J ogging homeward from a country call one afternoon in May, I was admiring the apple-orchards and the new-ploughed fields between them, when I chanced upon my son Robin with a handful of columbine, gathered among the Sun Dial rocks. "Oh," said he, "is that you, father?" It is an innocent way of his when he has anything in particular to conceal. "At any rate," I replied, "you are my son." He smiled amiably and I cranked the wheel, making room for him beside me. "Columbine," I remarked. "Yes." "Letitia will be pleased," I said. Now I knew it was for the Parker girl—Rita Parker, who blushes so when I chance to meet "I just saw a redstart," remarked my son. "So?" I replied. "Did you notice any bobolinks?" "Did I?" he answered. "I saw a million of them." "You did?" "Down in the meadows there." "A million of them?" "Almost a million," he replied. "Every grass-stalk had one on it, teetering and singing away like anything." "Why, I didn't know Rita was with you." "Rita!" he exclaimed, reddening. "Why, yes," I said. "You saw so many birds, you know." It was a little hard upon the boy, but I broke the ensuing silence with some comments on the weather, and having him wholly at my mercy then, I chose a subject which so long had charmed me, I had been on the point of telling him time and again, yet had refrained. "Robin," said I, "you will be a graduate in a He caught my hand—so violently that the rein was drawn and Pegasus turned obediently into the ditch and stopped. "England, father!" "If we are spared," I said, getting the buggy into the road again. "All of us!" he cried. "No." "But you'll come, father?" He said it so anxiously that I was touched. It isn't always that a boy cares to lug his father. "I should like to," I said, "but—no." "Why not?" "I cannot leave," I replied. "Jamieson's going. We can't both go." "Oh, bother Jamieson!" Robin exclaimed. "What does he want to choose our year for? Why can't he wait till next?" "It's his wife," I explained. "She's ill again. But you go, Robin, and take Letitia." "When do we start?" "In June." "This June?" "Next month. I've laid out the journey for "But when did you think of it?" asked my son. "Last fall." "Last fall! Does Aunt Letty know?" "Partly," I said. "She knows you're going, but not herself. It's a little surprise for her. You may tell her yourself, now, while I stop at the office." He scrambled out and hitched my horse for me, so I held the flowers. He flushed a little as he took them. "Father, you're a trump," he said. I bowed slightly: it is wise to be courteous even to a son. I had stopped at the office to get the map, and an hour later Letitia met me in our doorway. "Bertram!" she said, taking my hand. "Robin told you?" "Yes. Oh, it's beautiful, Bertram, but I cannot go." "Nonsense," I said. "But you?" "I shall do very nicely." "But the cost?" "Will be nothing," I said. "The boy must not go alone." "That's not the reason you are sending me, Bertram." "It's a good one," I replied. "No," she insisted, shaking her head. "You have been good to the boy, Letitia," I explained. "This is only a way of saying that I know." "You do not need to say it," she replied. "I have done nothing." "You have done everything, Letitia—for us both." The tears ran down her cheeks. My own eyes— "You have loved Dove's husband and son," I told her. "We shall not forget it." Her face was radiant. "It has been nothing for me to do," she said. "Loving no one in particular, I have had the time to love every one, don't you see? Why, all my life, Bertram, I've loved other people's dogs, and other people's children"—she paused a moment and added, smiling through her tears—"and other people's husbands, I suppose." "You will go?" I asked. "I should love to go." "You will go, Letitia?" "I will go," she said. That evening I took from my pocket a brand-new map of the British Isles—I mean brand-new last fall. Many a pleasant hour I had spent that winter at the office with a red guide-book and the map before me on my desk. With no little pride I spread it now on the sitting-room table which Letitia had cleared for me. "What are the red lines, father?" asked my son. He had returned breathless from telling the Parker girl. "Those in red ink," I replied, "I drew myself. It is your route. There's Southampton—where you land—and there's London—and there's Windsor and Oxford and Stratford and Warwick and Kenilworth—and here," I cried, sweeping my hand suddenly downward to the left—"here's Devonshire!" "Where father was a boy," Letitia murmured, touching the pinkish county tenderly with her hand. Ah, I was primed for them! There was not a question they could ask that I could not answer. "Oh, it is beautiful!" exclaimed Letitia. "Isn't it?" I cried. "You should have it patented," said my son. "Suppose," I suggested, "you ask me something—something hard now. Ask me something hard." I took a turn with my cigar. Robin knitted his brows, but could think of nothing. Letitia pondered. "Where's—" She hesitated. "Out with it!" I urged. "Where's Tavistock?" she asked. I thought a moment. "Is it a castle?" She shook her head. "Is it a battle-field?" "No." "Is it just a town, then?" "Yes, just a town." "Did anything famous happen there?" She hesitated. "Well," she said, "perhaps nothing very famous—but it's an old little town—one that I've heard of, that is all." Well, she did have me. It was not very famous, and only a—an idea came to me. "Oh," I said, shutting my eyes a moment, "that town's in Devon." Letitia nodded. "See," I said. Adjusting my glasses, and peering a moment at the pinkish patch, I tapped it, Tavistock, with my finger-nail. "Right here," I said. We made a night of it—that is, it was midnight when I folded my map and locked it away with the guide-book and the table of English money I had made myself. There was one in A fortnight later I had the tickets in my hand —ss. Atlantis, date of sailing, the tenth of June. I myself was to steal a day or two and wave farewell to them from the pier. Robin already had packed his grip; indeed, he repacked it daily, to get the hang of it, he said. It was a new one which I had kept all winter at the office in the bottom of a cupboard, and it bore the initials, R. W., stamped on the end. And he had a housewife—a kind of cousin to a needle-book—stuffed full of handy mending-things, presented by the Parker girl. The boy was radiant, but as June drew nigh I saw he had something heavy on his mind. A dozen times he had begun to speak to me, privately, but had changed the subject or had walked away. I could not imagine what ailed the fellow. He seemed restless; even, as I fancied, a little sad at times, which troubled me. I made opportunities for him to speak, but he failed to do so, either through neglect or fear. I saw him often at the office, where he was always bursting in upon me with some new plan or handy matter for his "But what are they for?" I asked, amazed. A blush mantled his beardless cheeks. "Those? Oh—just to be sure," he said. Now what could be troubling the lad, I wondered? It was something not always on his mind, for he seemed to forget it in preparations, but it lurked near by to spring out upon his blithest moments. His face would be shining; an instant later it would fall, and he would walk to the window and gaze out thoughtfully into the street, in a way that touched me to the heart, for, remember, this was to be my first parting with the boy. The more I thought of it, the more perplexed I was; and the more I wondered, the more I felt it might be my duty to speak myself. "Robin," I said one day, and as casually as I could make my tone, "did you want to tell me anything? What is it? Speak, my boy." We were alone together in my inner office and the door was shut. He walked resolutely to the desk where I was sitting. "Father," he said, "I have." My heart was beating, he looked so grave. "Well," I remarked, "you have nothing to fear, you know." "Father," he said, doggedly, "it's about—it's about—" "Yes?" I encouraged him. "It's about this trip." "This trip?" "Yes. It's about—father, you'll tell her—" "Tell her?" I repeated. "Yes. You tell her." "Tell whom? Tell what?" "Why, Aunt Letty." "Aunt Letty! Tell Aunt Letty what?" He blurted it fiercely: "About her hat." "Her hat! Her hat! Good Lord, what hat?" "Why, her Sunday hat!" "You mean her—" "Why, yes, father! You know that hat." I knew that hat. "Do you object," I asked, "to your aunt's best Sunday hat?" His scowl vanished and his face broke into smiles. "That's it," he said. "Don't be alarmed," I assured him, keeping His smiles vanished. He seemed suspicious. His tone was cautiousness itself. "But who will buy it?" he asked. "Why, you!" I said. He leaped to my side. "I?" "You," I repeated. He laughed hysterically—whooped is the better word. "You wait!" he cried, and, fairly dancing, he seized his cap and rushed madly for the door. It shut behind him, but as swiftly opened again. "Oh, dad," he said, beaming upon me from the crack, "it'll be a stunner! You'll see." It was. |