Part 15 (1/2)

”Beautiful,” she said, trying to see the knitting.

”Aren't you glad I brought them?” still anxiously inquiring.

”Very”--she pushed them away. ”You're soaked. Take off your things.”

And little Bob, still holding his flowers, was stripped to his skin.

”Now lie down,” said his mother. ”I'm turning the heel.”

He obeyed, but turbulently, and with much pretense, making believe to fall and rolling on the sacks, a naked cherub writhing with laughter.

Finally, his mother had to stop her heel-turning to seize him by one leg, drag him toward her, roll him up in the end of the blanket and with a silencing slap say, ”There, lie still.” This quieted him. He lay subdued save for a waving hand in which the flowers were still imbedded and with which he made pa.s.ses at the two girls, murmuring with the thick utterance of rising sleep ”Bu'full flowers.” And in a moment he slept, curled against his mother, his face angelic beneath the wet hair.

When Susan came to the giving of her personal data--the few facts necessary to locate and introduce her--her engagement was the item of most interest. A love story even on the plains, with the rain dribbling in through the cracks of the canvas, possessed the old, deathless charm. The doctor and his philanthropies, on which she would have liked to dilate, were given the perfunctory attention that politeness demanded. By himself the good man is dull, he has to have a woman on his arm to carry weight. David, the lover, and Susan, the object of his love, were the hero and heroine of the story. Even the married woman forgot the turning of the heel and fastened her mild gaze on the young girl.

”And such a handsome fellow,” she said. ”I said to Lucy--she'll tell you if I didn't--that there wasn't a man to compare with him in our train. And so gallant and polite. Last night, when I was heating the water to wash the children, he carried the pails for me. None of the men with us do that. They'd never think of offering to carry our buckets.”

Her husband who had appeared to be asleep said:

”Why should they?” and then shouted ”Gee Haw” and made a futile kick toward the nearest ox.

n.o.body paid any attention to him and Lucy said:

”Yes, he's very fine looking. And you'd never met till you started on the trail? Isn't that romantic?”

Susan was gratified. To hear David thus commended by other women increased his value. If it did not make her love him more, it made her feel the pride of owners.h.i.+p in a desirable possession. There was complacence in her voice as she cited his other gifts.

”He's very learned. He's read all kinds of books. My father says it's wonderful how much he's read. And he can recite poetry, verses and verses, Byron and Milton and Shakespeare. He often recites to me when we're riding together.”

This acquirement of the lover's did not elicit any enthusiasm from Bella.

”Well, did you ever!” she murmured absently, counting st.i.tches under her breath and then pulling a needle out of the heel, ”Reciting poetry on horseback!”

But it impressed Lucy, who, still in the virgin state with fancy free to range, was evidently inclined to romance:

”When you have a little log house in California and live in it with him he'll recite poetry to you in the evening after the work's done. Won't that be lovely?”

Susan made no response. Instead she swallowed silently, looking out on the rain. The picture of herself and David, alone in a log cabin somewhere on the other side of the world, caused a sudden return of yesterday's dejection. It rushed back upon her in a flood under which her heart declined into bottomless depths. She felt as if actually sinking into some dark abyss of loneliness and that she must clutch at her father and Daddy John to stay her fall.

”We won't be alone,” with a note of protest making her voice plaintive.

”My father and Daddy John will be there. I couldn't be separated from them. I'd never get over missing them. They've been with me always.”

Bella did not notice the tone, or maybe saw beyond it.

”You won't miss them when you're married,” she said with her benign content. ”Your husband will be enough.”

Lucy, with romance instead of a husband, agreed to this, and arranged the programme for the future as she would have had it:

”They'll probably live near you in tents. And you'll see them often; ride over every few days. But you'll want your own log house just for yourselves.”

This time Susan did not answer, for she was afraid to trust her voice.