The rain had stopped; and after long days of downpour, there seemed
at last to be a definite change. Anne Warriner, standing at one of
the dining-room windows, with the tiny Virginia in her arms, could
find a decided brightening in the western sky. Roofs--the roofs that
made a steep sky-line above the hills of old San Francisco--glinted
in the light. The glimpse of the bay that had not yet been lost
between the walls of fast-encroaching new buildings, was no longer
dull, and beaten level by the rain, but showed cold, and ruffled,
and steely-blue; there was even a whitecap or two dancing on the
crests out toward Alcatraz. A rising wind made the ivy twinkle
cheerfully against the old-fashioned brick wall that bounded the
Warriners' backyard.
"I believe the storm is really over!" Anne said, thankfully, half
aloud, "to-morrow will be fair!"
"Out to-morrow?" said Diego, hopefully. He was wedged in between his
mother and the window-sill, and studying earth and sky as absorbedly
as she.
"Out to-morrow, sweetheart," his mother promised. And she wondered
if it was too late to take the babies out to-day.
But it was nearly four o'clock now; even the briefest airing was out
of the question. By the time the baby was dressed, coated, and
hooded, and little Diego buttoned into gaiters and reefer, and Anne
herself had changed her house gown for street wear, and pinned on
her hat and veil, and Helma, summoned from her ironing, had bumped
Virginia's coach down the back porch steps, and around the wet
garden path to the front door,--by the time all this was
accomplished, the short winter daylight would be almost gone, she
knew, and the crowded hour that began with the children's baths, and
that ended their little day with bread-and-milky kisses to Daddy
when he came in, and prayers, and cribs, would have arrived.
Anne sighed. She would have been glad to get out into the cool
winter afternoon, herself, after a long, quiet day in the warm
house. It was just the day and hour for a brisk walk, with one's
hands plunged deep in the pockets of a heavy coat, and one's hat
tied snugly against the wind. Twenty minutes of such walking, she
thought longingly, would have shaken her out of the little
indefinable mood of depression that had been hanging over her all
day. She could have climbed the steep street on which the cottage
faced, and caught the freshening ocean breeze full in her face at
the corner; she could have looked down on the busy little
thoroughfares of the Chinese quarter just below, and the swarming
streets of the Italian colony beyond, and beyond that again to the
bay, dotted now with the brown sails of returning fishing smacks,
and crossed and recrossed by the white wakes of ferry-boats. For the
Warriners' cottage clung to the hill just above the busy,
picturesque foreign colonies, and the cheerful unceasing traffic of
the piers. It was in a hopelessly unfashionable part of the city
now; its old, dignified neighbors--French and Spanish houses of
plaster and brick, with deep gardens where willow and pepper trees,
and fuchsias, and great clumps of calla lilies had once flourished--
were all gone, replaced by modern apartment houses. But it had been
one of the city's show places fifty years before, when its separate
parts had been brought whole "around the Horn" from some much older
city, and when homesick pioneer wives and mothers had climbed the
board-walk that led to its gate, just to see, and perhaps to cry
over, the painted china door-knobs, the colored glass fan-light in
the hall, the iron-railed balconies, and slender, carved balustrade
that took their hungry hearts back to the decorous, dear old world
they had left so far behind them.
Jimmy and Anne Warriner had stumbled upon the Jackson Street cottage
five years ago, just before their marriage, and after an ecstatic,
swift inspection of it, had raced like children to the agent, to
crowd into his willing hand a deposit on the first month's rent.
Anne had never kept house before, she had no eyes for obsolete
plumbing, uneven floors, for the dark cellar sacred to cats and
rubbish. She and Jim chattered rapturously of French windows, of
brick garden walks, of how plain little net curtains and Anne's big
brass bowl full of nasturtiums would look on the landing of the
absurd little stairway that led from the square hall to two useless
little chambers above.
"Jimski--this floor oiled, and the rug laid cross-wise! And old
tapestry papers from Fredericks! And the spindle-chair and Fanny's
clock in the hall!"
"And the davenport in the dining-room, Anne,--there's no room in
here, and your tea-table at the fireplace, with your copper blazer
on it!"
"Oh, Jim, we'll have a place people will talk about!" Anne would
sigh happily, after one of these outbursts. And when they made their
last inspection before really coming to take possession of the
cottage, she came very close to him,--Anne was several inches
shorter than her big husband-to-be, and when she got as close as
this to Jim she had to tip her serious little face up quite far,
which Jim found attractive,--and said, in a little, breathless
voice:
"It's going to be like a home from the very start, isn't it, Jim?
And aren't you glad, Jim, that we aren't doing exactly what every
one else does, that you and I, who are a little different, Jim, are
going to keep a little different? I mean that you really did do
unusual work at college, and you really are of a fine family, and I
am a Pendeering, and have travelled a lot, and been through Vassar,-
-don't you know, Jim? You don't think it's conceited for us to think
we aren't quite the usual type, just between ourselves? Do you?"
Jim implied wordlessly that he did not. And whatever Jim thought
himself, he was quite sincere in saying that he believed Anne to be
peerless among her kind.
So they came to Jackson Street, and Anne made it quite as quaint and
charming as her dreams. For a year they could not find a flaw in it.
Then little enchanting James Junior came, nick-named Diego for
convenience, who fitted so perfectly into the picture, with his
checked gingham, and his mop of yellow hair. Anne gallantly went on
with her little informal luncheons and dinners, but she had to
apologize for an untrained maid now, and interrupt these festivities
with flying visits to the crib in the big bedroom that opened out of
the dining-room. And then, very soon after Diego, Virginia was born-
-surely the most radiant, laughing baby that ever brought her joyous
little presence into any home anywhere. But with Virginia's coming,
life grew very practical for Anne, very different from what it had
been in her vague hopes and plans of years ago.
The cottage was no longer quite comfortable, to begin with. The
garden, shadowed heavily by buildings on both sides, was undeniably
damp, and the fascinating railing of the little balconies was
undeniably mouldy. The bath-room, despite its delightful size, and
the ivy that rapped outside its window, was not a modern bath-room.
The backyard, once sacred to geraniums and grass, and odd pots of
shrubs, was sunny for the children's playing, to be sure, but no
longer picturesque after their sturdy little boots had trampled it
down, and with lines of their little clothes intersecting it. Anne
began to think seriously of the big apartments all about, hitherto
regarded as enemies, but perhaps the solution, after all. The modern
flats were delightfully airy, high up in the sun, their floors were
hard-wood, their bath-rooms tiled, their kitchens all tempting
enamel, and nickel plate, and shining new wood. One had gas to cook
with, furnace heat, hall service, and the joy of the lift.
"What if we do have to endure a dining-room with red paper and black
woodwork, Jim," she would say, "and have near-Tiffany shades and a
hall two feet square? It would be so comfortable!"
But if Jim agreed,--"we'll have a look at some of them on Sunday,"
Anne would hesitate.
"They're so horribly commonplace; they're just what every one else
has!" she would mourn.
Commonplace,--Anne said the word over to herself sometimes, in the
long hours that she spent alone with the children. That was what her
life had become. The inescapable daily routine left her no time for
unnecessary prettiness. She met each day bravely, only to find
herself beaten and exhausted every night. It was puzzling, it was
sometimes a little depressing. Anne reflected that she had always
been busy, she was indeed a little dynamo of energy, her college
years and the years of travel had been crowded with interests and
enterprises. But she had never been tired before; she had never
felt, as she felt now, that she could fall asleep at the dinner
table for sheer weariness, and that no trial was more difficult to
bear than Jim's cheerful announcement that the Deanes might be in
later for a call, or the Weavers wanted them to come over for a game
of bridge.
And what did she accomplish, after all? she thought sometimes. What
mark did her busy days leave upon her life? She dressed and
undressed the children, she bathed, rocked, amused them; indeed, she
was so adoring a mother that sometimes whole precious fractions of
hours slipped by while she was watching them, laughing at them,
catching the little unresponsive soft cheeks to hers for the kisses
that interfered so seriously with their important little goings and
comings. She sewed on buttons and made puddings for Jim, she went
for aimless walks, pushing Jinny before her in the go-cart, and
guiding the chattering Diego with her free hand. She paused long in
the market, uncomfortably undecided between the expensive steak Jim
liked so much, and the sausages that meant financial balm to her own
harassed soul. She commenced letters to her mother that drifted
about half-written until Jinny captured and destroyed them. She
sewed up rents in cloth lions and elephants, and turned page after
page of the children's cloth books. Same and eventless, the months
went by,--it was March, and the last of the rains,--it was July, and
she and Jim were taking the children off for long Sundays in
Sausalito, or on the Piedmont hills,--it was October, with the usual
letter from Mother about Thanksgiving,--it was Christmas-time again!
The seasons raced through their familiar surprises, and were gone.
Anne had a desperate sense of wanting to halt them; just to think,
just to realize what life meant, and what she could do to make it
nearer her dreams.
So the first five years of their marriage slipped by, but toward the
end with a perceptible brightening of the prospect in every
direction. Not in one day, nor in one week, did the change come; it
was just that things went well for Jim at the office, that the
children were daily growing less helpless and more enchanting, that
Anne was beginning to take an interest in the theatre again, and was
charming in a new suit and a really extravagant hat. The Warriners
began to spend their Sunday afternoons with real estate agents in
Berkeley--not this year, perhaps, but certainly next, they told each
other, they could consider that lovely one, with the two baths, and
such a view, or the smaller one, nearer the station, don't you
remember, Jim? where there was a sleeping-porch, and the garden all
laid out? They would bring the children up in the open air and
sunshine, and find neighbors, and strike roots, in the lovely
college town.
Then suddenly, there were hard times again. Anne's health became
poor, she was fitful and depressed, quite unlike her usual sunshiny
self. Sometimes Jim found her in tears,--"It's nothing, dearest!
Only I'm so miserable all the time!" Sometimes she--Anne, the
hopeful!--was filled with forebodings for herself and the child that
was to come. No unnecessary expense could be incurred now, with this
fresh, inevitable expense approaching. Especial concessions must be
made to Helma, should Helma really stay; the whole little household
was like a ship that shortens sail, and makes all snug against a
storm. As a further complication, business matters began to go badly
for Jim. Salaries were cut, new rules made, and an unpopular manager
installed at the office. Anne struggled bravely to hide her mental
and physical discomfort from Jim. Jim, cut to the heart to have to
add anything to her care just now, touched her with a thousand
little tendernesses; a joke over the burned pudding, a little name
she had not heard since honeymoon days, a hundred barefoot
expeditions about the bedroom in the dark, when Jinny awoke crying
in the night, or Diego could not sleep because he was so "firsty."
Tender and intimate days these, but the strain of them told on both
husband and wife.
Things were at this point on the particular dark afternoon that
found Anne with the two children at the window. All three were still
staring out into the early dusk when Helma came in from the kitchen
with an armful of damp little garments:
"Ef aye sprad dese hare, dey be dray en no tayme?" suggested Helma.
"Oh, yes! Spread them here by all means; then you can get a good
start with your ironing to-morrow!" Anne agreed, rousing herself
from her revery. "Put them all around the fire. And I must
straighten this room!" she said, half to herself; "it's getting on
to five!"
Followed by the stumbling children, she went briskly about the room,
reducing it to order with a practised hand. Toys were piled in a
large basket, scraps tossed into the fire, sewing materials gathered
together and put out of sight, the rugs laid smoothly, the window-
shades drawn. Anne "brushed up" the floor, pushed chairs against the
wall, put a shovelful of coals on the fire, and finally took her
rocker at the hearth, and sat with Virginia in her arms, and Diego
beside her, while two silver bowls of bread and milk were finished
to the last drop.
"There!" said she, pleasantly warmed by these exertions, "now for
nighties! And Daddy can come as soon as he likes."
But Virginia was fretful and sleepy now, and did not want to be put
down. So Diego manfully departed kitchenward with the empty bowls,
and Anne, baby, rocker, and all, hitched her way across the room to
the old chest of drawers by the hall door, and managed to secure the
small sleeping garments with the little daughter still in her arms.
She had hitched her way back to the fireplace again, and was very
busy with buttons and strings, when Helma, appearing in the doorway,
announced a visitor.
"Who?" said Anne, puzzled. "Did the bell ring? I didn't hear it.
What is it?"
"A gentleman?" Anne, very much at a loss, got up, and carrying
Jinny, and followed by the barefoot Diego, went to the door. She had
a reassuring and instant impression that it was a very fine--even a
magnificent--old man, who was standing in the twilight of the little
hall. Anne had never seen him before, but there was no question in
her heart as to his reception, even at this first glance.
"How do you do?" she said, a little fluttered, but cordial, too.
"Will you come in here by the fire? The sitting-room is so cold."
"Thank you," said her caller, easily, with a little inclination of
his head that seemed to acknowledge her hospitality. He put his hat,
a shining, silk hat, upon the hall table, and followed her into the
dining-room. Anne found, when she turned to give him the big chair,
that he had pulled off his big gloves, too, and that Diego had put a
confident, small hand into his.
He sat down comfortably, a big, square-built man, with rosy color,
hair that was already silvered, and a fast-silvering mustache, and
keen, kind eyes as blue as Virginia's. In the expression of these
eyes, and in the lines about his fine mouth, was that suggestion of
simple friendliness and sympathy that no man, woman, or child can
long resist. Anne found herself already deciding that she liked this
man. She went on with Jinny's small toilet, even while she wondered
about her caller, and while she decided that Jim should have an
overcoat of exactly this big, generous cut, and of exactly this
delightful, warm-looking rough cloth, some day.
"Perhaps this is a bad hour to disturb these little people?" said
the caller, smiling, but with something in his manner and in his
rather deliberate and well-chosen speech, of the dignity and
courtesy of an older generation.
"Oh, no, indeed!" Anne assured him. "I'm going right on with them,
you see!"
Jinny, deliciously drowsy, gave the stranger a slow yet approving
smile, from the safety of Anne's arms. Diego went to lay a small
hand upon the gentleman's knee.
"This is my shoe," said Diego, frankly exhibiting a worn specimen,
"and Baby has shoes, too, blue ones. And Baby cried in the night
when the mirror fell down, didn't she, mother? And she broke her
bowl, and bited on the pieces, and blood came down on her bib--"
"Didn't that hurt her mouth?" said the caller, interestedly, lifting
Diego into the curve of his arm.
Diego rested his golden mop comfortably against the big shoulder.
"It hurt her teef," he said dreamily, and subsided.
As if it were quite natural that the child should be there, the
gentleman eyed Anne over the little head.
"I've not told you my name, madam," said he. "I am Charles Rideout.
Not that that conveys anything to you, I suppose--?"
"But it does, as it happens!" Anne said, surprised and pleased.
"Jim--my husband, is with the Rogers-Wiley Company, and I think they
do a good deal of cement work for Rideout & Company."
"Surely," assented the man, "and your husband's name is--?"
"Ah--? I don't place him," Mr. Rideout said thoughtfully. "There
are so many. Well, Mrs. Warriner," he turned his smiling, bright
eyes to her again, from the fire, "I am intruding on you this
afternoon for a reason that I hope you will find easy to forgive
in an old man. I must tell you first that my wife and I used
to live in this house, a good many years ago. We moved away from
it--let me see--we left this house something like twenty-six or
--eight years ago. But we've talked a hundred times of coming
back here some day, and having a little look about 'little
Ten-Twelve,' as we always used to call it. I see your number's
changed. But"--his gesture was almost apologetic--"we are busy
people. Mrs. Rideout likes to live in the country a great part
of the time; this neighborhood is inaccessible now--time goes
by, and, in short, we haven't ever come back. But this was home
to us for a good many years." He was speaking in a lower voice
now, his eyes on the fire. "Yes, ma'am. Yes, ma'am," he said
gently, "I brought Rose here a bride--thirty-three years ago."
"Well, but fancy!" said Anne, her face radiant, "just as we
did! No wonder we said the house looked as if people had been
happy in it!"
"There was a Frenchwoman here then," said Mr. Rideout, thoughtfully,
"a queer woman! She played fast and loose until I didn't know
whether we'd ever really get the place or not. This neighborhood was
full of just such houses then, although I remember Rose used to make
great capital out of the fact that ours was the only brick one among
them. This house came around the Horn from Philadelphia, as a matter
of fact, and"--his eyes, twinkling with indulgent amusement, met
Anne's,--"and you know that before a lady has got a baby to boast
of, she's going to do a little boasting about her new house!"
Anne laughed. "Perhaps she boasted about her husband, too," she
said, "as I do, when Jimmy isn't anywhere around."
She liked the tender look, that had in it just a touch of pleased
embarrassment with which he shook his head.
"Well, well, perhaps she did. Perhaps she did. She was very merry;
pleased with everything; to this day my wife always sees the
cheerful side of things first. A great gift, that. She danced about
this house as if it were another toy, and she a little girl. We
thought it a very, very lovely little home." His eyes travelled
about the low walls. "I got to thinking of it to-day, wondered if it
were still standing. I stood at your gate a little while,--the path
is the same, and the steps, and some of the old trees,--a japonica,
I remember, and the lemon verbenas. Finally, I found myself ringing
your bell."
"I'm so glad you did!" Anne said. "There are lots of old trees and
shrubs in the backyard, too, that you and your wife might remember.
We think it is the dearest little house in the world, except that
now we are rather anxious to get the children out of the city."
"Yes, yes," he agreed with interest, "much better for them somewhere
across the bay. I remember that finally we moved into the country--
Alameda. The boy was a baby, then, and the two little girls very
small. It was quite a move! Quite a move! We got one load started,
and then had to wait and wait here--it was raining, too!--for the
men to come for the other load. My wife's sister had gone ahead with
the girls, but I remember Rose and I and the baby waiting and
waiting,--with the baby's little coat and cap on top of a box, ready
to be put on. Finally, I got Rose a carriage, to go to the ferry,--
quite a luxury in those days!" he interrupted himself, with a smile.
"And did the children love it,--the country?" said Anne, wistfully.
"Made them over!" said he, nodding reflectively. "Yes. I remember
that the day after we moved was a Sunday, and we had quite a patch
of lawn over there that I thought needed cutting. I shall never
forget those little girls tumbling about in the cut grass, and Rose
watching from the steps, with the baby in her lap. It made us all
over." His voice fell again, and he stared smilingly into the fire.
"The little girls, yes. And the oldest boy. Afterward there was
another boy, and a little girl--" he paused. "A little girl whom we
lost," he finished gravely.
"Both these babies were born here," Anne said, after a moment. Her
caller looked from one child to the other with an expression of
interest and understanding that no childless man can ever wear.
"Our Rose was born here, our first girl," he said. "Sometimes a
foggy morning even now will bring that morning back to me. My wife
was very ill, and I remember creeping out of her room, when she had
gone to sleep, and hearing the fog-horns outside,--it was early
morning. We had an old woman taking care of her,--no trained nurses
in those days!--and she was sitting here by this fireplace, with the
tiny girl in her lap. Do you know--" his smile met Anne's--"do you
know, I was so tired, and we had been so frightened for Rose, and it
seemed to me that I had been up and moving about through unfamiliar
things for so many, many hours, that I had almost forgotten the
baby! I remember that it came to me with a shock that Rose was safe,
and asleep, and that morning had come, and breakfast was ready, and
here was the baby, the same baby we had been so placidly expecting
and planning for, and that, in short, it was all right, and all
over!"
"Oh, I know!" Anne laid an impulsive hand for a second on his, and
the eyes of the young wife, and of the man who had been a young
father thirty years before, met in wonderful understanding. "That's-
-that's the way it is," said Anne, a little lamely, with a swift
thought for another foggy morning, when the familiar horn, the
waking noises of the city, had fallen strangely on her own senses,
after the terror and triumph of the night. Neither spoke for a
moment. Diego's voice broke cheerily into the pause.
"I can undress myself," he announced, with modest complacence.
"Can you?" said Charles Rideout. "How about buttons?"
"Well, I think--I can--remember--how to unbutton--a boy!" said the
man, with his pleasant deliberation, as he began on the button that
was always catching itself on Diego's hair. Diego cheerfully
extended little arms and legs in turn for the disrobing process.
Presently a small heap of garments lay on the floor, and the
children were quite delicious in baggy blue flannels. All the four
were laughing and absorbed, when James Senior came in a few minutes
later, and found them.
"Jim," said his wife, eagerly, rising to greet him, and to bring
him, cold and ruddy, to the fireplace, "this is Mr. Rideout, dear!"
"How do you do, sir?" said Jim, stretching out his hand, and with a
smile on his tired, keen, young face. "Don't get up. I see that my
boy is making himself at home."
"Yes, sir; we've been having a great time getting undressed," said
the visitor.
"Jim," Anne went on radiantly, "Mr. Rideout and his wife lived here
years ago, when they were just married, and their children were born
here too!"
"No--is that so!" Jim was as much pleased and surprised as Anne, as
he settled himself with Virginia's web of silky hair against his
shoulder. "Built it, perhaps, Mr. Rideout?"
"No. No, it was eight or ten years old, then. I used to pass it,
walking to the office. We had a little office down on Meig's pier
then. As a matter of fact, my wife never saw it until I brought her
home to it. She was the only child of a widow, very formal Southern
people, and we weren't engaged very long. So my brother and I
furnished the house; used--" his eyes twinkled--"used to buy our
pictures in a lump. We decided we needed about four to each room,
and we'd go to a dealer's, and pick out a dozen of 'em, and ask him
to make us a price!"
"Very--pretty--little--ruffled--curtains they were," he affirmed
seriously. "Linen, with blue bands, in this bedroom, and red bands
upstairs. And things--things--" he made a vague gesture--"things on
the dressing-tables and bed to match 'em! I remember that on our
wedding day, when I brought Rose home, we had a little maid here,
and dinner was all ready, but no, Rose must run up and down stairs
looking at everything in her little wedding dress--" Suddenly came
another pause. The room was dark now, but for the firelight. Little
Jinny was asleep in her father's arms, Diego blinking manfully.
Neither husband nor wife, whose hands had found each other, cared to
break the silence. But after a while Anne said:
Instantly roused, the guest raised bright, pleased eyes.
"The ladies' question, Warriner," said he. "It was silk, my dear,
her first silk gown. Yellowish, or brownish, it was. And she had one
of those little ruffled capes the ladies used to wear. And a little
bonnet--"
"A bonnet she had trimmed herself. I remember watching her, when we
were engaged, making that trimming. You don't see it any more, but
that year all the girls were making it. They made little bunches of
grapes out of dried peas covered with chamois skin--"
"Indeed, they did. Then they covered their bonnets with them, and
with leaves cut out of the chamois skin. They were charming, too. My
wife wore that bonnet a long time. She trimmed it over and over." He
sighed, but there was a shade of longing as well as pity in his
eyes. "We were young," he said thoughtfully; "I was but twenty-five;
we had our hard times. The babies came pretty fast. Rose wasn't very
strong. I worked too hard, got broken down a little, and expenses
went right on, you know--"
"You bet I know!" Jim said, with his pleasant laugh, and a glance
for Anne.
"Well," said Charles Rideout, looking keenly from one to the other,
"thank God for it, you young people! It never comes back! The days
when you shoulder your troubles cheerfully together,--they come to
their end! And they are"--he shook his head--"they are very
wonderful to look back to! I remember a certain day," he went on
reminiscently, "when we had paid the last of the doctor's bills, and
Rose met me down town for a little celebration. We had had five or
six years of pretty hard sailing then. We bought her new gloves that
day, I remember, and--shoes, I think it was, and I got a hat, and a
book I'd been wanting. We went to a little French restaurant to
dinner, with all our bundles. And that, that, my dear,--"he said,
smiling at Anne,--"seemed to be the turning point. We got into the
country next year, picked out a little house. And then, the rest of
it all followed; we had two maids, a surrey, I was put into the
superintendent's place--" a sweep of the fine hand dismissed the
details. "No man and wife, who do what we did," said he, gravely,
"who live modestly, and work hard, and love each other and their
children, can fail. That's one of the blessed things of life."
Jim cleared his throat, but did not speak. Anne was frankly unable
to speak.
"And now I mustn't keep these children out of bed any longer," said
the older man. "This has been a--a lovely afternoon for me. I wish
Mrs. Rideout had been with me." He stood up. "Shall I give you this
little fellow, Mrs. Warriner?"
"We'll put the babies down," said Jim, rising, too, "and then,
perhaps, you'd like to look about the house, Mr. Rideout?"
"But I know how a lady feels about having her house inspected--"
hesitated the caller, with his bright, fatherly look for Anne.
So the gas was lighted, and they all went into the bedroom, where
Anne tucked the children into their cribs. She stayed there while
the others went on their tour of inspection, patting her son's
small, warm body in the darkness, and listening with a smile to the
visitor's cheerful comments in kitchen and hallway, and Jim's
answering laugh.
When she came blinking out into the lighted dining-room, the men
were upstairs, and Helma, to Anne's astonishment, was showing in
another caller,--and another Charles Rideout, as Anne's puzzled
glance at the card in her hand, assured her. This was a tall young
man, a little dishevelled, in a big storm coat, and with dark rings
about his eyes.
"I beg your pardon, madam," said he, abruptly, "but was my father,
Mr. Charles Rideout, here this afternoon?"
"Why, he's upstairs with my husband now!" Anne said, strangely
disquieted by the young man's manner.
"Thank God!" said the newcomer, briefly. And he wiped his forehead
with his handkerchief, and drew a deep short breath.
"He--I must apologize to you for breaking in upon you this way,"
said young Rideout, "but he came out in the car this afternoon, and
we didn't know where he had gone. He made the chauffeur wait at the
corner at the bottom of the hill, and the fool man waited an hour
before it occurred to him to telephone me at the house. I came at
once."
"He's been here all that time," Anne said. "He's all right. Your
mother and father used to live here, you know, years ago. In this
same house."
"Yes, I know we did. I think I was born here," said Charles Rideout,
Junior. "I had a sort of feeling that he had come here, as soon as
Bates telephoned. Dear old dad! He and mother have told us about
this place a hundred times! They were talking about it for a couple
of hours a few nights ago." He looked about the room as his father
had done. "They were very happy here. There--" he smiled a little
bashfully at Anne--"there never was a pair of lovers like mother and
dad!" he said. Then he cleared his throat. "Did my father tell you--?"
he began, and stopped.
"No," Anne said, troubled. He had told them a great deal, but not--
she felt sure--not this, whatever it was.
"That's why we worried about him," said his son, his honest,
distressed eyes meeting hers. "You see--you see--we're in trouble at
the house--my mother--my mother left us, last night--"
"She's been ill a good while," said the young man, "but we thought--
She's been so ill before! A day or two ago the rest of us knew it,
and we wired for my married sister, but we couldn't get dad to
realize it. He never left her, and he's not been eating, and he'd
tell all the doctors what serious sicknesses she'd gotten over
before--" And with a suddenly shaking lip and filling eyes, he
turned his back on Anne, and went to the window.
"Ah!" said Anne, pitifully. And for a full moment there was silence.
Then Charles Rideout, the younger, came back to her, pushing his
handkerchief into his coat pocket; and with a restored self-control.
"Too bad to bother you with our troubles," he said, with a little
smile like his father's. "To us, of course, it seems like the end of
the world, but I am sorry to distress you! Dad just doesn't seem to
grasp it, he hasn't been excited, you know, but he doesn't seem to
understand. I don't know that any of us do!" he finished simply.
"Here they are!" Anne said warningly, as the two other men came down
the stairs.
"Hello, Dad!" said young Rideout, easily and cheerfully, "I came to
bring you home!"
"This is my boy, Mrs. Warriner," said his father; "you see he's
turned the tables, and is looking after me! I'm glad you came,
Charley. I've been telling your good husband, Mrs. Warriner," he
said, in a lower tone, "that we--that I--"
"Yes, I know!" Anne said, with her ready tenderness, and a little
gasp like a child's.
"So you will realize what impulse brought me here to-day," the older
man went on; "I was talking to my wife of this house only a day or
two ago." His voice had become almost inaudible, and the three young
people knew he had forgotten them. "Only a day or two ago," he
repeated musingly. And then, to his son, he added wistfully, "I
don't seem to get it through my head, my boy. For a while to-day, I
forgot--I forgot. The heart--" he said, with his little old-world
touch of dignity--"the heart does not learn things as quickly as the
mind, Mrs. Warriner."
Anne had found something wistful and appealing in his smile before,
now it seemed to her heartbreaking. She nodded, without speaking.
"Dear old Dad," said Charles Rideout, affectionately. "You are tired
out. You've been doing too much, sir, you want sleep and rest."
"Surely--surely," said his father, a little heavily. Father and son
shook hands with Jim and Anne, and the older man said gravely, "God
bless you both!" as he and his son went down the wet path, in the
shaft of light from the hall door. At the gate the boy put his arm
tenderly about his father's shoulders.
"Oh, Anne, Anne," said her husband as she clung to him when the door
was shut, "I couldn't live one day without you, my dearest! But
don't--don't cry. Don't let it make you blue,--he had his happiness,
you know,--he has his children left!"
"I am crying a little for sorrow, Jim, dearest!" she sobbed, burying
her face in his shoulder. "But I believe it is mostly--mostly for
joy and gratitude, Jim!"