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CHAPTER X.
The two ladies paused at a safe distance,--there seemed to be nothing but boys astir--boys and nuts; and these last not dropping from the tree, but thrown from hand to hand (hand to head would be more correct) of the busy throng. Some picking up, some throwing stones to bring down, others at some flat stone 'shucking,' others still filling their baskets. And four boys out of five, cracking and eating--whatever else they were about. The gra.s.s, trodden down by the many feet, lay in prostrate shadow at the foot of the great tree; and the shadows of other trees fell and met in soft wavy outline. From the side of one old tree a family of grey squirrels looked out, to see the besiegers lay waste the surrounding country; in the top of another--a tall hickory, full clad with golden leaves, Mr. Linden sat--to view the same country himself; well knowing that he had given the boys full occupation for at least fifteen minutes. He was not very visible from below, so thickly did the gold leaves close him in; but Faith heard one of the boys call out,
"You Johnny Fax! if you throw stones in _that_ tree, you'll hit Mr.
Linden."
"Trust Johnny Fax for not never throwin' so high as _he_ is," said Joe Deacon.
"I don't _want_ to--" said Johnny Fax--"I don't want to fetch _him_ down."
Whereupon there was a general shout, and "Guess you'd better not, Johnny!"--"He might come, if you didn't just hit him," vociferated from various quarters.
"My!" Mrs. Derrick said, surveying the golden hickory, "how on earth did he ever get up?--And how _do_ you s'pose, Faith, he'll ever get down!"
Faith's low laugh was her only answer; but it would have told, to anybody who could thoroughly have translated it, Faith's mind on both points.
Apparently he was in no haste to come down--certainly meant to send the nuts first; for a sudden shower of hickory nuts and leaves swept away every boy from the tree near which Faith and her mother stood, and threw them all into its vortex. Drop, drop, the nuts came down, with their sweet patter upon the gra.s.s; while the golden leaves fell singly or in sprays, or floated off upon the calm air.
"Child," said Mrs. Derrick, "how pretty it is! I haven't seen such a sight since--since a long while ago," she added with a sobering face.
"I want to be there under the tree," said Faith looking on enviously.
"No mother--and I haven't seen it before in a long time, either. It's as pretty as it can be!"
"Run along then, child," said her mother,--"only take care of your eyes. Why shouldn't you? I don't want to pick up nuts myself, but I'll go down and pick you up."
Faith however kept away from the crowd under the hickory tree; and went peering about under some others where the ground was beaten and the branches had been, and soon found enough spoil to be hammering away with a stone on a rock like the rest. But she couldn't escape the boys so, for little runners came to her constantly. One brought a handful of nuts, another a better stone--while a third told her of 'lots' under the other tree; and Reuben Taylor was ready to crack or climb as she chose to direct.
"If you'll come down the other side, Miss. Faith," said Reuben, "down by the bank, you could see it all a great deal better."
Faith seized two or three nuts and jumped up, and Reuben led the way through the leaf-strewn gra.s.s to the other side of the mob. But mobs are uncertain things! No sooner was Faith seen approaching the hickory, though yet full three feet from the utmost bound of its shadow, than a sudden pause in the great business of the day was followed by such a tumultuous shout of "Three cheers for Miss Faith Derrick!--the prettiest girl in Pattaqua.s.set!"--that she was well nigh deafened. And promptly upon that, Joe Deacon stepped up to Reuben and whispered,
"_That_'ll fetch him down!"
Faith did not hear the words--she only heard Reuben's indignant,
"Joe Deacon! behave yourself. What makes you always leave your manners home? that big basket of yours would have held 'em all, easy."
"I didn't know but Sam might want 'em," replied the unabashed Joe, dashing back into the midst of his compardons, while Reuben at last reached the pretty look-out at the edge of the woods where Faith could see the whole meadow and its scattered trees. And having placed her there ran off again. Standing half hidden by the oaks and chestnuts, she could see the whole group cl.u.s.tering about the climber now, for he had come down from his high post.
"Boys," he said, "I am going back to the house to dinner. Any boy who prefers nuts to dinner may stay and pick them up."
A sudden recollection came over Faith that her fire was probably well down and coffee not in a state presentable. Taking a survey of the ground, and calculating that so large a company would want a little time to get under weigh, she slipped round to where her mother sat, and giving her a word, set off fleetly and skilfully under cover of some outstanding chestnuts across the fallow. If she had known it, Faith need not have shunned to shew her running, for prettier running could not be. She was soon hidden in the further woodland.
The rest of the party took it more leisurely, so their outrunner easily gained her point; and having put the fire in order stood at the door to watch the progress of the coming invasion. It looked enough like that.
For though excellent order of march had been kept for most of the way, the main body of the troops maintaining a proper position in the rear of their captain who was quietly escorting Mrs. Derrick over the meadows, no sooner did the whole band come in sight of the distant place of lunch baskets, than it became manifest for the hundred thousandth lime that liberty too long enjoyed leads to license.
Scattering a little from the direct line of march, the better to cover their purpose or evade any check thereto, as if by concert, first one and then another set off on a run,--sprang the orchard fence,--and by the time the mid-orchard was reached all of Mr. Linden's force with the exception of one or two of the very steadiest, were ahead of him and straining in full run, if not in full cry, for the now near-at-hand farmhouse quarry. Beyond all call or hindrance. Standing at the kitchen door, Faith watched their coming; but discerning beyond the runners the one or two figures that did not indeed 'bring up the rear' but that covered it, and supposing that the invaders' object was to storm the wagon in which the lunch baskets were hid, she stood her ground; till she perceived that the foremost of the band were making straight for the kitchen door, and all the rest in their order. Faith gave back a little and the whole horde poured in. The fire was in a brisk blaze; the table had nice white cups and naperies on it; the nose of the coffee-pot was steaming. It looked altogether an inviting place. Down went hats and caps on the floor, from some of the party, and the whole of them with flushed faces and open mouths took the survey.
"Ain't it jolly here!"
"I wonder if he'll let us take our dinner in here. There's lots o'
room."
"It's good shady."
"It's a long sight better under the trees."
"Coffee!--I'm blessed!"--said a fifth speaker bending over the fireplace; while a sixth began slyly to inspect what lay under Faith's napkins on the table.
"Charley," said Mr. Linden's quiet voice from the doorway, "did Miss Derrick desire you to uncover her dishes?"
The hand slipped from what it touched, as stealthily the boy's eye went to the face of the speaker, in the one place if not in the other 'to see what there might be.'
"I will bear witness that you have 'carried' the house," Mr. Linden went on,--"now I should like to see you carry the wagon. It will be a more useful enterprise than this. Only remember that one of the first duties of a surprise party is to go forth softly."
"Where will we carry the wagon to, sir?" inquired one of the party.
"As far from the house as you can," said Mr. Linden, with a little glance at Faith. "Come! be off!--great enterprises are never finished till they are begun."
"I'd like to begin dinner, anyhow," said one, catching up his cap and leading off.
As quick and more quick than it had been filled, the room was cleared; and laughing Faith watched the busy swarm as they poured towards their magazine. Then remembered her own and came back to offer it.
"You may as well rest, Mr. Linden," said Faith as she offered him a cup of coffee. "I'm sure _they_ are all comfortable. Besides, you particularly desired a fire and somebody in the house, you know."
"Miss Faith," he said, (taking the cup however) "I'm afraid your notions of duty are very slack! What sort of a captain would you make to a beleaguered city? I shall make you read the story of Catherine Dougla.s.s."
"Will you?" said Faith looking very pleased. "And what is 'beleaguered,' Mr. Linden? in the meantime."
"'Beleaguered' means, to be beset with a swarm of invaders who want to come in and ought to be kept out."
"I didn't know I ought to keep them out," said Faith laughing, "or I'd have done it."
Mr. Linden shook his head doubtfully. "I saw you give way!" he said,--"I doubt whether there was even a show of resistance. Now Catherine Dougla.s.s--But I must go. No, don't tempt me with apple pie--you have no idea of the pies in that wagon. Perhaps if I get successfully through them, I'll come back and dispose of yours. What are you reading to-day?--'Le Philosophe'?"
A little soberness came over Faith's smile as she shook her head and said no.
"I can't stay to ask a question upon that--but I'll ask you two by and by to pay for it."
And he went out to that little cl.u.s.ter of life that hung about the great wagon, making himself at once the centre of pleasure and interest and even fun, as Faith's eye and ear now and then informed her. It was pretty, the way they closed in about him--wild and untutored as they were,--pretty to see him meet them so easily on their own ground, yet always enticing them towards something better. Mrs Derrick thought so too, for she stood in the doorway and smiled very pleasantly.
"He's a real nice man, Faith," she said. "I don't wonder the boys like him."
Faith did not wonder at it, but she did not answer, though she too stood looking.
The ladies had finished their lunch, and Mr. Linden had perhaps _not_ finished his, for he came in again to take another cup of coffee while the boys were disposing of that very ragged piece of time which the end of a boys' feast invariably is. So much peace and quietness he gave himself, if he did not give himself a sandwich--of which I am not certain.