And his eye, well, it was already beginning to
swell; for Cynthia had been game, Dick said, and had
not only given her lover a swelled nose, but a swelled
eye as well. O dear! it was comical to see the way
she glared at the poor creature, meekly trying to explain
that he was only trying to peer into the mystery-room,
for he seems to think that the valuable thing is
hidden in that room, and had gotten as far as he could
get—into the wrong room. Mother says she is glad
it happened and hopes he will now stop his prowling.
“Now for funny number four. After the excitement
caused by Mr. Buddie’s efforts to peep into the
mystery-room quietness reigned for a while, until the
other night. I was terribly tired, for I had been doing
the kids’ ironing, and my feet ached so that I carried
a pail of hot water to my room to soak them. I am
on the upper floor now, near the boys, for Cynthia
insisted that they made such a noise at night that they
kept her awake. But everything that goes wrong she
lays on their little shoulders, so I have mounted guard,
to avoid any future unpleasantness. As I sat there,
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trying to make up my mind to plunge my feet in that
hot water, I heard a queer sound.
“There has been a report lately that burglars are in
the neighborhood, for several of the ladies at the Sunset
Hill House have missed articles of jewelry. Somehow
that noise brought it to my mind, and I jumped
up,—I was in my bare feet,—quickly turned off the
light, stepped to the window, and poked my head out,
and—if there wasn’t a man on the roof of the veranda,
creeping stealthily towards the mystery-room,
directly under mine. O dear! and its two windows
were both unlatched,—one of the boys had discovered
that,—but no one had dared to break the rule and go
in to fasten them. In a moment he had begun to
work at the shutters, very cautiously,—he had a flashlight
in his hand,—stopping every moment or so to
listen, to see if any one had heard him.
“My heart bounded into my throat, but while I was
making up my mind what to do, there came a wrench,
and I knew that in a moment or so that man would be
in the room! Desperate with fright, I flung about,
and then my glance fell on that pail of water. Without
further ado I seized it, pushed it softly out of the
window, hurriedly turned it upside down, and then
hurled the pail after the water. There came a smothered
sound, a half-cry and groan, and then a funny,
swishy noise.
“As I peered down through the darkness I saw a
black object slipping down the roof, and heard a sudden
imprecation, as it rolled over the edge. There
came a splashy sound, a deep groan, and then I knew
that the thief had fallen off the roof, and landed in a
hogshead of water that always stood under the veranda
by the kitchen porch.
“Now came a fierce barking, mingled with growls,
and I realized that Jean’s little dog, Tige, was chewing
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up the thief. The next instant I made a mad rush
for the door, to see Dick flying down the stairs in his
bath-robe, followed by mother and the boys!
“I plunged blindly forward, managed to grab him
by the arm, and, between hysterical gasps, explained
what I had seen, and begged him not to go out for
fear the man would shoot him. But Dick shook me
off like a feather, and, although mother tearfully
seconded my plea, he was about to dash into the darkness
when Cynthia rushed up and handed him her
revolver,—Janet says she always sleeps with one under
her pillow. The boys—each little chap, even
Jean, was armed to the teeth, Danny with his policeman’s
club, Tony with an iron bar, and Jean with a
mountain-staff—lost no time in following him, with
mother close behind.
“I grabbed a chair—it could fell a man, at least—and
followed mother, while Janet, Cynthia, and Sheila
alternately yelled and wept as they sat huddled on the
stairs, each one expecting to be shot. But by the time
I reached the veranda Dick appeared, dragging a miserable-looking
little object by the collar of his pajamas,—for
his trousers had been about chewed off by Tige,—with
rivulets of water oozing over his face, who was
abjectly pleading and howling that he was no thief.
“But Dick was obdurate, and as we all stared with
bulging eyes, he marched him up to Cynthia. As he
shook him fiercely by the collar, as one would shake
a dog, he cried, ‘Here, Miss Cynthia, here’s the thief,
your estimable friend and lover, Mr. Buddie!’ I leave
the rest for you to imagine. Mr. Buddie left the next
morning.
“Now good-by. Be sure and tell me more about
yourself and your work when you write again, for I
am anxious to know everything that happens to you,
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girl of my heart, for you are a brave dear, and I miss
you more than I can express.
.rj 2
“Again with love,
“Nathalie Page.”
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.sp 4
.h2 id=ch22
CHAPTER XXII||THE MAN IN THE WOODS
.sp 2
“Oh, Nathalie, what do you think? They have
sent for a detective up at the hotel!” The
speaker was Nita, who, with her friend, was
sitting on the veranda of Seven Pillars, a few afternoons
subsequent to Nathalie’s sending her letter to
Helen.
“A detective?” echoed Nathalie, looking at Nita in
surprise. “What for?”
“Why, about those robberies. I told you some time
ago how the guests were missing jewelry and other
small articles of value. It has been kept very quiet,
but mother heard this morning that the manager is
getting worried as to who is the thief, and has sent for
a secret-service man to come up and ferret out the
mystery. But, Blue Robin,” she added, with a more
serious expression, “those school friends of yours are
not going to take any more French lessons.”
“And pray, why not?” demanded Nathalie. Then
she ejaculated, “Dear me, what have we done to offend
them now?”
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“I don’t know. But, Nathalie, did you notice the
night of the Liberty Tea at the hotel, how they sat in
a corner, whispering most of the time? I had an uncanny
feeling that they were making unkind remarks
about us, not that I care, for I don’t like them anyway,”
added Nita disgustedly.
“I’m sorry,” said Nathalie regretfully, “for I hate
to have Mr. de Brie lose any pupils. I imagine they
were angry at the last Liberty Cheer, for, you remember,
when they joined us we all grew very quiet. Not
that any one meant to be rude, but they are so snobby
that they cast a cloud over one’s fun.”
“Well, I guess Philip can get along without them,”
returned Nita confidently. “Did you notice that he
was quite the lion the other evening? He cast the
Count quite into the shade, for every one fell in love
with him.”
“Yes, he can be very charming,” acquiesced Nathalie,
“for he is so distinguished-looking in his uniform
of a British lieutenant. Mother says that in his
manners he combines the fineness of an American
gentleman with the courtesy and charm of a Frenchman.
I am sorry about his arm, for the doctor says
he will always have to carry it stiffly.
“But, Nita,” continued Nathalie, “I just adore that
big doctor friend of yours. What do you think? I
was worrying about his calling so many times on
Philip, for I was afraid that my ‘drop in the bucket’
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would not be enough to pay the bill, and of course
Philip wouldn’t have enough from his earnings to pay
it. Finally I wrote the doctor to send his bill to me.
And oh, Nita, he wrote me a love of a letter, in which
he said that he never charged girls anything. And as
for Mr. de Brie, he considered it his great privilege to
be allowed to give his services to a man who had given
the best of himself to give liberty to the world. Oh,
I think he is just the dearest old thing!” ended the girl
enthusiastically.
“Oh, I knew he would do that,” answered Nita,
with a wise little smile, “for he has the best heart in
the world.”
“But listen,” went on her companion earnestly.
“Janet told Philip about it, excusing herself by saying
that he was worrying over the bill, and that she wanted
to relieve his mind.”
“Of course she did,” giggled Nita, “for one can
see with half an eye what is going on in that direction
for it is a clear case of ‘spoons,’ all right.”
“Do you really think so?” cried Nathalie with sudden
animation. “Why, I suggested something of that
kind to mother, and she said I was a silly. Well, they
were made for one another. Why, Philip just adores
the ground she walks on, and as for Janet, it’s just a
guessing game as to how she feels. But, to go on with
my tale,” continued the girl. “As soon as Philip
heard what Janet had to tell, he came straight to me,
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and, with a voice that fairly shook with emotion, said
that my kindness to him would be one of the unforgettable
things in his life. Of course I had to make light
of the matter, for I saw the poor fellow was terribly
affected over it. Oh, I do hope things will brighten
for him this fall, for he is going to the city, to make
an attempt to get some pupils to tutor until his health
is better. You know,” she added, dropping her voice,
“I think there must have been some mystery about
his grandmother, or his family, for although he loves
to come down here and be one of us,—he says it is so
homey with us,—he never says a word about her or
his family.”
Nita had been reading to Miss Whipple, and Nathalie
had been tying up sweet peas, one morning a few
days after Nita’s news about the detective, and the
two girls were on their homeward way, when Nathalie
suddenly exclaimed with a little burst of laughter,
“Oh, Nita, I have something funny to tell you.”
“Well, tell it to me then,” rejoined her companion
somewhat dolefully, “for although I have something
to tell you, alas, it is anything but funny.”
“Oh, is it about Philip?” cried Nathalie, a sudden
premonition of evil darkening the golden lights of her
eyes. “Or are any more of the girls going to give up
taking French lessons?”
“It is worse than that,” answered Nita, with such
grave import in her voice that Nathalie stared at her
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with big eyes as she cried, “Oh, Nita! do hurry and
tell me. Have those girls—”
“Yes, those girls, your friends—”
“Please don’t call them my friends,” pleaded poor
Nathalie tremulously, “for they are anything but
friends.”
“So it seems,” nodded Nita dryly, “for they have
told—well, just about every one in the house—that
they suspect that Mr. de Brie is the thief who has been
robbing the hotel. You know he has been giving them
private lessons. Nelda declares that she believes
Philip took her watch,—it was lying on the table when
she left the room to answer a ’phone call from the
office. Justine was out riding with the Count. When
Nelda returned the watch was gone. Five other girls
came to me this morning and told me that they were
not going to take any more lessons.
“These girls have circulated all over the house,”
continued Nita gloomily, “that Philip is an impostor;
that you picked him up without knowing anything
about him and that he is not a British soldier at all.
O dear! how hateful people can act! And the clerk
of the hotel—Well, he informed me this morning
that the Profile House had sent word that they did not
care to have Philip speak to their guests, as people were
tired of hearing about the war.”
“Nita, this is terrible! Oh, I know Philip is not an
impostor,” protested Nathalie with a dismayed face.
.pn +1
“Why, Nita, he showed me a letter written to him by
a soldier at the front, and he called him Lieutenant de
Brie. And where could he have gotten his uniform
if he is an impostor? Oh, I just believe those horrid,
hateful girls have made the whole thing up.” Nathalie
stopped, suddenly remembering that she was not speaking
kindly, and not living up to her motto. She gave
a long sigh, and then asked, “But, Nita, have you
heard anything more about the detective coming up
from the city?”
“Yes. Oh! there he is now, coming down the
walk,” cried Nita, lowering her voice. Then she
added, with a laugh, “Talk of the angels and you’ll
hear the flutter of their wings.”
“Well, he doesn’t look much like an angel,” answered
Nathalie, her eyes lighting humorously, as she
watched a stout, red-faced man with a sandy
moustache coming down the path towards them.
As the gentleman under discussion approached the
girls he lifted his hat courteously, as he said, “I beg
your pardon, but could you tell me how I can reach
the top of Garnet? I understand that there are several
trails up the mountain, but could you tell me which
one would be the best one to ascend?”
The girls made no reply for a moment, assailed by
the miserable fear that the man was going up the
mountain to trail Philip. Then Nathalie, with an effort,
turned and pointed down the road, explaining in
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a few words that one of the trails started in near the
Grand View road.
As the man thanked her and walked slowly on,
Nathalie drew a deep breath, while a troubled light
shone in Nita’s eyes, as she cried, “Oh, do you suppose
he is going to arrest Philip?” She spoke in a
half-whisper.
“Arrest Philip? Why, the idea of such a thing!
No, of course not,” Nathalie answered determinedly,
as if she was not going to allow herself to become
frightened. “Philip has committed no crime. That
man can’t arrest him unless he has some evidence, and
where is he going to get it?”
Nita made no reply, and the two girls, depressed by
the unpleasant occurrence, and the vague fear that
trouble was brewing for their friend, sat down in one
of the summer-houses near the board-walk. Here they
sat in silence for a few moments, and then Nathalie, as
if determined to throw off the depression that assailed
her, cried, “Oh, Nita, I have not told you the
funny thing.”
“Well, tell it to me, then; for I think it will take
something real comical to get me out of the blues.”
“It is about Tony,” explained Nathalie. “You
know the child is obsessed with the desire to have me
find the mystery thing. Well, the other day Danny
came running to tell me that Tony was rolling on the
floor with the colic. I was alarmed, for I immediately
.pn +1
thought he had been eating green apples, the way
Sheila did the other day, and mother had to poultice
her with mustard.
“I flew to his room and there was the little fellow
moaning and squirming about, apparently in great
pain. When he saw me he immediately begged me to
put a mustard plaster on his stomach. I was surprised,
for generally children will suffer quite a little
before they will have one on. I found some old linen,—mother
was out,—hurried down to the kitchen
closet, and got the mustard-box.
“But when I opened it, imbedded in the yellow,
powdery stuff, was something that glittered strangely.
I shook the box, and out rolled a little gold coin. I
carefully examined it, and immediately saw that it was
an ancient Roman coin, for although one side was so
blurred and worn with age that I could not decipher
anything on it, the other side bore the name and head
of Cæsar within a circle of fine gold beading.
“Something immediately told me that the coin belonged
to Tony, and that he had placed it there so I
would find it, for, not long ago he lost something from
his vest-pocket,—he keeps all of his treasures sewed up
in that old vest. Danny had helped him look for it,—it
had slipped out of a hole,—and after it had been
found he came and told me about it, describing it as
a little round piece of gold, the kind that you see, he
said, up in the museum at Central Park.
.pn +1
“I made the plaster and carried it, with the coin,
up to Tony, but before I put on the poultice I showed
him the gold piece and asked if it was not his. But
the little chap, with a bland and innocent expression,
vowed that he had never seen it. No amount of coaxing
or persuasion could make him confess to the truth.
You know that is the great trouble I have with Tony,
he will tell teeny little stories.” Nathalie sighed dolefully.
“Although I was sure that he didn’t have any colic,
and that the whole thing was just a trick to get me to
look in the mustard-box to find the coin, I put the
plaster on, and made him stay in bed, thinking that
when it got to burning that he would ’fess up.’ But
he didn’t, and although he howled and writhed with
the sting of it,—while I was reading him a lecture on
the sin of lying,—I told the story of Ananias and
Sapphira,—he stuck it out. Then, finally, my conscience
wouldn’t let me torture the boy any longer,
and I took the plaster off. That night while he was
asleep I found his old vest, and after putting the coin
in the pocket, sewed it up.”
After the girls had laughed over the incident, Nathalie
started homeward, her mind full of dismal forebodings
in regard to Philip. “Oh, I wish I could
prove in some way that he is not an impostor. But
suppose he should be?” The girl came to a sudden
halt. Then, with her eyes full of a strange bright
.pn +1
light, she went on. No, she just knew that Philip was
good and true.
“But I must do something,” she half moaned.
“For how dreadfully he will feel if he thinks that
people believe him a thief; and he will soon know something
is wrong, when all the girls stop taking lessons.
But Nita and I will have to pretend that the season is
drawing to a close,—as it is. But, O dear! he does
need the money so much. And Janet,—how it will
hurt her, for I am sure she cares—” the girl halted
at the thought, for it seemed too sacred a thing even to
whisper to herself. Then she was busy again, trying
to think how she could prove that her friend was what
he claimed to be.
As she unconsciously uttered her thoughts aloud,
by some mysterious process of thought, or strange correlation
between mind and matter, before her mental
vision flashed the picture of a dark wood, lighted by
gleams of moonlight that filtered through the tall
tree-tops. In the foreground of a forest-gloomed retreat,
in front of a high rock, a man was digging in
the ground, plainly seen by the yellow flickerings from
a burning torch that had been stuck upright in the
ground, a few feet away.
Although the girl reasoned and tried to convince
herself that there was no possible connection between
that man and the thief at the hotel, she could not drive
the impression from her mind. On going home she
.pn +1
questioned Jean, and found that he, too, still vividly
remembered the incident.
That night Nathalie could not sleep, for she was
haunted by the picture of the man in the woods, although
she hurled every name she could think of at
herself for being so foolish. The next night again
found her sleepless, but when morning dawned, as if
pursued and driven by the haunting vision, she called
the boys together, and stated the circumstances to them.
She did not tell her mother, as she would say that she
was losing her reason, and, well, she was determined
to find out—something.
Early the following morning, before any one had
gone through the woods, Nathalie and the boys met
Nita at the Red Trail; she had been taken into their
confidence, and accordingly was weirdly and thrillingly
excited. They soon reached the seat-tree, and then,
after locating the big rock, they all began to dig.
They had dug for almost an hour, by Nita’s wristwatch,
and then, feeling tired, and on the verge of
absolute despair, were talking about giving the whole
thing up, when all at once Jean’s little terrier began to
scratch in the ground on one side of the rock, and
partly under it. Jean gave a queer little cry as he
watched Tige, and the next moment had driven the
dog away, and had begun to dig as furiously as he
could with his one hand, in the place where the dog
had been scratching up the earth.
.pn +1
Nathalie watched him listlessly, for she had abandoned
all hope, and felt utterly weary, too, after her
two sleepless nights. Suddenly Jean gave a loud
shout, and then a moment later they had all rushed to
his side, and presently were boring down into the earth
under the rock as quickly as they could, to unearth in
a few moments a gold chain. Nita gave a loud scream
as she snatched it from Danny, for she immediately
recognized it as belonging to an old lady at the hotel,
who had been bemoaning its loss. A few moments’
digging, and then, with pale faces, in repressed excitement,
they replaced the chain in the hole, covered it
with dirt, so as to make it appear that the spot had
not been disturbed, and then they started home, stopping
to rest on the stone ledge of Liberty Fort, while
discussing their discovery. It was enough to excite
any one, and might mean a great deal to Philip.
Nita was quite insistent at first that they should
immediately tell the manager of the hotel what they
had seen. But Nathalie demurred, convinced, on
second thought, that if the jewelry was found hidden
up in the woods, because Philip lived up on the mountain,
every one would say that that was sure proof that
he was the thief. “No,” declared the girl determinedly,
“we can’t do that; but we will have to come
up here and watch for the man so we can identify
him.” This plan was finally decided upon, and the
little party, seething with suppressed excitement under
.pn +1
the weight of their momentous secret, returned
home.
That night Nathalie, Danny, and Jean stole up the
trail. Strange to say, it was again a moonlight night,
the same as a month ago, when the man had been seen
by Nathalie and Jean. After finding the seat-tree
they all sat down and waited, alternately dozing and
waking, but although they remained until the first
streaks of gray dawn appeared, nothing happened.
The following night, Jean—Nathalie had put the
boy to bed for the day, letting her mother think that
he had one of his headaches to which he was subject—and
Tony accompanied the girl to the tree. But alas,
for the second time nothing came to pass. Nathalie
began to be discouraged. Fortunately it rained that
night, and, as they could not venture out, they all had
a good night’s rest.
The fourth night again found the girl with the boys
at her post, oppressed and miserable, for by this time
she began to fear that the man in the woods was a
snare and a delusion,—something she had dreamed,
or else he had gone. But why did he leave that jewelry
behind?—for the children had discovered that
there were other pieces hidden in that hole, or very
near it.
All at once—Nathalie had fallen quite sound asleep—Jean
gave her a pinch; he was snuggling up against
her, seated on her lap. The girl opened her eyes
.pn +1
sleepily, rubbed them drowsily, and then stretched them
wide, caught by the gleam of a light over by the rock.
Yes, the man was there! Her heart leaped excitedly,
for he was digging under the rock, just where they
had found the jewelry!
With stilled breath, the three figures, hidden by the
tree, watched him, Nathalie’s mind keeping up an incessant
query as to how she could steal around behind
the rock to get a view of his face. Ah, that queer
shaking of the head! Who was it that she had seen
who had that peculiar nervous affliction? And then,
in a sudden revelation, she knew! It was the man who
had stared at her so rudely in the post-office, the man
who had repaired her automobile. Why, it was the
man known as the Count!
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch23
CHAPTER XXIII||A MYSTERY SOLVED
.sp 2
Several hours later, Nathalie, Nita, Sheila, the
three boys, and Mrs. Van Vorst were seated in
that lady’s sitting-room on the second floor of
the Sunset Hill House, overlooking the roof of the
front veranda. Nathalie was nervously tapping the
floor with her foot, as, with a perplexed, uneasy expression
in her eyes, she watched Mr. Grenoble, the
secret-service man, who had been employed to fathom
the strange mystery of the many jewelry thefts that
had occurred at the hotel within the last few weeks.
She had told her story, not only to the detective, but
to the manager of the hotel, explaining how she had
come to discover the man digging in the woods the
night that Sheila had wandered away. She had told
also how they had all dug under the rock, to find the
pieces of missing jewelry, and how she and the boys
had hid in the woods, and finally had seen the man
again digging by the rock. She had verified her story
in its details, and, although sharply questioned by the
detective and the manager, she had stoutly maintained
that the man whom she had seen was Mr. Keating,
known as the Count. But her intuition immediately
.pn +1
revealed to her that they were not inclined to accept
her theory as to the identification of the thief.
The manager immediately protested that she must
be mistaken, that his guest was too well known, his
position too assured, to identify him in any way with
the man at the rock. As the girl realized that her
story was doubted, a strange numbness seized her,
and she had a paralyzing premonition that not only
would her well-founded suspicions prove futile, as well
as her long, watchful hours, and her many efforts to
clear Philip, but that possibly these things would increase
the circumstantial suspicions already directed
towards him.
Seeing the apparent uselessness of further conversation
the girl rose, oppressed by the dread that if she
remained in that room a moment longer she would
burst into tears. But no, she would not give up!
She would go somewhere and think it all over, to see
if there was not some way of ascertaining who the
man was. Perhaps she could go again to the woods,—she
would try and get behind that rock,—and make
sure—
At this moment Sheila, who was standing with Jean
by the window, watching the automobiles constantly
coming and going in front of the hotel, uttered a sharp
cry. As Nathalie turned towards the child as if to
still her, she heard her exclaim: “Oh, Jean, there’s
the funny ’phone man! See, there he is! Don’t you
.pn +1
remember, he’s the man who put the black trumpet
on top of his head when he was in the ’phone-box?”
Sheila always called the receiver a “black trumpet.”
Nathalie, aroused by the remark, mechanically
allowed her glance to follow the direction of the
child’s finger, as she pointed towards Mr. Keating, who
was coming up the walk leading to the hotel. Unconsciously
she bent forward, and with alert eyes watched
the man, for she had again seen that peculiar motion
of the head that had identified him as the man whom
she had seen digging in the woods.
But Sheila’s exclamation had been overheard by the
detective, who stepped quickly to the child’s side, crying:
“What was that you said, little girl, about a
funny ’phone man? Tell me about him.”
The man’s manner was so abrupt and commanding,
that Sheila shrank back against Nathalie, and shyly
hid her face. But the girl, startled also by Mr. Grenoble’s
abruptness, with a quick glance at his face,
cried, “Yes, Sheila, tell the gentleman what you saw.”
Oh, yes, she remembered now that the two children
had told her about this “funny ’phone man” whom
they had seen at the hotel one day, but she had paid no
attention to their prattle at the time.
Sheila, with a quick upward glance into the girl’s
face, as if instantly divining the seriousness of the
situation, answered, “Why, that’s the man I saw in
the ’phone-box,” again pointing towards the Count,
.pn +1
who had stopped to chat with a lady on the walk.
“He put the black trumpet right up on top of his head,
like this,”—she imitated the man’s motion,—“when
he was talking through the ’phone.”
“Did you see him, too?” questioned the detective,
turning towards Jean, his eyes suddenly illumined with
an odd gleam. Jean nodded silently, and then, seeing
that further confirmation was needed, in his odd,
hesitating English, repeated the same words, accompanied
by the same motion, as the little girl.
The detective nodded absently, still with that odd
gleam in his eyes, and then walked hastily towards the
door. As he reached it, as if suddenly remembering
their former conversation, he turned towards the occupants
of the room and, with slow deliberation, said,
“Well, ladies, I think our problem is still unsolved;
however, I will look into the matter and let you know
the result in a few days.” With an abrupt nod he
motioned to the manager, whose kindly face was
strangely perturbed, as he quickly followed him from
the room.
Nathalie and the children, a few mornings after the
conference at the Sunset Hill House, were standing in
front of the big white Roslinwood barn watching
Teddy and Billy, two little black pigs that were the
delight of Sheila’s heart. But they were tantalizing
joys, for as soon as they caught sight of their admirer,
as they peered out of the big barn-door, with
.pn +1
their bright, bead-like eyes, they would scurry away
as quickly as their round, shiny black bodies would
permit, greatly to that young lady’s disappointment.
As Sheila ran to gather a roadside nosegay, and the
boys hurried homeward, for Philip had promised to
teach them some new military tactics in their soldier-drill
at the Liberty Fort, Nathalie, beguiled by the calm
stillness of the woods, sat down on the seat under
the trees where the sign, “Hit the Trail,” showed that
was where the path started that led through Lovers’
Lane.
The woods, aglow with the yellow and reds of the
maples, were strangely still that beautiful September
morning, save for the occasional chirp of some belated
songster, or the loud caw of a crow as he signaled
to his mates, who were making a noisy clatter
in some leafy retreat of the greenwood.
To Nathalie, the crimson branches of the reddening
maples, showing vividly bright from among the green
leaves of the spruce, fir, oak, or beech, softened with
the glow from the silver poplars as they quivered in
the wind, seemed like red banners. As they swayed in
undulating motion, to her they were flags, curling and
beating the air for that which is every man’s right,
liberty.
The girl felt a little depressed at the thought that
the summer was over, for the crumpled and autumn-hued
leaves, as they fell from the trees, or swept by on
.pn +1
the wings of the wind in their dying splendor, seemed
to be calling a sad and mournful farewell. Oh, how
she would hate to leave these rocky heights that rose
in such statuesque grandeur before her, the splendors
of the sky with its glory of sunset, the forest gnomes
in their crooked and gnarled ugliness, and the green
fields, now starred with the yellow beauty of our national
flower, the goldenrod!
What an odd summer it had been! So different
from what she had expected. How she would miss
her beautiful companions on her morning walks, the
blue-hazed mountains! And yet she had made friends.
Ah, there was the soldier-boy. She wondered if he
would write to her. Then there was Janet. Well,
she was never going to let her go out of her life, for
she was to visit them next winter.
Her eyes saddened as she thought of the Sweet-Pea
ladies. Oh, how sorry she would be to bid them
good-by, for Miss Whipple seemed to grow frailer
every day, and then what would become of poor Miss
Mona? And her queer little old friend in the red
house? Well, she didn’t suppose that she would ever
see her again, for she said that she never wrote to
people. Yes, it was depressing to think that you had
to meet people you liked, and then go away and just
have to forget them, because they passed out of your
life.
And the kiddies? She hated to think of their going
.pn +1
back to that slum life again. She wondered if any
of the country people up in the mountains would like
to take them to live with them, for, yes, Tony and
Danny could learn to be very useful. But poor Jean—and
Sheila! Then she wondered if her trying to
make them Sons of Liberty would help them to be
good and honorable men. Sometimes it seemed as if
she hadn’t accomplished much, and then again she
could see how different they were from what they had
been when they came to her. O dear! they were problems.
And Philip de Brie? Surely she had made a friend
of him, at least he was more than a friend to Janet,
who—the perverse thing!—was so careful not to let
her know if she really cared for him or not. Perhaps
it was on account of Cynthia, for she had overheard
that young lady telling Janet that Philip was an impostor,
and that he had fooled her the way he had
Nathalie Page and her mother. The story of his being
a British soldier, and that story, too, about his
grandmother, was all folderol.
And poor Janet had meekly made no reply to this
tirade, but Nathalie, in imagination, saw the red mount
into her cheeks, and knew how humiliated she felt.
Well, he was better than that funny little Mr. Buddie
anyway. She believed it was just jealousy on Cynthia’s
part, for she herself had tried to be very nice
to Philip, but somehow he didn’t seem to understand
.pn +1
her,—no sensible person could,—and although he had
always been very courteous to her, he had never made
a friend of her.
Well, she had done her best to clear him of the
horrible suspicion that had lost him his pupils; but,
alas, she seemed to have made the matter worse, or,
at least, she had not done him any good, for when his
cabin on the mountain had been burned one night,
people had declared that he had set it afire himself to
destroy evidences of his guilt.
And then, when the manager of the hotel had the
ground dug up, where she and the children had discovered
those pieces of jewelry, nothing had been found.
And Mr. Keating, alias the Count, had gone, called to
Chicago, he claimed, the very night before they dug
up around the rock,—the very night, too, that the
cabin had been burned. No, Philip had not been arrested,
for certainly the evidence was not strong
enough to warrant such action. And then the detective
had disappeared, although Nathalie had a feeling
at times that he was hanging around somewhere near
the place, in disguise, perhaps, watching Philip.
And the people who had been so nice to Philip, now
acted very queerly whenever they saw him, and Philip,
the poor fellow, had said nothing, although Nathalie
was afraid that he suspected that something was
wrong. Her mother had persuaded him to come down
to Seven Pillars after the burning of the cabin, and
.pn +1
although he had accepted their kind hospitality for
the time being, he chafed under the favors showered
upon him, and showed that he was inwardly suffering
to have to be placed in such a position, for Janet said
he resented charity. Yes, and ten days had passed,
and Nathalie had not heard one word from the detective.
O dear! the world was a queer place to live
in, anyway.
Just after luncheon, as Nathalie and her mother
sat knitting on the veranda, a loud “Honk! Honk!”
announced the arrival of Nita, who, with her cheeks
red with excitement, burst upon the group like a young
whirlwind.
“Oh, Blue Robin,” she cried, as she caught sight
of Nathalie, “I have the most wonderful news for
you.” And then, without waiting to be questioned
by her friend, who had risen to her feet in nervous
expectancy, she added excitedly, “Philip has been
cleared!”
“Oh, Nita, how do you know?” cried Nathalie,
her face turning white, as she nervously clutched at
her chair.
“The news came this morning from the detective,
and the manager told mother. He said Mr. Grenoble
got his clew from Sheila. You just come right here,
little girl,” broke off Nita abruptly, as she beckoned
for Sheila to come to her, “so I can kiss you for a
blessed dear.” She seized the somewhat astonished
.pn +1
child and began to hug her with excited exuberance.
“But who is the thief?” exclaimed Nathalie breathlessly.
“Oh, do tell us!”
“The thief? Why, Mr. Keating, the Count, of
course,” laughed Nita gleefully; “and he was caught
all through Sheila’s crying out about the funny ’phone
man. When she spoke of the man in the booth placing
the receiver on his head when telephoning, it gave
Mr. Grenoble a big clew. It seems that the detective-bureau
had been on the lookout for some time for a
gentleman burglar who had the peculiar eccentricity
of holding the receiver on the top of his head, as
Sheila stated. He was born without any folds to his
ears,—no, that isn’t the word; I guess it was ganglion
cells. No, that isn’t right—Well, anyway he had
something the matter with his auditory nerve, so that
his hearing was defective. By placing the receiver
on the top of his head, as he had very good bone-conduction,—yes,
that’s right,—he could hear better.
“As soon as the detective heard what Sheila said
he began to shadow our friend, the Count. He saw
him do the same thing that Sheila told about, and that,
with certain other clews, led to his arrest. He was
not the Mr. Keating from Chicago that he claimed to
be, whom the manager asserted had spent a summer
at the hotel two years ago. That gentleman died this
spring, and this ‘count’ fellow impersonated him, so
as to gain a social standing in the hotel.
.pn +1
“The manager now admits that at times he had been
puzzled by certain changes in Mr. Keating’s appearance,
but he attributed it to the fact that he was older,
and was now clean-shaven, when two years ago he
wore a mustache. The detective thinks that the
Count burned the cabin up in the woods so as to deepen
the suspicion already fostered in regard to Philip.”
“But he got away with the jewelry,” exclaimed that
young gentleman, who, with Janet, had just stepped up
to the edge of the veranda, while Nita had been talking.
“But he did not get far,” rejoined Nita, “for when
he walked into the New York station a few days ago,—that
was just a ruse, talking about being called to
Chicago,—he simply walked into the net that the
detectives had spread for him, and he is now in jail.”
“I saw that the detective doubted my story,” remarked
Nathalie, “and it made me feel unpleasant.
But, oh, I am so glad the thief has been caught—and—”
“That Philip is cleared,” interrupted that young
man. “Yes, Miss Nathalie, you have added to the
store of kind things that you have done for me. But
wait,” Philip’s eyes glowed, “some day,—well, perhaps
I can repay every one. And little Blue Robin,”
he continued, laughingly, “I knew that I was the suspected
one, although you were all so careful not to let
anything slip out that would tell me, so as to save my
.pn +1
sensitiveness, but as I was innocent I knew that things
would clear up somehow.”
And then he and Janet returned to their seats under
the trees, where Philip had been reading to her, while
Nathalie, with a glad light in her eyes, continued to
discuss the many details of the affair. As Nita rose
to go she suddenly exclaimed: “Oh, there, I forgot
to tell you that we are going home in a couple of days.
Mother is anxious to get back to the city.”
“Oh, I shall miss you terribly,” cried her friend, as
she placed her arm affectionately around the little
hunchback; “but then I presume we shall be going
soon ourselves. But, Nita,” she added abruptly. “I
came very near forgetting to tell you that we have all
handed our diaries to Mr. Banker, and I am so glad
that irksome task is over, for I hated to have to write
in it every day. We are to meet Mr. Banker in the
mystery-room to-morrow afternoon. It all sounds
very thrilling, doesn’t it? We are all very curious
to know what is hidden there.”
“Oh, I am just dying to know, too,” cried Nita.
“Well, come over to tea to-morrow, and then perhaps
the mystery will be a mystery no longer.”
“But have you selected the valuable thing?” asked
the girl laughingly, after she assured her friend that
she would surely accept her invitation.
“Why, no, not as yet,” returned Nathalie, “for I
.pn +1
am swayed by two loves. But it is all nonsense anyway,
so I don’t think it will make much difference
what any of us select. Cynthia will probably win the
prize, as the kiddies say, for she has chosen a very
valuable painting. Janet has selected a most curious
thing,—a necklace. It came from China, and has a
series or chain of heads; they say every one is a likeness
of some old mummified mandarin. When you
touch a spring—Janet didn’t know this until mother
showed it to her, for she saw this necklace years ago,
when Mrs. Renwick brought it home with her from
one of her Oriental trips—each one of these mummified
Chinamen sticks out his tongue.”
“Well, good-by until to-morrow,” cried Nita, and
then she was in her car and a moment later went
whizzing along the road towards Sugar Hill village.
Nathalie had just finished putting her boys through
their morning drill the following day, and seen them
hurry away with Janet to do some weeding and hoeing
for her in her garden, when she was joined
by Philip. As he finished telling her a bit of war
news,—she was industriously trying to finish a
sweater for Dick,—his glance was arrested by the little
Bible lying on the chair by her side, for Nathalie
had continued her Scripture readings to the children.
Picking the book up, he began to turn over its leaves
carelessly, almost mechanically, as if his mind was occupied
with some other matter, when suddenly Nathalie
.pn +1
heard a surprised exclamation, and looked up to see
Philip staring at the fly-leaf of the Bible, with an odd,
curious expression on his face.
“Where did you get this Bible?” he asked hurriedly,
turning towards the girl.
“In one of the upper rooms of the house. I think
it must have belonged to Mrs. Renwick’s son, Philip.
Why, your name is Philip, too,” she cried smilingly.
“Why, I never thought of that before.”
“Yes, my name is Philip, and this Bible belonged to
my father—”
“Your father?” repeated the dazed girl. But before
Philip could answer her, in a quick revelation she
cried, “Why, is your name Renwick?” staring at him
with wide-open eyes.
“Yes, Philip de Brie Renwick.”
“And Mrs. Renwick, who used to live here?”
“Was my grandmother!”
.pn +1
.sp 4
.h2 id=ch24
CHAPTER XXIV||THE WINNER OF THE PRIZE
.sp 2
As Nathalie sat in dazed surprise upon hearing
Philip’s announcement, he went on and told her
of the early life of his father, of his going to
Europe, of his marriage with Marie de Brie, a French
girl, of his return to America, and of his subsequent
quarrel with his mother, who had refused to receive his
wife, a story that the girl had already heard, but not
in detail, from Mrs. Page.
When his father left his grandmother, Philip stated,
he was in a mood of mingled anger and humiliation,
while his heart had been deeply seared with disillusioned
love. He could not realize that the mother who
had made him her idol, the mother whom he adored,
could, from mere motives of false pride, wound him so
deeply by refusing to receive the girl to whom he had
given the affections of his young manhood.
On leaving his mother, Philip Renwick had remained
at the hotel for a time, vainly hoping that she would
attempt a reconciliation, but when no word came from
her, he took his wife to a southern town, where, a few
.pn +1
months later, he, Philip the second, had been born. A
couple of years later the young couple had returned
to England, where they had lived until his father’s
death. Shortly after losing her husband, young Mrs.
Renwick had returned to France, and had become the
home-keeper for a bachelor brother. On his death she
was left a small annuity on the condition that she retain
her maiden name of de Brie; hence the reason that
Philip had become known by his mother’s maiden
name.
“But did you know that it was here, at Seven Pillars,
that your grandmother used to live?” asked Nathalie,
as Philip finished.
“Yes, and that was why I felt that I could not refuse
your mother’s kind invitation to spend a short
time here as her guest, for the house had so many associations
for me, for my father, as well as my grandmother,
were very fond of this old place up here in
these mountains.
“The night you found me in the cabin, Miss Nathalie,”
resumed the young man, “I had become tired of
life, for it seemed as if there was nothing for me to
live for, for I hadn’t enough ambition to try to better
my condition. I could only face the fact that mother
was gone, that I had not a cent in the world, as my
mother’s annuity ceased with her life, and my soldier’s
pension was only a few dollars a week. I realized that
I would probably lose my arm, for I knew that it
.pn +1
should have a surgeon’s care and I had no money to pay
one. And it is right here, Miss Nathalie, that I want
you to understand my deep appreciation of, and my
hearty thanks for, what you have done for me; also the
kindness of Miss Janet,” a sudden light flamed in the
young man’s eyes, “and the thoughtfulness of your
mother, and your friends, Mrs. Van Vorst and Miss
Nita.
“The companionship of you all, even of the kiddies,
your Liberty boys, has put new life into me. I did become
a little discouraged, it is true, when I began to
lose my French pupils, and surmised the reason, from
various hints that were dropped by some of the people,
who were the victims of the thief, for it is not an enlivening
thought to fear that your only and very best
friends might grow to think you a rascal.
“But you all proved so true to me, especially you,
little Blue Robin, I call you that name, as the bluebird
is a bird of cheer, and certainly you have inspired me
with the ambition for a new career-to-be, as you have
proved yourself such a loyal little comrade in my time
of need. Remember, Nathalie, I shall never forget
you, or what you have done for me.”
Nathalie, her face a wave of color from the unexpected
warmth of Philip’s praise, in hasty confusion, as
if to change the subject to another one than herself,
cried, “But why did you not go, when you were in
Boston, to Mrs. Renwick’s trustees, and make yourself
.pn +1
known to them? For, if you are her grandson,
you are entitled to some of her money.”
“For two reasons,” replied Philip slowly. “One
was that, in my hasty departure from England it
slipped my mind to bring my credentials with me.
And then, again,—perhaps my grandmother’s pride
has descended to me,—I felt that if she did not love
my father,—she had let him go so easily,—that I
could have pride, too, and did not care to accept her
money. If I could have met her when alive, and had
learned that she did have some love for my father,
why, then I would have revealed myself to her, and
naturally would have felt differently in regard to accepting
her money. But I have one thing by which I
could have proved my identity to her if she had been
still alive. See, it is this little ring. She gave it to my
father, who always wore it, as I have done, ever since
it came into my possession.”
Philip took from one of his little fingers an odd,
peculiar-looking seal ring. After showing his father’s
and his grandmother’s initials and the date of its presentation,
he touched a tiny spring back of the stone,
and Nathalie saw a miniature picture of Mrs. Renwick.
She knew it immediately from its resemblance
to several pictures of her that were scattered about the
house.
At this moment there was a loud wail from Sheila,
who, in picking flowers in the meadow where Sam was
.pn +1
mowing, had been injured by the mower. It was some
time before her cries were stilled, and her wound properly
bandaged, so that, for the time being, the wonderful
news that Philip had told was forgotten.
When it finally came to mind, Nathalie was tempted
to run and claim him as her cousin, to tell him about
Mrs. Renwick’s peculiar letter, and what was expected
to take place there that afternoon. But after some
thought she wisely concluded to remain silent until
after she had talked with Mr. Banker and her mother.
Not but that she had faith in Philip’s story, but because
it seemed the most prudent thing to do.
These thoughts were hasty ones, for the girl had suddenly
remembered that she had not selected the valuable
thing as yet, and that it was almost four o’clock,
the hour of Mr. Banker’s arrival. She had partly decided
to select a set of rubies,—a necklace and pair of
bracelets,—and then a Russian curio had made its appeal,
but somehow she bordered upon a state of indecision
that was becoming intolerable.
As she turned to enter the house, her eyes fell on the
little Bible that, in her hasty rush to Sheila, when she
appeared with her bleeding foot, she had left lying on
the chair under the trees. She ran hastily across the
lawn and picked it up. As she did so, the book flew
open and her attention was arrested by the name,
Philip Renwick, on the fly-leaf, and its connection with
what Philip had just told her. And then, she stood a
.pn +1
minute, pondering. Why had not she thought of that
before? and then, with a dimpling face, she closed the
book and hurried back to the veranda, almost knocking
down Tony, who stood wistfully regarding her.
“Pleass, scusa, Mees Natta, haf you gotta da theeng
for de preez?—Mister Banka, hees com’ bimeby to
looka for eet.” Tony’s big, velvety eyes were mutely
pleading as he looked up at Nathalie.
The girl laughingly mimicked the boy as she patted
him on the head, understanding that he was worried
because she had not selected the thing that the children
were so anxious should “win the prize,” as they called
it, for her. Then her eyes sobered, and, drawing the
little lad to her, she showed him the Bible she held in
her hand, explaining that she had selected it, as it told
about Christ the Savior, and contained God’s wonderful
message to His people, telling them how to love Him
and be good. “Yes, Tony,” she added solemnly, “the
Bible is the most precious thing to everybody in the
world. And then, as this little Bible used to belong
to Mrs. Renwick’s only son, I am sure that it would be
the most valuable thing to her, so I am going to select
it.”
As the girl saw the child’s eyes light up, as if he comprehended
what she meant, she laid the Bible on a chair
and ran hastily up to her room to hunt for some white
paper and blue ribbon. In a moment or so she was
back, wrapping up the book, and then, to Tony’s infinite
.pn +1
delight, she slipped her card under the blue ribbon
and gave the book to him, to place at the door of
the mystery-room with the other packages.
Some time later, Nathalie, in company with her
mother, Janet, Cynthia, and Mr. Banker, entered the
mystery-room, no one perceiving as they entered that
the children had slyly followed them, and were staring
about with wondering, curious eyes. Ah, so this
was the room they had all been so curious about; and
Nathalie smiled as she saw that it was a homey, cozy
room, suggestive of feminine tastes and occupations,
but, after all, it was just nothing but Mrs. Renwick’s
sitting-room, the room where she had sewed, read, and
wrote her letters.
The low book-cases lining the wall, the hardwood
floor with its costly Persian rug, the open fireplace set
with fagots ready to light on a cool morning, the desk
in one corner, with the Victrola near, and the antique
furniture, all of solid mahogany, certainly did not
savor of a mystery or anything uncanny. In fact, the
little table in the center of the room, with its shaded
lamp, books, and magazines, and the little upright
work-basket near, rather intimated that the owner of
the room had just left it for a moment or so.
But Mr. Banker was speaking. He stood by the little
center-table on which lay the three valuable things.
He held up Cynthia’s selection as he said: “I have
here a picture, a most valuable painting, as it is a Van
.pn +1
Dyke. It has been selected by Miss Cynthia Loretto
Stillwell, as I see by the name on the card. This little
box bears the name of Miss Janet Page, and is a curio
from China. And here is a Bible,” the gentleman’s
voice deepened as he held up Nathalie’s selection. The
girl’s heart, notwithstanding her indifference to the outcome
of the selection, was beating against her side in a
very annoying way.
“It is a curious selection,” continued Mr. Banker,
“and—oh, what is this?” as something round and
glittering fell from the book. “A gold coin,” he commented
with some surprise; “yes, a Roman coin, for it
bears the head of Cæsar, and I should imagine he
turned the coin over as it lay in his palm, that it was
of considerable value, as, from what I can decipher
between the obliterations, it has a very ancient date.
But I do not understand,” he glanced inquiringly,
“which is the article that has been selected as the valuable
thing, the coin or the Bible? The card on the
letter bears the name of Nathalie Page,” turning as he
spoke, and looking at the girl, who was staring at him,
with mystified, bewildered eye, “A coin!” she finally
managed to gasp. “Why, I didn’t see—”
“Pleass ’scusa. Mister Banka,” cried Tony’s soft,
musical voice at this point, “da coin eet belona to Mees
Natta,—she fina eet wan day een a box.” The liquid
black eyes of the boy were brilliant with a strange glow
of joy.
.pn +1
“Oh, no, Tonio, the coin is not Miss Natta’s,” cried
Nathalie, a sudden light breaking in upon her bewilderment.
“It is your coin. Don’t you remember, I
found it in the mustard-box the day you were ill? But
it is yours, Tony; you placed it there for Miss Natta to
find.” The girl, strangely amused, smiled down at the
lad.
“You bet my life, Mees Natta, Tonio, no, hees neva
hada coin. Eet verra old, da coin, eet com’ f’om a
beeg keeng wat liva een da Roma lan’. Ees belonga to
Mees Natta,” the boy ended persistently.
“Oh, Tony, you are in the wrong,” pleaded the girl,
suddenly feeling that she wanted to cry, as she saw that
the child was determined to persist in his untruth.
“You know it is your coin, for Danny found it one
day for you when it had dropped from your embroidered
vest. Didn’t you, Danny?”
And Danny, with a troubled look in his blue eyes,—he,
too, wanted Miss Natta to have that prize,—mutely
nodded in confirmation of her word. But Tony, with
a sudden tightening of his red lips, again protested in
a sullen tone, “No, eet ees no Tonio’s coin. Eet belona
to Mees Natta.”
“Oh, Tony,” exclaimed the girl, as the tears swelled
up into her eyes, “you hurt ‘Mees Natta.’ ‘Mees
Natta’ rather not have the prize than have Tonio tell
what is not so.”
Tony’s eyes fell, as he shifted uneasily from one foot
.pn +1
to the other, and then, glancing up, still with that stubborn
look on his face, and seeing the tears in the girl’s
eyes, he dropped his face into the curve of his arm.
Not a sound came from him, but the long, convulsive
shivers of the slim little body told that the lad was
crying.
Nathalie turned towards Mr. Banker, distress depicted
on her face, as she cried, “Oh, Mr. Banker, I
am so sorry, but I selected the Bible.”
Mr. Banker hesitated a moment, and then his sharp
eyes softened, as he saw the mute anguish of the little
Italian lad and realized his keen disappointment, for
he had often commented upon the boy’s affection for
the girl. Stepping to his side, he patted him on the
head, as he said cheerily: “Never mind, son; don’t
cry. Who knows, perhaps ‘Mees Natta’ may win the
prize, as you call it, even without the coin. Here, lad,
take what belongs to you, and mind you,” he added in
a sterner tone, “never again be tempted to tell an untruth,
even for ‘Mees Natta.’” With another pat on
the bowed head he stepped back beside the table, where
he had been standing.
“I have gone over these diaries,” said the gentleman,
as he picked up one of the three books that lay on
the table, “and I find that Miss Cynthia Loretto Stillwell
has not passed a day in this house, within the last
two months in which she has not searched for the valuable
thing. Certainly her diligence should be rewarded,”
.pn +1
ended the gentleman, as he bowed ceremoniously
to that lady, whose eyes radiated with triumphant
joy.
“Miss Janet, I find,” his eyes gleamed pleasantly at
that winsome young woman, “has been somewhat of a
delinquent at times, for there are several entries missing
in her diary. But as its reading shows that her
heart is a kindly one, as shown by her careful nursing
of the young British soldier, I certainly think that she
should be well favored.
“Miss Nathalie, I am afraid, has not done her duty
as faithfully as she might have, in looking for the valuable
thing”; he spoke somewhat severely as he peered
over his glasses at the girl, whose cheeks flushed, their
red deepening, as she caught a gleam of satisfaction
emanating from Cynthia’s eyes.
“But her negligence has been more than compensated
for,”—there was a queer note in the gentleman’s
voice, “as this record of two months is so filled with
kind acts for others, that— Well, ladies, possibly
you have begun to sense that it is not the finding of the
valuable thing that is to win out, but the acts it typifies.
Each day has been conscientiously noted in Miss Nathalie’s
diary, and almost every day bears a record of
some good work done for others. I think—well—I
am inclined to believe that the young lady—”
Mr. Banker paused abruptly, for at this moment a
loud knocking sounded on the door. Cynthia, who
.pn +1
was standing near it, with a frown on her face, stepped
impatiently forward, and with a hasty movement threw
it open.
On the threshold stood Mrs. Carney, who, the next
moment, with her sharp gray eyes peering defiantly out
from under the queer poke-bonnet, while the basket on
her arm stuck out aggressively, brushed quickly past
Cynthia and into the room. But that lady, with two
red spots on her cheeks, seized her by the arm, crying,
“You can’t come in here now; we have company,”
turning the old lady, as she spoke, and roughly shoving
her towards the door.
“Oh, Cynthia, don’t be rude to Mrs. Carney!”
pleaded distressed Nathalie, as she sprang to the side
of her queer little friend. “How are you, Mrs. Carney?”
she asked gently, smiling at the face under the
bonnet. “We are very glad to see you. You don’t
mind Mrs. Carney joining us, do you?” continued the
girl, looking at Mr. Banker. “If you do,” she added
quickly, “and will excuse me, I will go down-stairs
with her, so we can have a little chat.”
“No, Miss Nathalie, we do not mind Mrs. Carney
joining us; in fact,” again that queer little note in Mr.
Banker’s voice, “I was just about to ask you to go and
bring her here.” He advanced as he spoke and cordially
shook the hand of the old lady, who pressed his
warmly, but said nothing.
“Ah, here is your favorite seat,” continued the gentleman;
.pn +1
“perhaps you would like to sit down in it.
But I forgot, ladies; perhaps you have not met Mrs.
John Renwick,” he had turned towards the occupants
of the room smilingly, “the lady who has allowed you
the privilege of summering in her house for the last
two months, your neighbor of the little red house. As
you see, Mrs. Renwick is alive, and I will ask her to
take charge of her own letter of instruction, and see
that the reward is given to the right one—and—”
The gentleman paused, for Mrs. Page, with a glad
light in her eyes, was already at the lady’s side, crying,
“Oh, sister Mary, it was kind of you to take this way
of giving us such a lovely summer. And I am so glad
that you are alive and well.” She kissed Mrs. Renwick
with warm cordiality. “Do you know,” she continued
smilingly, “I was rather suspicious that you
were up to one of your—”
“Eccentricities,” interrupted the old lady pleasantly,
with an odd twinkle in her eyes. “Well, I was
anxious to know these young ladies. Yes, I guess I
know them now, one of them at least.” She glanced
wrathfully at Cynthia, who stood with down-cast eyes,
her face as crimson as a poppy, and her heart in a
strange tumult of amazement, anger, and regret.
But Nathalie, in her quick, impulsive way, had
thrown her arms around Mrs. Renwick’s neck and was
giving her a good hug, as she cried, “Oh! my dear
little lady of the red house, I am so glad you are Aunt
.pn +1
Mary, for now you will have to be my friend, and answer
my letters whether you want to or not.”
The old lady’s gray eyes softened, as she bent forward
and kissed the girl softly on each cheek as she answered
gently, “Nathalie, you are just like your father,—he
was my favorite brother,—but it is for yourself,
child,” she added gravely, “that I have learned to love
you. But who has won the prize?” she inquired
abruptly, smiling down at the children who were staring
at her uncomprehendingly, recognizing her as the
inmate of the red house, who seemed to have suddenly
assumed a new character.
“Come over here and look them over,—I mean the
valuable things,” advised Mr. Banker, at this moment,
as he led Mrs. Renwick to the table, “for the diaries
you saw last night.” And then he pointed out in quick
succession the three articles of value that were grouped
on the table.
Mrs. Renwick glanced carelessly at the picture.
“Yes, it is most valuable,” she assented quietly, “a
Van Dyke. And so is this”; she fingered Janet’s
choice. “But what is this?” she added suddenly, as
her eyes fell on the little Bible that lay at her elbow.
“This is Philip’s Bible,” said the gentleman, “and
it was selected by Miss Nathalie—”
“Why, Nathalie, my child, did you select my dear
son’s Bible?” As Nathalie mutely assented, Mrs.
Renwick motioned for her to come and tell her why she
.pn +1
had made this choice. With some embarrassment the
girl gave her reasons. As she finished, her aunt said:
“Yes, my dear child, there is nothing in the house I
value as highly as Philip’s Bible. Nathalie, you have
won the prize, and you deserve it, my dear, for you
have not only selected the most valuable thing, but you
have learned what is the most valuable thing in life.”
The old lady drew Nathalie close to her, as she again
kissed her on both of her flushed cheeks.
But Nathalie drew quickly away, for a sudden
thought had come to her. “Oh, wait a moment!” she
exclaimed hurriedly. “I’ll be back presently,” and
then, without waiting to be excused, she flew from the
room.
“Oh, Philip!” screamed the girl a moment or so
later, as she rushed up to her friend, who was reading
in the hammock, “I want you to come with me—quick!
Oh—I—” she paused as if at a loss to explain,
and then added hurriedly, “Oh, do come! I
have something to show you!”
Philip looked up at the girl in surprise, but, instantly
perceiving from her bright, shining eyes, that she was
more than usually excited, he jumped from the hammock
crying, “All right, Blue Robin, you look very
happy, so I suppose it is something very good to see,
or good to eat.”
.il id=i06 fn=i08.jpg w=348 link=i08f.jpg
.ca “Oh, it is Philip, my son!”—Page #377#.
.pn +1
Two minutes later the girl had pushed open the door
of the mystery-room, and was trying to pull Philip in
with her, but that gentleman, on seeing that strangers
were present, had stepped back.
“No, no, you must come in,” cried the girl in happy
excitement. The young man, seeing the determination
on his companion’s face, somewhat puzzled, silently followed
her into the room. And then Nathalie swirled
him about so that he faced Mr. Banker, crying, “Mr.
Banker, this is Philip de Brie Renwick!” And then,
without waiting for that gentleman to acknowledge the
introduction, she took Philip’s hand and led him towards
Mrs. Renwick, who, as she saw the young man
approaching, tremblingly arose, and, with clasped
hands, cried, “Oh, it is Philip, my son!”
“No it is not Philip, your son,” quickly answered
the young man, who had instantly divined who the old
lady was, “but Philip’s son, your grandson, Philip de
Brie Renwick.”
The next moment Philip was holding the old lady in
his arms, while he quietly tried to soothe her sobs, as
she wept in happy joy on his breast. As her sobs subsided
somewhat, Philip said gently, “Mother Mine,”—it
used to be his father’s pet name for his mother,—“here
is the ring you gave father when at college.”
He drew the seal ring from his finger and held it up
before his grandmother, who, with one look at it, cried,
“Yes, grandson, I know he has gone, for he promised
me—” there was a quiver in her voice—“that the ring
should never be removed until—” she drew a deep
.pn +1
breath that threatened to turn into a sob—“until he
was no more. But he has given me—you, his son.
Oh, my dear boy, my own grandson!”
.tb
Nathalie sat by her little sewing-table under the
trees, gazing off at her grand old friends, the purple-misted
mountains. It had seemed hard to do anything,
this her last day at Seven Pillars, but gaze at the
lofty heights that stood forth so calm and beautiful in
their mystical splendor on this gloriously White Mountain
day. But she must read over that letter to see if
it was all right, so, in soft, low tone she read slowly,
.in +4
.ll -4
“Dear Helen:
“I have such good news to tell you that I can hardly
write,—for, oh, Helen! the little old lady who lived in
the red house is Mrs. Renwick, and Philip de Brie, the
British soldier whom we found up in the cabin on the
mountain, is her grandson! And I have won the prize.
No, of course, it is not really a prize, but the good-will
and affectionate regard of Aunt Mary, because—well—I
made her happy by selecting her son’s Bible as the
most valuable thing in her house. And now I have
dandy news to tell. She is going to send me to college.
I have just lived in a dream ever since I heard the good
news. Yes, and I have one hundred dollars for my
very own, to do just as I like with—no restrictions,
reparations, or indemnities, but just for wee little me.
I think that blessed sum was given to me, because the
boys, when told I had won the prize, could not understand
anything so vague as going to college, but they
did finger that crisp bank-note with eager, curious little
fingers when I showed it to them. Sometimes I
.pn +1
feel a little guilty, for really Cynthia’s selection, a Van
Dyke painting, was the most valuable from a certain
point of view.
“And, oh, what I told you would happen about
Philip and Janet is true, for they are engaged, and go
about looking into each other’s eyes in a state of beatific
happiness. Now she will be a grand lady, for she to
live with her new husband, and mother, in a beautiful
mansion in Boston. And Cynthia. Well, Mrs. Renwick
was quite angry with her, but finally, after mother
and I had talked to her, and told her the disadvantages
she labored under, and how she wanted to marry Mr.
Buddie, why she partly relented, for she is to set Cynthia
up in a studio in Boston, and try to get her friends
to buy her pictures, for she insists that Cynthia is a real
artist.
“And Mrs. Renwick—mother says I must learn to
call her Aunt Mary—wanted Sheila to live with her,
and as there was no question of separating her from
Danny, he goes to Boston with her and is to be educated,
and I know he will grow to be just a splendid
man. Mrs. Van Vorst has taken another one of my
kids, Tony. She has always been in love with those
black eyes of his, and she insists that he is going to be
a great musician. Then there was dear little Jean.
Yes, he had to have something good come into his life,
too, so mother and I have decided to take him to live
with us.
“And now for another bit of news. I had a nice,
long letter from the soldier-boy, Van Darrell, and isn’t
it too funny, but that Blue Robin girl of his was just
me all the time. Now for the fairy-tale part of my
story. Do you remember my telling you about writing
a letter to a soldier-boy, and slipping it into a comfort-kit
that, with a lot of others, was to be given to the boys
at Camp Mills?
.pn +1
“Well, Van got it. He says that it set him to thinking,
and made him realize that we were not only going
into this war of wars to get even with the Huns, but
because it is our duty to give the liberty that we enjoy
in our country to all the nations in the world. And
he has been ordered overseas. Yes, and he says he’s
going, ready to make the sacrifice if necessary, and to
give his life that all men may be free. Oh, I’m so glad
I wrote that letter, and to think it has done some one
some good. Yes, and I’m going to pray as hard as I
can that the soldier-boy will come back to his mother,
and to his friend, Blue Robin. Yes, indeed, I am glad
that he is not just a conceited boy, as I at one time
feared.
“So good-by, you dear little maid, serving the Lord
so faithfully with those busy fingers of yours. I think
of you every day, and pray for you every night, so,
with a bushel of love, I am, as ever,
.rj 2
“Your own
“Blue Robin.”
.in -4
.ll +4
.ce
THE END
.pb
.nf c
DOROTHY BROWN
By NINA RHOADES
Illustrated by Elizabeth Withington
Large 12mo\ \ \ \ Cloth $1.50 net
.nf-
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.de @media handheld {.imgleft { float:left; }}
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[Illustration: image of Dorothy Brown book cover]
.if-
This is considerably longer than the other
books by this favorite writer, and with a
more elaborate plot, but it has the same winsome
quality throughout. It introduces the
heroine in New York as a little girl of eight,
but soon passes over six years and finds her at
a select family boarding school in Connecticut.
An important part of the story also takes place
at the Profile House in the White Mountains.
The charm of school-girl friendship is finely
brought out, and the kindness of heart, good
sense and good taste which find constant expression
in the books by Miss Rhoades do not
lack for characters to show these best of
qualities by their lives. Other less admirable
persons of course appear to furnish the alluring mystery, which is not
all cleared up until the very last.
.fs 80%
“There will be no better book than this to put into the hands of a girl in
her teens and none that will be better appreciated by her.”—Kennebec Journal.
.fs 100%
.nf c
MARION’S VACATION
By NINA RHOADES
Illustrated by Bertha G. Davidson\ \ \ \ 12mo\ \ \ \ $1.25 net
.nf-
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.de @media handheld {.imgright { float:right; }}
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[Illustration: image of Marion’s Vacation book cover]
.if-
This book is for the older girls, Marion
being thirteen. She has for ten years
enjoyed a luxurious home in New York with
the kind lady who feels that the time has now
come for this aristocratic though lovable little
miss to know her own nearest kindred, who
are humble but most excellent farming people
in a pretty Vermont village. Thither Marion
is sent for a summer, which proves to be a
most important one to her in all its lessons.
.fs 80%
“More wholesome reading for half grown girls
it would be hard to find; some of the same lessons
that proved so helpful in that classic of the last
generation ‘An Old Fashioned Girl’ are brought
home to the youthful readers of this sweet and
sensible story.”—Milwaukee Free Press.
.fs 100%
.nf c
For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of
price by the publishers
LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO., Boston
.nf-
.pb
.nf c
JEAN CABOT SERIES
By GERTRUDE FISHER SCOTT
Illustrated by Arthur O. Scott\ \ \ \ 12mo\ \ \ \ Cloth
Price, Net, $1.35 each
.nf-
.ce
JEAN CABOT AT ASHTON
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[Illustration: image of Jean Cabot at Ashton book cover]
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Here is the “real thing” in a girl’s
college story. Older authors can invent
situations and supply excellently written
general delineations of character, but all
lack the vital touch of this work of a bright
young recent graduate of a well-known
college for women, who has lost none of the
enthusiasm felt as a student. Every activity
of a popular girl’s first year is woven into a
narrative, photographic in its description of
a life that calls into play most attractive
qualities, while at the same time severely
testing both character and ability.
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JEAN CABOT IN THE BRITISH ISLES
This is a college story, although dealing with a summer vacation,
and full of college spirit. It begins with a Yale-Harvard boat
race at New London, but soon Jean and her room-mate sail for Great
Britain under the chaperonage of Miss Hooper, a favorite member of the
faculty at Ashton College. Their trip is full of the delight that comes
to the traveler first seeing the countries forming “our old home.”
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JEAN CABOT IN CAP AND GOWN
Jean Cabot is a superb young woman, physically and mentally,
but thoroughly human and thus favored with many warm friendships.
Her final year at Ashton College is the culmination of a
course in which study, sport and exercise, and social matters have
been well balanced.
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JEAN CABOT AT THE HOUSE WITH THE BLUE SHUTTERS
Such a group as Jean and her most intimate friends could not
scatter at once, as do most college companions after graduation,
and six of them under chaperonage of a married older graduate
and member of the same sorority spend a eventful summer in a
historic farm-house in Maine.
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For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt
of price by the publishers
Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co.\ \ \ \ Boston
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HANDICRAFT FOR HANDY GIRLS
By A. NEELY HALL
Author of “The Boy Craftsman,” “Handicraft for Handy Boys,”
“The Handy Boy”
AND DOROTHY PERKINS
Illustrated with photographs and more than 700 diagrams
and working drawings
8vo\ \ \ \ Cloth\ \ \ \ Price, Net, $2.00\ \ \ \ Postpaid, $2.25
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[Illustration: image of Handicraft for Handy Girls book cover]
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With the aid of an experienced
craftswoman, A. Neely Hall, who is
in a class by himself as a thoroughly reliable
teacher of handicraft, every operation
that he describes being first practically
worked out by himself, and every working
drawing presented being original, new,
and actual, has opened the door for the
great and constantly increasing number of
girls who like to “make things.” Such
girls see no reason why the joy of mechanical work should be
restricted to their brothers, and with this book it need no longer
be. The first part of the book is devoted to a great variety of indoor
craft that can be followed in autumn and winter, while the
second part, “Spring and Summer Handicraft,” deals with many
attractive forms of outdoor life, including an entire chapter on
the activities of “Camp Fire Girls.”
.fs 80%
“This book will be hailed with delight by all girls who have a mechanical
turn.”—Watchman-Examiner.
“Girls will love just such a book and will find interest for every day of
the year in it.”—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
“Triumphs of ingenuity never dreamed of are to be found in this volume
of handicraft that girls can make, but its chief charm is to be found in the
practical value of most of the things to be made.”—Lexington Herald.
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For sale by all booksellers or sent postpaid on receipt
of price by the publishers
Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co.\ \ \ \ Boston
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BOOKS BY RENA I. HALSEY
Illustrated\ \ \ \ Cloth\ \ \ \ $1.50 each
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BLUE ROBIN, THE GIRL PIONEER
Nathalie Page is just such a girl of sixteen as one likes to
read about. Obliged to exchange affluence in a large city for
a modest home in a small one, she develops into capable young
womanhood by becoming a member of The Girl Pioneers of
America.
.fs 80%
“Any girl of a dozen years or more, or even less, will enjoy this thoroughly, and anyone,
young or old, will be the better for having read it.”—Pittsburgh Times-Gazette.
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AMERICA’S DAUGHTER
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[Illustration: image of America’s Daughter book cover]
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This is a rarely good and inspiring story of
girls in a select school in Brooklyn who
organize a club called “Daughters of America,”
and under the care of a well-liked
teacher take a trip to points on the New
England coast made famous in our history.
One of the girls has been brought up without
knowledge of her own family, and so is called
“America’s Daughter.” In the course of
the trip she unravels the mystery of her
birth and all ends happily and profitably.
.fs 80%
“It is an inspiring story, well told and will be appreciated by girls who love an active,
out of doors life.”—Daily Press, Portland, Me.
.fs 100%
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THE LIBERTY GIRL
Nathalie Page, seventeen, bright and popular with all
her mates, forms a club called the “Liberty Girls” and enthusiastically
does her bit to help win the war. A surprising
invitation to the White Mountains takes her from organized
activity with her companions, but a girl like Nathalie will not be
idle wherever she goes, and in carrying out the principles of
patriotic service she wins great and deserved credit.
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Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co.\ \ \ \ Boston
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Transcriber’s Notes
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1. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
2. Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation in the original document have been preserved.
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