Part 28 (1/2)
”You've been busier than we.”
”Mighty poor sign of industry. I didn't come out for game, but a man's sure to be sorry if he goes into the woods without a gun. I mean, of course, Miss Garnet, if he's alone!”
Barbara answered with a smile and a wicked drawl, ”You've been enjoying both ad-van-tag-es. I used to wish I was a squirrel, they're so en-er-get-ic.” She added that she would be satisfied now to remain as she was if she could only get home safe. She reckoned they could find the road if Mr. March would tell them how.
John smiled seriously. ”Better let me show you.” He moved down the middle of the stream. ”This used to be the right road, long time ago.
You know, Mr. Fair”--his voice rang in the trees, ”our mountain roads just take the bed of the nearest creek whenever they can. Our people are not a very business people. But that's because they've got the rare virtue of contentment. Now--”
”I don't think they're too contented, Mr. March,” said Barbara, defensively. ”Why, Mr. Fair, how much this creek and road are like ours at Rosemont!”
”It's the same creek,” called March.
By and by they left it and rode abreast through woods. There was much badinage, in which Barbara took the aggressive, with frequent hints at Fannie that gave John delicious pain and convinced him that Miss Garnet was, after all, a fine girl. Fair became so quiet that John asked him two or three questions.
”O no!” laughed Fair, he could stay but a day or two. He said he had come this time from ”quite a good deal” of a stay in Texas and Mexico, and his father had written him that he was needed at home. ”Which is absurd, you know,” he added to Barbara.
”Per-fect-ly,” she said. But he would not skirmish.
”Yes,” he replied. ”But all the same I have to go. I'm sorry.”
”We're sorry at Rosemont.”
”I shall be sorry at Widewood,” echoed March.
”I regret it the more,” responded Fair, ”from having seen Widewood so much and yet so little. Miss Garnet believes in a great future for Widewood. It was in trying to see something of it that we lost----”
But Barbara protested. ”Mr. Fair, we rode hap-hazard! We simply chanced that way! What should I know, or care, about lands? You're confusing me with pop-a! Which is doub-ly ab-surd!”
”Most a.s.suredly!” laughed the young men.
”You know, Mr. March, pop-a's so proud of the Widewood tract that I believe, positively, he's jealous of anyone's seeing it without him for a guide. You'd think it held the key of all our fates.”
”Which is triply absurd!”
”Superlatively!” drawled Barbara, and laughing was easy. They came out upon the pike as March was saying to Fair:
”I'd like to show you my lands; they're the key of my fate, anyhow.”
”They're only the lock,” said Barbara, musingly. ”The key is--elsewhere.”
John laughed. He thought her witty, and continued with her, though the rest of the way to Rosemont was short and plain. Presently she turned upon the two hors.e.m.e.n a pair of unaggressive but invincible eyes, saying, languorously,
”Mr. March, I want you to show Widewood to Mr. Fair--to-morrow. Pop-a's been talking about showing it to him, but I want him to see it with just you alone.”
To Fair there always seemed a reserve of merriment behind Miss Garnet's gravity, and a reserve of gravity behind her brightest gayety. This was one thing that had drawn him back to Rosemont. Her ripples never hid her depths, yet she was never too deep to ripple. I give his impressions for what they may be worth. He did not formulate them; he merely consented to stay a day longer. A half-moon was growing silvery when John said good-by at the gate of the campus.
”Now, in the morning, Mr. Fair, I'll meet you somewhere between here and the pike. I wish I could say you'd meet my mother, but she's in poor health--been so ever since the war.”