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"I know that I don't like to have you say such things to me."
"Why not?"
"I am not sure that you mean them."
"But I do mean them," eagerly.
"Perhaps," stiffly, "but we won't talk about it. I must go up to Peggy."
Peter Bower was with Peggy. He was a round and red-faced Peter with the kindest heart in the world. And Peggy was the apple of his eye.
"Do you think she is better, Miss Anne?"
"Indeed I do. And now you go and get some sleep, Mr. Bower. I'll stay with her until four, and then I'll wake Beulah."
He left her with the daily paper and a new magazine, and with the light shaded, Anne sat down to read. Peggy was sleeping soundly with both arms around the plush p.u.s.s.y which Geoffrey had given her. It was a most lifelike p.u.s.s.y, gray-striped with green gla.s.s eyes and with a little red mouth that opened and mewed when you pulled a string. Hung by a ribbon around the p.u.s.s.y cat's neck was a little bra.s.s bell. As the child stirred in her sleep the little bell tinkled. There was no sound except the sighing of the wind. All the house was still.
The paper was full of news of the great war. Anne read it carefully, and the articles on the same subject in the magazine. She felt that she must know as much as possible, so that she might speak to her children intelligently of the great conflict. Of Belgium and England, of France and Germany. She must be fair, with all those clear eyes focussed upon her. She must, indeed, attempt a sort of neutrality. But how could she be neutral, with her soul burning candles on the altar of the allies?
As she read on and on in the silence of the night, there came to her the thought of the dead on the field of battle. What of those shining souls?
What happened after men went out into the Great Beyond? Hun and Norman, Saxon and Slav, among the shadows were they all at Peace?
Again the child stirred and the little bell tinkled. It seemed to Anne that the bell and the staring eyes were symbolic. The gay world played its foolish music and looked with unseeing eyes upon murder and madness.
If little Peggy had lain there dead, the little bell would still have tinkled, the wide green eyes would still have stared.
But Peggy, thank G.o.d, was alive. Her face, like old ivory against the whiteness of her pillow, showed the ravages of illness, but the doctor had said she was out of danger.
The child stirred and spoke. "Anne," she whispered, "tell me about the bears."
Anne knelt beside the bed. "We must be very quiet," she said. "I don't want to wake Beulah."
So very softly she told the story. Of the Daddy Bear and the Mother Bear and the Baby Bear; of the little House in the Woods; of Goldilocks, the three bowls of soup, the three chairs, the three beds----
In the midst of it all Peggy sat up. "I want a bowl of soup like the little bear."
"But, darling, you've had your lovely supper."
"I don't care." Peggy's lip quivered. "I'm just starved, and I can't wait until I have my breakfast."
"Let me tell you the rest of the story."
"No. I don't want to hear it. I want a bowl of soup like the little bear's."
"Maybe it wasn't nice soup, Peggy."
"But you _said_ it was. You said that the Mother Bear made it out of the corn from the farmer's field, and the c.o.c.k that the fox brought, and she seasoned it with herbs that she found at the edge of the forest. You said yourself it was _dee-licious_ soup, Miss Anne."
She began to cry weakly.
"Dearie, don't. If I go down into the kitchen and warm some broth will you keep very still?"
"Yes. Only I don't want just broth. I want soup like the little bear had."
"Peggy, I am not a fairy G.o.dmother. I can't wave my wand and get things in the middle of the night."
"Well, anyhow, you can put it in a blue bowl, you _said_ the little bear had his in a blue bowl, and you said he had ten crackers in it. I want ten crackers----"
The kitchen was warm and shadowy, with the light of a kerosene lamp above the cook-stove. Anne flitted about noiselessly, finding a little saucepan, finding a little blue bowl, breaking one cracker into ten bits to satisfy the insistent Peggy, stirring the bubbling broth with a spoon as she bent above it.
And as she stirred, she was thinking of Geoffrey Fox, not as she had thought of Richard, with pulses throbbing and heart fluttering, but calmly; of his book and of the little bust of Napoleon, and of the things that she had been reading about the war.
She poured the soup out of the saucepan, and set it steaming on a low tray. Then quietly she ascended the stairs. Geoffrey's door was wide open and his room was empty, but through the dimness of the long hall she discerned his figure, outlined against a wide window at the end. Back of him the world under the light of the waning moon showed black and white like a great wash drawing.
He turned as she came toward him. "I heard you go down," he said. "I've been writing all night--and I've written--perfect rot." His hands went out in a despairing gesture.
Composed and quiet in her crisp linen, she looked up at him. "Write about the war," she said; "take three soldiers,--French, German and English.
Make their hearts hot with hatred, and then--let them lie wounded together on the field of battle in the darkness of the night--with death ahead--and let each one tell his story--let them be drawn together by the knowledge of a common lot--a common destiny----"
"What made you think of that?" he demanded.
"Peggy's p.u.s.s.y cat." She told him of the staring eyes and the tinkling bell. "But I mustn't stay. Peggy is waiting for her soup."
He gazed at her with admiration. "How do you do it?"
"Do what?"
"Dictate a heaven-born plot to me in one breath, and speak of Peggy's soup in the next. You are like Werther's Charlotte."
"I am like myself. And we mustn't stay here talking. It is time we were both in bed. I am going to wake Beulah when I have fed Peggy."
He made a motion of salute. "The princess serves," he said, laughing.
But as she pa.s.sed on, calm and cool and collected, carrying the tray before her like the famous Chocolate lady on the backs of magazines, the laugh died on his lips. She was not to be laughed at, this little Anne Warfield, who held her head so high!
CHAPTER VII
_In Which Geoffrey Writes of Soldiers and Their Souls._
EVE CHESLEY writing from New York was still in a state of rebellion.
"And now they all have the _measles_. Richard, it needed only your letter to let me know what you have done to yourself. When I think of you, tearing around the country on your old white horse, with your ears tied up--I am sure you tie up your ears--it is a perfect nightmare. Oh, d.i.c.ky Boy, and you might be here specializing on appendicitis or something equally reasonable and modern. I feel as if the world were upside down.
Do children in New York ever have the measles? Somehow I never hear of it. It seems to me almost archaic--like mumps. n.o.body in society ever has the mumps, or if they do, they keep it a dead secret, like a family skeleton, or a hard-working grandfather.
"Your letters are so short, and they don't tell me what you do with your evenings. Don't you miss us? Don't you miss me? And our good times? And the golden lights of the city? Winifred Ames wants you for a dinner dance on the twentieth. Can't you turn the measley kiddies over to some one else and come? Say 'yes,' d.i.c.ky, dear. Oh, you musn't be just a country doctor. You were born for bigger things, and some day you will see it and be sorry."