Part 11 (1/2)
'Yes, Richard.'
It was my turn to feel something squeeze my heart as in two hands. I'll never tell you how I felt! For I saw a thousand things at once. I saw what dad meant by my touching life. And I saw the meaning of the path I had chosen blindly. Before me, like a map, were spread their lives and mine, to-day and yesterday. I shook with the pa.s.sions that had created me. I vibrated with the sacrifices that had gone to make me possible.
For the first time in all my days I got a glimpse of what the young generation means to the elder. On my head had descended all their hopes.
I was the laden s.h.i.+p that carried their great desires. Mine to lift the torch for all of them--and thank G.o.d for the chance!
I struck my tears away and reached out blindly to grasp Seth Miles's bony hand. I guess he knew I meant it.
BURIED TREASURE
BY MAZO DE LA ROCHE
I
IT was Sat.u.r.day morning, and we three were together in Mrs.
Handsomebody's parlor--Angel, and The Seraph, and I.
No sooner had the front door closed upon the tall, angular figure of that lady, bearing her market basket, than we shut our books with a snap, ran on tiptoe to the top of the stairs, and, after a moment's breathless listening, cast our young forms on the smooth walnut banister, and glided gloriously to the bottom.
Regularly on a Sat.u.r.day morning Mrs. Handsomebody went to market, and with equal regularity we, her pupils, instantly cast off the yoke of her restraint, slid down the banisters, and entered the forbidden precincts of the Parlor.
On other week-days the shutters of this grim apartment were kept closed, and an inquisitive eye, applied to the keyhole, could just faintly discern the portrait in crayon of the late Mr. Handsomebody, presiding, like some whiskered ghost, over the revels of the stuffed birds in the gla.s.s case below him.
But on a Sat.u.r.day morning Mary Ellen swept and dusted there. The shutters were thrown open, and the thin-legged piano and the haircloth furniture were furbished up for the morrow.
Moreover, Mary Ellen liked our company. She had a spooky feeling about the parlor. Mr. Handsomebody gave her the creeps, she said; and once when she had turned her back she had heard one of the stuffed birds twitter. It was a gruesome thought.
When we bounded in on her, Mary Ellen was dragging the broom feebly across the gigantic green-and-red lilies of the carpet, her bare red arms moving like listless antennae. She could, when she willed, work vigorously and well; but no one knew when a heavy mood might seize her, and render her as useless as was compatible with retaining her situation.
'Och, byes!' she groaned, leaning on her broom. 'This spring weather do be makin' me as wake as a blind kitten! Sure, I feel this mornin' like as if I'd a stone settin' on my stomach, an' me head feels as light as thistledown. I wisht the missus'd fergit to come home an' I could take a day off--but there's no such luck for Mary Ellen!'
She made a few more pa.s.ses with her broom and then sighed.
'I think I'll soon be leavin' this place,' she said.
A vision of the house without the cheering presence of Mary Ellen rose blackly before us. We crowded round her.
'Now, see here,' said Angel masterfully, putting his arms about her stout waist. 'You know perfectly well that father's coming back from South America soon to make a home for us, and that you are to come and be our cook, and make apple-dumplings, and have all the followers you like.'
Now Angel knew whereof he spoke, for Mary Ellen's 'followers' were a bone of contention between her and her mistress.
'Aw, Master Angel,' she expostulated, 'what a tongue ye have in yer head to be sure! Followers, is it? Sure, they're the bane o' me life! Now git out o' the way o' the dust, all of yez, or I'll put a tin ear on ye!'
And she began to swing her broom vigorously.
We ran to the window and looked out; but no sooner had we looked out than we whistled with astonishment at what we saw.
But first, I must tell you that the street on which we lived ran east and west. On the corner to the west of Mrs. Handsomebody's house was the gray old cathedral; next to it was the Bishop's house, of gray stone also; then a pair of dingy, white brick houses exactly alike. In one of these we lived with Mrs. Handsomebody, and the other was the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Mortimer Pegg and their three servants.
To us they seemed very elegant, if somewhat uninteresting people. Mrs.