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Going down the hill, Richard pondered. Was Eve right after all? Did a man who turned his face away from the rush of cities really lack red blood?
Stopping at the schoolhouse, he found teacher and scholars still gone.
But the door was unlocked and he went in. The low-ceiled room was charming, and the good taste of the teacher was evident in its decorations. There were branches of pine and cedar on the walls, a picture of Washington at one end with a flag draped over it, a pot of primroses in the south window.
There were several books on Anne's desk. Somewhat curiously he examined the t.i.tles. A shabby Browning, a modern poet or two, Chesterton, a volume of Pepys, the pile topped by a small black Bible. Moved by a sudden impulse, he opened the Bible. The leaves fell back at a marked pa.s.sage:
"_Let not your heart be troubled._"
He shut the book sharply. It was as if he had peered into the girl's soul. The red was in his cheeks as he turned away.
That night Nancy Brooks went with Richard to his room. On the threshold she stopped.
"I have given this room to you," she said, "because it was mine when I was a girl, and all my dreams have been shut in--waiting for you."
"Mother," he caught her hands in his, "you mustn't dream too much for me."
"Let me dream to-night;" she was looking up at him with her shining eyes; "to-morrow I shall be just a commonplace mother of a commonplace son; but to-night I am queen, and you are the crown prince on the eve of coronation. Oh, Hickory d.i.c.kory, I am such a happy mother."
Hickory d.i.c.kory! It was her child-name for him. She had not often used it of late. He felt that she would not often use it again. He was much moved by her dedication of him to his new life. He held her close. His doubts fled. He thought no more of Eve and of her flaming arguments.
Somewhere out in the snow her rose lay frozen and faded where he had dropped it.
And when he slept and dreamed it was of a little brown bird which sang in the snow, and the song that it sang seemed to leap from the pages of a Book, "_Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid._"
CHAPTER IV
_In Which Three Kings Come to Crossroads._
ANNE'S budget of news to her Great-uncle Rod swelled to unusual proportions in the week following the opening of Crossroads. She had so much to say to him, and there was no one else to whom she could speak with such freedom and frankness.
_By the Round Stove._
MY DEAR:
I am sending this as an antidote for my doleful Sunday screed. Now that the Lovely Ladies are gone, I am myself again!
I know that you are saying, "You should never have been anything but yourself." That's all very well for you who know Me-Myself, but these people know only the Outside-Person part of me, and the Outside-Person part is stiff and old-fashioned, and self-conscious. You see it has been so many months since I have hobn.o.bbed with Lilies-of-the-Field and with Solomons-in-all-their-Glory. And even when I did hobn.o.b with them it was for such a little time, and it ended so heart-breakingly. But I am not going to talk of that, or I shall weep and wail again, and that wouldn't be fair to you.
The last Old Gentleman left yesterday in the wake of the Lovely Ladies.
Did I tell you that Brinsley Tyson is a cousin of Mrs. Brooks? His twin brother, David, lives up the road. Brinsley is the city mouse and David is the country one. They are as different as you can possibly imagine.
Brinsley is fat and round and red, and David is thin and tall and pale.
Yet there is the "twin look" in their faces. The high noses and square chins. Neither of them wears a beard. None of the Old Gentlemen does. Why is it? Is h.o.a.ry-headed age a thing of the dark and distant past? Are you the only one left whose silver banner blows in the breeze? Are the grandfathers all trying to look like boys to match the grandmothers who try to look like girls?
Mrs. Brooks won't be that kind of grandmother. She is gentle and serene, and the years will touch her softly. I shall like her if she will let me.
But perhaps little school-teachers won't come within her line of vision.
You see I learned my lesson in those short months when I peeped into Paradise.
I wonder how it would seem to be a Lily-of-the-Field. I've never been one, have I? Even when I was a little girl I used to stand on a chair to wipe the dishes while you washed them. I felt very important to be helping mother, and you would talk about the dignity of labor--_you darling_, with the hot water wrinkling and reddening your lovely long fingers, which were made to paint masterpieces.
I am trying to pa.s.s on to my school children what you have given to me, and oh, Uncle Rod, when I speak to them I seem to be looking with you, straight through the kitchen window, at the sunset. We never knew that the kitchen sink was there, did we? We saw only the sunsets. And now because you are a darling dear, and because you are always seeing sunsets, I am sending you a verse or two which I have copied from a book which Geoffrey Fox left last night at my door.
"When Salomon sailed from Ophir, With Olliphants and gold, The kings went up, the kings went down, Trying to match King Salomon's crown; But Salomon sacked the sunset, Wherever his black ships rolled.
He rolled it up like a crimson cloth, And crammed it into his hold.
CHORUS: "Salomon sacked the sunset, Salomon sacked the sunset, He rolled it up like a crimson cloth, And crammed it into his hold.
"His masts were Lebanon cedars, His sheets were singing blue, But that was never the reason why He stuffed his hold with the sunset sky!
The kings could cut their cedars, And sail from Ophir, too; But Salomon packed his heart with dreams, _And all the dreams were true_."
Now join in the chorus, you old dear--and I'll think that I am a little girl again--
"The kings could cut their cedars, Cut their Lebanon cedars; But Salomon packed his heart with dreams, _And all_ _the dreams_ _were true_!"
_In the Schoolroom._
I told you that Geoffrey Fox left a book for me to read. I told you that he wore eye-gla.s.ses on a black ribbon, that he is writing a novel, and that I don't like him. Well, he went into Baltimore this morning to get his belongings, and when he comes back he will stay until his book is finished. It will be interesting to be under the same roof with a story.
All the shadows and corners will seem full of it. The house will speak to him, and the people in it, though none of the rest of us will hear the voices, and the wind will speak and the leaping flames in the fireplace, and the sun and the moon--and when the snow comes it will whisper secrets in his ear and presently it will be snowing all through the pages.
It snowed this morning, and from my desk I can see young Dr. Brooks shoveling a path from his front porch. He and his mother came to Crossroads yesterday, and they have been very busy getting settled. They have a colored maid, Milly, but no man, and young Richard does all of the outside work. I think I shall like him. Don't you remember how as a little girl I always adored the Lion-hearted king? I always think of him when I see Dr. Brooks. He isn't handsome, but he is broad-shouldered and big and blond. I haven't had but one chance to speak to him since he and his mother left Bower's. Perhaps I shan't have many chances to speak to him. But a cat may look at a king!
I am all alone in the schoolroom. The children went an hour ago. Eric and Beulah are to call for me on their way home from town. They took Peggy with them. Did I tell you that Eric is falling in love with Beulah? I am not sure whether it is the best thing for him, but I am sure it is for her. She is very happy, and blushes when he looks at her. He is finer than she, and bigger, mentally and spiritually. He is crude, but he will grow as so many American men do grow--and there are dreams in his clear blue eyes. And, after all, it is the dreams that count--as Salomon discovered.
Yet it may be that Eric will bring Beulah up to his level. She is an honest little thing and good and loving. Her life is narrow, and she thinks narrow thoughts. But he is wise and kind, and already I can see that she is trying to keep step with him--which is as it should be.
I like to think that father and mother kept step through all the years.
She was his equal, his comrade; she marched by his side with her head up fitting her two short steps to his long stride.
King Richard has just waved to me. I stood up to see the sunset--a band of gold with black above, and he waved, and started to run across the road. Then somebody called him from the house. Perhaps it was the telephone and his first patient. If I am ever ill, I should like to have a Lion-hearted Doctor--wouldn't you?
_At the Sign of the Lantern._
I am with Diogenes in the stable, with the lantern making deep shadows, and the loft steps for a desk. Eric and Beulah came for me before I had asked a question--an important question--so I am finishing my letter here, while Eric puts Daisy in her stall, and then he will post it for me.
Diogenes has had his corn, and is as happy as Brinsley Tyson after a good dinner. Oh, such eating and drinking! How these old men love it! And you with your bread and milk and your book propped up against the lamp, or your handful of raisins and your book under a tree!
But I must scribble fast and ask my question. It isn't easy to ask. So I'll put it in sections:
Do you ever see Jimmie--Ford?