Through the tremulous beauty of the California woods, in the silent
April afternoon, came Sammy Peneyre, riding Clown. The horse chose
his own way on the corduroy road, for the rider was lost in dreams.
Clown was a lean old dapple gray so far advanced in years and
ailments that when Doctor Peneyre had bought him, the year before,
the dealer had felt constrained to remark:
"He's better'n he looks, Doc'. You'll get your seven dollars' worth
out of him yet!"
"Your saying so makes me wonder if I will, Joe. However, I'll have
my boy groom him and feed him, and we'll see!"
But, as Clown had stubbornly refused to respond to grooming and
feeding, he was, like other despised and discarded articles, voted
by the Peneyre family quite good enough for Sammy, and Sammy
accepted him gratefully.
The spirit of spring was affecting them both to-day--a brilliant day
after long weeks of rain. Sammy whistled softly. Clown coquetted
with the bit, danced under the touch of the whip, and finally took
the steep mountain road with such convulsive springs as jolted his
rider violently from dreams.
"Why, you fool, are you trying to run away?" said Sammy, suddenly
alive to the situation. The road here was a mere shelf on the slope
of the mountain, constantly used by descending lumber teams, and
dangerous at all times. A runaway might easily be fatal. Sammy
pulled at the bit; but, at the first hard tug, the old bridle gave
way, and Clown, maddened by a stinging blow from the loose flying
end of the strap, bolted blindly ahead.
Terrified now, Sammy clung to the pommel and shouted. The trees flew
by; great clods of mud were flung up by the horse's feet. From far
up the road could be heard the creaking of a lumber team and the
crack of the lumberman's long whip.
"My Lord!" said Sammy, aloud, in a curious calm, "we'll never pass
that!"
And then, like a flash, it was all over. Clown, suddenly freed from
his rider, galloped violently for a moment, stopped, snorted
suspiciously, galloped another twenty feet, and stood still, his
broken bridle dangling rakishly over one eye. Sammy, dragged from
the saddle at the crucial instant to the safety of Anthony Gayley's
arms, as he brought his own horse up beside her, wriggled to the
ground.
"That was surely going some!" said Anthony, breathing hard. "Hurt?"
"No-o!" said Sammy. But she leaned against the tall, big fellow, as
he stood beside her, and was glad of his arm about her shoulders.
They had known each other by sight for years, but this was the first
speech between them. Anthony suddenly realized that the doctor's
youngest daughter, with her shy, dark eyes and loosened silky
braids, had grown from an awkward child into a very pretty girl.
Sammy, glancing up, thought--what every other woman in Wheatfield
thought--that Anthony Gayley was the handsomest man she had ever
seen, in his big, loose corduroys, with a sombrero on the back of
his tawny head.
"I was awfully afraid I'd grate against your leg," said the boy,
with his sunny smile; "but I couldn't stop to figure it out. I just
had to hustle!"
"There's a lumber wagon ahead there," Sammy said. "I'm--I'm very
much obliged to you!"
They both laughed. Presently Anthony made the girl mount his own
beautiful mare.
"Ride Duchess home. I'll take your horse," said he.
"Oh, no, indeed; please don't bother!" protested Sammy, eagerly.
But Anthony only laughed and gave her a hand up. Sammy settled
herself on the Spanish saddle with a sigh of satisfaction.
"I've always wanted to ride your horse!" said she, delightedly, as
the big muscles moved smoothly under her.
Anthony smiled. "She's the handsomest mare here-abouts," said he. "I
wouldn't take a thousand dollars for her!"
Sammy watched him deftly repair the broken bridle of the now docile
and crestfallen Clown, and spring to the saddle.
"I'm taking you out of your way!" she pleaded, and he answered
gravely:
"Oh, no; I'll be much happier seeing you safe home."
When they reached her gate, the two changed horses, and Sammy rode
slowly up the dark driveway alone. Even on this brilliant afternoon
the old Peneyre place looked dull and gloomy. Dusty dark pines and
eucalyptus trees grew close about the house. There was no garden,
but here and there an unkempt geranium or rank great bush of
marguerites sprawled in the uncut grass, and rose bushes, long grown
wild, stood in spraying clusters that were higher than a man's head.
Pampas trees, dirty and overgrown, outlined the drive at regular
intervals, their shabby plumes uncut from year to year.
The house was heavy, bay-windowed, three-storied. Ugly, immense,
unfriendly, it struck an inharmonious note in the riotous free
growth of the surrounding woods. The dark entrance-hall was flanked
by a library full of obsolete, unread books, and by double drawing-
rooms, rarely opened now. All the windows on the ground floor were
darkened by the shrubbery outside and by heavy red draperies within.
Sammy, entering a side door, seemed to leave the day's brightness
behind her. The air indoors was chill, flat. A half-hearted little
coal fire flickered in the grate, and Koga was cleaning silver at
the table. Sammy took David Copperfield from the mantel and settled
herself in a great chair.
Koga beamed assent. Departing, he wrestled with a remark: "Oh! Nise
day. I sink so."
Sammy agreed. "You don't have weather like this in Japan in April!"
"Oh, yis," said Koga, and, drunk with the joy of speech, he added:
"I sink so. Awe time nise in Jap-pon! I sink so."
"All the time nice in Japan?" echoed Sammy, lazily. "Oh, what a
story!"
But Koga was convulsed with innocent mirth. However excruciating the
effort, he had produced a remark in English. He retired, repeating
between spasms of enjoyment: "Oh, I sink so. Awe time nise in Jap-
pon!"
The day dragged on, to all outward seeming like all of Sammy's days.
Twilight made her close her book and straighten her bent shoulders.
Pong came in to set the table. The slamming of the hall door
announced her father.
Presently Mrs. Moore, the housekeeper, came downstairs. Lamps were
lighted; dinner loitered its leisurely way. After it the doctor set
up one of his endless chess problems on the end of the table, and
Sammy returned to David Copperfield.
"Father, you know Anthony Gayley--that young carpenter in Torney's
shop?"
"Ha!" said the doctor, presently. "Set this down, will you, Sammy?
Rook to queen's fourth. Check. Now, knight--any move. No--hold on.
Yes. Knight any move. Now, rook--wait a minute!"
His voice fell, his eyes were fixed. Sammy sighed.
At eight she fell to mending the fire with such vigor that her
colorless little face burned. Then her spine felt chilly. Sammy
turned about, trying to toast evenly; but it couldn't be done. She
thought suddenly of her warm bed, put her finger in her book, kissed
her father's bald spot between two yawns, and went upstairs.
The dreams went, too. There was nothing in this neglected, lonely
day, typical of all her days, to check them. It was delicious,
snuggling down in the chilly sheets, to go on dreaming.
Again she was riding alone in the woods. Again Clown was running
away. Again, big gentle Anthony Gayley was galloping behind her.
Again for that breathless moment she was in his arms. Sammy shut her
eyes....
Her father, coming upstairs, wakened her. She lay smiling in the
dark. What had she been thinking of? Oh, yes! And out came the dream
horses and their riders again....
The next day she rode over the same bit of road again, and the day
after, and the day after that. The rides were absolutely uneventful,
but sweet with dreams.
A week later Sammy teased Mrs. Moore into taking her to the Elks'
concert and dance at the Wheatfield Hall over the post-office. When
Mrs. Moore protested at this unheard-of proceeding, the girl used
her one unfailing threat: "Then I'll tell father I want another
governess!"
Mrs. Moore hated governesses. There had been no governess at the
doctor's for two years. She looked uneasy. "You've nothing to wear,"
said she.
"I'll wear my embroidered linen," said Sammy, "and Mary's spangled
scarf."
"You oughtn't borrow your sister's things without permission," said
Mrs. Moore, half-heartedly.
"Mary's in New York," said Sammy, recklessly. "She's not been home
for two years, and she may not be back for two more! She won't care.
I'm eighteen, and I've never been to a dance, and I'm going--that's
all there is about it!"
And she burst into tears, and presently laughed herself out of them,
and went to her sister's orderly empty room to see what other
treasures besides the spangled scarf Mary had left behind her.
Three months later, on a burning July afternoon, the Wheatfield
"Terrors" played a team from the neighboring town of Copadoro.
Wheatfield's population was reputedly nine hundred, and certainly
almost that number of onlookers had gathered to watch the game. The
free seats were packed with perspiring women in limp summer gowns,
and restless, crimson-faced children; and a shouting, vociferous
line of men fringed the field. But in the "grand stand," where
chairs rented for twenty-five cents, there was still some room.
Three late-comers found seats there when the game was almost over--
Sammy's sister Mary, an extremely handsome young woman in a linen
gown and wide hat, her brother Tom, a correct young man whose
ordinary expression indicated boredom, and their aunt, a magnificent
personage in gray silk, with a gray silk parasol. Their arrival
caused some little stir.
"Well, for pit--!" exclaimed a stout matron seated immediately in
front of them. "If it ain't Mary Peneyre--an' Thomas too! An' Mrs.
Bond--for goodness' sake! Well, say, you folks are strangers. When
'jew all get here? Sammy never told me you was coming!"
"How d'you do, Mrs. Pidgeon?" said Sammy's aunt, cordially. "No,
Samantha didn't know it. We came--ah--rather suddenly. Yes, I've not
been in Wheatfield for ten years. We got here on the two o'clock
train."
"Going to stay long, Mary?" said Mrs. Pidgeon, sociably.
"Only a few days," said Miss Peneyre, distantly. ("That's the worst
of growing up in a place," she said to herself. "Every one calls you
'Mary'!") "We are going to take Samantha back to New York with us,"
she added.
"Look out you don't find you're a little late," said Mrs. Pidgeon,
with great archness. "I'm surprised you ain't asked me if there's
any news from Sammy. Whole village talking about it."
The three smiles that met her gaze were not so unconcerned as their
wearers fondly hoped. Mrs. Bond ended a tense moment when she
exclaimed, "There's Sammy now!" and indicated to the others the last
row of seats, where a girl in blue, with a blue parasol, was sitting
alone. Mrs. Pidgeon delivered a parting shot. "Sammy might do lots
worse than Anthony Gayley," said she, confidentially. "Carpenter or
no carpenter, he's an elegant fellow. I thought Lizzie Philliber was
ace high, an' then folks talked some of Bootsy White. I guess
Bootsy'd like to do some hair-pulling."
"I dare say it's just a boy-and-girl friendship," said Mrs. Bond,
lightly, but trembling a little and pressing Mary's foot with her
own. When they were climbing over the wooden seats a moment later,
on their way to join Sammy, she added:
"Oh, really, it's insufferable! I'd like to spank that girl!"
"Apparently the whole village is on," contributed Tom, bitterly.
A moment later Sammy saw them; and if her welcome was a little
constrained, it was merely because of shyness. She settled down
radiantly between her sister and aunt, with a hand for each.
"Well, this is fun!" said Sammy. "Did you get my letter? Were you
surprised? Are you all going to stay until September?"
Her happy fusillade of questions distressed them all. Mary said the
unwise thing, trying to laugh, as she had always laughed, at Sammy:
"Don't talk as if you were going to be married, Sammy! It's too
awful--you don't know how aunty and I feel about it! Why, darling,
we want you to go back with us to New York! Sammy--"
The firm pressure of her aunt's foot against her own stopped her.
"I knew you would feel that way about it, Mary," said Sammy, very
quietly, but with blazing cheeks; "but I am of age, and father says
that Anthony has as much right to ask for the girl he loves as any
other man, and that's all there is to it!"
"You have it all thought out," said Mary, very white; "but, I must
say, I am surprised that a sister of mine, and a granddaughter of
Judge Peters--a girl who could have everything!--is content to marry
an ordinary country carpenter! You won't have grandmother's money
until you're twenty-one; there's three years that you will have to
cook and sweep and get your hands rough, and probably bring up--"
"Well, I don't care!" said Mary, unreproved. "And when she does get
grandma's money," she grumbled, "what good will it do her?"
"We won't discuss it, if you please, Mary," said little Sammy, with
dignity.
There was a silence. Tom lighted a cigarette. They watched the game,
Mary fighting tears, Sammy defiant and breathing hard, Mrs. Bond
with absent eyes.
"Stunning fellow who made that run!" said the elder woman presently.
"Who is he, dear?"
"That's Anthony!" said Sammy, shortly, not to be won.
"Anthony!" Mrs. Bond's tone was all affectionate interest. She put
up her lorgnette. "Well, bless his heart! Isn't he good to look at!"
she said.
"He's all hot and dirty now," Sammy said, relenting a little.
"He'smagnificent," said Mrs. Bond, firmly. She cut Mary off from
their conversation with a broad shoulder, and pressed Sammy's hand.
"We'll all love him, I'm sure," said she, warmly.
"Youwill, Aunt Anne," said she, a little huskily. Pent up
confidence came with a rush. "I know perfectly well how Mary feels!"
said Sammy, eagerly. "Why, didn't you yourself feel a little sorry
he's a carpenter?"
"I wish myself he wasn't," Sammy pursued; "but he likes it, and he's
making money, and he's liked by every one. He's on the team, you
know, and sings in all the concerts. Wild horses couldn't drag him
away from Wheatfield. And why should he go away and study some
profession he hates," she rushed on resentfully, "when I'm perfectly
satisfied with him as he is? Father asked him if he wouldn't like to
study a profession--I don't see why he should!"
"Surely," said Mrs. Bond, sympathetically, but quite at a loss.
After a thoughtful moment she added seriously: "But, darling, what
about your trousseau? Why not make it November, say, and take a
flying trip to New York with your old aunty? I want the first bride
to have all sorts of pretty things, you know. No delays,--everything
ready-made, not a moment lost--?"
Sammy hesitated. "You do like him, don't you, Aunt Anne?" she burst
out.
"Do--do you mind my talking it over with him before I say I'll go?"
Sammy's eyes shone.
"My darling, no! Take a week to think it over!" Mrs. Bond had never
tried fishing, but she had some of the instincts of the complete
angler.
A mad burst of applause interrupted her, and ended the game.
Strolling from the field in the level, pitiless sunshine, the
Peneyres were joined by young Gayley. He was quite the hero of the
hour, stalwart in his base-ball suit, nodding and shouting greetings
in every direction. He transferred a bat to his left hand to give
Mrs. Bond a cheerfully assured greeting, and, with the freedom of
long-gone days when he had played in the back lot with the Peneyre
children, he addressed the young people as "Mary" and "Tom." If
three of the party thought him decidedly "fresh," Sammy had no such
criticism. She evidently adored her lover.
It was at her suggestion, civilly indorsed by the others, that he
came to the house a few hours later for dinner. It was a painful
meal. Mr. Gayley did not hesitate to monopolize the conversation. He
was accustomed to admiration--too completely accustomed, in fact, to
perceive that on this occasion it was wanting.
After dinner he sang--having quite frankly offered to sing. Mary
played his accompaniments, and Sammy leaned on the closed cover of
her mother's wonderful old grand piano--sadly out of tune in these
days!--and watched him. Tom, frankly rude, went to bed. Mary,
determined that the engaged pair should not be encouraged any
further than was unavoidable, stuck gallantly to her post.
Mrs. Bond sat watching, useless regrets filling her heart. How sweet
the child was! How full of possibilities! How true the gray eyes
were! How stubborn the mouth might be! Sammy's power to do what she
willed to do, in the face of all obstacles, had been notable since
her babyhood. Her aunt looked from the ardent, virginal little head
to the florid, handsome face of the singer, and her heart was sick
within her.
Anthony Gayley came to the train to see them off, two weeks later,
and Sammy kissed him good-by before the eyes of all Wheatfield. She
had made her own conditions in consenting to make the Eastern visit.
She was going merely to buy her trousseau; the subject of her
engagement was never to be discussed; and every one--every one--she
met was to know at once that she was going back to Wheatfield
immediately to be married in December.
"It isn't as if every one knew it, Kid," he said sensibly to his
fiancee; "it gives me a chance to save a little, and it's not so
hard on mother. Besides, I'm looking out for a partner, and I'll
have to work him in."
"I wonder you don't think of entering some other business, Anthony,"
Mrs. Bond said, to this remark. "You're young enough to try
anything. It's such a--it's such hard work, you know."
"I've often thought I'd like to be an actor," said Mr. Gayley,
carelessly; "but there's not much chance to break into that."
"You could take a course of lessons in New York," suggested Mary,
and Sammy indorsed the idea with an eager look. But Anthony laughed.
"Not for mine! No, sir. I'll stick to Wheatfield. I was a year in
San Francisco a while back, and it was one lonesome year, believe
me. No place like home and friends for your Uncle Dudley!"
"Don't you meet a bunch of swell Eastern fellows and forget me," he
said to Sammy, as they stood awaiting the train. "I'll be getting a
little home ready for you; I'll--I'll trust you, Kid."
"You may," said Sammy. She looked at the burning, dry little main
street, the white cottages that faced the station from behind their
blazing gardens; she looked at the locust trees that almost hid the
church spire, at the straggling line of eucalyptus trees that
followed the country road to the graveyard a mile away. It was home.
It was all she had known of the world--and she was going away into a
terrifying new life. Her eyes brimmed.
"I swear to you that I'll be faithful, Anthony," she said solemnly.
"On my sacred oath, I will!"
And ten minutes later they were on their way. The porter had pinned
her new hat up in a pillow-case and taken it away, and Sammy was
laughing because another porter quite seriously shouted: "Last call
for luncheon in the dining-car!"
"I always knew they did it, but I never supposed they really did!"
said Sammy, following her aunt through the shaded brightness of the
Pullman to an enchanted table, from which one could see the glorious
landscape flashing by.
It was all like a dream--the cities they fled through, the luxury of
the big house at Sippican, the capped and aproned maids that were so
eager to make one comfortable. The people she met were like dream
people; the busy, useless days seemed too pleasant to be real.
August flashed by, September was gone. With the same magic lack of
effort, they were all in the New York house. Sammy wore her first
dinner gown, wore her first furs, made her youthful conquests right
and left.
From the first, she told every one of her engagement. The thought of
it, always in her mind, helped to give her confidence and poise.
"You must have heard of me, you know," said her first dinner
partner, "for your sister's told me a lot about you. Piet van Soop."
"Why, because no one with a name like van Soop to begin with would
name a little darling baby Piet," submitted Sammy.
"Oh, come," said Mr. van Soop. "Your own name, now! Sammy, as Mary
always calls you--that's nothing to boast of, you know, and I'll bet
you were a very darling little baby yourself!"
Sammy laughed joyously, and a dozen fellow guests glanced
sympathetically in the direction of the fresh, childish sound.
"Well, if that's really your name, of course you can't help it," she
conceded, adding, with the naivete that Mr. van Soop already found
delightful: "Wouldn't the combination be awful, though! Sammy van
Soop!"
"If you'll consider it, I'll endeavor to make it the only sorrow you
have to endure," said Mr. van Soop; and the ensuing laughter brought
them the attention of the whole table.
"No danger!" said Sammy, gayly. "I'm going home in December, you
know, to be married!"
Every one heard it. Mary winced. Mrs. Bond flushed. Tom said a word
that gave his pretty partner a right to an explanation. But Sammy
was apparently cheerful.
Only apparently, however. For that night, when she found herself in
her luxurious room again, she took Anthony's picture from the bureau
and studied it gravely under the lights.
"I said that right out," she said aloud, "and I'll keep on saying
it. Then, when the time comes to go, I simply can't back out!"
She put the picture back, and sat down at her dressing-table and
stared at her own reflection. Her hair was filleted with silver and
tiny roses; her gown was of exquisite transparent embroidery, and
more tiny roses rumpled the deep lace collar. But even less familiar
than this finery were the cheeks that blazed with so many remembered
compliments, the scarlet lips that had learned to smile so readily,
the eyes brilliant with new dreams.
"I feel as if sorrow--sorrow," said little Sammy, shivering, "were
just about two feet behind me, and as if--if it ever catches up--
I'll be the most unhappy girl in the world!"
And she gave herself a little shake and put a firm little finger-tip
on Gabrielle's bell.
"Sammy," said Mr. van Soop, one dull gray afternoon some weeks
later, "I've brought you out for a special purpose to-day."
"Tea, gluttonous one," he admitted, turning his big car into the
park. "But, seriously, I want to ask you about your going away."
"I don't know that there's anything to say about it," said Sammy,
carelessly. "I've had a wonderful time, and every one's been
charming. And now I've got to go back."
"Sammy, I've no right to ask you a favor, but I've a reason," Piet
began. He halted. Both were crimson.
The car slackened, stopped. Their faces were not two feet apart.
"Well! Will you let me beg you--for your aunt, and sister, and for--
well, for me, and for your own sake, Sammy--will you let me beg you
just to wait? Here, or there, or anywhere else--will you just wait a
while?"
"Because you may save yourself lifelong unhappiness."
Sammy pondered, her lashes dropped, her hands clasped in her muff.
"Piet," she said gravely, "it's not as bad as that. No--I'll not be
unhappy. I love Wheatfield, and horses, and the old house, and--"
she hesitated, adding more brightly: "and you can make happiness,
you know! Just because it's spring, or it's Thanksgiving, or you've
got a good book! Please go on," she urged suddenly. "We're very
conspicuous here."
They moved slowly along under the bare trees. A sullen sunset
colored the western sky. The drive was filled with motor-cars, and
groups of riders galloped on the muddy bridle-path. It was just
dusk. Suddenly, as the lamplighters went their rounds, all the park
bloomed with milky disks of light.
"You see," Sammy went on presently, "I've thought this all out.
Anthony's a good man, and he loves me, and I--well, I've promised.
What right have I to say calmly that I've changed my mind, and to
hurt him and make him ridiculous before all the people he loves? He
knows I'll have money some day--no, Piet, you needn't look so! That
has nothing to do with it! But, of course, he knows it; and I said
we would have a motor,--he's wild for one!--and entertain, don't you
know, and that's what he's waiting for and counting on. He doesn't
deserve to be shamed and humiliated. And, besides, it would break
his mother's heart. She's been awfully sweet to me. And it must be a
bitter thing to be told that you're not good enough for the woman
you love. Anthony saved my life, you know, and I can't break my
word. I said: 'On my oath, I'll come back.' And just because there
is a difference between him--and us," she hesitated, "he's all the
prouder and more sensitive. And it's only a difference in surface
things!" finished Sammy, loyally.
"Why, Tom keeps telling me that mother was a Cabot, and grandfather
a judge, and talking Winthrop Colony and Copleys and Gilbert Stuarts
to me!" the girl burst out presently. "As if that wasn't the very
reason for my being honorable! That's what blood's for!"
Still Piet was silent, his kind, ugly face set and dark.
"And then, you know," said Sammy, with sudden brightness, "when I
get back, and see the dear old place again, and get a good big
breath of air,--which we don't have here!--why, it'll all straighten
out and seem right again. My hope is," she added, turning her honest
eyes to the gloomy ones so near her, "my hope is that Anthony will
be willing to wait a while--"
"What makes you think he is likely to?" said Piet, dryly.
For some time after that they wove their way along the sweeping
Parkroads without speaking, and when they did begin to talk to one
another again, the subject was a different one and Mr. van Soop was
more cheerful. The tea hour was a fairly merry one. But when he left
Sammy, an hour later, at her aunt's door, he took off his big glove,
and grew a little white, and held out his hand to her and said:
"I won't see you again, Sammy. I've been thinking it over. You're
right; it's all my own fault. I was very wrong to attempt to
persuade you. But I won't see you again. Good-by."
"Why--!" began Sammy, in astonishment; then she looked down and
stammered, "Oh--," and finally she put her little hand in his and
said simply:
Therefore it was a surprise to Mr. van Soop to find himself entering
Mrs. Bond's library just twenty-four hours later, and grasping the
hands of the slender young woman who rose from a chair by the fire.
Sammy looked very young in a little velvet gown with a skirt short
enough to show the big bows on her slippers. Her eyes had a
childishly bewildered expression.
"I wanted you," she said simply. "I--I've had a letter from Anthony.
It came only an hour ago. I don't know whether to be sorry or glad.
Read it! Read it!"
She sat on a little, low stool by the fire, and Piet flattened the
many loose pages of the letter on his knee and read.
Anthony had written on the glazed, ruled single sheets of the
"Metropolitan Star Hotel"--had covered some twenty of them with his
loose, dashing hand-writing.
My Dear Sammy [wrote Anthony, with admirable directness]: The boys
wanted me to sit in a little game to-night, but the truth is I have
been wanting for a long time to speak to you of a certain matter,
and to-night seems a good chance to get it off my chest. A man feels
pretty rotten writing a letter like this, but I've thought it over
for more than a month now, and I feel that no matter how badly you
and I both feel, the thing to do is not to let things go too far
before we think the thing pretty thoroughly over and make sure that
things--
"What the deuce is he getting at?" said Piet, breaking off suddenly.
--make sure that things are best for the happiness of all parties
[resumed Piet]. You see, Sammy [the letter ran on], as far as I am
concerned, I never would have said a word, but I have been talking
things over with a party whose name I will tell you in a minute, and
they feel as if it would be better to write before you come on. I
mean Miss Alma Fay. You don't know her. She is Lucy Barbee's cousin.
Lucy and I had a great case years ago, and she and Tom asked me up
to their house a few weeks ago, and Alma was staying with Lucy.
Well, I took her to the Hallowe'en dance, and it was a keen dance,
the swellest we ever had at the hall. Some of us rowed the girls on
the river between the dances; we had a keen time. Well, after that I
took her riding once or twice. She rides the best of any girl I ever
saw; her father has the finest horses in East Wood--I guess he
counts for quite a lot up there, he has the biggest department store
and runs his own motor. Well, Sammy, I never would of written one
word of this to you, but when Alma came to go away we both realized
how it was. You know I have often had cases, as the boys call them,
and a girl I was engaged to in Petrie told me once she hoped some
day I'd get mine. Well, she would be pleased if she knew that I
have. I have not slept since--
But Piet couldn't go on. He glanced at the next page, read, "Now,
Sammy, it is up to you to decide," skipped another page or two and
read, "Neither Alma nor I would ever be happy if--" glanced at a
third; then the leaves fluttered in wild confusion to the floor,
and, with something between a sob and a shout, he caught Sammy in
his arms.
"My darling," said Piet, an hour later, "if I release your right
hand for ten minutes, do you think you could write a line to Mr.
Anthony Gayley? I would like to mail it when I go home to dress."
"I was thinking I might wire--" said Sammy, dreamily.