"Mother," remarked Farmer Banning, discontentedly, "Susie is
making a long visit."
"She is coming home next week," said his cheery wife. She had
drawn her low chair close to the air-tight stove, for a late March
snowstorm was raging without.
"Oh, come, wife, you needn't be. The idea! But I'd be jealous if
our little girl was sorter weaned away from us by this visit in
town."
"Now, see here, father, you beat all the men I ever heard of in
scolding about farmers borrowing, and here you are borrowing
trouble."
"Well, I hope I won't have to pay soon. But I've been thinking
that the old farmhouse may look small and appear lonely after her
gay winter. When she is away, it's too big for me, and a suspicion
lonely for us both. I've seen that you've missed her more than I
have."
"I guess you're right. Well, she's coming home, as I said, and we
must make home seem home to her. The child's growing up. Why,
she'll be eighteen week after next. You must give her something
nice on her birthday."
"I will," said the farmer, his rugged, weather-beaten face
softening with memories. "Is our little girl as old as that? Why,
only the other day I was carrying her on my shoulder to the barn
and tossing her into the haymow. Sure enough, the 10th of April
will be her birthday. Well, she shall choose her own present."
On the afternoon of the 5th of April he went down the long bill to
the station, and was almost like a lover in his eagerness to see
his child. He had come long before the train's schedule time, but
was rewarded at last. When Susie appeared, she gave him a kiss
before every one, and a glad greeting which might have satisfied
the most exacting of lovers. He watched her furtively as they rode
at a smart trot up the hill. Farmer Banning kept no old nags for
his driving, but strong, well-fed, spirited horses that sometimes
drew a light vehicle almost by the reins. "Yes," he thought, "she
has grown a little citified. She's paler, and has a certain air or
style that don't seem just natural to the hill. Well, thank the
Lord! she doesn't seem sorry to go up the hill once more."
"There's the old place, Susie, waiting for you," he said. "It
doesn't look so very bleak, does it, after all the fine city
houses you've seen?"
"Yes, father, it does. It never appeared so bleak before."
He looked at his home, and in the late gray afternoon, saw it in a
measure with her eyes--the long brown, bare slopes, a few gaunt
old trees about the house, and the top boughs of the apple-orchard
behind a sheltering hill in the rear of the dwelling.
"Father," resumed the girl, "we ought to call our place the Bleak
House. I never so realized before how bare and desolate it looks,
standing there right in the teeth of the north wind."
His countenance fell, but he had no time for comment. A moment
later Susie was in her mother's arms. The farmer lifted the trunk
to the horse-block and drove to the barn. "I guess it will be the
old story," he muttered. "Home has become 'Bleak House.' I suppose
it did look bleak to her eyes, especially at this season. Well,
well, some day Susie will go to the city to stay, and then it will
be Bleak House sure enough."
"Oh, father," cried his daughter when, after doing his evening
work, he entered with the shadow of his thoughts still upon his
face--"oh, father, mother says I can choose my birthday present!"
"And so I have your bond. My present will make you open your
eyes."
"And pocket-book too, I suppose. I'll trust you, however, not to
break me. What is it to be?"
"I'll tell you the day before, and not till then."
After supper they drew around the stove. Mrs. Banning got out her
knitting, as usual, and prepared for city gossip. The farmer
rubbed his hands over the general aspect of comfort, and
especially over the regained presence of his child's bright face.
"Well, Sue," he remarked, "you'll own that this room in the house
doesn't look very bleak?"
"No, father, I'll own nothing of the kind. Your face and mother's
are not bleak, but the room is."
"Well," said the farmer, rather disconsolately, "I fear the old
place has been spoiled for you. I was saying to mother before you
came home--"
"There now, father, no matter about what you were saying. Let
Susie tell us why the room is bleak."
The girl laughed softly, got up, and taking a billet of wood from
the box, put it into the air-tight. "The stove has swallowed it
just as old Trip did his supper. Shame! you greedy dog," she
added, caressing a great Newfoundland that would not leave her a
moment. "Why can't you learn to eat your meals like a gentleman?"
Then to her father, "Suppose we could sit here and see the flames
curling all over and around that stick. Even a camp in the woods
is jolly when lighted up by a flickering blaze."
"Oh--h!" said the farmer; "you think an open fire would take away
the bleakness?"
"Certainly. The room would be changed instantly, and mother's face
would look young and rosy again. The blue-black of this sheet-iron
stove makes the room look blue-black."
"Open fires don't give near as much heat," said her father,
meditatively. "They take an awful lot of wood; and wood is getting
scarce in these parts."
"I should say so! Why don't you farmers get together, appoint a
committee to cut down every tree remaining, then make it a State-
prison offence ever to set out another? Why, father, you cut
nearly all the trees from your lot a few years ago and sold the
wood. Now that the trees are growing again, you are talking of
clearing up the land for pasture. Just think of the comfort we
could get out of that wood-lot! What crop would pay better? All
the upholsterers in the world cannot furnish a room as an open
hardwood fire does; and all the produce of the farm could not buy
anything else half so nice."
"Say, mother," said her father, after a moment, "I guess I'll get
down that old Franklin from the garret to-morrow and see if it
can't furnish this room."
The next morning he called rather testily to the hired man, who
was starting up the lane with an axe, "Hiram, I've got other work
for you. Don't cut a stick in that wood-lot unless I tell you."
The evening of the 9th of April was cool but clear, and the farmer
said, genially, "Well, Sue, prospects good for fine weather on
your birthday. Glad of it; for I suppose you will want me to go to
town with you for your present, whatever it is to be."
"You'll own up a girl can keep a secret now, won't you?"
"He'll have to own more'n that," added his wife; "he must own that
an ole woman hasn't lost any sleep from curiosity."
"How much will be left me to own to-morrow night?" said the
farmer, dubiously. "I suppose Sue wants a watch studded with
diamonds, or a new house, or something else that she darsn't speak
of till the last minute, even to her mother."
"Nothing of the kind. I want only all your time tomorrow, and all
Hiram's time, after you have fed the stock."
"Oh, you know it, do you? Well, how pretty you look in the
firelight. Even mother, there, looks ten years younger. Keep your
low seat, child, and let me look at you. So you're eighteen? My!
my! how the years roll around! It will be Bleak House for mother
and me, in spite of the wood-fire, when you leave us."
"It won't be Bleak House much longer," she replied with a
significant little nod.
The next morning at an early hour the farmer said, "All ready,
Sue. Our time is yours till night; so queen it over us." And black
Hiram grinned acquiescence, thinking he was to have an easy time.
"Queen it, did you say?" cried Sue, in great spirits. "Well, then,
I shall be queen of spades. Get 'em, and come with me. Bring a
pickaxe, too." She led the way to a point not far from the
dwelling, and resumed: "A hole here, father, a hole there, Hiram,
big enough for a small hemlock, and holes all along the northeast
side of the house. Then lots more holes, all over the lawn, for
oaks, maples, dogwood, and all sorts to pretty trees, especially
evergreens.'
"Oh, ho!" cried the farmer; "now I see the hole where the
woodchuck went in."
"But you don't see the hole where he's coming out. When that is
dug, even the road will be lined with trees. Foolish old father!
you thought I'd be carried away with city gewgaws, fine furniture,
dresses, and all that sort of thing. You thought I'd be pining for
what you couldn't afford, what wouldn't do you a particle of good,
nor me either, in the long run. I'm going to make you set out
trees enough to double the value of your place and take all the
bleakness and bareness from this hillside. To-day is only the
beginning. I did get some new notions in the city which made me
discontented with my home, but they were not the notions you were
worrying about. In the suburbs I saw that the most costly houses
were made doubly attractive by trees and shrubbery, and I knew
that trees would grow for us as well as for millionaires--My
conscience! if there isn't--" and the girl frowned and bit her
lips.
"Is that one of the city beaux you were telling us about?" asked
her father, sotto voce.
"Yes; but I don't want any beaux around to-day. I didn't think
he'd be so persistent." Then, conscious that she was not dressed
for company, but for work upon which she had set her heart, she
advanced and gave Mr. Minturn a rather cool greeting.
But the persistent beau was equal to the occasion. He had endured
Sue's absence as long as he could, then had resolved on a long
day's siege, with a grand storming-onset late in the afternoon.
"Please, Miss Banning," he began, "don't look askance at me for
coming at this unearthly hour. I claim the sacred rites of
hospitality. I'm an invalid. The doctor said I needed country air,
or would have prescribed it if given a chance. You said I might
come to see you some day, and by playing Paul Pry I found out, you
remember, that this was your birthday, and--"
Mr. Minturn shook the farmer's hand with a cordiality calculated
to awaken suspicions of his designs in a pump, had its handle been
thus grasped. "Mr. Banning will forgive me for appearing with the
lark," he continued volubly, determining to break the ice. "One
can't get the full benefit of a day in the country if he starts in
the afternoon."
The farmer was polite, but nothing more. If there was one thing
beyond all others with which he could dispense, it was a beau for
Sue.
Sue gave her father a significant, disappointed glance, which
meant, "I won't get my present to day"; but he turned and said to
Hiram, "Dig the hole right there, two feet across, eighteen inches
deep." Then he started for the house. While not ready for suitors,
his impulse to bestow hospitality was prompt.
The alert Mr. Minturn had observed the girl's glance, and knew
that the farmer had gone to prepare his wife for a guest. He
determined not to remain unless assured of a welcome. "Come, Miss
Banning," he said, "we are at least friends, and should be frank.
How much misunderstanding and trouble would often be saved if
people would just speak their thought! This is your birthday--your
day. It should not be marred by any one. It would distress me
keenly if I were the one to spoil it. Why not believe me literally
and have your way absolutely about this day? I could come another
time. Now show that a country girl, at least, can speak her mind."
With an embarrassed little laugh she answered, "I'm half inclined
to take you at your word; but it would look so inhospitable."
"Bah for looks! The truth, please. By the way, though, you never
looked better than in that trim blue walking-suit."
"Old outgrown working-suit, you mean. How sincere you are!"
"Indeed I am. Well, I'm de trop; that much is plain. You will let
me come another day, won't you?"
"Yes, and I'll be frank too and tell you about this day. Father's
a busy man, and his spring work is beginning, but as my birthday-
present he has given me all his time and all Hiram's yonder. Well,
I learned in the city how trees improved a home; and I had planned
to spend this long day in setting out trees--planned it ever since
my return. So you see--"
"Of course I see and approve," cried Minturn. "I know now why I
had such a wild impulse to come out here to-day. Why, certainly.
Just fancy me a city tramp looking for work, and not praying I
won't find it, either. I'll work for my board. I know how to set
out trees. I can prove it, for I planted those thrifty fellows
growing about our house in town. Think how much more you'll
accomplish, with another man to help--one that you can order
around to your heart's content."
"A capital idea! and if a man doesn't work when a woman puts him
at it he isn't worth the powder--I won't waste time even in
original remarks. I'll promise you there will be double the number
of trees out by night. Let me take your father's spade and show
you how I can dig. Is this the place? If I don't catch up with
Hiram, you may send the tramp back to the city." And before she
could remonstrate, his coat was off and he at work.
Laughing, yet half in doubt, she watched him. The way he made the
earth fly was surprising. "Oh, come," she said after a few
moments, "you have shown your goodwill. A steam-engine could not
keep it up at that rate."
"Perhaps not; but I can. Before you engage me, I wish you to know
that I am equal to old Adam, and can dig."
"Engage you!" she thought with a little flutter of dismay. "I
could manage him with the help of town conventionalities; but how
will it be here? I suppose I can keep father and Hiram within
earshot, and if he is so bent on--well, call it a lark, since he
has referred to that previous bird, perhaps I might as well have a
lark too, seeing it's my birthday." Then she spoke. "Mr. Minturn!"
"Says he's looking for work and knows how to set out trees."
"And will work all day for a dinner," the tramp promptly added.
"If he can dig holes at that rate, Sue," said her father, catching
their spirit, "he's worth a dinner. But you're boss to-day; I'm
only one of the hands."
"I'm only another," said Minturn, touching his hat.
"Boss, am I? I'll soon find out. Mr. Minturn, come with me and don
a pair of overalls. You shan't put me to shame, wearing that
spick-and-span suit, neither shall you spoil it. Oh, you're in for
it now! You might have escaped, and come another day, when I could
have received you in state and driven you out behind father's
frisky bays, When you return to town with blistered hands and
aching bones, you will at least know better another time."
"I don't know any better this time, and just yearn for those
overalls."
"To the house, then, and see mother before you become a wreck."
Farmer Banning looked after him and shook his head. Hiram spoke
his employer's thought, "Dar ar gem'lin act like he gwine ter set
hisself out on dis farm."
Sue had often said, "I can never be remarkable for anything; but I
won't be commonplace." So she did not leave her guest in the
parlor while she rushed off for a whispered conference with her
mother. The well-bred simplicity of her manner, which often
stopped just short of brusqueness, was never more apparent than
now. "Mother!" she called from the parlor door.
The old lady gave a few final directions to her maid-of-all-work,
and then appeared.
"Mother, this is Mr. Minturn, one of my city friends, of whom I
have spoken to you. He is bent on helping me set out trees."
"Yes, Mrs. Banning, so bent that your daughter found that she
would have to employ her dog to get me off the place."
Now, it had so happened that in discussing with her mother the
young men whom she had met, Sue had said little about Mr. Minturn;
but that little was significant to the experienced matron. Words
had slipped out now and then which suggested that the girl did
more thinking than talking concerning him; and she always referred
to him in some light which she chose to regard as ridiculous, but
which had not seemed in the least absurd to the attentive
listener. When her husband, therefore, said that Mr. Minturn had
appeared on the scene, she felt that an era of portentous events
had begun. The trees to be set out would change the old place
greatly, but a primeval forest shading the door would be as
nothing compared with the vicissitude which a favored "beau" might
produce. But mothers are more unselfish than fathers, and are
their daughters' natural allies unless the suitor is
objectionable. Mrs. Banning was inclined to be hospitable on
general principles, meantime eager on her own account to see
something of this man, about whom she had presentiments. So she
said affably, "My daughter can keep her eye on the work which she
is so interested in, and yet give you most of her time.--Susan, I
will entertain Mr. Minturn while you change your dress."
She glanced at her guest dubiously, receiving for the moment the
impression that the course indicated by her mother was the correct
one. The resolute admirer knew well what a fiasco the day would be
should the conventionalities prevail, and so said promptly: "Mrs.
Banning, I appreciate your kind intentions, and I hope some day
you may have the chance to carry them out. To-day, as your husband
understands, I am a tramp from the city looking for work. I have
found it, and have been engaged.--Miss Banning, I shall hold you
inflexibly to our agreement--a pair of overalls and dinner."
Sue said a few words of explanation. Her mother laughed, but
urged, "Do go and change your dress."
"I protest!" cried Mr. Minturn. "The walking-suit and overalls go
together."
"Walking-suit, indeed!" repeated Sue, disdainfully. "But I shall
not change it. I will not soften one feature of the scrape you
have persisted in getting yourself into."
"Mr. Minturn," said the matron, with smiling positiveness, "Susie
is boss only out of doors; I am, in the house. There is a fresh-
made cup of coffee and some eggs on toast in the dining-room.
Having taken such an early start, you ought to have a lunch before
being put to work."
"Yes," added Sue, "and the out-door boss says you can't go to work
until at least the coffee is sipped."
"She's shrewd, isn't she, Mrs. Banning? She knows she will get
twice as much work out of me on the strength of that coffee.
Please get the overalls. I will not sip, but swallow the coffee,
unless it's scalding, so that no time may be lost. Miss Banning
must see all she had set her heart upon accomplished to-day, and a
great deal more."
The matron departed on her quest, and as she pulled out the
overalls, nodded her head significantly. "Things will be serious
sure enough if he accomplishes all he has set his heart on," she
muttered. "Well, he doesn't seem afraid to give us a chance to see
him. He certainly will look ridiculous in these overalls, but not
much more so than Sue in that old dress. I do wish she would
change it."
The girl had considered this point, but with characteristic
decision had thought: "No; he shall see us all on the plainest
side of our life. He always seemed a good deal of an exquisite in
town, and he lives in a handsome house. If to-day's experience at
the old farm disgusts him, so be it. My dress is clean and tidy,
if it is outgrown and darned; and mother is always neat, no matter
what she wears. I'm going through the day just as I planned; and
if he's too fine for us, now is the time to find it out. He may
have come just for a lark, and will laugh with his folks to-night
over the guy of a girl I appear; but I won't yield even to the
putting of a ribbon in my hair."
Mrs. Banning never permitted the serving of cold slops for coffee,
and Mr. Minturn had to sip the generous and fragrant beverage
slowly. Meanwhile, his thoughts were busy. "Bah! for the old
saying, 'Take the goods the gods send,'" he mused. "Go after your
goods and take your pick. I knew my head was level in coming out.
All is just as genuine as I supposed it would be--simple, honest,
homely. The girl isn't homely, though, but she's just as genuine
as all the rest, in that old dress which fits her like a glove. No
shams and disguises on this field-day of my life. And her mother!
A glance at her comfortable amplitude banished my one fear.
There's not a sharp angle about her. I was satisfied about Miss
Sue, but the term 'mother-in-law' suggests vague terrors to any
man until reassured.--Ah, Miss Banning," he said, "this coffee
would warm the heart of an anchorite. No wonder you are inspired
to fine things after drinking such nectar."
"Yes, mother is famous for her coffee. I know that's fine, and you
can praise it; but I'll not permit any ironical remarks concerning
myself."
"I wouldn't, if I were you, especially when you are mistress of
the situation. Still, I can't help having my opinion of you. Why
in the world didn't you choose as your present something stylish
from the city?"
"Something, I suppose you mean, in harmony with my very stylish
surroundings and present appearance."
"I didn't mean anything of the kind, and fancy you know it. Ah!
here are the overalls. Now deeds, not words. I'll leave my coat,
watch, cuffs, and all impedimenta with you, Mrs. Banning. Am I not
a spectacle to men and gods?" he added, drawing up the garment,
which ceased to be nether in that it reached almost to his
shoulders.
"Indeed you are," cried Sue, holding her side from laughing. Mrs.
Banning also vainly tried to repress her hilarity over the absurd
guy into which the nattily-dressed city man had transformed
himself.
"Come," he cried, "no frivolity! You shall at least say I kept my
word about the trees to-day." And they started at once for the
scene of action, Minturn obtaining on the way a shovel from the
tool-room.
"To think she's eighteen years old and got a beau!" muttered the
farmer, as he and Hiram started two new holes. They were dug and
others begun, yet the young people had not returned. "That's the
way with young men nowadays--'big cry, little wool.' I thought I
was going to have Sue around with me all day. Might as well get
used to it, I suppose. Eighteen! Her mother's wasn't much older
when--yes, hang it, there's always a when with these likely girls.
I'd just like to start in again on that day when I tossed her into
the haymow."
"Well, now, Sue! the idea of letting Mr. Minturn rig himself out
like that! There's no use of scaring the crows so long before
corn-planting." And the farmer's guffaw was quickly joined by
Hiram's broad "Yah! yah!"
She frowned a little as she said, "He doesn't look any worse than
I do."
"Come, Mr. Banning, Solomon in all his glory could not so take
your daughter's eye to-day as a goodly number of trees standing
where she wants them. I suggest that you loosen the soil with the
pickaxe, then I can throw it out rapidly. Try it."
The farmer did so, not only for Minturn, but for Hiram also. The
lightest part of the work thus fell to him. "We'll change about,"
he said, "when you get tired."
But Minturn did not get weary apparently, and under this new
division of the toil the number of holes grew apace.
"Sakes alive, Mr. Minturn!" ejaculated Mr. Banning, "one would
think you had been brought up on a farm."
"Or at ditch-digging," added the young man. "No; my profession is
to get people into hot water and then make them pay roundly to get
out. I'm a lawyer. Times have changed in cities. It's there you'll
find young men with muscle, if anywhere. Put your hand here, sir,
and you'll know whether Miss Banning made a bad bargain in hiring
me for the day."
"Why!" exclaimed the astonished farmer, "you have the muscle of a
blacksmith."
"Yes, sir; I could learn that trade in about a month."
"You don't grow muscle like that in a law-office?"
"No, indeed; nothing but bills grow there. A good fashion, if not
abused, has come in vogue, and young men develop their bodies as
well as brains. I belong to an athletic club in town, and could
take to pugilism should everything else fail."
"Is there any prospect of your coming to that?" Sue asked
mischievously.
"If we were out walking, and two or three rough fellows gave you
impudence--" He nodded significantly.
"What could you do against two or three? They'd close on you."
"A fellow taught to use his hands doesn't let men close on him."
"Yah, yah! reckon not," chuckled Hiram. One of the farm household
had evidently been won.
"It seems to me," remarked smiling Sue, "that I saw several young
men in town who appeared scarcely equal to carrying their canes."
"They are not men. They are neither fish, flesh, nor fowl, but the
beginning of the great downward curve of evolution. Men came up
from monkeys, it's said, you know, but science is in despair over
the final down-comes of dudes. They may evolute into
grasshoppers."
The farmer was shaken with mirth, and Sue could not help seeing
that he was having a good time. She, however, felt that no
tranquilly exciting day was before her, as she had anticipated.
What wouldn't that muscular fellow attempt before night? He
possessed a sort of vim and cheerful audacity which made her
tremble, "He is too confident," she thought, "and needs a lesson.
All this digging is like that of soldiers who soon mean to drop
their shovels. I don't propose to be carried by storm just when he
gets ready. He can have his lark, and that's all to-day. I want a
good deal of time to think before I surrender to him or any one
else."
During the remainder of the forenoon these musings prevented the
slightest trace of sentimentality from appearing in her face or
words. She had to admit mentally that Minturn gave her no occasion
for defensive tactics. He attended as strictly to business as did
Hiram, and she was allowed to come and go at will. At first she
merely ventured to the house, to "help mother," as she said. Then,
with growing confidence, she went here and there to select sites
for trees; but Minturn dug on no longer "like a steam-engine," yet
in an easy, steady, effective way that was a continual surprise to
the farmer.
"Well, Sue," said her father at last, "you and mother ought to
have an extra dinner; for Mr. Minturn certainly has earned one."
"I promised him only a dinner," she replied; "nothing was said
about its being extra."
"Quantity is all I'm thinking of," said Minturn. "I have the sauce
which will make it a feast."
"Beckon it's gwine on twelve," said Hiram, cocking his eye at the
sun. "Hadn't I better feed de critters?"
"Ah, old man! own up, now; you've got a backache," said Minturn.
"Drop work, all hands," cried Sue. "Mr. Minturn has a 'crik' also,
but he's too proud to own it. How you'll groan for this to-morrow,
sir!"
"If you take that view of the case, I may be under the necessity
of giving proof positive to the contrary by coming out to-morrow."
"You're not half through yet. The hardest part is to come."
"Oh, I know that," he replied; and he gave her such a humorously
appealing glance that she turned quickly toward the house to hide
a conscious flush.
The farmer showed him to the spare-room, in which he found his
belongings. Left to make his toilet, he muttered, "Ah, better and
better! This is not the regulation refrigerator into which guests
are put at farmhouses. All needed for solid comfort is here, even
to a slight fire in the air-tight. Now, isn't that rosy old lady a
jewel of a mother-in-law? She knows that a warm man shouldn't get
chilled just as well as if she had studied athletics. Miss Sue,
however, is a little chilly. She's on the fence yet. Jupiter! I am
tired. Oh, well, I don't believe I'll have seven years of this
kind of thing. You were right, though, old man, if your Rachel was
like mine. What's that rustle in the other room? She's dressing
for dinner. So must I; and I'm ready for it. If she has romantic
ideas about love and lost appetites, I'm a goner."
When he descended to the parlor, his old stylish self again, Sue
was there, robed in a gown which he had admired before, revealing
the fact to her by approving glances. But now he said, "You don't
look half so well as you did before."
"No matter how much was thrown, I don't think it would blind you,
Miss Banning."
The dining-room door across the hall opened, and the host and
hostess appeared. "Why, father and mother, how fine you look!"
"It would be strange indeed if we did not honor this day," said
Mrs. Banning. "I hope you have not so tired yourself, sir, that
you cannot enjoy your dinner. I could scarcely believe my eyes as
I watched you from the window."
"I am afraid I shall astonish you still more at the table. I am
simply ravenous."
"This is your chance," cried Sue. "You are now to be paid in the
coin you asked for."
Sue did remark to herself by the time they reached dessert and
coffee, "I need have no scruples in refusing a man with such an
appetite; he won't pine. He is a lawyer, sure enough. He is just
winning father and mother hand over hand."
Indeed, the bosom of good Mrs. Banning must have been environed
with steel not to have had throbs of goodwill toward one who
showed such hearty appreciation of her capital dinner. But Sue
became only the more resolved that she was not going to yield so
readily to this muscular suitor who was digging and eating his way
straight into the hearts of her ancestors, and she proposed to be
unusually elusive and alert during the afternoon. She was a little
surprised when he resumed his old tactics.
After drinking a second cup of coffee, he rose, and said, "As an
honest man, I have still a great deal to do after such a dinner."
"Well, it has just done me good to see you," said Mrs. Banning,
smiling genially over her old-fashioned coffee-pot. "I feel highly
complimented."
"I doubt whether I shall be equal to another such compliment
before the next birthday. I hope, Miss Susie, you have observed my
efforts to do honor to the occasion?"
"Oh," cried the girl, "I naturally supposed you were trying to get
even in your bargain."
"I hope to be about sundown. I'll get into those overalls at once,
and I trust you will put on your walking-suit."
"Yes, it will be a walking-suit for a short time. We must walk to
the wood-lot for the trees, unless you prefer to ride.--Father,
please tell Hiram to get the two-horse wagon ready."
When the old people were left alone, the farmer said, "Well,
mother, Sue has got a suitor, and if he don't suit her--" And then
his wit gave out.
"There, father, I never thought you'd come to that. It's well she
has, for you will soon have to be taken care of."
"He's got the muscle to do it. He shall have my law-business,
anyway."
"Thank the Lord, it isn't much; but that's not saying he shall
have Sue."
They all laughed till the tears came when Minturn again appeared
dressed for work; but he nonchalantly lighted a cigar and was
entirely at his ease.
Sue was armed with thick gloves and a pair of pruning-nippers.
Minturn threw a spade and pickaxe on his shoulder, and Mr.
Banning, whom Sue had warned threateningly "never to be far away,"
tramped at their side as they went up the lane. Apparently there
was no need of such precaution, for the young man seemed wholly
bent on getting up the trees, most of which she had selected and
marked during recent rambles. She helped now vigorously, pulling
on the young saplings as they loosened the roots, then trimming
them into shape. More than once, however, she detected glances,
and his thoughts were more flattering than she imagined. "What
vigor she has in that supple, rounded form! Her very touch ought
to put life into these trees; I know it would into me. How young
she looks in that comical old dress which barely reaches her
ankles! Yes, Hal Minturn; and remember, that trim little ankle can
put a firm foot down for or against you--so no blundering."
He began to be doubtful whether he would make his grand attack
that day, and finally decided against it, unless a very favorable
opportunity occurred, until her plan of birthday-work had been
carried out and he had fulfilled the obligation into which he had
entered in the morning. He labored on manfully, seconding all her
wishes, and taking much pains to get the young trees up with an
abundance of fibrous roots. At last his assiduity induced her to
relent a little, and she smiled sympathetically as she remarked,
"I hope you are enjoying yourself. Well, never mind; some other
day you will fare better."
"Why should I not enjoy myself?" he asked in well-feigned
surprise. "What condition of a good time is absent? Even an April
day has forgotten to be moody, and we are having unclouded, genial
sunshine. The air is delicious with springtime fragrance. Were
ever hemlocks so aromatic as these young fellows? They come out of
the ground so readily that one would think them aware of their
proud destiny. Of course I'm enjoying myself. Even the robins and
sparrows know it, and are singing as if possessed."
"Hadn't you better give up your law-office and turn farmer?"
"I'm not confident. That's where you are mistaken." And he gave
her such a direct, keen look that she suddenly found something to
do elsewhere.
"I declare!" she exclaimed mentally, "he seems to read my very
thoughts."
At last the wagon was loaded with trees enough to occupy the holes
which had been dug, and they started for the vicinity of the
farmhouse again. Mr. Banning had no match-making proclivities
where Sue was concerned, as may be well understood, and had never
been far off. Minturn, however, had appeared so single-minded in
his work, so innocent of all designs upon his daughter, that the
old man began to think that this day's performance was only a
tentative and preliminary skirmish, and that if there were danger
it lurked in the unknown future. He was therefore inclined to be
less vigilant, reasoning philosophically, "I suppose it's got to
come some time or other. It looks as if Sue might go a good deal
further than this young man and fare worse. But then she's only
eighteen, and he knows it. I guess he's got sense enough not to
plant his corn till the sun's higher. He can see with half an eye
that my little girl isn't ready to drop, like an over-ripe apple."
Thus mixing metaphors and many thoughts, he hurried ahead to open
the gate for Hiram.
"I'm in for it now," thought Sue, and she instinctively assumed an
indifferent expression and talked volubly of trees.
"Yes, Miss Banning," he said formally, "by the time your hair is
tinged with gray the results of this day's labor will be seen far
and wide. No passenger in the cars, no traveller in the valley,
but will turn his eyes admiringly in this direction."
"I wasn't thinking of travellers," she answered, "but of making an
attractive home in which I can grow old contentedly. Some day when
you have become a gray-haired and very dignified judge you may
come out and dine with us again. You can then smoke your cigar
under a tree which you helped to plant."
"Certainly, Miss Banning. With such a prospect, how could you
doubt that I was enjoying myself? What suggested the judge? My
present appearance?"
The incongruity of the idea with his absurd aspect and a certain
degree of nervousness set her off again, and she startled the
robins by a laugh as loud and clear as their wild notes.
"I don't care," she cried. "I've had a jolly birthday, and am
accomplishing all on which I had set my heart."
"Yes, and a great deal more, Miss Banning," he replied with a
formal bow. "In all your scheming you hadn't set your heart on my
coming out and--does modesty permit me to say it?--helping a
little."
"Now, you have helped wonderfully, and you must not think I don't
appreciate it."
She looked at him with a laughing and perplexed little frown, but
only said, "No irony, sir."
By this time they had joined her father and begun to set out the
row of hemlocks. To her surprise, Sue had found herself a little
disappointed that he had not availed himself of his one
opportunity to be at least "a bit friendly" as she phrased it. It
was mortifying to a girl to be expecting "something awkward to
meet" and nothing of the kind take place. "After all," she
thought, "perhaps he came out just for a lark, or, worse still, is
amusing himself at my expense; or he may have come on an exploring
expedition and plain old father and mother, and the plain little
farmhouse, have satisfied him. Well, the dinner wasn't very plain,
but he may have been laughing in his sleeve at our lack of style
in serving it. Then this old dress! I probably appear to him a
perfect guy." And she began to hate it, and devoted it to the rag-
bag the moment she could get it off.
This line of thought, once begun, seemed so rational that she
wondered it had not occurred to her before. "The idea of my being
so ridiculously on the defensive!" she thought. "No, it wasn't
ridiculous either, as far as my action went, for he can never say
I acted as if I wanted him to speak. My conceit in expecting him
to speak the moment he got a chance was absurd. He has begun to be
very polite and formal. That's always the way with men when they
want to back out of anything. He came out to look us over, and me
in particular; he made himself into a scarecrow just because I
looked like one, and now will go home and laugh it all over with
his city friends. Oh, why did he come and spoil my day? Even he
said it was my day, and he has done a mean thing in spoiling it.
Well, he may not carry as much self-complacency back to town as he
thinks he will. Such a cold-blooded spirit, too!--to come upon us
unawares in order to spy out everything, for fear he might get
taken in! You were very attentive and flattering in the city, sir,
but now you are disenchanted. Well, so am I."
Under the influence of this train of thought she grew more and
more silent. The sun was sinking westward in undimmed splendor,
but her face was clouded. The air was sweet, balmy, well adapted
to sentiment and the setting out of trees, but she was growing
frosty.
"Hiram," she said shortly, "you've got that oak crooked; let me
hold it." And thereafter she held the trees for the old colored
man as he filled in the earth around them.
Minturn appeared as oblivious as he was keenly observant. At first
the change in Sue puzzled and discouraged him; then, as his acute
mind sought her motives, a rosy light began to dawn upon him. "I
may be wrong," he thought, "but I'll take my chances in acting as
if I were right before I go home."
At last Hiram said: "Reckon I'll have to feed de critters again;"
and he slouched off.
Sue nipped at the young trees further and further away from the
young man who must "play spy before being lover." The spy helped
Mr. Banning set out the last tree. Meantime, the complacent farmer
had mused: "The little girl's safe for another while, anyhow.
Never saw her more offish; but things looked squally about dinner-
time. Then, she's only eighteen; time enough years hence." At last
he said affably, "I'll go in and hasten supper, for you've earned
it if ever a man did, Mr. Minturn. Then I'll drive you down to the
evening train." And he hurried away.
Sue's back was toward them, and she did not hear Minturn's step
until he was close beside her. "All through," he said; "every tree
out. I congratulate you; for rarely in this vale of tears are
plans and hopes crowned with better success."
"Oh, yes," she hastened to reply; "I am more than satisfied. I
hope that you are too."
"I have no reason to complain," he said. "You have stood by your
morning's bargain, as I have tried to."
"It was your own fault, Mr. Minturn, that it was so one-sided. But
I've no doubt you enjoy spicing your city life with a little lark
in the country."
"Itwas a one-sided bargain, and I have had the best of it."
"Perhaps you have," she admitted. "I think supper will be ready by
the time we are ready for it." And she turned toward the house.
Then she added, "You must be weary and anxious to get away."
"You were right; my bones do ache. And look at my hands. I know
you'll say they need washing; but count the blisters."
"I also said, Mr. Minturn, that you would know better next time.
So you see I was right then and am right now."
"I see no reason to think otherwise." In turning, she had faced a
young sugar-maple which he had aided her in planting early in the
afternoon. Now she snipped at it nervously with her pruning-
shears, for he would not budge, and she felt it scarcely polite to
leave him.
"Well," he resumed, after an instant, "it has a good look, hasn't
it, for a man to fulfil an obligation literally?"
"Certainly, Mr. Minturn," and there was a tremor in her tone; "but
you have done a hundred-fold more than I expected, and never were
under any obligations."
"You are as free now as you have been all day to do what you
please." And her shears were closing on the main stem of the
maple. He caught and stayed her hand. "I don't care!" she cried
almost passionately. "Come, let us go in and end this foolish
talk."
"But I do care," he replied, taking the shears from her, yet
retaining her hand in his strong grasp. "I helped you plant this
tree, and whenever you see it, whenever you care for it, when, in
time, you sit under its shade or wonder at its autumn hues, I wish
you to remember that I told you of my love beside it. Dear little
girl, do you think I am such a blind fool that I could spend this
long day with you at your home and not feel sorry that I must ever
go away? If I could, my very touch should turn the sap of this
maple into vinegar. To-day I've only tried to show how I can work
for you. I am eager to begin again, and for life."
At first Sue had tried to withdraw her hand, but its tenseness
relaxed. As he spoke, she turned her averted face slowly toward
him, and the rays of the setting sun flashed a deeper crimson into
her cheeks. Her honest eyes looked into his and were satisfied.
Then she suddenly gathered the young tree against her heart and
kissed the stem she had so nearly severed. "This maple is witness
to what you've said," she faltered. "Ah! but it will be a sugar-
maple in truth; and if petting will make it live--there, now!
behave! The idea! right out on this bare lawn! You must wait till
the screening evergreens grow before--Oh, you audacious--I haven't
promised anything."
"I promise everything. I'm engaged, and only taking my retaining-
fees."
"Mother," cried Farmer Banning at the dining-room window, "just
look yonder!"
"And do you mean to say, John Banning, that you didn't expect it?"
"Well, then, Mr. Hal, you must promise me one thing in dead
earnest. I'm the only chick father and mother have. You must be
very considerate of them, and let me give them as much of my time
as I can. This is all that I stipulate; but this I do."
"Sue," he said in mock solemnity, "the prospects are that you'll
be a widow."
So it would appear. They sat in the parlor as if waiting for the
world to come to an end--as indeed it had, one phase of it, to
them. Their little girl, in a sense, was theirs no longer.
"Father, mother," said Sue, demurely, "I must break some news to
you."
"It's broken already," began Mrs. Banning, putting her
handkerchief to her eyes.
Sue's glance renewed her reproaches for the scene on the lawn; but
Minturn went promptly forward, and throwing his arm around the
matron's plump shoulders, gave his first filial kiss.
"Come, mother," he said, "Sue has thought of you both; and I've
given her a big promise that I won't take any more of her away
than I can help. And you, sir," wringing the farmer's hand, "will
often see a city tramp here who will be glad to work for his
dinner. These overalls are my witness."
Then they became conscious of his absurd figure, and the scene
ended in laughter that was near akin to tears.
The maple lived, you may rest assured; and Sue's children said
there never was such sugar as the sap of that tree yielded.
All the hemlocks, oaks, and dogwood thrived as if conscious that
theirs had been no ordinary transplanting; while Minturn's half-
jesting prophecy concerning the travellers in the valley was amply
fulfilled.