“My father,” said Mrs. Rowantree with her delicate Irish accent, “was a gentleman—a scholar and a gentleman.” She paused a moment in that little dramatic way of hers and then went on. “But my mother was a cottager’s daughter, very sweet and lovely to see, but lacking the fine ways of himself. He gave up his friends for her sake, and they left the village where they were known and went to live in Dublin where my father made a living by writing for the newspapers and reviews. I was born the second year of their marriage, and seven years later my little brother David came into the world.” She paused again, but this time because there was a tightening in her throat which would not let her go on. “David,” she said, “was the finest baby I ever laid my eyes on, and I’ve had some fine ones of my own. He was a treasure from the first, “Then, just as we were at our happiest, father came home with a chill. I well remember it. We were watching for him at the window, David and mother and I, and we had a meat pie because of his liking for it, and we had taught David to say ‘Four and Twenty Blackbirds.’ Oh, we were counting on such a happy evening! But when dad came in, he did not speak to us for the anguish that was on him, and mother got him in his bed, and he never got out of it again.” “Oh, me!” said Azalea softly. A little silence fell in which Mary Cecily “And after he was gone,” she resumed, “we had nothing. Never had he earned enough for my mother to put by any savings. So we took to selling off what was in the house, and she to doing sewing and embroidering, but in a little while she saw it was no use—there’d be nothing for us but starvation unless some great piece of fortune befell us. My mother was a devout woman and she prayed morning and night and often through the day for help for her children, and her prayers, she thought, were answered when word came from my father’s brother who was in America, that if she’d bring the children to him, he’d care for them with his own, and she could be about some kind of work. In America, he said, there were chances. He sent us money for the journey, but not very much—all he could afford, of course. So mother, who was not afraid to do anything for her children’s sake, took passage with other poor people in the steerage of a great ship sailing from Queenstown.” “Poor little dear,” said Azalea. “Poor little dear!” echoed Mary Cecily. The memory of the old anguish was upon her, and she stared before her at the great trees of “Oh,” cried Azalea, “I hope you won’t think about it, Mrs. Rowantree. That’s how I manage to get along. I say to myself: ‘My sorrow is sacred. I will not take it out and look at it often. I will leave it in a holy place. It will be safe there. I will go my way, doing happy, common things.’ Can’t you look at your trouble that way, Mrs. Rowantree?” Mary Cecily turned her misty blue eyes on Azalea. “My girl,” she said solemnly, “I have not yet told you of my real trouble.” Azalea caught her breath. “Well?” she breathed. “Well, they dropped my little mother in the sea, a good priest saying the words of the church over her. Some were kind to us, but after all it was not many who were knowing us. The wild weather kept up, and hundreds there were on the ship who did not leave their beds at all. David and I had no heart for talking, and we kept much to ourselves as we had seen our mother do. There were rough people all about “I can understand that,” Azalea murmured from her heart. “Well, we got to the landing place at last, and I was near suffocated with the beating of my heart. I was as afraid of the city as if it had been a dragon. The fear of cities always was in me, but no city—not Calcutta, not Hong Kong, nor any foreign place—could have seemed more terrible to me than New York. ‘For David’s sake I must be brave,’ I kept saying to myself. ‘For David’s sake.’ Well, the first and second-class passengers were let off, and then came our turn. I never did know how many hundreds there were of us. We seemed like a city-full in ourselves. And if you’ll believe me, at the same time, on the other side of the dock, another great steamer was unloading. So that “Yes,” said Azalea, guessing now what was coming. “So I lost David,” whispered Mary Cecily; “I lost my little brother. His hand slipped from mine and I could not find him. I looked for him all that day; I asked everybody, and no one could tell me anything about him. At night a policeman took me away and put me in the house of a woman and told me to sleep and he would look. So I stayed in the house that night, and the next day I began searching again; and the policeman had others looking. But we never found him, any of us.” “You never found him at all?” “Never at all. My uncle came on, after I had written him, and he searched. But it was no use. David was never found; and they concluded at last that he had been pushed from the wharf into the water and drowned. But I said no. I could hear him calling for me in the night the way the dead never call. I could feel him somewhere, drawing me, drawing me, but I could not tell which way to go, or I would have run to him across the world.” “But we never found him,” she repeated. “So after a while we left the city, my uncle and I, and went to the little farm he had in Maryland. He was something of a writer too, like my father; and he published a little weekly paper. So you see it was an interesting home he had brought me to. His wife was one of those women who are well pleased to have a motherless child to add to her own. She was kind to me but she didn’t spoil me because I was bounden to her. She set me my tasks and saw to it that I did them, and when I was a grown girl and showed a little talent for writing I was sent to my uncle’s office to help with the making of his paper and setting of it up. He drilled me in writing and he taught me type-setting, and I was content there. I never wanted to take up any life of my own. I wanted to be left to myself to mourn for David—” “Oh, but there was nothing in that,” broke in Azalea. “Don’t I know it? But sorrow is like sickness and it can cloud the spirits as sickness “But you grew happier after a time,” protested Azalea, who could not long endure the thought of sorrow. “You must have! See how happy everything is with you now.” “Yes,” admitted Mary Cecily, “I did grow happier after a time, though as I say, I didn’t really want to. But I got to be a young woman, and Bryan Rowantree came along. He was the younger son of a fine English family—Irish on his mother’s side, however—and he came over to America to better himself. He heard of my uncle’s little paper and looked him up, thinking he might be wanted to lend a hand, but my uncle She smiled down at Azalea happily, and the girl could see that whatever others might think, Rowantree’s wife could see nothing but the advantages of the marriage. “I say he was young,” she went on. “He was, however, twelve years older than myself. But I have always been a poor thing and thankful to have some one to lean on.” “Mercy me,” thought Azalea, “can it be she thinks she’s leaning on that man? I thought it was just the other way.” She kept her eyes fixed on the ground carefully, afraid that if she lifted them her thoughts would be read in her face. “We had a sweet little wedding,” said Mary Cecily dreamily, “and then we came away together. We had no particular place to go to, but Bryan said he thought he would like to wander for a time. That suited me, too. But after a little we got tired of that. Besides, we saw that our money would soon give out. So, when we heard of this woodland up here for sale for almost nothing, we bought it. The A call sounded through the woods. “They think we’re lost,” smiled Mrs. Rowantree. “And we must be getting back to the house, but before we go I want you to promise me that you will not speak of my sorrow. It’s a queer way I have with me, not liking to see sympathy save in the eyes of my own chosen friends. Come now, and I hope and pray Miss Pace will not accuse me of rudeness!” “Aunt Zillah? Never!” said Azalea. “It’s a wonderful story you’ve told me, Mrs. Rowantree—so sad I can hardly believe it—much sadder than mine, and that is sad enough. Not that I feel sad,” she added hastily. “Since I became a McBirney I’m a very happy girl.” “But you’re not really a McBirney, are you? Those good mountain people haven’t really adopted you?” “And you have Miss Carin and her parents for your friends. That must be a great comfort to you.” “Oh, indeed, they’re like flowers in the garden of the world,” cried Azalea with one of her pretty extravagant speeches. “Indeed, I believe it, my dear. Yes, we are coming,” she called. “Did you think I had locked this dryad up in an oak tree?” she asked playfully, her arm about Azalea, as they came up to the gallery. Her husband threw a quick glance at her. He knew how to read the changes on her emotional face. “Tut,” he said under his breath to her. “David again! You shouldn’t, mavourneen.” “She’s a treasure, Bryan,” his wife whispered, indicating Azalea with a little nod of the head. “It never could do any harm to ease my heart to her.” “Miss Pace thinks they must all be on their way, Mary Cecily,” he said aloud. “I must have the horses brought ’round.” “Oh, have a taste of tea before you start,” pleaded Mrs. Rowantree. But Aunt Zillah as “I was very happy the little time I stayed there at Rowantree Hall,” he said. “I understood their ways—understood the things they do and the things they don’t do—and what’s more I perfectly understand why they don’t do them. Rowantree himself amuses me, yet I’m fond of him. Mrs. Rowantree—well, she’s a little miracle.” “Oh, she is,” cried Azalea. “How she works—and doesn’t mind. What ducks the children are! And how contented they all seem in that solitude!” “Might be Highland chieftains,” laughed Keefe. “And how do you suppose they live?” “I can’t imagine,” Azalea admitted. “Does he farm?” “A little—a very little. It’s she who thinks out the things that keep the wolf from the door. “Not a thing! I liked that, Keefe. She knew we wouldn’t care how things were. All we wanted was themselves.” “Quite right. All we wanted was themselves.” He sighed sharply. “She makes one feel at home, doesn’t she, that little Mary Cecily Rowantree? I’ve been a lonely cub, Miss Azalea—a queer lonely cub—thrown out of the lair by an accident, and not knowing much about home. But she does something to me—makes me feel as if I’d got back—” He hesitated for a long time. At last Azalea prodded him with a “Got back?” But he did not answer. They rode on then in the noisy silence of the woods, rode to the sound of falling water, the call of sleepy birds, Most of all he wondered why it was that there were so few thoughts really worth thinking which one could put into words. |