Part 40 (2/2)

At Widewood that same hour there was deep silence. Since the first of the year the only hands left on the place were a decrepit old negro and wife, whom even he p.r.o.nounced ”wuthless,” quartered beyond the stable-yard's farther fence. For some days this ”lady” had been Widewood's only cook, owing to the fact that Mrs. March's servant, having a few nights before seen a man prowling about the place, had left in such a panic as almost to forget her wages, and quite omitting to leave behind her several articles of the Widewood was.h.i.+ng.

Within the house John March sat reading newspapers. His healthy legs were crossed toward the flickering hearth, and his strong shoulders touched the centre-table lamp. The new batten shutters excluded the beautiful outer night. His mother, to whom the mail had brought nothing, was sitting in deep shadow, her limp form and her regular supply of disapproving questions alike exhausted. Her slender elbow slipped now and then from the arm of her rocking-chair, and unconscious gleams of incredulity and shades of grief still alternated across her face with every wrinkling effort of her brows to hold up her eyelids.

John was not so absorbed as he seemed. He felt both the silence and the closed shutters drearily, and was not especially cheered by the following irrelevant query in the paragraph before him:

”Who--having restored the sight of his jailer's blind daughter and converted her father from idolatry--was on this day beheaded?”

Yet here was a chance to be pleasant at the expense of a man quite too dead to mind.

”Mother,” he began, so abruptly that Mrs. March started with a violent shudder, ”this is February fourteenth. Did any ancient person of your acquaintance lose his head to-day?” He turned a facetious glance that changed in an instant to surprise. His mother had straightened up with bitter indignation, but she softened to an agony of reproach as she cried:

”John!”

”Why, mother, what?”

”Ah! John! John!” She gazed at him tearfully. ”Is this what you've joined the church for? To cloak such----”

”My dear mother! I was simply trying to joke away the dismals! Why,”--he smiled persuasively--”if you only knew what a hard job it is.” But the ludicrousness of her misconstruction took him off his guard, and in spite of the grimmest endeavor to prevent it, his smile increased and he stopped to keep from laughing.

Mrs. March rose, eloquent with unspoken resentment, and started from the room. At the door she cast back the blush of a martyr's forgiveness, and the next instant was in her son's big right arm. His words were broken with laughter.

”My dear, pretty little mother!” She struggled alarmedly, but he held her fast. ”Why, I know the day is nothing to you, dear, less than nothing. I know perfectly well that I am your own and only valentine.

Ain't I? Because you're mine now, you know, since I've turned over this new leaf.”

The mother averted her face. ”O my son, I'm so unused to loving words, they only frighten me.”

But John spoke on with deepening emotion. ”Yes, mother, I'm going to be your valentine, and yours only, as I've never been or thought of being in all my life before. I'm going to try my very best! You'll help me, won't you, little valentine mother?”

She lifted a glance of mournful derision. ”Valentine me no valentines.

You but increase my heart-loneliness. Ah! my self-deluded boy, your fickle pledges only mean, to my sad experience, that you have made your own will everything, and my wish nothing. Valentine me no valentines, let me go.”

The young man turned abruptly and strode back to his newspapers. But he was too full of bitterness to read. He heard his mother's soft progress upstairs, and her slow step in the unlighted room overhead. It ceased.

She must have sat down in the dark. A few moments pa.s.sed. Then it sounded again, but so strange and hurried that he started up, and as he did so the cry came, frantic with alarm, from the upper hall, and then from the head of the stairs:

”John! John!”

He was already bounding up them. Mrs. March stood at the top, pale and trembling. ”A man!” she cried, ”with a gun! I saw him down in the moonlight under my window! I saw him! he's got a gun!”

She was deaf and blind to her son's beseechings to be quiet. He caught her hands in his; they were icy. He led her by gentle force down-stairs and back to her sitting-room seat.

”Why, that's all right, mother; that's what you made me put the shutters on down here for. If you'd just come and told me quietly, why, I might a' got him from your window. Did you see him?”

”I don't know,” she moaned. ”He had a gun. I saw one end of it.”

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