Frances had her enthusiasms; so had Edward Montague, with the saving difference that hers were for her amusement and his were concerning his life-work. Still he found time for other things also. He accepted the invitation to dinner promptly. The University was by no means a byway homeward, but he found many an odd moment to spend there when he rode in for his mail or for other affairs. He came the following Sunday and the next, and made the round of Sabbath-school and church and mission and late walk with the professor and his daughter. Lawson, who had not seen Frances since the short drive she permitted him, was loitering that last Sabbath afternoon before the doorway of a student in the West Range—a monkish row of rooms fashioned as those on the inner quadrangle are, but unbroken by the professors' houses and facing "Good-by, old fellow!" he called shortly, turning suddenly away. "Hold on!" called the student, who had some thought of accompanying him. But when he had gotten his hat and coat, Lawson was striding far down the corridor. At the end of it the road from the mountain of the observatory curved into the wide drive through the grounds. Lawson looking upward was angered unreasonably, violently, unbelievingly. He left such moods to others, mostly. He turned instantly into the short cut across the campus. He could not hurry enough even when outside the grounds, but he must swing himself on the car clanging townward. He left behind a gay, unconscious trio. The professor and Frances and Edward Montague were walking briskly homeward, when they glimpsed him. The professor's face, when interested, was strangely frank and boyish; Lawson was used to seeing him look a trifle bored and a trifle more absorbed. To see him, as he had done that one swift instant, alert, wide-awake, to see a tall, fair, young man talking to him with careless ease—the University men were always in "You will come in, Edward," the professor said at the door. The young man looked at the fading sunset lights of the sky and hesitated. He thought of the ride before him and he thought of the empty house awaiting him; he looked in at the cheer of the house showing through the open door and at the young woman standing in the hall listening for his answer. Her face neither invited nor forbade; he followed the professor. But the contrast he had drawn for a minute haunted him. He cared not a whit for fine furnishings, scarce knowing them when he saw them, except for the air of comfort and the atmosphere of home they might give; but those two were requirements. He was too busied all the days and too tired all the nights to think how they were now denied "What's the use of going home, now?" the professor reassured him as they went in to the fireside; "it would be dark when you got there. You couldn't do anything; just have an evening all to yourself." "And father wants to talk grapes to you," Frances added gayly; "he's just gotten some pamphlets—" The professor looked guilty. "Well, I chanced on an advertisement—" "And he hasn't had a chance to bring them out all day—" "Frances!" "Here they are," teased his daughter, "with your report on agriculture," she held up dramatically the big book she had dragged from beneath the papers on the table. "I have been listening to hear him begin The professor fingered the pamphlet nervously. "You know, here—the secretary says—" "There, he has begun; I am going to see about supper." Edward listened. There was much to awaken his keenest interest. He was devoted to his pursuit, theory and practice. But he was listening too, with all his inner consciousness, for a light footstep, and when Frances came quietly back with an amused look at the two, his eyes flashed her amusement back at her, as with much show of not disturbing them, she slipped into a chair before the fire. The professor was unconscious; he was in full swing and went on glibly. The young man's face was turned attentively towards him; the father did not know that just so Frances' face was in the line of vision, but Edward knew. It needed but the flicker of an eyelid for him to watch the The professor broke the thread of his argument. "You are tired?" "I! no—ah—" the young man stammered. "Well, here, take this home with you when you go! Read it for yourself, and see what you think of it; I expect some others," he added shamefacedly. "Father!" cried Frances mischievously, "Mr. Montague, he's started," she added comically, "there's no stopping him. He'll go with no particular interest for ever so long, then something attracts him," she spread out her hands as if in dismay, "we are flooded with papers and pamphlets; he "You had better stop, yourself," said the professor chafing a little under her teasing. "I warn you, he will try—" "Now, daughter!" he knew what she was going to say, "you know I never interfere with other people." "It's true, every word of it!" but Frances saw that her father was hurt a trifle. She came behind his chair and put her arms about his shoulders, laughing over his head at Edward who was watching her with half envious amusement. "Professors should be bald," she said lightly, "now look at this!" She ran her fingers through his thick, dark hair, wavy about the temples where the gray showed in the black. Her father looked up at her adoringly, his eyes—which were often stern—dark and loving. "If they were, they would have no young woman to bother them, rumpling it up." "You are lucky, sir, to have one; isn't he?" Young Montague was silent, but Frances, looking up, saw his eyes. She slipped back to her chair. When he took his leave, later in the evening, he had his own special plea. "You've promised to come and see the old place," he began. "Father is going to bring me some day." "I'm going to make some day a near day," he said persistently. "Mr. Holloway, I'm going hunting Tuesday. I've a good deal of game about my woods. Come out Wednesday; I'll see you have some for dinner." The professor reluctantly pleaded his engagements. "It's moonlight; you don't mind driving home at night?" "Oh, the road is familiar enough," assented the professor. "Mrs. Randall will come." "We'll drive by for her." "I asked her to-day after church; she said any time this week. I shall look for you in the afternoon, as early as you can make it." So it was they arranged. Edward watched the peaks apprehensively; but the fine weather held. His hunting was successful. There were a score of partridges and a brace of rabbits in the big basement kitchen and he was cautioning his cook fussily, when he heard the roll of wheels. "I 'clar' I's glad dey's come!" muttered the cook, as at last she was free to go about her work. Edward had been nervously anxious all day. The bare house was swept and scrubbed to the last point of cleanliness. He hesitated long over the propriety of entertaining them in "the chamber," over across the hall from the parlor, but it was the only furnished room of the house except the basement dining room. He got all of his belongings out of sight and locked the closet door on the disorder. He wondered if he should leave his pipe upon the mantelpiece and at the Edward was as glad as she was to hear the wheels. He hurried out on the porch and down the long flight of steps. He had hoped to help Frances from the trap and say some pretty words of greeting, but she had already sprung out and met him at the steps. The professor was assisting Mrs. Randall. "Father says you are going to take us all over the place," called Frances at once. "Let's go now; Mrs. Randall wants to, also!" "Of course!" chimed that pleased matron; "we want to see all the establishment. When we come back, I'm going down in the kitchen." "I wish you would," pleaded the host fervently. Mrs. Randall, who had no children of her own, had a mother's heart for all: she had been longing to get out to this bachelor's establishment ever since it was set up, but the doctor was always too busy. She was going to make the best of the opportunity, and if this "boy" had any need her bright eyes could see, she was resolved to help him fill it. "Go get your hat, Edward; we'll all come in afterwards." And the young man ran back up the steps, all his pretty speeches unsaid. "We'll go out to the vineyard first," suggested the professor, hurrying ahead, with Mrs. Randall close behind him, in the narrow path beaten along the tangle of yellow Jerusalem apples and prickly Spanish needles and wild grasses. The farm was still in sorry order. The ground of the orchard close to the house was covered with tangled, browning weeds, in some of the trees the late winesaps shone "Don't eat those; I have some splendid ones in the house for you." "These are fine!" She set her white teeth in the red fruit. "I like these best, I like to pull them." "Eve!" he bantered. "Are they forbidden?" "Nothing is, here; it's all yours—" he began eagerly. "Oh, thanks! Had you a Spanish ancestor?" "English on each side," he declared stoutly. "You look it," she assented, with one quick look at his fair face and a swift noting of his sturdiness. "The Saxons are truth-tellers," he urged. But the professor had paused at the pig-pen near the orchard's edge. "Fine hogs!" he called back to his host, "Cheshire?" Edward joined him reluctantly. "That one is," he said, pointing to the pinkish-white sides of a lazy, fat wallower. "He'll weigh two hundred." "I expect he will." "Seems a pity to kill him." "I have the mother." "Who's going to make your sausage and dry your lard?" asked Mrs. Randall quickly. "Lizzie." "What, trust that darkey with it?" "There's nothing else to do." "Come on, Frances," called her father, for that young woman was still loitering under the apple-trees. Mr. Holloway took the lead towards the vineyard. The Northrup estate numbered many acres, but not many valuable ones. They were too high up the mountains, which ran steeply to their crests a bare five hundred yards behind the house. This narrow valley at its base sheltered from the north was fertile, and wound straight at the foot of the peaks for nearly a mile. Close to the house was the vineyard; beyond the vines, the cornfields, above there on the mountain side, the woodland. Frances followed, but her words of praise were for the autumn woods, the towering There was the pipe bringing its clear mountain water from a far off spring to the kitchen door, there was the great ground floor room of the wing stored with apples shining redly against the white of the walls. Here Mrs. Randall paused. "I am going into the kitchen," she announced. But the professor and Frances and Edward went up the stairway to the covered porch joining the wing to the main building, and by the rear door of "the chamber" into the house. "You must go through the house," insisted Edward. The professor begged off. "No, I'll sit here; it isn't often I see such a fire as this. I've been over it before, and many times, years ago." The professor was lost in the memory of the happy days he had spent in the old house when his years were less than young Montague's, of the lives which had drifted The man saw bright faces there in the flames which went roaring up the great chimney, read old tales in the gleaming Frances and her host were walking through the empty rooms upstairs, the young man pointing eagerly to views of towering peaks silhouetted against the reddening sky, their sides tawny with the russet leaves of oaks or vivid with the evergreens, or gray with bare tossing branches. From the windows opposite those framing such vistas, she looked into a wide deep valley of clustering hill-tops, low, soft, round, green, crowding close together, running water between,—though this she could not see. "The grass is green down between those hills the whole year through," he was telling her, "and the water never freezes; that's why it is such a splendid stock-farm. Mr. Payne is very successful. I have been wondering if I should try some stock here." Frances was scarce heeding, she was looking down on the circle of the lawn before the door, tangled, weed-grown; noting that the "Shall we go down?" he asked, seeing she was only half attentive. "You have not seen the parlor," he paused at the foot of the stairway to say. He led the way across the hall. "It's a splendid room!" It was. But it was empty and cold and dusky. Frances went over to the high, black-painted mantel and leaned against it looking down on the fireless hearth. She was thinking how desolate it was. He, for one flashing second, saw again his vision. For an instant it shone—the fire, the furnishings, the happy woman. He stepped forward impulsively. "It lacks one thing," he blurted, without a moment's thought of what she would think of his speech. "Two!" she said lightly. "Furnishings as well," he said in his mind, "furnishings and a mistress," he repeated in his heart, but before he could open his lips, she was saying, "Two!" "What?" he asked breathlessly. "Steam heat and an electric plant!" |