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As he looked he smiled. It was a very friendly smile and the sh.e.l.l-pink deepened.
A touch on his arm interrupted--it seems there was something to interrupt.
"Have I taken a liberty? I called you David."
David turned the remnant of the friendly smile upon Jonathan Radbourne.
"Of course not. I hope you will do that again."
Jonathan beamed. "Thank you. And now, shall we start?"
An hour later they were bowling swiftly along, up hill and down dale, over a smooth country road. Fields of young corn sped by, stretches of yellowing grain that rippled and tossed under the sweep of the breeze, fragrant wood-lots whose shadow was a caress. The host of the occasion sat with the chauffeur, turning often to point out to his guests some beauty of landscape they already had seen, commenting tritely, obvious as always in his effort to be entertaining, happy in the belief that he was succeeding. And he was succeeding; such is the uplifting power of the spirit of true friendliness, even when dwelling in a d.i.n.ky little man with whiskers absurdly swept by the rushing wind.
The guests were silent for the most part when his comments did not call for answer. In the girl--she seemed very girlish that afternoon--the sense of holiday and adventure continued, her eyes shone softly and the pretty color did not fade. This despite her seatmate's evident wish to be left to his thoughts. She had no wish to break through his reserve.
But she wondered, a bit gravely, what he was thinking, and she did wish she could make things brighter for him, the superior young man who for all his nice courtesy and friendly smiles held himself so aloof and was so evidently subject to the blues. She thought she knew what troubled him. She could understand that. She was not always so contented as her quiet cheery manner proclaimed; sometimes, in the middle of the night, she awoke crying for the gift that had been taken from her.
His thoughts were less somber than from his long face she supposed. He, too, had his pleasurable sense--of respite. For once, though idle, neither loneliness nor dejection oppressed him. It was good to lean back lazily in the chariot of the rich, dreamily watching the ever-shifting picture, soaking in the sunshine. It was good, too--but in no-wise alarming--to have beside him this pretty girl who knew when not to talk and in whose occasional smile was a new subtle flattery. It was even good to be with that odd fish Jonathan Radbourne, for whose company, in a more fortunate case, he would have had no desire. He was glad Radbourne had arranged this little party.
They came, at the end of a long climb, to a ridge lifted high above those they had crossed. On its crest, at a word from Radbourne, the chauffeur brought his machine to a stop.
Behind them lay the rough broken country of the foot-hills through which they had pa.s.sed. And before--the mountains! To them the eyes of the holiday-takers turned and clung.
Range after range they rose, like mighty billows, mounting higher until the tallest, dimly outlined in a thickening purplish haze, cut the sky, a rampart vision could not pierce. They seemed alive, those hills, the thick untouched growth stirring ceaselessly under the wind, a restless sea of sunlit green with flashes of white from laurel thickets and soft glintings where satiny oak-leaves caught and tossed back the slanting rays. And they sang.
"Listen!" Jonathan commanded, and the chauffeur shut off the panting motor.
They listened--all but the chauffeur, that philistine, who opened the hood and gingerly felt of the heated engine. And the voice of the wind, wandering through the forest, came to them. David heard a long wondering sigh from the girl beside him.
Jonathan, too, heard and turned quickly.
"That is real music, isn't it?"
She nodded.
"Is it worth the long ride?"
"The ride was good enough in itself, but this--! I never saw mountains before and I--oh, there aren't words for it."
"I know," Jonathan nodded, and the little twinkling eyes, even through the hideous goggles, seemed very tender as they rested on her. "'I will lift mine eyes unto the hills.' The old fellow who sang that knew what he was talking about, didn't he? If you've happened to mislay a faith anywhere, the mountains are a good place to look for it."
"Even faith in one's self?"
"The easiest to lose and the hardest to recover? Yes, even that.
Particularly that. To any one needing it, I'd prescribe a month over yonder. I've never been able to do that, but often, when the world seems a little--gray, I ride up here for an hour. It does me good."
The philistine yawned and turned his pa.s.sengers' thoughts to a more interesting matter.
"See there." He pointed to a thin low-lying cloud on the western horizon. "That's the city. 'Most sixty miles. Done it in two hours, up-hill more'n half the way, too."
"That's very good time, isn't it?" said Jonathan politely.
"Humph!" The philistine's disdain was marked. "We'll do better'n that goin' back. That is," he hinted, "if the dark don't catch us."
It seemed best, on such sound considerations as a waiting dinner, to take the hint. The big car panted once more, moved slowly along the ridge, then dipped sharply as it took the down grade. They coasted, gathering headway with each turn of the wheels. The girl, half turned, wistfully watched the mountains until the ridge rose to shut off the last crest from her sight. Then she settled back in the seat as though she were very tired.
David saw and on an impulse leaned toward her.
"Do you mean," he asked in a voice so low that the others could not hear, "that you lose faith in yourself?"
"It's the same thing, I suppose. I lose courage sometimes. I get tired of trying to like to do things I never really can like."
"I understand," he said gently. "Mr. Radbourne told me about you. Will you let me say, I am very sorry?"
She started, as if she had forgotten herself, and flushed deeply in her contrition.
"There! I'm perfectly nonsensical, letting myself be a cry-baby just when I'd intended-- It isn't my habit at all. There's nothing really to be sorry for. If you give any work your best and put your heart into it, you'll get--",
"A great deal of happiness out of it," David finished dryly. "Exactly!
I recognize the formula. Also its author. I think you're just whistling to keep up your courage now."
"But that isn't a bad thing at all to do. Why--" She turned to face him, with a little gasp for her daring. "Why don't you try it?"
It was his turn to grow red. "You think I'd be more cheerful company?"
"I think," she said, with a pretty gravity, "you make too much of being a--lame duck. And I think that isn't like you."
"How do you know whether it's like me or not?"
"That," she laughed to cover her discomfiture, "is an embarra.s.sing question. But I do think it."
"At least, I'm not such a grouch as I sound. And I know how to be thankful when I find good--friends?"
She nodded emphatically, and indicated their host. "Two of us."
"I'll hold you to that. And," he continued, "you make me a little ashamed. I should like to say that you, being with you, is very good medicine for lame ducks."
Another flush--not of contrition this time nor yet of displeasure--deepened the pretty color. He pursed his lips and whistled, as well as he could against the rushing wind, a bar or two of the latest popular melody. They found humor in this and laughed, so merrily that their host turned and beamed approvingly upon them.
It was a good car and the chauffeur was as good as his word. The miles stretched out behind them, at a pace that forbade conversation. The exhilaration of speed was upon David; and a deeper joy, born of a friendship found in a waste of loneliness.
The late June sun was just sinking to rest when they entered the outskirts of the city and drew up before a rambling white house set well back on a velvety lawn. Two great elms stood in the front of the yard and rhododendrons bloomed against the wide porch, their fragrance lingering on the evening air.
"That," said Jonathan, "was a very spirited ride. But I hope," this to David, "you aren't sorry it's ended, because this is my home, where we want you to come very often. Miss Summers," he added, "already knows her welcome is sure."
He got to the pavement and helped Miss Summers to alight, as deferentially as if she had been the finest lady in the land. And, despite red whiskers and cap and goggles, to David the manner did not seem absurd. . . .
A little later David descended from the room where he had removed the traces of their ride. At the parlor door he stopped, looking uncertainly at the sole occupant of that cozy room. She was reclining, eyes closed and hands folded, on a pillowed settee, where the glow of a shaded lamp fell softly upon her, and David thought her the most beautiful thing he had ever seen. A very wisp of a woman she was; he could have held her in his arms and scarcely felt the weight. But he would have taken her very tenderly, so fragile she seemed. Under a filmy lace cap her hair, still fine and plentiful, shone silvery. The face, though the face of age and white and thin almost to transparency, was strangely unlined. She wore a black silk dress with many folds and flounces and fine ruching at neck and wrists.