O wha can prudence think upon, And sic a lassie by him? O wha can prudence think upon, And sae in love as I am? —Old Song. Magnus, meanwhile, with quite as much of the "boy" as the "grand" about him, despite his inches, tiptoed off along passages and through doorways that he knew by heart, following the hum of voices. So presently came out into the small summer kitchen, where a pleasant smell of good cookery steamed and puffed and whiffed from various vessels within and upon the stove. Dishes stood ready on the table, with white-covered pans of rolls just waiting to be baked, but save the old cat, winking and blinking by the oven door, there was nobody in charge. Magnus gave her a toss up in the air for old times' sake, peeped cautiously out at the broad back steps, then let himself easily down through the open window and came round the other way upon the scene of the sweet chatter that was going on. The three girls were on the steps, Rose and Violet hulling strawberries, while Cherry in a wide check apron, sat on the lowest step of all with a basket of lettuce at her side, picking over the fresh green leaves, and dropping them into a pan of cold water. A thick clump of lilac bushes served as a screen. "Do you know," Rose was saying, "I cannot believe it, "And doesn't he look well?" said Violet; "and isn't he a beauty?" "Do not tell him that," Cherry answered with discretion. She would have given a ready enough answer a week ago, but somehow, with the continent no more between them, the young damsel had grown wary. "I'm afraid everybody else will tell him," said Rose. "But he is not spoiled a bit yet. Don't you think so?" "Not a bit." It was a very mild way of giving her estimate, and Cherry scolded herself that she could not answer freely, as she had always done; called herself to account for the shyness which had sprung into life with, indeed, the very first coming of that photograph. "I am such a goose!" poor Cherry thought, bending down low over the lettuce basket. "What shall I do to myself? If only he had not acted so last night!" And just here, by way of composing matters, two hands came softly round her head, and were laid lightly and respectfully upon her eyes. It was one of his old teasing ways with her. Cherry's start passed almost into a tremor. She put up her hands to remove the obstruction, and they were taken and held fast; and what more Magnus might have dared had there been no witnesses, will never be known. Cherry lifted her face, trying to speak sternly. "Magnus," she said, "you have not improved one bit. I thought West Point was to make a man of you—or a better man—or something." "It has made 'something' of me," he retorted, gazing down at her. "Give you three guesses." "Too much else to do. Set that pan of lettuce on the "I see it—to the depths of my heart," Magnus answered as he did her bidding. "Here, Viola, give us your apron. If I don't sit down and help this girl, I shall have her fainting away on my hands." "No, you will not," Cherry said very decidedly. But Magnus spied a spare apron on a nail, and, tying it carefully round his neck, he put himself down on the doorstep, and dived in among the pea pods. Always taking, if he could, the very one of which Cherry had laid hold, and then dropping that and seizing her fingers, and then mysteriously scattering the peas from his own hands or shaking them out of hers, so that the rolling things had to be sought on all sides. Which last process Cadet Kindred pursued so zealously that more than once his face and Cherry's shining locks came very near together. The sisters looked on, laughing and delighted. For just so those two had teased and scolded and played together, since they were big enough to play, and to see it all go on again in the old fashion was too good for anything. Of the subtile difference that had crept in, their young eyes took no note. And Cherry herself tried hard to ignore it, laughing with the rest, and very well holding her own, but dimly conscious all the while that things she would have ventured once, she did not venture now. "Boy, why do you tie that string round your neck?" said Rose. "Have you forgotten how aprons are worn?" "A lost art. But this is the improved style, which I mean to introduce at West Point. I cannot see how the Tactical Department has overlooked aprons so long. We're too young to know when to wear overcoats, so aprons to keep our trousers clean would be just the thing. I'll introduce them." "When I go back as Com.," Magnus answered with dignity. "When I am Com. and Cherry is Supe. then you'll see." "You could see now, if you would look," said Cherry, as a podful of peas rolled down the step. "I am looking with all my eyes.—And they dare to call you a summer girl!" Magnus broke forth, watching the lovely pink cloud of colour that came and went with such swift changes. "Will you please tell us what a summer girl is like?" said Violet. "She has danced about a good deal in your letters, but we everyday people don't know what she is. Come, boy, describe her." "Her!" Magnus repeated. "She is to the full as plural as she is singular." "Many of them at West Point, are there?" said Rose. "Car loads; stunning, too, as they can be, some of them. Take your breath away. Say, girls, where's the old banjo? In existence yet?" "Oh, dear, yes," said Rose. "Only no one has played it since you went away." "And it is here, too," said Violet. "Mother made us bring it this morning, because she was sure Mr. Erskine would like to hear you sing." Magnus laughed. "Thought he couldn't wait until to-morrow," he said. "Or knew she couldn't. Mammy hasn't changed, that is plain. But I shall sing to Miss Erskine first. About her namesake—and some other things." He jumped up and went for the banjo, placing himself then in the doorway where he could look down upon Cherry. She had put away the peas, and now had in her hand a bowl of yellow cream, which she was softly beating to a "That bird sings for all she is worth," he said. It took such hold of him; the sweet home air and sounds and sunshine, the two dear girls watching him with their loving admiration, and the yet dearer, whose bent-down face told more than she meant it should, the sights and scents from hayfields and hills—it came upon Magnus Kindred like a spell. And as with it all mingled in the echoes of music from the graduating parade, he struck a few notes on the old banjo, and then sang out from the depths of his heart: "Home, home! Sweet, sweet home, O there's no place like home! There is no place like home." Cadet Kindred had by nature a rather rarely fine voice. Art had indeed never tutored nor trained it, but it was one of those voices which can never by possibility sing out of tune or time, and in the two years he had been away, exercise and growth had both strengthened and sweetened it; a sort of revelation now to the listening girls. The two sisters gazed at him as if nobody had ever sung before; Cherry's beater went slower and softer, then stopped, and the girl sat in breathless listening; until her lips began to tremble, and there came such a surge of sorrow and sympathy and delight in the music, and—and—everything else; that Cherry laid one hand upon her breast as if to quiet and keep it down, and at first dared not look at the singer, and then could not take her eyes away. "We twa hae paidlet in the burn, Frae morning sun till dine; But we've wandered mony a weary fit, Sen auld lang syne." "That is just what we did, Cerise—do you remember? And just what I have done, since." "But oh, Magnus!" she cried, "were you so homesick as that?" "Homesick? Your blue apron is rose-colour to it." "I am glad we did not know," Cherry said with a long breath, beginning slowly to beat her cream. "You were very good not to tell." "And did nobody help you or speak to you?" questioned the two young sisters, coming up nearer to sit at his feet. "I had help enough," said Magnus, softly twanging the strings of his banjo. "Everybody from the Com. to the third-class corporals bade me brace up. And if I wanted a lonely walk in the open air on Saturday, I had only to wear my hair long and dishevelled as a sign of grief, and they'd give to me without asking. And if I dead-beat and went to the Hospital to get a chance to mope a little, Dr. Pestle would give me some compound to make me sick, lest I should lose my time and be down there for nothing. The Tacs were so afraid I should 'wet my couch with briny tears' that they made me keep the old thing tight rolled up till bed time. I was too tired to cry, then." "The best that could be, Rosy. They made me mad, and then I was all right." "I should call that poor comfort," said Violet. "Nothing like it, however," said Magnus. "Dries up your feelings quicker than fourteen pocket-handkerchiefs. You owe the world one, and you mean to live till you pay it. So suicide can wait." "Magnus, I wish you would not talk so," Cherry said appealingly. "Now there is Cerise," Magnus went on. "If I could once make her thoroughly angry with me, she wouldn't mind anything else that happened. The thing is how. I haven't found out yet." "And you never will," said Rose. "You cannot do it." "I cannot, hey? That is good to know. Gives me great freedom of action. I'll store up the information for future use." "What makes you call her Cerise?" said Rose. "Practising my French. Of course I never thought of her in common English when I was away." "Cherry, he cannot be with you five minutes without beginning to tease," said the girls, laughing. "He is the very same boy he always was." "I think he has made good progress in the art of telling fibs," said Cherry in turn. "Fibs!" Magnus repeated, with much unworded scorn. "You'll see about that. I mean to tell the truth while I am home now, if I never do again." And with the most funny, rollicking tone Mr. Kindred caught up his banjo and dashed off into "The Girl I Left Behind Me"; rattling it out, throwing in recitative here and there, and putting such spirit and vim into the performance that now the girls all laughed till they nearly cried again; but this time Cherry kept her eyes on her cream. "Home, home; sweet, sweet home; There is no place like home,— There is no place like home." But now, when he stopped playing, his two sisters came round him caressing him, hanging upon him, and even Mrs. Kindred looked in from the other room and said: "Magnus, don't play that any more. You break my heart. I shall never be able to let you go back again." Magnus laid the banjo aside. "Don't fret now, mammy," he said. "It has been pretty tough, but the worst is over." |