THE SHINGLED COTTAGE Miss Barry's hard, kindly hands helped remove the visitor's hat and veil, although Mrs. Porter repeated her declaration that she had come only for a call. "You're going to stay to dinner with me," returned the hostess. "I always do have enough for two." Her lips, which had returned to their rather grim line, twitched a little as she spoke, and Maud Porter glanced about the living-room with its old-fashioned furniture and rag rugs. Beyond was the dining-room, divided from this only by an imaginary line, and the table stood ready set for one. "You live here all alone?" asked the visitor. "Not half as alone as I'd like to be. I don't mind the fish and the barnacles, but it's the folks coming to the back door. Sit right down, Mrs. Porter." "Don't let me detain you if you were getting dinner." The caller laughed. "How about these folks that come to the front door; the things Captain Holt leaves on the step?" "Oh, I'm in no hurry. I'm going to sit right down with you now. Things are stewing out there. There's nothing to hurt." Miss Barry suited the action to the word. Mrs. Porter regarded her with curious interest as she sank into a rocker with chintz cushions. The hostess's narrow face, usually as devoid of expression as a mask, was now lighted by pleasure. "How comes it you didn't let a body know?" she asked. "I was going to be so wonderfully independent! I was going to come to the Cape, and find a place to live, and then some day saunter over to your cottage bareheaded, and surprise you." "And all you accomplished was the surprise, eh?" "That's it, and it's entirely your fault. I was driving about with Captain Holt to see the lay of the land, when suddenly the rocks and the water, and this cottage perched on them like a gull's nest, did something to me. I don't know what. I think it gave me a brain-storm. When he told me you lived here, what could I do but rush in to congratulate you?" Miss Barry's lips twitched again. "I ain't any gull, I will maintain that, but—it is sightly, ain't it?" "Wonderful. Nothing less than wonderful. But in a storm, Miss Barry?" "Yes, the windows are all spray then, and the waves try to swallow me up, and I can't hear myself think, but—" "Yes,"—Mrs. Porter nodded as the other hesitated,—"I understand that 'but.'" "How'd you leave my brother?" "Very tired." "That so? Wouldn't you think he'd come up here and rock in the cradle o' the deep awhile? You write him about that hammock out there." Mrs. Porter looked out through the open window toward the end of the porch, where a hammock hung. "The doctor says Colorado," she replied. "Doctor? Is it as bad as that?" Miss Barry frowned questioningly. "Lambert never writes. I don't care for his stenographer's letters, and he knows it. If he can't take time to write himself, let it go." The speaker threw her head to one side, as if disposing of the matter of fraternal affection. "Linda is blooming," remarked Mrs. Porter. Miss Barry's lips took a thinner line. "Let her bloom," she responded dryly; and her visitor laughed again. "Doesn't she write either?" "I should say not." "It will be less difficult now she's out of college," said Mrs. Porter pacifically. "Those girls are absolutely occupied, you know." "Never play at all, I presume," returned her hostess, with a curling lip. "Oh, I wouldn't say that." "Better not if you care where you go to.—No," after a slight pause, "I understand my niece a good deal better than she thinks I do. It's enough that she scorns her own name. She was named for me. Belinda's been good enough for me, and she's no business to slight the name her parents gave her." "Oh, Linda is such a free lance," said Mrs. Porter apologetically; "and 'Linda' sounds so breezy, so—so like her. 'Belinda' is quaint and demure, and—and you know, really, she isn't demure!" "Not a great deal," agreed Miss Barry curtly. "I'm sorry my brother isn't well," she added. "These business men let themselves be driven so. You remember my cousin Bertram King. He and Mr. Barry have been worn down in the same vortex, and both are ordered away. I told Bertram Maine was the best place in the world for him. As soon as I find an abiding-place I shall let him know." Miss Barry rose suddenly. "I'm forgetting that you're starved. Just excuse me while I dish up the chowder," she said, and vanished. Mrs. Porter clasped her hands and lifted her eyes. "Chowder!" she repeated sententiously; then she too rose, went to the open window, and stood looking out. The tide was rising, and the waves, climbing higher and higher, threw white arms toward the shingled cottage, as if claiming its boulder foundation, and striving to pass the barrier of daisies and draw the little house down to its own seething breast. As the visitor stood there, a woman, bareheaded, stepped up from the grass upon the porch, and giving one glance from her prominent, faded eyes at the gray figure standing in the window, crossed the piazza to the front door, which was closed. Mrs. Porter, advancing, opened it, and came face to face with a scrawny little woman, who stood with her head apologetically on the side. Her temples were decorated with those plastered curls of hair known as "beau-catchers," and across the forehead it was strained back and caught in a comb set with large Rhinestones. Her red-and-green plaid calico dress was open girlishly at the throat, around which a red ribbon was tied with the bow in the back. "Why are they always thin here?" thought Maud Porter. "Is it eating fish? Do they never have to reduce?" "Oh, pardon me!" exclaimed the newcomer, with such an elegant lift of her bony shoulders that it twisted her whole body. "I expected to see Belinda—that is—pardon me!—Miss Barry." "She's in the kitchen just at present. Won't you come in?" The newcomer accepted with alacrity, her prominent eyes openly scanning Mrs. Porter's costume. "I wouldn't have thought of intruding had I supposed Miss Barry had a guest. I didn't notice Jerry brought anybody." Another writhe, and a rearrangement of a long necklace of imitation coral beads, which suffered against the red plaid. "Yes, he brought happy me," returned Mrs. Porter, wondering whether, with the chowder so imminent, she should ask this guest to be seated. The newcomer relieved her of responsibility by sinking into the nearest chair. "Comin' for the summer?" she asked hurriedly, as though she felt that her time was short. "I don't know. It's a place to tempt one, isn't it?" "The views is called wonderful," returned the other modestly. "Of course, 't ain't for us to call 'em sumtious, but artists hev called 'em sumtious." "They deserve any praise," was the reply, and Mrs. Porter gave the speaker her sweet smile. "It's very difficult, one might almost say comple-cated, for visitin' folks to find any place to reside on the Cape. We ain't got any hotel." Pen fails to describe the elegant action of shoulders and eyebrows which accentuated this declaration, and Mrs. Porter's smile broadened. "I've understood so," she replied. "My name's Benslow," said the visitor, casting an apprehensive glance toward the dining-room. "I've got one o' these copious houses with so much more room than I can use that sometimes I hev—I hev accawmodated parties. I suppose you're from the metrolopous." "Well, we think it is one. I'm from that wild Chicago!" "Oh, I s'posed it was Boston." Here Miss Barry entered, bearing a steaming tureen, which perfumed the atmosphere temptingly. "Hello, Luella," she said quietly. At the word the visitor started from her chair with guilty celerity, and brandished an empty cup she was carrying. "I hadn't an idea you was entertainin', Belinda, and you must excuse my walkin' right in on—on—" Miss Barry kept her eyes fixed imperturbably on the tureen, and turned to get a plate of crackers from a side table. "Mrs. Porter is my name," said the guest, taking pity on Miss Benslow's embarrassed writhings. "Oh, yes, on Mis' Porter. I just wanted to see if you could spare me a small portion of bakin' soda." "Why didn't you come to the back door as you do commonly?" "Why—why, the mornin' was so exhilaratin', I made sure you'd be watchin' the waves, and I thought it would expediate matters for me to come around front." An ingratiating smile revealed Miss Benslow's full set. "Just go right out and help yourself, Luella. You know where 't is, and you can let yourself out the back door. Come, Mrs. Porter, the chowder's good and hot." It was, indeed. Miss Benslow's prominent eyes rolled toward the white-clothed table as she passed it, and inhaled the tantalizing fragrance. She would presently go home and eat bits of cold mackerel with her old father, at the oilcloth-covered table in the kitchen. Neither he nor she was a "good provider." Miss Barry laughed quietly to herself as she and her guest sat down. "Luella did get ahead of me," she said appreciatively. "I don't know how she slid by. Her uniform never blends with the landscape, either. Perhaps she climbed under the lee of the rocks." "Oh, why does she wear those beads with that frock?" asked Mrs. Porter, accepting a dish of chowder. "I guess if we could find that out we'd know why she does lots of things," returned the hostess. "Simply delicious," commented Mrs. Porter, after her first mouthful. "Do show me how to do it, Miss Barry." "Surely I will; but serve it after an early start from Portland and a ride across country with the wind off the sea. That's the sauce that gives the finishing touch." "Why are all the people in Maine thin? Is it fish? You all have the best things to eat, yet you never get cushiony like us." Miss Barry cast a glance across at the round contours, so different from her own angles. "I think a bit of upholstery helps, myself," she remarked. "Now, that Miss Benslow—why, she's really—really bony." "Yes," responded Miss Barry, eating busily, "but she's got beauty magazines that's full of directions how to reduce, and she's delighted with her bones. Unlucky for her father, because she might do more cooking if she believed flesh was fashionable. Luella's dreadfully slack," added Miss Barry, sighing; "but so's her father, for that matter. He goes out to his traps twice a day, but he wouldn't mind his chicken-house if he lost the whole brood; and just so he has plenty of tobacco the world suits him all right. You know folks can just about live on this air." Mrs. Porter regarded her hostess thoughtfully. "Then," she said, "I don't believe their house would be a very good place to board." Miss Barry looked up suddenly. "Board!" she repeated explosively. Then, after a silent pause, she added, "Is that what Luella came over for?" "Probably not; but she mentioned—" "Yes, I guess she did. She saw Jerry bring you—" "No, she said she didn't see him bring me." Miss Barry snorted. "Luella says lots o' things beside her prayers, and if she uses the same kind o' language for them that she does for other folks, I doubt if the Almighty can understand her half the time. I often think the futurists ought to get hold of her and her clothes and her talk." Mrs. Porter laughed. "Perhaps she was born too soon." "Indeed she was for her own comfort. Luella's as sentimental as they make 'em, and she still feels twenty. Board with her, indeed! You'd reduce fast enough then, I assure you. Folks have lived with her till they were ready to eat stewed barnacles; and the only way they got along was finally to get her to live somewhere else and let them have the house to themselves. They've done that sometimes, and Luella and her father camped out in the boathouse, I guess; I don't know exactly what they did do with themselves. Tried to get you! Well, I do declare! Luella's nerve is all right, whatever else she may lack." "What I want to know," laughed Mrs. Porter, "is, when she says the view is 'sumtious,' whether she means 'scrumptious' or 'sumptuous.'" Miss Barry smiled at her plate. "Luella ought to write a dictionary or a key or something," she said.—"Oh, I don't know what's the matter with women, anyway," she added with a sigh of disgust. "Why, Miss Barry, what do you mean? They're finer every year! There are more of them every year for us to be proud of." "A few high lights, maybe," admitted Miss Barry, "but look at the rank and file of 'em. Look at the clothes they'll consent to wear—and not wear. Just possessed with the devil o' restlessness, most of 'em, and willing to sell their souls for novelty. Isn't it enough to see 'em perspiring under velvet hats and ostrich feathers with muslin gowns in September, and carrying straw hats and roses above their furs in February? I get sick of the whole lot. Do you suppose for a minute they could wait for the season to come around, whichever it is? H'm!" Miss Barry put a world of scorn into the grunt. Mrs. Porter, as she accepted a second helping of chowder, had a vision of Linda, capriciously regnant, and realized the status she must hold in her aunt's estimation. "Oh, I'm an optimist," she replied, "especially when I'm eating your chowder. I don't see how you can look out of these windows and not love everybody." She regarded her vis-À-vis as she said it. It was hard to visualize this spare and hard-featured woman as the young girl who used to sit on these rocks and build castles in the air. "Mortals are ungrateful, I guess," was the reply. "I'm glad you like it here." "It's a paradise to one who is tired of people and pianos," declared Mrs. Porter. "Think you could look out of these windows and love 'em all, do you?" inquired Miss Barry dryly. Mrs. Porter laughed. "At this distance, certainly," she answered. "Some of them I could love even if they were in the foreground," she continued. "I'm very fond of Linda, Miss Barry." "A point in her favor," remarked the hostess, with a cool rising inflection. "Thank you for saying so. One must make lots of allowance for a girl so pretty, so rich, and so overflowing with life." "Let her overflow, only nowhere near me." "Don't say that. She'll settle down under the responsibilities of life. Do you remember my cousin Bertram King?" "Oh, yes. The long-legged, light-haired fellow that aids and abets my brother in overworking." "That's the very one. I must tell you that he's heart and soul in love with Linda." "H'm. I suppose so. I only wish she'd marry him and live out on Sheridan Road somewhere, then I could live with my brother and take care of him winters. He'd get some care then. Are they engaged?" "Oh, no. She's just out of school. He hasn't asked her yet." "What's the matter with him? Is he the kind with boiled macaroni for a backbone?" "No, Bertram's backbone is all right. He wanted to let her get out of school. He has no relations but me. He had to confide in somebody." "Well, he'll get all that's coming to him if he marries her." Miss Barry sniffed. "I guess if there was a prize offered for arrogance she'd get it. I speak plain because you're fond of her, and you're aware that you know her much better than I do, so I couldn't set you against her even if I wanted to; and I need somebody to confide in too." Mrs. Porter smiled. "You'll change your tune some day. Linda has lots of goods that aren't in the show window." Miss Barry nodded. "If she keeps her distance I may change in time. It all depends on that." The visitor could picture how in little things the high-spirited, popular girl might have shown tactlessness during the holidays, and created an impression on the taciturn aunt which it would be hard to efface. Words could never do it, she realized, and wisely forbore to say more. Dinner was over, and the visitor was just considering that during the process of social dishwashing she could broach the subject of a boarding-place, when Jerry Holt's steed again approached the shingled cottage. Both women discerned him at the same moment. "Did you tell Jerry to come back for you? You can't go yet," said Miss Barry. "I didn't, but it might be a good plan for him to take me the rounds." "What rounds?" "Of possible boarding-places." Miss Barry did not reply, for she had to answer the knock at the door. There stood Captain Holt, holding a telegram gingerly between his thumb and finger, and his sea-blue eyes gazed straight into Belinda's. "I want you should bear up, Belinda," he said kindly. "There ain't no other way." His voice shook a little, and Miss Barry turned pale as she took the sinister envelope. Mrs. Porter heard his words, and hastening to her hostess stood beside her as she tore open the telegram. Captain Holt's heavy hand closed the door slowly, with exceeding care, as he shut himself out. Mrs. Porter's arm stole around the other woman as she read the message:— Mr. Barry died last night. Please come at once. Henry Radcliffe. Miss Barry's limbs shook under her, and she tottered to a chair. Captain Holt sat on the edge of the piazza and bit a blade of grass while he waited. In the silence a pall seemed to fall over the little house, broken only by the sharp rending apart of mounting waves against the rocks. Mrs. Porter knelt by her friend and held her hands. "What can I do for you?" she asked. "Look in the desk over in that corner, and find the time-tables in the drawer." "I know the Chicago trains, Miss Barry. Let me arrange it all for you. You wish to leave to-night?" Miss Barry nodded without speech. Mrs. Porter went out on the piazza and sent Jerry to telegraph, telling him to return. "Did you know my brother was ill?" asked Belinda, when she returned, still without moving. "No. I thought him just overtired." The other nodded. "That's the way they do it. Rush madly after money and more money till they go to pieces all of a sudden." The bereft sister's eyes were fixed on space, seeing who knows what pictures of the past, when a barefooted boy romped with her over these rocks that held the nest he had given her. Suddenly her far-away look came back, and focused on the pitiful eyes regarding her drawn, pale face. "I'm glad you're here," she said simply. "And I am so glad," responded the other, her thoughts busy with Linda and Bertram, and longing to fly to them. "Will you stay here in my cottage till I come back? I have a little girl that comes every day to help. She cooks pretty well. She'll stay with you." "Yes, Miss Barry." It was on the tip of the visitor's tongue to say, "You'll bring Linda back with you," but she restrained the words. This common sorrow would do its work between aunt and niece, she felt sure. There was no further inaction. A trunk was packed, and Mrs. Porter accompanied the traveler as far as Portland, spending the night again at the hotel where she had left her belongings; and Miss Barry pursued her sad journey. Henry Radcliffe met her at the station in Chicago; and when they were in the motor Miss Barry turned to him with dim eyes. "What was the matter with Lambert?" His pale face looked excited and sleepless. "You haven't seen the papers?" "No. My head ached and I didn't read them. What do you mean?" Her voice grew tense. "Barry & Co. have gone to pieces." "What do I care for that? Lambert! My brother! Tell me of him!" "But it carried a lot of innocent ones down in the crash." "Oh, my poor brother! What of him, Henry? Tell me. Tell me." The young man turned his head away, and his voice grew thick. "He died down in the office." "Heart trouble?" "Yes. He never told us if he knew he had a weak heart. The shock was terrible." The young man took his companion's groping hand. "Linda is prostrated. We have had to save her in every way. Poor Harriet! She has had to be a heroine." The speaker's voice thickened and choked again, and hand in hand the two kept an unbroken silence until the motor drew up before the house on Michigan Avenue, where lilies and ferns hung against the heavy door. |