Part 57 (2/2)

The girl turned, resting the heel of her hoe on the earth, and both hands on the end of its handle. Bob saw a dark, oval countenance, with very red cheeks, very black eyes and hair, and an engaging flash of teeth. The eyes looked at him as frankly as a boy's, and the flash of teeth made him unaffectedly welcome.

”Is Mr. Thorne here?” asked Bob.

”Why, no,” replied the girl; ”but I'm Mr. Thorne's sister. Won't I do?”

She was leisurely laying aside her hoe, and drawing the fringed buckskin gauntlets from her hands. Bob stepped gallantly forward to relieve her of the implement.

”Do?” he echoed. ”Why, of course you'll do!”

She stopped and looked him full in the face, with an air of great amus.e.m.e.nt.

”Did you come to see Mr. Thorne on business?” she asked.

”No,” replied Bob; ”just ran over to see him.”

She laughed quietly.

”Then I'm afraid I won't do,” she said, ”for I must cook dinner. You see,” she explained, ”I'm Mr. Thorne's clerk, and if it were business, I might attend to it.”

Bob flushed to the ears. He was ordinarily a young man of sufficient self-possession, but this young woman's directness was disconcerting.

She surveyed his embarra.s.sment with approving eyes.

”You might finish those beans,” said she, offering the hoe. ”Of course, you must stay to dinner, and I must go light the fire.”

Bob finished the beans, leaned the hoe up against the house, and went around to the front. There he stopped in astonishment.

”Well, you have changed things!” he cried.

The stuffy little shed kitchen was no longer occupied. A floor had been laid between the bases of four huge trees, and walls enclosing three sides to the height of about eight feet had been erected. The affair had no roof. Inside these three walls were the stove, the kitchen table, the shelves and utensils of cooking. Miss Thorne, her sunbonnet laid aside from her glossy black braids, moved swiftly and easily here and there in this charming stage-set of a kitchen. About ten feet in front of it, on the pine needles, stood the dining table, set with white.

[Ill.u.s.tration: ”I beg pardon,” said he. The girl turned]

The girl nodded brightly to Bob.

”Finished?” she inquired. She pointed to the water pail: ”There's a useful task for willing hands.”

Bob filled the pail, and set it br.i.m.m.i.n.g on the section of cedar log which seemed to be its appointed resting place.

”Thank you,” said the girl. Bob leaned against the tree and watched her as she moved here and there about the varied business of cooking. Every few minutes she would stop and look upward through the cool shadows of the trees, like a bird drinking. At times she burst into s.n.a.t.c.hes of song, so brief as to be unrecognizable.

”Do you like sticks in your food?” she asked Bob, as though suddenly remembering his presence, ”and pine needles, and the husks of pine nuts, and other debris? because that's what the breezes and trees and naughty little squirrels are always raining down on me.”

”Why don't you have the men stretch you a canvas?” asked Bob.

”Well,” said the girl, stopping short, ”I have considered it. I no more than you like unexpected twigs in my dough. But you see I do like shadows and sunlight and upper air and breezes in my food. And you can't have one without the other. Did you get all the weeds out?”

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