Produced by Al Haines. [Frontispiece: "You locked me out!" she said, hysterically. HER LORD By MARTHA MORTON Illustrated by HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY R. F. FENNO & COMPANY Copyright, 1902 Entered at Stationers' Hall, London All Rights Reserved Contents CHAPTER I.— Illustrations Foreword "Her Lord and Master," by Martha Morton, was first produced in New York, during the Spring of 1902. The play met with great success, and ran for over one hundred nights at the Manhattan Theatre. Miss Victoria Morton, the sister of the playwright, now presents "Her Lord and Master" as a novel. The play is being produced in the principal cities during this season. CHAPTER I. A Reunion. "Did the ladies arrive, Mr. Stillwater?" inquired the clerk at the Waldorf Hotel, New York, as a tall, broad-shouldered man, unmistakably Western in appearance, walked smilingly up to the desk. "Bag and baggage, bless their hearts!" A dark, distinguished looking man, who was looking over the register, glanced at the speaker, then moved slightly to one side as the latter took up the pen. Stillwater registered in a quick, bold hand, and walked away. The dark gentleman turned again to the register and read: "Horatio Stillwater, Stillwater, Indiana." "Horatio Stillwater, Stillwater!" he remarked to the clerk with a cultured English accent. "A coincidence, I presume?" "Not at all," answered the clerk laughing. "That often happens out West. You see, Stillwater founded the town. He owned most of the land, besides the largest interests in wheat and oil. It's a great wheat and oil centre. Naturally the town is named after him." "Naturally," acquiesced the Englishman, staring blankly at the clerk. He lit a cigar and puffed it thoughtfully for about five minutes, then he exclaimed, "Extraordinary!" "Beg pardon?" said the clerk. "I find it most extraordinary." "What are you referring to, Lord Canning?" "I was referring to what you were telling me about this gentleman, of course!" Lord Canning pointed to Stillwater on the register. "Oh!" laughed the clerk, amused that the facts he had given were still a matter for reflection. "Yes, he's one of our biggest capitalists out West. The family are generally here at this time of the year. The ladies have just arrived from Palm Beach." "Palm Beach?" "That's south, you know." "Oh, a winter resort?" "Exactly." Lord Canning recommenced his study of the register. "Mrs. Horatio Stillwater," he read. "Stillwater, Indiana. Miss Indiana Stillwater." He reflected a moment. "Miss Indiana Stillwater, Stillwater, Indiana. Here too, is a similarity of names. Probably a coincidence and probably not." He read on, "Mrs. Chazy Bunker, Stillwater, Indiana. Bunker, Bunker!" He pressed his hand to his forehead. "Oh, Bunker Hill," he thought, with sudden inspiration. "Miss Indiana Stillwater, Stillwater, Indiana. If the town was named after the father, why should not the State—no, that could not be. But the reverse might be possible." He addressed the clerk. "Would you mind telling me—oh, I beg your pardon," seeing that the clerk was very much occupied at that moment—"It doesn't matter—some other time." He turned and lounged easily against the desk, surveying the people walking about, with the intentness of a person new to his surroundings, and still pondering the question. * * * * * "Now," said Stillwater, after his family had been duly installed, "let me look at you. I'm mighty glad to see you all again." He swung his daughter Indiana up in his arms and kissed her, then set her on his knee and looked at her with open admiration. Mr. Horatio Stillwater had never seen any reason why he should be ashamed of his great pride in his only child. Indiana herself had often been heard to remark, "Pa has never really recovered from the shock of my birth. It was a case of too much joy. He thinks I'm the greatest thing on record." "Well, folks," he said, "I expect you're all dead tired." "Not I," said Mrs. Bunker, his mother-in-law. She was a well-formed woman, with dark, vivacious eyes and a crown of white hair dressed in the latest mode. "I could take the trip all over again." "Did you miss us, father?" asked Mrs. Stillwater, a gentle-looking, pretty woman, with soft, brown hair and dark blue eyes like her child's, only Indiana's were more alert and restless. "Ma has lovely eyes," Indiana was in the habit of remarking. "She takes them from me." Mr. Stillwater put Indiana off his knees and sat by his wife. "Did I miss you? Not a little bit." "Your color's pretty bad, father," she said, "and you look dead tired. Perhaps," she rose impulsively, "perhaps you've been laid up." "No, ma, no," he placed his big hands on her shoulders, forcing her down in her chair. "I haven't been laid up. But I've been feeling mighty queer." He was immediately overwhelmed by a torrent of exclamations and questions from Mrs. Bunker and Indiana, while his wife sat pale and quiet, with heaving breast. "No, I don't know what's the matter with me," he answered. "No, I can't describe how I feel. No, I have not been to a doctor, and I'm not going. There, you have it straight. I don't believe in them." "Pa!" said Indiana, taking a stand in the centre of the room, "I want to say a few words to you." "Oh, Lord!" thought Stillwater, "When Indiana shakes her pompadour and folds her arms, there's no telling where she'll end." "I want to ask you if the sentiments which you have just expressed are befitting ones for a man with a family?" "Mother," said Mrs. Stillwater, "he always takes your advice, tell him he should consult a doctor." "Indiana has the floor!" said Mrs. Bunker. "Is it right that you should make it necessary for me to remind you of a common duty; that of paying proper attention to your health, in order that we should have peace of mind?" Indiana had been chosen to deliver the valedictory at the closing exercises at her school. This gave her a reputation for eloquence which she liked to sustain whenever an occasion presented itself. "I see your finish," she wound up, not as elegantly as one might have expected. "You'll be a hopeless wreck and we'll all have insomnia from lying awake nights, worrying. When we once get in that state—" she turned to Mrs. Bunker. "No cure," said the lady. "Nothing but time." Stillwater sat with his hand in his pocket and his eyes closed, apparently thinking deeply. "Well, I've said all I'm going to say." She looked at him expectantly. His eyes remained closed, however, and he breathed deeply and regularly. "I have finished, pa. Have you any remarks to make?" No answer. "He's asleep, Indiana," said Mrs. Bunker, with a peal of laughter. "He is not," said Indiana indignantly. "He's only making believe—" She bent down and looked in his face. "You're not asleep, are you, pa?" "No, of course not; who said I was?" He sat up rubbing his eyes. "Did you get it all off your mind, Indy?" "You heard what I said, pa?" "Certainly; it was fine. You must write it down for me some day, Indy." "Would you close your ears and eyes to the still, small voice," said Indiana, jumping upon a chair and declaiming in approved pulpit fashion. "The voice which says, 'Go not in the by-ways. There are snares and quick-sands. Follow in the open road, the path of truth and righteousness.' I want to know if you're going to a doctor?" "Well, I suppose I must, if I want some peace in life." "No ordinary doctor, you must consult a specialist." She looked around triumphantly. Her mother smiled on her in loving approval. "A specialist for what, Indy?" Stillwater asked drily. Indiana met his eyes bent enquiringly upon her, then burst into laughter. "Well, you've phazed me this time," she said. Then she installed herself on his knee. "Oh, I don't mean a specialist at all. I mean a consulting physician—an authority." "Now you're talking," answered Stillwater, with a beaming smile. Indiana jumped off his knee. "An ordinary doctor isn't good enough for my father!" She gave a very good imitation of a cowboy's swagger. "I'm hungry, pa." "Well, where are you going to have lunch?" "I'd like mine brought up," said Mrs. Stillwater. "Are the trunks unlocked, Kitty?" as a young, bright-looking girl appeared at the door. "Yes ma'am. Come right in and I'll make you comfortable." "I'll have my lunch up here with ma," said Mr. Stillwater. "What's the rest of you going to do?" "Oh, we'll go down and hear the band play," said Mrs. Bunker with exuberant spirits. "Come along, Indiana!" Stillwater was one of the men who had risen rapidly in the West. He had married at a boyish age, a very young, gentle girl, and had emigrated from the East soon after marriage, with his wife and her mother, Mrs. Chazy Bunker. He built a house on government land in Indiana. The first seven years meant hard and incessant toil, but in that time he and the two women saw some very happy days. His marriage had been a boy and girl affair, dating from the village school. One of those lucky unions, built neither upon calculation or judgment, which terminate happily for all concerned. Stillwater was only aware that the eyes of Mary Bunker were blue and sweet as the wild violets that he picked and presented to her, and that she never spelt above him. His manliness won her respect, and his gentleness her love. Their immature natures thus thoughtlessly and happily united, like a pair of birds at nesting time, grew together as the years went on until they became one. After seven years of unremitting work, Stillwater could stand and look proudly as far as the eye could reach, on acre after acre of golden wheat tossing blithely in the breeze. He had been helped to this result by the women who had lived with the greatest economy and thrift putting everything into the land. His young and inexperienced wife acted under the direction of her mother, a splendid manager and a woman of great shrewdness and sense. He could look, also, on the low, red-painted house, which could boast now of many additions, and realize that his marriage had been a success. In that low red house Indiana first saw the light, and, simultaneously, oil was struck on the land. The child became the prospective heiress of millions. The birth of a daughter opened the source of the deepest joy Stillwater had ever known. When Mrs. Bunker laid the infant swathed in new flannels in his arms, he was assailed by indescribable feelings, altogether new to him. She watched him curiously as he held the tiny bundle with the greatest timidity in his big brawny hands. Feeling her bright eyes on his face he flushed with embarrassment. Mrs. Bunker pushed back the flannel and showed him a wee fist, like a crumpled roseleaf, which she opened by force, clasping it again around Stillwater's finger. As he felt that tiny and helpless clasp tears welled into his honest brown eyes. "There isn't anything she shan't have," he said. And these words held good through all the years that Indiana lived under his roof. In a spirit of patriotism, Stillwater named his daughter Indiana. "She was born right here in Indiana," he declared. "She's a prairie flower, so we named her after the State." The birth of a daughter appealed to Stillwater as a most beautiful and wonderful thing. It awakened all the latent chivalry and tenderness of his character. As he remarked to his friend Masters, "A girl kinder brings out the soft spots in man's nature." This feeling is a foreign one to the European who always longs for a son to perpetuate his name and possessions, and after all it is a natural egotism when there is a long and honorable line of ancestry, but in all ranks and conditions the cry is the same, "A son, oh Lord, give me a son!" After the boom which followed the discovery of oil-gushers on the land, and Stillwater looked steadily in the face, with that level head which no amount of success could turn, the enormous prospects of the future, he thought, "It's just come in time for Indiana." His imagination pictured another Mary Bunker, another soft and clinging creature to nestle against his heart, another image of his wife to wind her arms about his neck and look up into his face with trusting love. Instead, he had a little whirlwind of a creature, a combination of tempests and sunshine, with eyes like the skies of Indiana, and hair the color of the ripe wheat, upon which his wife used to gaze as she sat on her porch sewing little garments, nothing as far as the eyes could strain but that harmony of golden color, joining the blue of the sky at the rim of the horizon. The peace and happiness of the Stillwater household fluctuated according to the moods of Indiana. These conditions commenced when she was a child, and grew as she developed. The family regarded her storms as inevitable, and nothing could be more beautiful than her serenity when they passed, nothing could equal the tenderness of her love for them all. Stillwater, under high pressure from his family, went to consult a noted New York medical authority; a gaunt, spare-looking man, who, after the usual preliminaries, leaned back in his chair and regarded Stillwater fixedly. "Your liver's torpid, your digestion is all wrong, and you are on the verge of a nervous collapse." "Well, doctor, what do you advise?" "Complete change." "Well, don't send me too far. I have big interests on hand just now." "Cessation of all business." "Don't know how I can manage that." "Get on a sailing vessel. Stay on it for three months." "I should die for want of an interest in life." "Take my advice in time, Mr. Stillwater. It will save future trouble." "I wonder how Indiana would like a sailing trip," thought Stillwater. "If the folks were along I guess we'd manage to whoop it up, all right. Well, I'll think it over, Doctor. Of course, I couldn't do anything without consulting the ladies." Stillwater smiled in a confidential way, as much as to say, "You know how it is yourself." The noted authority answered by a look of contemptuous pity. "See you again, Doctor." As he arrived at the hotel he was hailed by Indiana, driving up in a hansom. "Been to see the doctor?" "Yes; I've got lots to tell." "Jump in and we'll drive around the park. The others won't be home yet." Stillwater made a feint of hesitating. "Perhaps I'd better wait till we're all together." "Well, you can jump in anyway, and come for a drive," said Indiana. "I'll give him five minutes," she thought, "before he tells me all he knows." "The air will do me a whole lot of good," remarked Stillwater, acting on her advice. It was a clear cold day, in the latter part of February, and the wind blew keenly in their faces as they bowled leisurely up Fifth Avenue. "Say, Indiana," after three minutes perusal of the promenaders. "Yes, pa—it's coming," she thought. "How would you like to go on a sailing trip for three months; the whole kit and crew of us? We'd have everything our own way; I'd see to that. We'd run the whole show. On the water for three months. What do you think of it—eh?" "Bully!" shouted Indiana, throwing her muff up in the air, and catching it deftly. "I thought you'd like it," said Stillwater, chuckling. "What did the doctor say, pa?" said Indiana breathlessly. "What did he say was the matter with you? Tell me—you must tell me." "Now, Indiana, give me a chance. I'm going to tell you. Didn't I start to give away the whole snap?" "But you're taking such a long time, pa," she said, tapping the floor of the hansom nervously. "Well, when it comes down to it, there isn't much the matter with me," answered Stillwater reassuringly. "He said something about a torpid liver." "Torpid liver!" echoed Indiana, looking as if she were just brought face to face with the great calamity of her life. "Now, that's what I was afraid of," said Stillwater. "Please don't go on like that before your ma, Indiana. It's not serious." "No?" echoed Indiana helplessly. "Why, it's nothing at all," Stillwater laughed hilariously. "Torpid livers—people have them every day." "Well, what else?" said Indiana. "Oh, lots," answered Stillwater confidentially. "Tell me this minute; I must know. Don't you try and keep anything from me, pa." "Indiana, will you give me a chance? Sit down! You'll be out of this hansom in a minute. Something about digestion. That don't amount to anything." Indiana sank back with a sigh of relief. "And something about nerves—says I must throw up business, that's all it amounts to, for a few months." "Then you'll be cured?" "Positively." "Then you shall, pop—you shall; do you hear me?" "Now, Indiana, what's the use of your taking the reins and whipping up like that? I've told you what I reckon to do. Didn't I broach the subject of a sailing trip?" "Ma and I are good sailors," remarked Indiana meditatively, "but Grandma Chazy don't like the water." "Oh, we'll jolly her along her all right," said Stillwater easily. "Say, Indiana," he put his mouth to her ear, "Grandma Chazy wouldn't miss a trick." Indiana laughed loudly. "Well, this is what I call a wild and exciting time, Indiana. If you took me on many of these drives I think I'd get rid of that 'slight nervous derangement' the doctor was talking about. Sort of a rest-cure—eh?" "Oh, if I could only get on that horse's back!" cried Indiana, "I'd make him go." "Not that horse, Indiana," said Stillwater chuckling. "All the sporting spirit in you wouldn't make that horse go. Suppose we think about getting home?" "Back to the hotel," he shouted to the driver. "I can't help thinking of Circus," said Indiana sentimentally. "I wonder if he misses me." "You think more of that horse than all your beaux, don't you, Indiana?" Indiana nodded and smiled. "I'll have my hands full for a few weeks before I go on that sailing trip. I don't know how I'm going to manage it." "Well, you just must!" "Suppose we don't say anything to the others till I make sure I can go. I've got some big things on now, Indiana—" "You won't go after you've worked me all up about it—you'll keep on grinding until you're past curing, until one day you'll just drop down and die. What do you care—and ma and Grandma Chazy and—and I'll be left with no one to look after us." She buried her face in her muff, making piteous little gulps. "I'm a fool," thought Stillwater, patting her on the back. "The idea of that little thing takin' it so to heart. I didn't think she was old enough to realize things like that. None of us know how much there is in Indiana." His heart swelled with gratitude at this proof of devotion from his only child. "Now, Indiana, don't lose your grip like this. I'm going, I tell you. I'm going on this trip. There isn't anything on earth that'll stop me. Hi! Driver! Just run through and stop at Thorley's!" As the hansom dashed up to Thorley's Indiana gave a clear jump to the curb, disdaining the hand her father held out. "American beauties!" said Stillwater. The salesman showed them a gorgeous long-stemmed cluster. "That's the ticket," said Stillwater. "My, they're fresh, Indiana." She selected one and fastened it in her furs. "I'll carry the rest for you. Now what would the others like?" Indiana flitted about selecting flowers. "Would you like them sent?" inquired the salesman. "No," said Indiana, "we'll take them right along." "Why," exclaimed Stillwater as they were leaving the store, "I was just about forgetting you were all going to the opera to-night. Now, what flowers do you want to wear, Indiana?" "Well, my dress is white. Hyacinths, white hyacinths. Corsage bouquet, Miss Stillwater." "And ma, she likes the sweet-smelling ones." "Well, violets for ma. Violets, Mrs. Stillwater." "Shall we say violets for Grandma Chazy?" "I think Grandma Chazy would like something brighter," said Indiana. "Carnations?" suggested the salesman. "Yes," said Indiana. "Pink carnations, Mrs. Chazy Bunker. Send to the Waldorf Hotel for this evening. Don't make any mistake, please!" "Duplicate the order to-morrow, same time," added Stillwater. Indiana hummed gaily to herself as they drove off with their flowers. "She's forgotten all about it now," thought Stillwater, with a satisfied glance at her happy face. Lord Canning noticed them when they entered the hotel. He was standing in the lobby through which they passed, lighting a cigar preparatory to going out. He recognized Stillwater immediately, and stared curiously at Indiana. "I suppose that is the daughter," he thought, "Indiana." He smiled as he puffed his cigar. CHAPTER II. Birds of Passage. "Anything, if it's for your good," said Mrs. Stillwater, when the subject of the sailing trip was broached. "Father, this is the finest mignonette I've ever seen." "Well, I suppose I'll be sick," added Mrs. Bunker dolefully, as she helped her daughter arrange the flowers, "but I'll get used to the motion. As long as we get somewhere sometime, and see something that's worth seeing. Isn't that vase a picture?" "Well, you must leave that to me, Grandma Chazy. What's the matter with Japan?" There was a chorus of delight. Indiana jumped wildly up and down the room. "I'll run in and see the old man to-morrow morning. He'll be glad to hear I'm going to act on his advice. I told him I couldn't pledge myself to do anything until I had first consulted the ladies." "Well, I guess," said Indiana. "Let's have lunch; then I must get right down town. You won't see me till dinner." Their faces fell. "What are we going to do with ourselves?" said Indiana. "Go shopping." This seemed to be a happy idea, and Stillwater congratulating himself that he had suggested an entertainment which appealed to them, kissed his wife, remarking, "Now, don't you go and tire yourself, mother. You can't travel with these other young things." When Stillwater, the following morning, confided to the noted medical authority that he intended to take his whole family on a sailing voyage to Japan, adding the clause, "We're going to have a real good time," he sank back in his chair, and regarded Stillwater with an expression of patient endurance. "I thought I had impressed on you, Mr. Stillwater, the necessity of absolute rest and quiet. Rest and quiet; do you understand me?" "Perfectly! Perfectly! That's what I'm laying my plans for. Three months on a sailing vessel—" "With your entire family, which includes—?" "My wife, my daughter, and my mother-in-law." "A wife, a daughter, and a mother-in-law. None of them deaf or dumb, I presume?" "Ha, ha, ha! Now you needn't be afraid I shan't have cheerful company. They'll make things hum, I tell you!" "I don't doubt it for a minute. Mr. Stillwater, I strongly advise this trip without your family. With your family I am as strongly against it. To be confined for three months on a sailing vessel with a wife, a daughter, and a mother-in-law, would be enough to derange any man's nerves, allowing he is perfectly normal when he starts. Now, the consequences in your condition—" "Now, doctor, you're not sure of your ground. You don't know my family. They're devoted to me." "Of course," said the Noted Authority, smiling blandly. "That is the trouble." "Say now. They're not going to do me any harm." "Intentionally, I hope not." "Of course they have their little squabbles, but I can manage them all right." "We might effect a compromise. How old is your daughter?" "Eighteen. A perfect child. We can do whatever we like with her." Stillwater smiled involuntarily as he uttered this unblushing falsehood, thinking "I mean she can do whatever she likes with us. My words got twisted, that's all." "Well, suppose we leave your mother-in-law behind, and take your wife and daughter. The latter, I gather, is tractable and easily managed." "Leave my mother-in-law behind! Oh, I couldn't do that. She's making a great sacrifice for my sake. She's awful seasick but I promised her a good time, once we get to Japan, and I mean to keep my word." The Noted Authority sighed. "You're quite decided on that point?" "Quite. Couldn't leave her behind. Wouldn't hurt her feelings for the world." "There is no more to be said, Mr. Stillwater." "The sailing trip's off, then?" "Except you resolve to go alone. In case of nervous derangement I always advise separation. No family." "Of course, I couldn't presume to argue with you, Doctor. But I'll talk it over with the ladies. They'll never allow me to go alone, though, I'm quite sure of it." "Is there any necessity to precipitate matters so far?" said the Noted Authority. "Would it not be easier to announce at once quietly and firmly your intention to go, avoiding all preliminary discussion?" "Oh, you don't know my family; they would not allow that sort of thing. Doctor, are you married?" "I have been a widower for some years." "That explains—you've forgotten how it is. You see, my family are a very touchy lot—but I know just how to handle them. We get along swimmingly." "As these domestic conditions seem inevitable, further discussions seem useless. Talk it over with the ladies. Perhaps with the assistance of your wife, your daughter and your mother-in-law you may arrive at some decision which will be agreeable to all concerned." "Certainly! Certainly! I'll do as you say—we'll talk it over and we'll hit on something between the lot of us. See you again, Doctor. Good-by." "He's pretty far gone already, I fear," thought the Noted Authority after Stillwater had departed. "Absolutely afraid to act on his own responsibility." "What do you think?" cried Stillwater, bursting in on his family about dinner hour. "He won't allow you to go with me on that sailing trip. He says I must go alone." "Well, pa, you go right back and tell him that we wouldn't think of allowing you to do anything of the kind." "His office hours are over now, Indiana," said Stillwater, smiling placidly. "Will to-morrow morning do?" "Oh, father, it would just break my heart to see you going off alone and sick, too." "Not to be thought of for a minute," said Mrs. Bunker. "I told him you wouldn't hear of it." Stillwater leaned back in his chair, watching with evident enjoyment the effect of his words. "He said that to confine a perfectly normal person on a sailing vessel for three months with his wife, his daughter, and his mother-in-law, would make him a nervous wreck for life." "Did he say that, pa?" "Practically, Indiana." "Brute," said Mrs. Bunker. "If he once had the privilege of making my acquaintance he might change his views on the matter." "He might fall all over himself to become one of the sailing party himself then," remarked Stillwater chuckling. "Well, he said I should talk it over with the ladies." "It's a wonder he gave us that much consideration," said Indiana loftily. "I reckon he thought he was humoring me. I guess he thinks I'm a gone case." Stillwater slapped his knee. "Well, I've been doing some tall thinking on my own account and it's come to this." He rose and looked at his wife. "In the old days when I was coaxing the ground, I never had these feelings, mother." "Oh, no!" "I'm going back to nature. I'm going to buy a farm. I know just where to lay my hands on one in Indiana. Spring is coming. I'm going to live on it and work on it, till I'm a new man again." "I second that motion," said Mrs. Bunker, bringing her hand down on the table. "And I," cried Indiana. "We'll all go farming." "Well, mother, you're not saying a word." She smiled up at him. Her eyes were full of tears. "It—it will be like the old days," she said. "Here are the hats!" cried Indiana, as Kitty, the maid, entered staggering under the weight of a number of boxes. They all became immediately interested in the absorbing question of spring headgear. "How do you like this?" inquired Mrs. Bunker, perching a black net concoction on her carefully dressed head. "Very becoming!" answered Indiana, after a critical inspection. "Suits you fine, grandma!" said Stillwater. "Shows what you all know!" remarked Mrs. Bunker, looking in the glass. "It's entirely too old for me." She placed it on her daughter's smooth brown coils. "Ah!" cried Stillwater admiringly. His wife, sitting under inspection, looked inquiringly at Indiana. A mirror held no significance for Mrs. Stillwater. She was always supremely satisfied with whatever her family approved of, for her, in the way of personal adornment. "I'll take that hat for ma," said Indiana. "It's all right." "Yes, Mary can afford to wear it," said Mrs. Bunker. "I'm not young enough for a hat like that." "Ladies," exclaimed Mr. Stillwater, looking at his watch. "This is a pretty interesting show, but excuse me for the liberty of reminding you that there's another, starting at a quarter past eight, at which we've made a solemn resolution to be present." "Hear! Hear!" cried Indiana. "It is now seven o'clock. Of course you don't take as long to dress as I do." He made quickly for the door. "Not a bit longer than other women," cried Indiana. "Well, we'll leave that question open," said Mr. Stillwater, disappearing. That evening, as they were stepping from the elevator in their wraps, ready for the theatre, Mrs. Bunker uttered an exclamation of intense surprise. "Lord Canning!" "Mrs. Bunker; I am delighted!" "And Lord Stafford, too!" She shook hands with an elderly gentleman, slightly foppish in appearance. "Well, of all people in the world, to meet you here to-night. I'm just ready to faint." "Don't! Don't! Mrs. Bunker," said Lord Stafford, with a laugh of intense enjoyment. "Lord Stafford; Lord Canning; my son-in-law, Mr. Stillwater; my daughter, Mrs. Stillwater, and my grand-daughter, Miss Stillwater." "Indiana," thought Lord Canning, as he bowed ceremoniously. "These gentlemen were my constant companions at Cannes last year," said Mrs. Bunker. "We and the Jennings' were together most of the time." "I'm glad to know you, gentlemen! My mother-in-law's often talked about your kind attention to her abroad." "Kind attention is no name for it," said Mrs. Bunker. "They gave me the best time I ever had. And now that I've caught them on American ground, I intend to repay it with interest." "I assure you, Mrs. Bunker, you need feel no sense of obligation," said Lord Canning. "Your companionship was a source of unfailing pleasure." "What do you think of this big town, Lord Canning?" said Mr. Stillwater, indicating his surroundings by a comprehensive wave of the hand. "Extraordinary!" answered Lord Canning. "How long are you going to be here?" inquired Mrs. Bunker of Lord Stafford, while her son-in-law was probing Lord Canning's recently acquired views of America. "Oh, we're only birds of passage, Mrs. Bunker." "So are we; but isn't it delightful to meet on the wing?" "On the wing; ha, ha! Delightful, Mrs. Bunker! Delightful!" "We start to-morrow for California," said Lord Canning. "And the day after we return to Indiana," added Mrs. Bunker. "In the summer we intend to investigate Colorado." "I have a ranch up in the Rockies," said Stillwater. "Why, this little girl," he brought his hand down on Indiana's shoulders, "learned to shoot up there." "Indeed!" said Lord Canning. "Well, you just ought to have seen her once cornering a grizzly. She shot him, too—sure as I stand here." "Extraordinary!" exclaimed Lord Canning. "Oh, that's a small matter," remarked Indiana modestly. "Indeed!" said Lord Canning. "We shoot bears every day in America," she added airily. At these words Lord Canning looked about him as though he fully expected one to appear that moment, for the purpose of allowing him to see Miss Stillwater dispatch it with all possible speed, and just as she stood there in her long white opera cloak, holding a bunch of hyacinths. "Not here!" exclaimed Indiana. "No?" answered Lord Canning, looking absently at her blonde pompadour, every hair of which seemed to quiver with a distinct life and individuality of its own. Indiana gave vent to a long peal of merriment. "No—of course not!" Lord Canning hastened to add. "Not here." "We used to spend most part of our summers in the Rockies," said Stillwater, "but the last two or three years the ladies have preferred the Adirondacks." "We thought of giving ourselves a month there in the autumn, before we return to England," said Lord Canning. "Now's my chance," exclaimed Mrs. Bunker; "you must stay with us, and we'll give you fine hunting." "Plenty of deer in the North Woods," added Stillwater. "You'll be heartily welcome if you care to rough it with us. Camp life, you know." "I should be only too delighted," said Lord Canning. "What do you say, Uncle?" "Charmed!" "I'm sure we'll make you feel at home," said Mrs. Stillwater. At these words, uttered with such heartfelt sincerity, the two Englishmen felt at home that very moment. There was a soft domesticity about Mrs. Stillwater, which made itself perceptible even in the brilliant crowded corridor of the Waldorf. "Now, Lord Stafford," said Mrs. Bunker, "take out your note book; and I'll give you all necessary instructions to reach us." "I generally manage to get up there in September," said Mr. Stillwater. "But, if anything detains me for a short while—you'll be in good hands." "Yes, we'll take care of you," said Indiana. Lord Canning smiled. Indiana immediately decided that his face, though stern in repose, was not unattractive. "Well, good-bye till the fall," said Mrs. Bunker. "Lord Stafford, do you remember that odd trick you had abroad, of turning up unexpectedly, wherever I happened to be?" She tapped him playfully with a carnation from her bouquet. "Ha, ha, ha! You see, I haven't lost that trick yet, Mrs. Bunker!" He took the carnation and fastened it in his buttonhole. "Good-bye, Lord Canning," said Indiana. "Don't forget to look us up, when you come to the woods. I'll show you the sights." Lord Canning bowed, blushing with embarrassment. No young lady, of the tender age of Indiana, had ever before spoken to him with such freedom, or looked at him with such unconscious, unabashed eyes. "Lively woman, Mrs. Bunker," remarked Lord Stafford, looking after the party, and inhaling the fragrance of the carnation. He met with no response. "Lively woman, eh?" he repeated in a louder tone. "Yes," answered Lord Canning absently, "very, very young; little more than a child, in spite of her self-assurance—and there's something about her—something—quite—er—different!" |