Jinnie looked very sweet when she bade farewell to Peg and Lafe the next morning. Mr. King’s car was at the door, and the cobbler watched him as he stepped from it with a monosyllabic greeting to the girl and helped her to the seat next to his. Peggy, too, was craning her neck for a better view. “They’re thick as thieves,” she said, with a dubious shake of her head. “I guess he likes ’er,” chuckled Lafe. “To make a long story short, wife, a sight like that does my eyes good!” Mrs. Grandoken shrugged her shoulders, growled deep in her throat, and opined they were all fools. “An’ quit doin’ yourself proud, Lafe!” she grumbled. “You’re grinnin’ like a Cheshire cat. ’Tain’t nothin’ to your credit she’s goin’ to have the time of her life.” “No, ’tain’t to my credit, Peggy,” retorted the cobbler, “but ’tis to yours, wife.” By the time Lafe finished this statement, Mr. King and Jinnie Grandoken were bowling along a white road toward a hill bounding the west side of the lake. “See that basket down here?” said the man after a long silence. “Yes.” “That’s our picnic dinner! I brought everything I thought a little girl with a sweet tooth might like.” Jinnie had forgotten about food. Her mind had dwelt only upon the fact she was going to be with him all day, one of those long, beautiful days taken from Heaven’s cycle for dear friends. The country, too, stretched in majestic splendor miles ahead of them, trees rimming the road on each side and making a thick woodland as far as one could see. “I’m glad I brought my fiddle,” Jinnie remarked presently. “I am, too,” said Theodore. The place he chose for their outing was far back from the highway, and leaving the car at one side of the road, they threaded their way together to it. The sky above was very blue, the lake quietly reflecting its sapphire shades. Off in the distance the high hills gazed down upon the smaller ones, guarding them in quietude. Theodore spread one of the auto robes on the ground, and shyly Jinnie accepted his invitation to be seated. “Oh, it’s lovely,” she said in soft monotone, glancing at the lake. “Yes,” replied Theodore dreamily. His eyes were upon the placid water, his thoughts upon the girl at his side. Jinnie was thinking of him, too, and there they both sat, with passionate longing in their young hearts, watching nature’s great life go silently by. “Play for me,” Theodore said at length, without taking his eyes from the water. “Stand by that big tree so I can look at you.” Flushed, palpitating, and beautiful, Jinnie took the position he directed. She had come to play for him, to mimic the natural world for his pleasure. “Shall I play about the fairies?” she asked bashfully. “Yes,” assented King. As on that night in his home when first she came into A loose lock of hair fell coquettishly from the girl’s dark head low upon the fiddle, and Theodore loved and wanted to kiss it, and when the instrument dropped from under the dimpled chin, he held out his hand. “Come here, Jinnie,” he said softly. “Come sit beside me.” She came directly, as she always did when he asked anything of her. He drew her down close to his side, and for a long time they remained quiet. Jinnie was facing the acme of joy. The day had only begun, and she was with the object of her dreams. Just as when she had lived in the hills the fiddle had held the center of her soul, so now Theodore King occupied that sacred place. The morning light rose in her eyes, the blue fire transforming her face. Theodore turned, saw, and realized at that moment. He discovered in her what he had long desired. She loved him! All the old longing, all the strength and passion within him broke loose at the nearness of her. Suddenly he stretched out his arms and drew her still nearer. Jinnie felt every muscle of his strongly fibered body grow tense at her touch. She tried to draw away from his encircling arms, but the rise and fall of her bosom, girlishly curved—the small-girl shyness that caused her to endeavor to unloose his strong hands, only goaded him to press her closer. “Don’t leave me, my dearest, my sweet,” he breathed, kissing her lids and hair. “I love you! I love you!” She gasped once, twice, and her head fell upon his breast, and for a moment she lay wrapped in her youthful modesty as in a mantle. “Kiss me, Jinnie,” Theodore murmured entreatingly. She buried her head closer against him. “Kiss me,” he insisted, drawing her face upward. His lips fell upon hers, and Jinnie’s eyes closed under the magic of her first kiss. The master-passion of the man brought to sudden life corresponding emotions in the girl—emotions that hurt and frightened her. She put her hand to his face, and touched it. He drew back, looking into her eyes. “Don’t,” she breathed. “Don’t kiss me any more like—like that.” “But you love me, my girlie, sweet?” he murmured, his lips roving over her face in dear freedom. “You do!... You do!” Jinnie’s arms went about him, but her tongue refused to speak. “Kiss me again!” Theodore insisted. Oh, how she wanted to kiss him once more! How she gloried in the strong arms, and the handsome face strung tense with his love for her! Then their lips met in the wonders It might have been the weird effect of the shadows, or the deep, sudden silence about them that drew the girl slowly from his arms. “I want my fiddle,” she whispered. “Let me go!” Faint were the inflections of the words; insistent the drawing back of the dear warm body. Theodore permitted her to get up, and with staggering step she took her position at the tree trunk. Then he sank down, hot blood coursing through his veins. Long ago he had realized in Jinnie and the fiddle essentials—essentials to his future and his happiness, and to-day her kisses and divine, womanly yielding had only strengthened that realization. Nothing now was of any importance to him save this vibrant, temperamental girl. There was something so delightfully young—so pricelessly dear in the way she had surrendered herself to him. The outside world faded from his memory as Jinnie closed her eyes, and with a very white face began to play. For that day she had finished with the song of the fairies, the babbling of the brook, and the nodding rhythm of the flowers in the summer’s breeze. All that she considered now was Theodore and his kisses. The bow came down over a string with one long, vibrating, passionate call. It expressed the awakening of the girl’s soul—awakened by the touch of a man’s turbulent lips—Jinnie’s God-given man. Her fiddle knew it—felt it—expressed it! With that first seductive kiss the soul-stirring melody was full born within her, as a world is called into the firmament by one spoken word of God. And as she played, Theodore moved silently toward her, for the fiddle was flashing out the fervor of the kisses she had given him. He was close at her feet before he spoke, and simultaneously the white lids opened in one blue, blue glance. “Jinnie!” breathed Theodore, getting up and holding out his arms. “Come to me! Come to me, my love! I can’t live another moment without you.” The bow and fiddle remained unnoticed for the next half hour, while the two, the new woman and the new man, were but conscious of one another, nothing else. At length Theodore spoke. “Jinnie, look up and say, ‘Theodore, I love you’.” It was hard at first, because her mind had never reached the point of speaking aloud her passionate love for him, but Theodore heard the halting words, and droned them over to himself, as a music lover delights in his favorite strains. “And you love me well enough to marry me some day?” he murmured. Marry him! This, too, was a new thought. Jinnie’s heart fluttered like a bird in her breast. To be with him always? To have him for her own? Of course, he was hers, and she was his! Then into her mind came the thought of Lafe, Peggy, and Bobbie, and the arms around him relaxed. “I love you better’n anybody in the world,” she told him, pathetically, “but I can’t ever leave the cobbler.... They need me there.” “They can’t keep you,” he cried passionately. “I want you myself.” His vehemence subdued her utterly. She glanced into his face. In his flashing eyes, Jinnie read a power inimitable and unsurpassed. “I couldn’t ever leave ’em,” she repeated, quivering, “but couldn’t they live––” “We’d take the little blind boy,” promised Theodore. Jinnie remained pensive. To bring the shine in her eyes once more, he said: “Wouldn’t you like Bobbie to live with us?” “Yes, of course; but I couldn’t leave Lafe and Peg in Paradise Road.” Theodore surrounded the entreating, uplifted face with two strong hands. “I know that. We’ll take care of them all––” Still Jinnie held back her full surrender. “Can I take Happy Pete, too? And the cats? There’s an awful lot of ’em.... Milly Ann does have so many kitties,” she ended naÏvely. Theodore laughed delightedly. “Dearest little heart! Of course we’ll take them all, every one you love!” “Will you tell Lafe about—about us?” Jinnie asked shyly, “I—I––” but she had no more time to finish. “I’ll tell him to-morrow, Jinnie!” exclaimed Theodore. “Are you happy, dearest?” “So happy,” she sighed, with loving assurance. The rest of the day they were like two frolicking children, eating their luncheon under the tall trees. When the shadows fell, they left their trysting place, and with their arms about each other, went slowly back to the automobile. |