She awoke to fright—some great hairy beast of the forest was nosing her. Then a light flashed in her eyes, and as she closed them, drifting off to exhaustion again, she half saw a figure stooping towards her. Then she felt herself being carried, while a barking seemed to be all about her. The next thing she knew was light forcing its brightness through her closed lids and a great warmth beating upon her. She dragged her eyes open again. She was lying on a black bear skin rug before a roaring fire, and some one was kneeling beside her, tucking cushions beneath her head. She had a glimpse of a khaki sleeve and a lean brown wrist. The warmth was delicious. She wanted to Sleepily, she mumbled, "What time is it?" The khaki shirt sleeve had withdrawn from view and the answering voice came from a corner of the room. "It's about two." Two o'clock! The night gone—gone past redemption. "Oh, Madre mia!" whispered Maria Angelina. She struggled up on one elbow, her little face, scratched and stained, staring wildly out from the dark thicket of hair. "But where am I? Where is this place? Is it near the Lodge—near Wilderness Lodge?" "We're miles from Wilderness," said the voice out of the shadows. "This is Old Chief Mountain—on the Little Pine River." Old Chief Mountain! Vaguely Maria Angelina recalled that stony peak, far behind Old Baldy. ... They had climbed the wrong She stared about her. She saw a huge fireplace where the flames were dancing. Above it, on a wide mantel, was a disarray of books, cigar-boxes, pipes and papers, the papers weighted oddly with a jar of obviously pickled frogs. Upon the log walls several fishing rods were stretched on nails and a gun, a corn-popper, a rough coat and cap and a fishing net were all hung on neighboring hooks. It was the cabin of some woodsman, and she seemed alone in it with the woodsman and his dog, a tawny collie—the wild animal of her awakening. Quietly alert, he lay now beside her, his grave, bright eyes upon her face. The woodsman she could not see. "Now see if you can drink all of this." The khaki sleeve had appeared from the shadows and was holding a steaming cup to her lips. "Lucky I didn't empty my coffeepot," said the voice cheerfully. "There it was—waiting to be heated. Memorandum—never wash a coffeepot." The voice seemed coming to her out of a dream. Thrusting back the tangled hair from her eyes Maria Angelina lifted them incredulously to the woodsman's face. Was it true? ... Those clear, sharp-cut features, those bright, keen eyes with the gay smile! ... Was it true—-or was she dreaming? Instinctively she dropped her hand and let her hair like a black curtain shield her face. The blood seemed to stand still in her veins waiting that dreadful instant of recognition. Confusedly, with some frantic thought of flight, "I must go—Oh, I must go——" "You lie down and rest," said the authoritative voice. "If there's any going to be done I'll do it. Is there some other Babe in the Woods to be found?" "Oh, no—no, but I must go——" "You get a good rest. You can tell me all about it and who you are when you're dry and warm." She yielded to the compulsion in his voice and to her own weakness, and lay very still and inert, her cheek upon her outflung arm, her eyes watching the red dance of flames through the black strands of her hair. It was the final irony, she felt, of that dreadful night. To meet Barry Elder again—like this—after all her dreams—— It was too terrible to be true. And he did not know her. He had come to that place of his, in the Adirondacks, of which he had spoken, and had never given her a thought. He had never come to see her. ... She had suffered many pangs of mortification this night but now her poor, shamed spirit bled afresh. But perhaps he had just come. And certainly he would remember to come and see his friends, the Blairs, and possibly he would remember that foreign cousin of theirs that he had danced with—just remember her with pleasant friendliness. She would give herself so much of balm. And who indeed was she for Barry Elder to A girl who had thrown her name recklessly to the winds and who, to-morrow, would be a byword. ... These thoughts ached in her with her bruised flesh. Meanwhile Barry Elder had been making quick trips about the room and now he threw down an armful of garments beside her and knelt at her feet, tugging at her sopping shoes. "Let me get these off—there, that's better. Now the other one. ... Lordy, child, those footies. ... Now you'd better get into these dry things as quick as you can. Not a perfect fit, but the best I can do. I'll take a turn in the woods and be back in ten minutes. So you hurry up." He closed the door upon the words that Ma They were in an untouched heap when her host returned, letting in a cold rush of the night with him. "What's this?" he flung out in mock severity. "See here, young lady, you must get into those clothes whether they happen to be the style or not! Little girls who get wet can't go to sleep in their clothes. Now I'll give you just ten minutes more and then if you are not a good girl——" To her own dismay and to his Maria Angelina burst into tears. "Oh, come now," said Barry helplessly. "You poor little dud——" The sudden gentleness of his voice undid the last of the girl's control. She sobbed harder and harder as he sat down beside her and began to pat her shaking shoulders. "Oh, please, Signor, not those things. Do not make me. I will get dry——" "You don't have to if you don't want to," he told her gently, looking down in a puzzled way at her distress. Her face was buried in a crook of her arm; her black hair streamed tempestuously over her heaving shoulders. "Come closer to the fire, then, and dry out." He threw more wood upon the flames and piled on brush that shed a swift, crackling heat. "Give that a chance at those wet clothes of yours," he advised. "Meanwhile we'd better wring this out," and with businesslike despatch he began gathering that dripping black hair into the folds of a Turkish towel. Very strenuously he wrung it. "That's what I do for my kid sister when she's been in swimming," he mentioned. "She's at the seashore now—no getting her away "Yes," said Maria Angelina half whisperingly. Had he no memory of her at all? Or was she so different in that wet, muddied blouse, hair streaming, and face scratched—she looked down at her grimy little hands and wondered dumbly what her face might look like. And then she saw that Barry Elder, having finished with her hair, was preparing to wash her face, for he brought a granite basin of hot water and began wetting and soaping the end of a voluminous towel with which he advanced upon her. "I can well wash myself," she cried with promptness, and most thoroughly she washed and scrubbed, and then hung her head as he took away the things. She felt as if a screening mask had fallen "You are very good," she said shyly. "I cannot tell you how I thank you. And I feel so much better that if you will please let me go——" "Go? To Wilderness Lodge? It's miles and miles, child—and it's pouring cats and dogs again. Don't you hear the drumsticks on the roof?" She hesitated. "Then—have you a telephone?" "No, thank the Lord!" The remembered laughter flashed in Barry Elder's tones. "I came here to get away from the devil of invention and all his works. There isn't a telephone nearer than Peter's place—four miles away. I'll go over for you as soon as it's light, for I expect your mother's worrying her head off about you. How did you ever happen to get lost over here?" Helplessly Maria Angelina sought for "It was on a picnic—please do not ask me," she whispered foolishly. In humorous perplexity the young man stood looking down upon the small figure that chance had deposited so unexpectedly upon his hearth, a most forlorn and drooping small figure, with downcast and averted head, then with that sudden smile that made his young face so brightly persuasive he dropped beside her and reached towards her. "Here, little kiddie, you come and sit with me while I warm those feet of yours——" Swiftly she withdrew from his kindly reaching hands. "Signor, it is not fitting that you should hold me, that you should warm my feet," she gasped. "I am not a child, Signor!" Signor ... The word waked some echo in his mind. ... The child had used it before—but what connection was groping——? He repeated the word aloud. She glanced up to see recognition leap amazedly into his face. "The little Signorina! The Blairs' little Signorina!" "Maria Angelina Santonini," she told him soberly. "Yes, that is I." "Why of course I remember," he insisted. "A little girl in a white dress. A big hat which you took off. Your first night in America. We had a wonderful dance together——" "And you said you would come to the mountains," she told him childishly. He stared a moment. "Why, so I did. ... And here I am. And here you are. To think I did not know you—I've been wondering whom you made me want to think of! But I took you for a youngster, you know, a regular ten-year-old runaway. Why, with your hair He paused with a smile for the absurdity of it. Gallantly she tried to give him back that smile but there was something so wan and piteous in the curve of her soft lips, something so hurt and sick in the shadows of her dark eyes, that Barry Elder felt oddly silenced. And then he tried to cover that silence with kind chatter as he moved about his room once more in hospitable preparation. "It was Sandy, here, who really found you," he told her. "He whined at the door till I let him out and then he came back, barking, for me, so I had to go. I was really looking for a mink. Sandy's always excited about minks." Maria Angelina put a hand to the dog's head and stroked it. "I was so tired," she said. "I think I was asleep." "I rather think you were," said Barry in an odd tone. He glanced at her white cheek Maria Angelina needed no urging. Like a starveling she fell upon that plate of crisp bacon and delicately fried eggs and cleaned it to the last morsel. "I had but two bites of sweet chocolate for my dinner," she apologized. "So you were lost before dinner—no wonder you were done in." Barry filled a very worn-looking little brown pipe with care. "Where were you going, anyway, for your picnic?" "It was to Old Baldy." "Old Baldy, eh? Let me see—what trail did you take?" "On the river path. Then—then we got separated——" "I see. But it's a fairly clear trail. Did you try another?" "We—we crossed the river the wrong time, Maria Angelina's voice died away in sudden sick perception of that betraying pronoun. Quite slowly, without looking at her, Barry completed the lighting of that pipe to his satisfaction and drew a few appreciative puffs. Then he turned to inquire casually, "And who is 'we'?" He saw only the top of the girl's tousled head and the tense grip of her clasped hands in her lap. "If you would not ask, Signor!" she said whisperingly. "A dark secret!" He tried to laugh over that but his keen eyes rested on her with a troubled wonder. "And then you got lost—even from your companion?" he prompted quietly. "Yes, I—I came away alone for he—he refused to go on," faltered Maria Angelina painfully, "and then I seemed to go on forever—and I could do no more. But now I am quite "You weren't trying to get lost, were you?" questioned Barry lightly, groping for a cue. There was no mistaking the flash of Maria Angelina's repudiation and the candor of her suddenly upraised young face. "Oh, no, Signor, no, no! It was only that I was so careless—that I believed he knew the way." "And was he trying to get lost?" "Oh, no, Signor, no, it was all a mistake." "This is a very easy neck of the woods to get lost in," Barry told her reassuringly. "Old residents here often miss their way—especially in a storm. Mrs. Blair will worry, of course, but she is very sensible and she knows you will come to light with the daylight. Just as soon as it is clear enough for me to find my way I'll strike over to Peter's place and phone her that "But you must not tell them you have found me," said Maria Angelina, overwhelmed with tragedy again. She seemed fated, she thought in dreadful humor, to spend the night with young men! And to have been lost by one and found by another! "It will be so much worse," she said pleadingly. "Could you not just show me the way and let me go——?" "So much worse?" His face was very grave and gentle. "So much worse? I don't think I understand." "So very much worse. To have been found like this—Oh, promise me to say nothing about it. I know that I can trust you." "I think you had better tell me all about it, Signorina." He saw that dark misery, like a film, swim blindingly over her wide eyes. He considered a moment before he spoke again. "If you really do not want any one to know that I found you I am willing to hold my tongue. But don't you see what a lot of ridiculous deception that would involve? You would have to make up all sorts of little things. And then, after all, you'd be sure to say something—one always does—and let it all out——" Maria Angelina looked at him pathetically and a sudden impulse stabbed him to say hastily, "I'll fall in with any plan you want to make. Only wait to decide until you feel rested. Then perhaps we can decide together. ... And now, if you are really getting dry——" "Truly, I am, Signor Elder. I am indeed dry and hot." "Then you'd better make up your mind to curl up on that cot over there and sleep." "I couldn't sleep." There was truth beneath Maria Angelina's quick disclaimer. Exhausted as she was, her Her mortification at his finding her was gone. He was so rarely kind, so pleasantly matter of fact. He was as gayly undisturbed as if the heavens rained starving young girls upon him every night! And somehow she had known he was like this ... but he was like no one else that she had known. ... Her mind groped for a comparison. For an instant she vainly tried to picture Paolo Tosti doing the honors to such a guest—but that picture was unpaintable. This Barry Elder was chivalry itself; he was kindness and comfort—and he was a strange, stirring excitement that flung a glamour over the disaster of the hour. It was like a little hush before the final storm, a dim dream before the nightmare enfolded her again. Her eyes followed him as he turned out the kerosene lamp, which was sputtering, and flung fresh logs upon the hearty fire. Over Barry's eyes, meeting the wistful dark ones, smiled responsively, and Maria Angelina felt a queer tightening within her, as if some one had tied a band about her heart. "You don't have such fires in Italy," he observed, dropping down upon the rug across from her, and refilling that battered pipe of his. "I well remember when I ordered a fire and the cameraria came in with a bunch of twigs." Madly Maria Angelina fell upon the revelation. "You have been in Italy!" "Oh, more than once! But all before the war." "And you have been in Rome? Oh, to think of that! But where did you stay? Whom did you know there, Signor?" Barry grinned. "Head waiters!" "I can well believe it, Signorina!" "Oh, Rome can be very gay—though I am not out in society myself, and know so little. ... What did you do, then? I suppose you went to the Forum and the Vatican and the Via Appia like all the tourists and drove out to the Coliseum by moonlight?" Delightedly she laughed as Barry Elder confirmed her account of his activities. "Me, I have never seen the Coliseum by moonlight," she reported plaintively, adding with eager wistfulness, "And did you buy violets on the Spanish Stairs? And throw a penny into the Trevi fountain to ensure your return? And do you remember the street that turns off left, the Via Poli? From there you come quick to my house, the Palazzo Santonini——" "And do you really live in a palace?" It was Barry's turn to question. "A really truly "Nothing so great! He is a count—but of a very old family, the Santonini," Maria Angelina explained with becoming pride. "And is your mother of a very old——" "My mother is American—the cousin of Mrs. Blair. But Mamma has never been back in America—she is too devoted to us, is Mamma, and she has so much to look after for Papa. Papa is charming but he does not manage." "That makes complications," said Barry gravely. "And Francisco, my brother, is just like him. He is always running bills, now that he is in the army. And he was so brave in the war that Mamma cannot bear to be cross. He will have to marry an heiress, that boy," she sighed and Barry Elder's eyes lighted in amusement. "How many of you are there?" he wanted interestedly to know, and vivaciously Maria And absorbedly Barry Elder listened, his eyes on her changing face. When she paused he flung in some question or some anecdote of his own times in Italy and Sandy was often roused by unseasonable laughter, and thudded his tail in sleepy friendliness before dozing off to his dreams again. Then like a flash, as swiftly as it had come, the excited glow of recollection was an extinguished flame, leaving her shivering before a nearer memory. For Barry Elder asked one question too many. He brought the present down upon them. "And how do you like America?" he asked. "Has it been good fun for you up here?" Only the blind could have missed the change that came over the girl's face, blotting out its "It has been—very gay," she stammered. Despairingly she asked herself why she still tried to hide her story from him since in the morning it must all come out. He would know all about her then. And what must he be thinking already of her stammered evasions? Oh, if only on that yesterday, which seemed a thousand yesterdays away, she had stayed closely by her Cousin Jane! If she had not let her folly wreck all her life! Bitterly ironic to know that all the time Barry Elder was here, at hand. If only she had known! Had he just come? She wondered and asked the question. And at that Barry's face changed as if he had remembered something he would have been as glad to forget. "Oh—I've been here a few days," he gave back vaguely. She glanced about the shadowy room. "So alone?" A wry smile touched his mouth. "I came for His linked hands had slipped over his knees and he looked ahead of him very steadily into the fire, and Maria Angelina had a feeling that he looked that way into the fire many evenings, so oddly, grimly intent, with oblivious eyes and faintly ironic lips. He was quiet so long, without moving, that she felt as if he had forgotten her. He did not look happy. ... Something dark had touched him. ... "Is it something you want that you cannot get, Signor?" she asked him in a grave little voice. He turned his eyes to her, and she saw there was smoldering fire beneath their surface brightness. "There is no difficulty there," she murmured. "No?" His tone held mockery. "The difficulty is in me. ... I don't want to want it." His eyes continued to rest on her in ironic smiling. "Signorina, what would you do if you wanted a cake, oh, such a beautiful cake, all white icing and lovely sugar outside ... and within—well, something that was very, very bad for the digestion? Only the first bite would be good, you see. But such a first bite! And you wanted it—because the icing was so marvelous and the sugar so sweet. ... And if you had wanted that cake a long time, oh, before you knew what a cheating thing it was within, and if you had been denied it and suddenly found it was within your reach——?" He broke off with a laugh. Slowly she asked, "And would you have to eat the cake if you took the first bite?" "Then I would not bite." "But the frosting, Signorina, the pretty pink and white frosting!" So bitter was his laugh that the girl grew older in understanding. She thought of the girl she had seen by his side in the restaurant, the girl whose eyes had been as blue as the sea and her hair yellow as amber ... the girl who had angled for Bob Martin's money. She remembered that Barry Elder had of late inherited some money. Impulsively she leaned towards him, her eyes dark and pitiful in her white face. "Do not touch it," she whispered. "Do not. I do not want you to be unhappy——" Utterly she understood. His absurd metaphor was no protection against her. She remembered all Cousin Jane's implications, all the bald revelations of Johnny Byrd. Somehow he had come to know that the heart of Leila Grey was a cheating thing, yet for the sake of the beauty which had so teased Barry Elder looked startled at that earnest little whisper and his eyes met hers unguarded a full minute, then a whimsical smile touched his lips to softness. "I'm afraid you have a tender heart, Maria Angelina Santonini," he said. "You want all the world to have nice wholesome cake, beautifully frosted—don't you?" Her gravity refused his banter. "Not all the world. Only those for whom realities matter. Only those—those like you, Signor—who could feel pain and disillusionment." "In God's green earth, what do you know of disillusionment, child?" "I am no child, Signor." "I don't believe that you are." He looked at her with new seriousness. "And I am horribly afraid," he continued, "that you have an inkling into my absurd symbols of speech." He began to wonder about her. He had wondered about her that night at the restaurant, he remembered—wondered and forgotten. He had been unhappy that night, with the peculiar unhappiness of a naturally decisive man wretchedly in two minds, and she had given him a half hour of forgetfulness. Afterwards he had concluded that his impressions had played him false, that no daughter of to-day could possibly be as touchingly young, as innocently enchanting. But she was quite real, it seemed. And she sat there upon his hearth rug with her eyes like pools of night. ... What in the world had happened to her in this America to which she had come in such gay confidence? What was she trying to hide? What in all the sorry, stupid world had put He could not conceive that real tragedy could so much as brush her with the tips of its wings, but some trouble was there, some difficulty. His pipe was out but he drew on it absently. Maria Angelina snuggled closer and closer into her pile of cushions and went to sleep. After she was asleep he rose and stood looking down at her, and he found his heart queerly touched by that scratched cheek and the childish way she tucked her hand under the other cheek as she slept. Also he was fascinated by the length of her black lashes. Very carefully he covered her with blankets. Then he yawned, looked at his watch, smiled to himself and with a blanket of his own he stretched himself upon the fur rug at her feet. |