The Brimming Cup
CHAPTER III
OLD MR. WELLES
AND YOUNG MR. MARSH
An Hour in the Life of Mr. Ormsby Welles,
aet. 67
March 15, 1920.
3:00 P.M.
Having lifted the knocker and let it fall, the two men stood
gazing with varying degrees of attention at the closed
white-painted old door. The younger, the one with the round dark
head and quick dark eyes, seemed extremely interested in the door,
and examined it competently, its harmoniously disposed wide panels,
the shapely fan-light over it, the small panes of greenish old
glass on each side. "Beautiful old bits you get occasionally in
these out-of-the-way holes," he remarked. But the older man was
aware of nothing so concrete and material. He saw the door as he
saw everything else that day, through a haze. Chiefly he was
concerned as to what lay behind the door. . . . "My neighbors," he
thought, "the first I ever had."
The sun shone down through the bare, beautiful twigs of the
leafless elms, in a still air, transparent and colorless.
The handle of the door turned, the door opened. The older man
was too astonished by what he saw to speak, but after an instant's
pause the younger one asked if Mr. and Mrs. Crittenden were at home
and could see callers. The lean, aged, leather-colored woman, with
shiny opaque black eyes, opened the door wider and silently ushered
them into the house.
As long as she was in sight they preserved a prudent silence as
profound as hers, but when she had left them seated, and
disappeared, they turned to each other with lifted eyebrows. "Well,
what was that, do you suppose?" exclaimed the Younger. He
seemed extremely interested and amused. "I'm not so sure, Mr.
Welles, about your being safe in never locking your doors at night,
as they all tell you, up here. With that for a neighbor!"
The older man had a friendly smile for the facetious intention
of this. "I guess I won't have anything that'd be worth locking
doors on," he said. He looked about him still smiling, his pleasant
old eyes full of a fresh satisfaction in what he saw. The room was
charming to his gaze, cheerful and homey. "I don't believe I'm
going to have anything to complain of, with the folks that live in
this house," he said, "any more than with any of the rest of
it."
The other nodded. "Yes, it's a very good room," he agreed. After
a longer inspection, he added with a slight accent of surprise, "An
oddly good room; stunning! Look at the color in those curtains and
the walls, and the arrangement of those prints over that
Chippendale sewing-table. I wonder if it's accidental. You wouldn't
think you'd find anybody up here who could achieve it
consciously."
He got to his feet with a vigorous precision of movement which
the other admired. "Well, he's grown to be considerable of a man,"
he thought to himself. "A pity his father couldn't have lived to
see it, all that aliveness that had bothered them so much, down at
last where he's got his grip on it. And enough of it, plenty of it,
oceans of it, left so that he is still about forty times more alive
than anybody else." He looked tolerantly with his tired elderly
amusement at the other, stepping about, surveying the room and
every object in it.
The younger brought himself up short in front of a framed
photograph. "Why, here's a château-fort I don't know!" he
said with an abrupt accent. He added, with some vehemence, "I never
even heard of it, I'm sure. And it's authentic, evidently."
The older man sat perfectly still. He did not know what a shatto
four was, nor had he the slightest desire to ask and bring the
information down on him, given as the other would give it,
pressingly, vividly, so that you had to listen whether you wanted
to or not. Heaven knew he did not want to know about whatever it
was, this time. Not about that, nor anything else. He only wanted
to rest and have a little life before it was too late. It was
already too late for any but the quietest sort. But that was no
matter. He wouldn't have liked the other kind very well probably.
He certainly had detested the sort of "life" he'd experienced in
business. The quietest sort was what he had always wanted and never
got. And now it really seemed as though he was going to have it.
For all his fatigued pose in the old arm-chair, his heart beat
faster at the idea. He hadn't got used to being free yet. He'd
heard people say that when you were first married it was like that,
you couldn't realize it. He'd heard one of the men at the office
say that for a long time, every time he heard his bride's skirts
rustle, he had to turn his head to make sure she was really there.
Well, he would like now to get up and look out of that window and
see if his garden was really there. His garden! He thought
with a secret feeling, half pity and half shame, of those yellowed
old seed catalogues which had come, varnished and brilliant and
new, year after year, so long ago, which he'd looked at so hard and
so long, in the evenings, and put away to get yellow and sallow
like his face . . . and his hopes. It must be almost time to "make
garden," he thought. He had heard them saying at the store that the
sap was beginning to run in the maple-trees. He would have just
time to get himself settled in his house . . . he felt an absurd
young flush come up under his grizzled beard at this phrase . . .
"his house," his own house, with bookshelves, and a garden. How he
loved it all already! He sat very still, feeling those savagely
lopped-off tendrils put out their curling fingers once more, this
time unafraid. He sat there in the comfortable old arm-chair at
rest as never before. He thought, "This is the way I'm going to
feel right along, every day, all the time," and closed his
eyes.
He opened them again in a moment, moved subconsciously by the
life-time habit of making sure what Vincent was up to. He smiled at
the keen look of alert, prick-eared attention which the other was
still giving to that room! Lord, how Vincent did love to get things
all figured out! He probably had, by this time, an exact diagram of
the owners of the house all drawn up in his mind and would probably
spend the hour of their call, seeing if it fitted. Not that
they would have any notion he was doing anything but talk a
blue streak, or was thinking of anything but introducing an old
friend.
One thing he wanted in his garden was plenty of gladioli. Those
poor, spindling, watery ones he had tried to grow in the
window-box, he'd forget that failure in a whole big row all along
the terrace, tall and strong, standing up straight in the country
sunshine. What was the address of that man who made a specialty of
gladioli? He ought to have noted it down. "Vincent," he asked, "do
you remember the address of that Mr. Schwatzkummerer who grew
nothing but gladioli?" Vincent was looking with an expression of
extreme astonishment at the sheet of music on the piano. He started
at the question, stared, recollected himself, laughed, and said,
"Heavens, no, Mr. Welles!" and went back into his own world. There
were lots of things, Mr. Welles reflected, that Vincent did
not care about just as hard as he cared about others.
In a moment the younger man came and sat down on the short,
high-armed sofa. Mr. Welles thought he looked puzzled, a very
unusual expression on that face. Maybe, after all, he hadn't got
the owners of the house so well-plotted out as he thought he ought
to. He himself, going on with his own concerns, remarked, "Well,
the name must be in the Long Island telephone directory. When you
go back you could look it up and send me word."
"Whose name?" asked Vincent blankly.
"Schwatzkummerer," said the other.
"What!" cried Vincent incredulously, and then, "Oh yes,"
and then, "Sure, yes, I'll look it up. I'm going back Thursday on
the night train. I won't leave the Grand Central without going to a
telephone booth, looking it up, and sending it to you on a
postcard, mailed there. It ought to be here on the morning mail
Saturday."
The older man knew perfectly well that he was being a little
laughed at, for his absorption in gladioli, and not minding it at
all, laughed himself, peaceably. "It would take a great deal more
than a little of Vincent's fun," he thought, "to make me feel
anything but peaceable here." He was quite used to having people
set him down as a harmless, worn-out old duffer, and he did not
object to this conception of his character. It made a convenient
screen behind which he could carry on his own observation and
meditation uninterrupted.
"Here comes somebody," said Vincent and turned his quick eyes
toward the door, with an eager expression of attention. He really
must have been stumped by something in the room, thought Mr.
Welles, and meant to figure it out from the owners of the house
themselves.
The tall, quiet-looking lady with the long dark eyes, who now
came in alone, excusing herself for keeping them waiting, must of
course be Mrs. Crittenden, Mr. Welles knew. He wished he could get
to his feet as Vincent did, looking as though he had got there by a
bound or a spring and were ready for another. He lifted himself out
of his arm-chair with a heaviness he knew seemed all the heavier by
contrast, took the slim hand Mrs. Crittenden offered him, looked at
her as hard as he dared, and sank again into the arm-chair, as she
motioned him to do. He had had a long experience in judging people
quickly by the expression of their faces, and in that short length
of time he had decided thankfully that he was really, just as he
had hoped, going to like his new neighbor as much as all the rest
of it. He gave her a propitiatory smile, hoping she might like him
a little, too, and hoping also that she would not mind Vincent.
Sometimes people did, especially nice ladies such as evidently Mrs.
Crittenden was. He observed that as usual Vincent had cut in ahead
of everybody else, had mentioned their names, both of them, and was
talking with that . . . well, the way he did, which people
either liked very much or couldn't abide. He looked at Vincent as
he talked. He was not a great talker himself, which gave him a
great deal of practice in watching people who did. He often felt
that he saw more than he heard, so much more did people's
faces express than their words.
He noticed that the younger man was smiling a good deal, showing
those fine teeth of his, and he had one of those
instantaneously-gone, flash-light reminiscences of elderly people,
. . . the day when Mr. Marsh had been called away from the office
and had asked him to go with little Vincent to keep an appointment
with the dentist. Heavens! How the kid had roared and kicked! And
now he sat there, smiling, "making a call," probably with that very
filling in his tooth, grown-up, not even so very young any more,
with a little gray in his thick hair, what people often called a
good-looking man. How life did run between your fingers! Well, he
would close his hand tight upon what was left to him. He noticed
further that as Vincent talked, his eyes fixed on his interlocutor,
his vigorous hands caressed with a slow circular motion the rounded
arms of his chair. "What a three-ringed circus that fellow is," he
thought. "I bet that the lady thinks he hasn't another idea in his
head but introducing an old friend, and all the time he's taking
her in, every inch of her, and three to one, what he'll talk about
most afterwards is the smooth hard feeling of those polished
arm-chairs." Vincent was saying, ". . . and so, we heard in a
round-about way too long to bother you with, about the small old
house next door being for sale, and how very quiet and peaceful a
spot this is, and the Company bought it for Mr. Welles for a
permanent home, now he has retired."
"Pretty fine of them!" murmured the older man dutifully, to the
lady.
Vincent went on, "Oh, it's only the smallest way for them to
show their sense of his life-time devotion to their interests.
There's no estimating what we all owe him, for his steadiness and
loyalty and good judgment, especially during that hard period, near
the beginning. You know, when all electrical businesses were
so entirely on trial still. Nobody knew whether they were going to
succeed or not. My father was one of the Directors from the first
and I've been brought up in the tradition of how much the small
beginning Company is indebted to Mr. Welles, during the years when
they went down so near the edge of ruin that they could see the
receiver looking in through the open door."
Welles moved protestingly. He never had liked the business and
he didn't like reminders that he owed his present comfort to it.
Besides this was reading his own epitaph. He thought he must be
looking very foolish to Mrs. Crittenden. Vincent continued, "But of
course that's of no great importance up here. What's more to the
purpose is that Mr. Welles is a great lover of country life and
growing things, and he's been forced to keep his nose on a city
grindstone all his life until just now. I think I can guarantee
that you'll find him a very appreciative neighbor, especially if
you have plenty of gladioli in your garden."
This last was one of what Welles called "Vincent's sidewipes,"
which he could inlay so deftly that they seemed an integral part of
the conversation. He wondered what Mrs. Crittenden would say, if
Vincent ever got through his gabble and gave her a chance. She was
turning to him now, smiling, and beginning to speak. What a nice
voice she had! How nice that she should have such a voice!
"I'm more than glad to have you both come in to see me, and I'm
delighted that Mr. Welles is going to settle here. But Mr. . . ."
she hesitated an instant, recalled the name, and went on, "Mr.
Marsh doesn't need to explain you any more. It's evident that you
don't know Ashley, or you'd realize that I've already heard a great
deal more about you than Mr. Marsh would be likely to tell me, very
likely a good deal more than is true. I know for instance, . . ."
she laughed and corrected herself, ". . . at least I've been told,
what the purchase price of the house was. I know how Harry Wood's
sister-in-law's friend told you about Ashley and the house in the
first place. I know how many years you were in the service of the
Company, and how your pension was voted unanimously by the
Directors, and about the silver loving-cup your fellow employees in
the office gave you when you retired; and indeed every single thing
about you, except the exact relation of the elderly invalid to
whose care you gave up so generously so much of your life; I'm not
sure whether I she was an aunt or a second-cousin." She paused an
instant to give them a chance to comment on this, but finding them
still quite speechless, she went on. "And now I know another thing,
that you like gladioli, and that is a real bond."
She was interrupted here by a great explosive laugh from
Vincent. It was his comment on her speech to them, and for a time
he made no other, eyeing her appreciatively as she and Mr. Welles
talked garden together, and from time to time chuckling to himself.
She gave him once a sidelong amused glance, evidently liking his
capacity to laugh at seeing the ground cut away from under his
feet, evidently quite aware that he was still thinking about that,
and not at all about Mr. Welles and tulip-beds. Welles was relieved
at this. Apparently she was going to "take" Vincent the right way.
Some ladies were frightfully rubbed the wrong way by that strange
great laugh of Vincent's. And what she knew about gardening! And
not only about gardening in general, but about his own garden. He
was astounded at her knowledge apparently of every inch of the
quadrangle of soil back of his house, and at the revelations she
made to him of what could lie sleeping under a mysterious blank
surface of earth. Why, a piece of old ground was like a person. You
had to know it, to have any idea of all that was hidden in its
bosom, good and bad. "There never was such a place for pigweed as
the lower end of your vegetable lot," she told him; "you'll have to
get up nights to fight it if there is plenty of rain this summer."
And again, "Be careful about not digging too close to the east wall
of your terrace. There is a border of peonies there, splendid pink
ones, and you're likely to break off the shoots. They don't show so
early as the red ones near the walk, that get more sun."
"Did you ever use to live in that house?" he asked her,
respectful of her mastery of its secrets.
She laughed. "No, oh no. We've lived right here all the eleven
years of our life in Vermont. But there's another side to the local
wireless information-bureau that let me know all about you before
you ever got here. We all know all about everybody and everything,
you know. If you live in the country you're really married to
humanity, for better or for worse, not just on speaking terms with
it, as you are in the city. Why, I know about your garden because I
have stood a thousand, thousand times leaning on my hoe in my own
garden, discussing those peonies with old Mrs. Belham who lived
there before you." This seemed to bring up some picture into her
mind at which she looked for a moment, turning from it to the man
beside her, with a warmth in her voice which went to his heart.
"It's been forlorn having that dear little old house empty and
cold. I can't tell you how glad I am you have come to warm
it, and live in it."
The wonder of it overcame Mr. Welles like a wave. "I can't
believe I'm really going to!" he cried desperately. "It doesn't
seem possible!" He felt shamed, knowing that he had burst
out too violently. What could she know of what lay back of him,
that he was escaped from! What could she think of him, but that he
was a foolish, bitter old man?
She did not seem to think that, looking at him attentively as
though she wanted to make out just what he meant. Perhaps she did
make out, for she now said gently, "I believe you are going to like
it, Mr. Welles. I believe you are going to find here what, . . .
what you deserve to find." She said quietly, "I hope we shall be
good neighbors to you."
She spoke so kindly, her look on him was so humane that he felt
the water coming to his eyes. He was in a foolishly emotional
state, these first days. The least little thing threw him off the
track. It really did seem hardly possible that it was all
true. That the long grind at the office was over, the business he
had always hated and detested, and the long, hateful slavery at the
flat finished at last, and that he had come to live out what was
left to him in this lovely, peaceful valley, in that quiet
welcoming little house, with this sweet woman next door! He
swallowed. The corners of his mouth twitched. What an old lunatic
he was. But he did not dare trust himself to speak again.
Now Vincent's voice rose. What a length of time Vincent had been
silent,—he who never took a back seat for anybody! What had
he been doing all this time, sitting there and staring at them with
those awfully brilliant eyes of his? Very likely he had seen the
silly weak tears so near the surface, had caught the sentimental
twitch of the mouth. Yes, quite certainly, for, now he was showing
his tact by changing the subject, changing it with a vengeance.
"Mrs. Crittenden," he was saying, "my curiosity has been touched by
that very fine photograph over there. I don't recognize the castle
it shows."
"That's in Bayonne," she said, and paused, her eyes
speculatively on him.
"No, Heavens no! You don't need to tell me that it's not
Bayonne, New Jersey!" he answered her unspoken question violently.
This made her laugh, opening her long eyes a little. He went on,
"I've been as far as Pau, but never went into the Basque
country."
"Oh, Pau." She said no more than this, but Welles had the
impression that these words somehow had made a comment on Vincent's
information. Vincent seemed to think so too, and curiously enough
not to think it a very favorable comment. He looked, what he almost
never looked, a little nettled, and spoke a little stiffly. "It's a
very fine specimen," he said briefly, looking again at the
photograph.
"Oh, it looks very much finer and bigger in the photograph than
it really is," she told them. "It's only a bandbox of a thing
compared with Coucy or Pierrefonds or any of the northern ones. It
was built, you know, like the Cathedral at Bayonne, when the
Plantagenets still held that country, but after they were
practically pretty near English, and both the château and the
Gothic cathedral seem queer aliens among the southern natives. I
have the photograph up there on the wall only because of early
associations. I lived opposite it long ago when I was a little
girl."
This, to Mr. Welles, was indistinguishable from the usual talk
of people who have been "abroad." To tell the truth they always
sounded to him more or less "showing-off," though he humbly tried
to think it was only because he could never take any part in such
talk. He certainly did not see anything in the speech to make
Vincent look at her, almost with his jaw dropped. He himself paid
little attention to what she was now saying, because he could not
keep his mind from the lingering sweet intonations of her voice.
What difference did it make where she had lived as a little girl?
She was going to live next door to him now; what an awfully nice
woman she was, and quite a good-looking woman too, with a very nice
figure, although not in her very first youth, of course. How old
could she be? Between thirty and forty of course, but You couldn't
tell where. His personal taste was not for such a long face as
hers. But you didn't notice that when she smiled. He liked the way
she did her black hair, too, so smooth and shining and close to her
head. It looked as though she'd really combed and brushed it, and
most women's hair didn't.
She turned to him now, again, and said, "Is this your very first
call in Ashley? Because if it is, I mustn't miss the opportunity to
cut in ahead of all the other gossips, and give you a great deal of
information. You might just as well have it all in one piece now,
and get it straight, as take it in little snippets from old Mrs.
Powers, when she comes to bring your milk, this evening. You see I
know that you are to get your milk of the Powers, and that they
have plucked up courage to ask you eight cents a quart although the
price around here has been, till now, six cents. You'll be obliged
to listen to a great many more details from Mrs. Powers than from
me, even those she knows nothing about. But of course you must be
introduced to the Powers, in toto too. Old Mrs. Powers, a
very lively old widow, lives on her farm nearly at the foot of Deer
Hollow. Her married son and his family live with her. In this
house, there is first of all my husband. I'm so sorry he is away in
Canada just now, on lumbering business. He is Neale Crittenden, a
Williams man, who in his youth had thoughts of exploring the world
but who has turned out head of the 'Crittenden Manufacturing
Company,' which is the high-sounding name of a smallish
wood-working business on the other side of the field next our
house. You can see the buildings and probably hear the saws from
your garden. Properly speaking, you know, you don't live in Ashley
but in 'Crittenden's' and your house constitutes one quarter of all
the residences in that settlement. There are yours, and ours, the
mill-buildings, the house where an old cousin of mine lives, and
the Powers' house, although that is so far away, nearly half a
mile, that it is really only a farm-house in the country.
We, you see, are the suburb of Ashley."
Marsh laughed out again at this, and she laughed with him, their
eyes, shining with amusement, meeting in a friendly glance.
"The mill is the most important member of Crittenden's, of
course. Part of the mill-building is pre-Revolutionary, and very
picturesque. In the life-time of my husband's uncle, it still ran
by water-power with a beautiful, enormous old mossy water-wheel.
But since we took it over, we've had to put in modern machinery
very prosaically and run it on its waste of slabs, mostly. All
sorts of small, unimportant objects are manufactured there, things
you never heard of probably. Backs of hair-brushes, wooden casters
to put under beds and chairs, rollers for cotton mills. As soon as
my husband returns, I'll ask him to take you through it. That and
the old church are the only historic monuments in town."
She stopped and asked him meditatively, "What else do you
suppose I need to forestall old Mrs. Powers on? My old Cousin Hetty
perhaps. She has a last name, Allen—yes, some connection with
Ethan Allen. I am, myself. But everybody has always called her Miss
Hetty till few people remember that she has another name. She was
born there in the old house below 'the Burning,' and she has lived
there for eighty years, and that is all her saga. You can't see her
house from here, but it is part of Crittenden's all the same,
although it is a mile away by the main road as you go towards the
Dug-Way. But you can reach it in six or seven minutes from here by
a back lane, through the Eagle Rock woods."
"What nice names!" Mr. Welles luxuriated in them. "The Eagle
Rock woods. The Dug-Way. The Burning. Deer Hollow."
"I bet you don't know what they mean," Vincent challenged him.
Vincent was always throwing challenges, at everything. But by this
time he had learned how to dodge them. "No, I don't know, and I
don't care if I don't," he answered happily.
It pleased him that Mrs. Crittenden found this amusing, so that
she looked at him laughing. How her eyes glistened when she
laughed. It made you laugh back. He risked another small attempt at
facetiousness. "Go on with the census of Crittenden's," he told
her. "I want to know all about my future fellow-citizens. You
haven't even finished up this house, anybody but your husband."
"There is myself. You see me. There is nothing more to that. And
there are the three children, Paul, Elly, and Mark, . . ." She
paused here rather abruptly, and the whimsical accent of
good-humored mockery disappeared. For an instant her face changed
into something quite different from what they had seen. Mr. Welles
could not at all make out the expression which very passingly had
flickered across her eyes with a smoke-like vagueness and rapidity.
He had the queerest fancy that she looked somehow scared,—but
of course that was preposterous.
"Your call," she told them both, "happens to fall on a day which
marks a turning-point in our family life. This is the very first
day in ten years, since Paul's birth, that I have not had at least
one of the children beside me. Today is the opening of spring term
in our country school, and my little Mark went off this morning,
for the first time, with his brother and sister. I have been alone
until you came." She stopped for a moment. Mr. Welles wished that
Vincent could get over his habit of staring at people so. She went
on, "I have felt very queer indeed, all day. It's as though . . .
you know, when you have been walking up and up a long flight of
stairs, and you go automatically putting one foot up and then the
other, and then suddenly . . . your upraised foot falls back with a
jar. You've come to the top, and, for an instant, you have a gone
feeling without your stairs to climb."
It occurred to Mr. Welles that really perhaps the reason why
some nice ladies did not like Vincent was just because of his habit
of looking at them so hard. He could have no idea how piercingly
bright his eyes looked when he fixed them on a speaker like that.
And now Mrs. Crittenden was looking back at him, and would notice
it. He could understand how a refined lady would feel as
though somebody were almost trying to find a key-hole to look in at
her,—to have anybody pounce on her so, with his eyes, as
Vincent did. She couldn't know, of course, that Vincent went
pouncing on ladies and baggagemen and office boys, and old friends,
just the same way. He bestirred himself to think of something to
say. "I wish I could get up my nerve to ask you, Mrs. Crittenden,
about one other person in this house," he ventured, "the old woman
. . . the old lady . . . who let us in the door."
At the sound of his voice Mrs. Crittenden looked away from
Vincent quickly and looked at him for a perceptible moment before
she heard what he had said. Then she explained, smiling, "Oh, she
would object very much to being labeled with the finicky title of
'lady.' That was Touclé, our queer old Indian
woman,—all that is left of old America here. She belongs to
our house, or perhaps I should say it belongs to her. She was born
here, a million years ago, more or less, when there were still a
few basket-making Indians left in the valley. Her father and mother
both died, and she was brought up by the old Great-uncle
Crittenden's family. Then my husband's Uncle Burton inherited the
house and brought his bride here, and Touclé just stayed on.
She always makes herself useful enough to pay for her food and
lodging. And when his wife died an elderly woman, Touclé
still just stayed on, till he died, and then she went right on
staying here in the empty house, till my husband and I got here. We
were married in Rome, and made the long trip here without stopping
at all. It was dawn, a June morning, when we arrived. We walked all
the way from the station at Ashley out to the old house, here at
Crittenden's. And . . . I'll never forget the astounded expression
on my husband's face when Touclé rose up out of the long
grass in the front yard and bade me welcome. She'd known me as a
little girl when I used to visit here. She will outlive all of us,
Touclé will, and be watching from her room in the woodshed
chamber on the dawn of Judgment Day when the stars begin to
fall."
Mr. Welles felt a trifle bewildered by this, and showed it. She
explained further, "But seriously, I must tell you that she is a
perfectly harmless and quite uninteresting old herb-gatherer,
although the children in the village are a little afraid of her,
because she is an Indian, the only one they have ever seen. She
really is an Indian too. She knows every inch of our valley
and the mountains better than any lumberman or hunter or fisherman
in Ashley. She often goes off and doesn't come back for days. I
haven't the least idea where she stays. But she's very good to our
children when she's here, and I like her capacity for monumental
silence. It gives her very occasional remarks an oracular air, even
though you know it's only because she doesn't often open her lips.
She helps a little with the house-work, too, although she always
looks so absent-minded, as though she were thinking of something
very far away. She's quite capable of preparing a good meal, for
all she never seems to notice what she's up to. And she's the last
member of our family except the very coming-and-going little maids
I get once in a while. Ashley is unlike the rest of the world in
that it is hard to get domestic servants here.
"Now let me see, whom next to introduce to you. You know all
your immediate neighbors now. I shall have to begin on Ashley
itself. Perhaps our minister and his wife. They live in the
high-porticoed, tall-pillared white old house next door to the
church in the village, on the opposite side from the church-yard.
They are Ashleyans of the oldest rock. Both of them were born here,
and have always lived here. Mr. Bayweather is seventy-five years
old and has never had any other parish. I do believe the very best
thing I can do for you is to send you straight to them, this
minute. There's nothing Mr. Bayweather doesn't know about the place
or the people. He has a collection of Ashleyana of all sorts,
records, deeds, titles, old letters, family trees. And for the last
forty years he has been very busy writing a history of Ashley."
"A history of Ashley?" exclaimed Vincent.
"A history of Ashley," she answered, level-browed.
Mr. Welles had the impression that a "side-wipe" had been
exchanged in which he had not shared.
Vincent now asked irrelevantly, "Do you go to church
yourself?"
"Oh yes," she answered, "I go, I like to go. And I take the
children." She turned her head so that she looked down at her long
hands in her lap, as she added, "I think going to church is a
refining influence in children's lives, don't you?"
To Mr. Welles' horror this provoked from Vincent one of his
great laughs. And this time he was sure that Mrs. Crittenden would
take offense, for she looked up, distinctly startled, really quite
as though he had looked in through the key-hole. But Vincent
went on laughing. He even said, impudently, "Ah, now I've caught
you, Mrs. Crittenden; you're too used to keeping your jokes to
yourself. And they're much too good for that."
She looked at him hard, with a certain wonder in her eyes.
"Oh, there's no necromancy about it," he told her. "I've been
reading the titles of your books and glancing over your music
before you came in. And I can put two and two together. Who are you
making fun of to yourself? Who first got off that lovely speech
about the refining influence of church?"
She laughed a little, half-uneasily, a brighter color mounting
to her smooth oval cheeks. "That's one of Mrs. Bayweather's
favorite maxims," she admitted. She added, "But I really do
like to go to church."
Mr. Welles felt an apprehension about the turn things were
taking. Vincent, he felt sure, was on the verge of being up to
something. And he did not want to risk offending Mrs. Crittenden.
He stood up. "Thank you very much for telling us about the minister
and his wife, Mrs. Crittenden. I think we'll go right along down to
the village now, and pay a call on them. There'll be time enough
before dinner." Vincent of course got up too, at this, saying,
"He's the most perfect old housekeeper, you know. He's kept the
neatest flat for himself and that aged aunt of his for seventy
years."
"Seventy!" cried Mr. Welles, scandalized at the
exaggeration.
"Oh, more or less," said Vincent, laughing. Mr. Welles noticed
with no enthusiasm that his eyes were extremely bright, that he
smiled almost incessantly, that he stepped with an excess of his
usual bounce. Evidently something had set him off into one of his
fits of wild high spirits. You could almost feel the electricity
sparkle from him, as it does from a cat on a cold day. Personally,
Mr. Welles preferred not to touch cats when they were like
that.
"When are you going back to the city, Mr. Marsh?" asked Mrs.
Crittenden, as they said good-bye at the door.
Vincent was standing below her on the marble step. He looked up
at her now, and something about his expression made Mr. Welles
think again of glossy fur emitting sparks. He said, "I'll lay you a
wager, Mrs. Crittenden, that there is one thing your Ashley
underground news-service has not told you about us, and that is,
that I've come up not only to help Mr. Welles install himself in
his new home, but to take a somewhat prolonged rest-cure myself.
I've always meant to see more of this picturesque part of Vermont.
I've a notion that the air of this lovely spot will do me a world
of good."
As Mr. Welles opened his mouth, perhaps rather wide, in the
beginning of a remark, he cut in briskly with, "You're worrying
about Schwatzkummerer, I know. Never you fear. I'll get hold of his
address, all right." He explained briefly to Mrs. Crittenden,
startled by the portentous name. "Just a specialist in gladiolus
seeds."
"Bulbs!" cried Mr. Welles, in involuntary correction, and
knew as he spoke that he had been switched off to a side-track.
"Oh well, bulbs be it," Vincent conceded the point indulgently.
He took off his hat in a final salutation to Mrs. Crittenden, and
grasping his elderly friend by the arm, moved with him down the
flag-paved path.