Part 26 (2/2)

I raised my eyes in a quick flash toward the young lady, but she had turned to the piano, and her right hand was evoking a few low chords.

”Miss Warren can tell you,” I said, laughing, ”that when people have been struck by lightning they often don't think straight for a long time to come.”

”Crooked thinking sometimes happens without so vivid a cause,” Miss Warren responded, without looking around.

”Zillah's right in thinking that thee can never be a stranger in this home,” said Mrs. Yocomb warmly.

”Mrs. Yocomb, please don't think me insensible to the feelings which are so apparent. Should I live centuries, the belief that I had served you and yours after your kindness would still be my pleasantest thought. But you overrate what I have done: it was such obvious duty that any one would have done the same, or else his ears should have been cropped. It gives me a miserably mean feeling to have you thank me so for it. Please don't any more.”

”We forget,” said Miss Warren, advancing to the window, ”that Mr.

Morton is versed in tragedies, and has daily published more dreadful affairs.”

”Yes, and has written 'paragraphs' about them that no doubt seemed quite as lurid as the events themselves, suggesting that I gloated over disasters as so much material.”

”Mr. Morton, isn't it nearly as bad to tell fibs about one's self as about other people?”

”My depravity will be a continuous revelation to you, Miss Warren,” I replied.

With a low laugh she answered, ”I see you make no secret of it,” and she went back to her piano.

I had bowed cordially to Adah as I joined the family group, and had been conscious all the time of her rather peculiar and fixed scrutiny, which I imagined suggested a strong curiosity more than anything else.

”Well, Richard Morton,” said Mr. Yocomb, as if the words were irrepressible, ”thee knows a little of how we feel toward thee, if thee won't let us say as much as we would like. I love this old home in which I was born and have lived until this day. I could never build another home like it if every leaf on the farm were a bank-note. But I love the people who live here far more. Richard Morton, I know how it would all have ended, and thee knows. The house was on fire, and all within it were helpless and unconscious. I've seen it all to-day, and Reuben has told us. May the Lord bless thee for what them hast done for me and mine! I'm not going to burden thee with our grat.i.tude, but truth is truth, and we must speak out once for all, to be satisfied. Thee knows, too, that when a Friend has anything on his mind it's got to come; hasn't it, mother? Richard Morton, thee has saved us all from a horrible death.”

”Yes, Mr. Morton,” said Miss Warren, coming again to the window and laughing at my crimson face and embarra.s.sment, ”you _must_ face that truth--there's no escaping it. Forgive me, Mr. Yocomb, for laughing over so serious a subject, but Reuben and Mr. Morton amuse me greatly.

Mr. Morton already says that any tramp from New York would have done the same. By easy transition he will soon begin to insist that it was some other tramp. I now understand evolution.”

”Emily Warren, thee needn't laugh at Richard Morton,” said Reuben a little indignantly; ”thee owes more to him than to any other man living.”

She did not turn to the piano so quickly now but that I saw her face flush at the unlooked-for speech.

”That you are mistaken, Reuben, no one knows better than Miss Warren herself,” I replied irritably.

She turned quickly and said, in a low tone, ”You are right, Mr. Morton.

Friends do not keep a debit and credit account with each other. I shall not forget, however, that Reuben is right also, even though I may seem to sometimes,” and she left the room.

I was by the open window, and I do not think any one heard her words except Zillah, and she did not understand them.

I stood looking after her, forgetful of all else, when a hand laid upon my arm caused me to look around, and I met Adah's gaze, and it was as fixed and intent as that of a child.

”She doesn't owe thee any more than I do,” she said gravely. ”I wish I could do something for thee.”

”Why do you say 'thee' to me now?--you always said 'you' before,” I asked.

”I don't know. It seems as if I couldn't say 'you' to thee any more,”

and a delicate color stole into her face.

”We all feel as if thee were one of us now,” explained Mrs. Yocomb gently, ”and I trust that life will henceforth seem to Adah a more sacred thing, and worthy of more sacred uses.” And she pa.s.sed into the house to prepare for supper.

<script>