= —— Bellefonte, Pa., June 14, 1929. ee ] DE NINETY AN’ NINE. Po’ lil brack sheep don’ strayed away, Don’ los’ in de win’ an’ de rain; An’ de Shepherd He say, ‘‘Oh, hirelin’ Go fin’ dat sheep again.” But de hirelin say ‘‘Oh, Shepherd, Dat sheep am brack an’ bad.” But de Shepherd He smile like dat lil brack sheep ‘Was de onliest one He had. An’ He say, ‘Oh, hirelin’ hasten, Fo’ de win’ an’ de rain am col’; An’ dat po’ lil sheep am lonesom’ So far away from de fol’. But de hirelin’ say, ‘‘Oh, Shepherd, Dat sheep am ol’ an’ gray.” © But de Shepherd He smile like dat lil brack sheep Was fair as de break of day. Ar’ He say, ‘‘Oh, hirelin’ hasten, Lo! Here am de ninety an’ nine; An’ dar far away from de sheep-fol’ Am ‘dat po’ lil sheep of mine.” But de hirelin’ say, ‘‘Oh, Shepherd, De res’ of the flock am here.” But de Shepherd He smile like dat lil brack sheep He hol’ it mostes’ dear. An’ de Shepherd go out in de da'kness, An’ de win’ de’ rain was col’; An’ de po’ lil sheep, He fin’ him, An he bring him back to de fol’. Rut de hirelin’ say ‘‘Oh, Shepherd, Don’ bring dat sheep to me!” Eut de Shepherd He smile an’ He hol’ him close, An’ dat lil brack sheep—was me. —Selected. THE 3 DARLINGS. Gaynor was the middle one: there were three of them. Patricia was the eldest. The fact that never at any time had she been called Patsy or Pat describes her best. Tall and slim, dark and regal, with aloof black eyes and a sulky mouth. And with two hobbies™—clothes and men. Geraldine was the youngest. But she never had been called anything but Jerry since her christening. Small, without hips or breasts like a boy, was Jerry, with curling flames of bright hair licking her little face in a wind-blown bob and wide blue eyes that looked at you with a blind, transparent stare. And a rather inadequate nose but the most satis- factory mouth imaginable. And a glorious golden-white skin. Her hob- bies were more numerous and more frequent than Patricia’s: tennis and boys....... ukulele and boys........ frat pins and boys........ then, after a while, just boys. Gaynor was two years younger than Patricia, three years old than ! Jerry. She was, if one bothered to classify her at all, what the French very nicely call chataine. But usual- ly no one noticed Gaynor’s hair, which was nut-brown, or her eyes, which were a smoky-gray, or her mouth, which was much too wide for beauty, but beautifully generous. And she had no hobbies—she couldn't spare time for them—but she did have many occupations. For the Darlings were poor. “Land poor,” the widowed Mrs. Darling would smile ruefully, waving a beautifully white and thin and. blue-veined hand vaguely. “This house and plantation are about the oldest in Virginia, and I reckon the poorest.” So Gaynor sewed dainty organdies, and dusted slender Chippendale, and polished old silver, rose-garden, and fed the kittens and dogs with which the place abounded. Mrs. Darling was very given to re- marking: “I really don’t know what I'd do without Gaynor.” Gaynor could have told her, but, of course, she didn’t. Instead, she went on sewing and dusting and weeding and wearing Patricia’s hand-em- downs. For being the middle one, Gaynor never got a new frock of her own. Patricia did, because she was the eldest; Jerry did, because by the time Gaynor had worn Patricia's they were too old to do over for Jerry. Very simple and quite systematic when one considered it. Gaynor had considered it. Not that it really mat- tered. Not even when Alan Colford came into her life did it really mat- ter. For there was always, of course, Patricia and Jerry. Patricia saw him first. At least she said so, though Jerry claimed he had seen and looked after her on the Middlebury Road. However, Patri: cia’s claim seemed to be the more legitimately staked as she and Alan had met at the Langhornes’ dance, which Jerry had scorned as too wet for expression, and Gaynor had ignor- ed for reasons best known only to herself. But as a matter of actual record, Gaynor had both seen and met him first, though of course she never had mentioned it. She had not wanted te mention it at the time and later— well, later, no one seemed at all in- terested. She had been walking in the rain through the woods above the old Mill Falls when she first heard it—that low, whimpering whine. She stop ped and listened. It came from her right—somewhere beyond the path ip the green density of a thicket—a soft moaning, then suddenly a sharp, high cry. Gaynor, recognizing that cry, ran swiftly in its direction. She found a collie bitch panting, whimpering, twitching, trying to make a bed for herself in the damp leaves beneath an alder. Gaynor sank to the sodden earth beside her. “Poor darling, are you trying to make a lyin-in kennel? Have I time to carry you home, I wonder.” And she bent over and tried to lift the writhing collie while the rain splashed down on her bare head. But the dog twisted from her grasp and lay gasping and whimpering, moving her head unhappily, her body and weeded the | twitching in agony. And Gaynor, born and reared in the atmosphere of the stcbles and kennels, knew that the animal in giving life would be denied it. She knelt, stroking the whimpering dog, miserably conscious of her own impotence in the face of relentless Nature. Then the collie raised her head. Her body bent, then suddenly relaxed. She gave again that sharp, high cry. A little later Gaynor gathered up the litter in her sweater. There were four of them with little red noses and a persistent little snigger. Their mother lay, exhausted and quiet, up- on the dark, sodden foliage; her eyes seemed to glaze even as Gaynor knelt above her. “Oh my dear, my dear, my dear,” wept Gaynor suddenly, aloud, “if you were so delicate, why didn’t you stay at home and have your babies with proper canine obstetrics?” But the collie did not hear her. And sitting there, with the rain streaming over her, the dead dog and the sniggering puppies, Gaynor wept softly in unison with the day. She was still crying when she saw him. He stood a few yards beyond the alder and he was as drenched as she was. But she did not see that at first. She saw only his face, miles, miles, miles above her. A thin, dark face with eyes that looked oddly tired and worn so early in the morning. He said: “Please don’t cry. It had to happen. Thistle always ran away. I've always had to go hunting her. I've been hunting her all night.” Perhaps that was why his eyes looked so tired and haggard. She forgot to cry, wondering about his tiredness. He knelt down across from her, Thistle’s still, wet body between them. He said, flushing: “I'm so sorry for you about this wretched business. I'll take the puppies.” She handed them, still wrapped in her sweater, to him. She said gravely: “I* doesn’t mat- ter—only her dying. Then, very seriously: Orphan collies are terri- bly sensitive. You'll have to be very careful raising them.” His eyes rested thoughtfully on her glistening face. He seemed not to hear her. But a moment later he said: “Yes, very sensitive.” She stood up. He continued to kneel on the ground beside the collie. She said: “Do you wish me to take them, or send anyone to look after Thistle ?” He rose quickly, as if suddenly con- scious of his delinquency. He said: “Oh, no. You've done quite enough. I can manage easily. And thank you.” He thrust out his hand. “My name’s Alan Colford. I've just come to live at Arden Hall for the summer.” She put her wet, grimy hand in his. “And mine’s Gaynor Darling. I live at the Oaks—just off the Mid- i dlebury Road.” She was suddenly {overcome by an enveloping shyness. She drew back her hand, flushing. “Don’t forget to keep them wrapped !in flannel......Good-by.” And she was | gone swiftly. Yes, she had seen him first. For (it was the following day that Jerry | announced that a handsome stranger {—oh, a most magnificent Tellow— had cantered past her on the Middle- {bury Road and turned to look back |even as she had turned in her own i saddle. And it was the night follow- ing that day that Patricia had come (home from the Langhorne party to tell Jerry and Gaynor the entire his- tory, as she had learned it, of one Alan Pell Colford. Son and heir of the “Steel Colford. (That had come first.) But not just a rich man’s son—no, a real worker Lafayette Escadrille at the very be- ginning of the war and, of course, all softs of decorations, not to men- {tion wounds. Then, later, back to | the engineering he was so mad about —in a way, the real reason for his presence in Virgina --they were Pitts- burgh people. But something to do with mines had brought him here— some sort of engineering gadget to prevent those awful explosions. And he wasn’t married or engaged. Look- ed like a god and drove his car like a devil. Oh, yes, he had brought her | home; was, in fact, coming to tea to- | morrow, no, today, in order to meet mother and the “family.” “I'll tell the world you handed him an uppercut that must have knocked him for a kayo,” said Jerry, who at that time was a devotee of the lit-- erature of Mr. Witwer, though she did not at all times succeed in quot- ing him correctly. Patricia managed a frown for Jer- ry’s slang and a faint smile for her , own powers of fascination at one and the same time. Then she said suddenly, turning to Gay: “Why didn’t you say that you and he had met?” Gaynor flushed. of it.” But Gaynor never had been a suc- cesful liar. Patricia's narrow dark brows drew more sharply together. “Well, he did. The very first thing he asked me when we were introduced was, did 1 have a sister by the name of Gay- nor.” “I'm sure,” mocked Jerry, “that Mrs. Price would not approve of a young man with such blunt man- ners.” She grinned maliciously. “Feature anyone asking Patricia if she even had a sister—Patricia the Perfect. No family could be expect- ed to produce another such rarity.” “Neither expected, nor does,” re- turned Patricia shortly. Then, to Gaynor again: “I can’t imagine why you were so close-mouthed about it. It certainly put me in an awkward position.” Gaynor drew farther back into her pillows. “I never thought that he'd remember, She had willed so “I never thought But she had! hard that he would. Only at that time she hadn't known he was Alan Pell Colford, et cetera. At that time he was only a tired young man in shabby tweeds and muddy boots. Patricia said, “As a matter of fact, | he spoke of you quite a little.” There -was a faintly patronizing note in her sulky voice. It rasped Gaynor’s nerves intolerably. She said suddenly, bitterly: “And quite a lot about himself, evidently. Decorations and wounds, of course. Oh, no, not married or engaged. Dear me, no, I can’t abide living off the governor's money.” Her imitation of masculine pomposity was perfect. Jerry giggled. Patricia’s nostrils flared slightly. But she laughed softly, said soft- ly: “Oh, no, he didn't tell me. I found out all about him from Jeff Langhorne. Mr. Colford, after speak- ing so nicely of you, devoted the rest of his conversation to—to impersonal topics.” “Such as ‘Do you like to walk in gardens? Isn't the moon beautiful ? What a lively perfume—ah, yours, Miss Darling........ Patricia Darling— such an intriguing name but rather dangerous—for me I mean; so tempt- ing... Oh no, this isn’t a line. 1 haven't any line. Certainly not with you, Patricia Darling— A pillow effectively stopped Jerry's bantering recital. But one—certain- 'ly Gay—could see that Patrica was secretly pleased. But when Patricia spoke, it was with a peculiar, distinct emphasis: “Such being the case, Jerry dear— where Alan Colford’s concerned, don’t poach out of season.” And that is when the question of priority arose. “Apple sauce!” said Jerry. him first.” ( “But he saw me more,” said Pa- trict significantly, if ambiguously. “More of you, perhaps,” said Jer- ry, with a meaning glance at Pa- tricia’'s frock. “But give me time darling—just wait till I spring my new swimming-suit! Patricia smiled disagreeably. “Don’t think that I'm asking you to keep out of the way on that account. I only meant, don’t turn the draw- ing room into a community-house parlor when he calls.” And her eyes seemed to incluae Gaynor in that edict as well as Jerry. Hands off—out of the way—-no butting in where you're not wanted or expected, said those black-dia- mond eyes. Well, if Alan Colford had given Patrica, in one evening, sufficient rea- son to issue that ultimatum— Gaynor closed her eyes as if the shaded lamplight hurt them. She saw a tired young man in shabby tweeds. She opened her eyes and saw Patricia—Patricia, the exquisite, | Patricia, the real beauty of the fam- ily—and poor, lovely Jerry— | Gaynor turned her head to the wall. She said, “Please go I want to 1 sleep.” | They went. But what Gay really wanted was to weep. It was three months later. | Upstairs, in the cool, dim bed- room, Mrs. Darling said, “Gaynor, I really think—I really believe Patrica will bring it off.” Gay looked at her blindly. “Bring what off, Mother?” As if she didn’t know ! “This marriage with Alan Colford of course.” Then suddenly, sharply: “Oh, if she shouldn't! If anything should happen—after all my hopes, my dreams, my plans !” Gaynor closed her eyes. She saw her mother’s hopes—a brilliant so- cial career for the lovely Patricia, a. brilliant launching of the fascina- ting Jerry. Her mother’s dreams— a London season, an apartment in Paris, a villa at Cannes. Her plans —perhaps, with the Colford fortune behind her, even a title for the dem- ocratic, slangy little Jerry. i But Gaynor saw also the struc- ture of her own hopes and dreams .come crashing down about her—mo, {flutter down about her, a jerry- | built house of flimsy paper cards. | She said, opening her eyes to the { Blue Virginia day that seemed sud- ‘denly dark, suddenly sinister: “What could possibly happen, Mother?” ‘What? Only a miracle. But Gay- nor did not believe in miracles. | Her mother looked at her without i seeing her—it was a peculiar little ‘habit Mrs. Darling reserved for Gay- 'nor—and said, “Oh, anything; per- haps Jerry—" Of course after Patricia there would always be little Jerry. “It would be the—the same for you wouldn't it, Mother?” Mrs. Darling stirred uneasily “No. I don’t think he loves Jerry— that is, seriously. She thinks she's crazy about him and he might amuse himself with her. marry her—" ‘Gaynor said, with sudden bitter- ness, “Then we’d better concentrate on Patricia.” But Patricia didn’t need it. She was, said the little complacent air about Patricia quite able to take care of Patrica. Jerry said, “Be a sport—give somebody else a chance once in a while. What are you trying to do— sandbag and hog-tie him?” ‘Don’t be vulgar,” advised her mother severely. “Don’t you be Vere-ish,” return- turned Jerry with cool impudence, then suddenly vicious: “I'd like to tell him a thing or two. Patricia's nobody's prize Christmas package !” “I suppose you think you're the topmost angel on the tree,” said Patricia, forgetting in her fury her languid air of the ice-princess. “You're burning up because he never looks at you.” “Oh, doesn't he!” mocked Jerry. “What a lot you know !” “Girls !” cried Mrs. Darling. “How can you so utterly, so disgustingly forget yourselves? Gaynor, will you see if the drawing room has been Gaynor went out. In the long drawing-room, surrounded on three sides by the white columned, double- storied veranda which gave to the room a perpetual dim twilight, she stood rigid, her eyes moving slowly from side to side, their pupils dilated. This room, which she dusted every day for his coming’; those Waterford glass jars kept filled with her Mare chal roses; those cushions, made by her hands, shaken by her hands to inviting plumpness, placed carefully against. the sides and back of the “I saw But to: Spehish ‘mahogany sofa—they were always crushed and limp from his road back, always faintly reminis- cent of Patricia's favorite perfume, after his going. The bronze knocker clattered sharply. Gaynor fled precipitately to the upper floor. dusted ?” While he was in the house she seemed unable to remain still. She wandered restlessly about the halls and bedrooms, and though it was late afternoon, set to work again, rearranged dressing-tables, put away drive.” Patricia’s flame silk kimono, cleaned, for the second time, their community tige of color. bathroom. | Jerry ran up to wash her hands and powder her nose: . She said, squintihg &t herself in the dim mirror: “I let him in and he gave me a look -—-like this—” She looked hard, and what she consider- ed passiondtely, at Gaynor. “Then he said, “Jerry, Gear child, if you get any prettier, the state will have to {legislate against your appearing In public.” And there stood Patricia in the doorway of the drawing-room, with that Dark-Lady of the Sonnets lair of hers thinking, I reckon, that she looked like Queen Guinevere or the blessed damsel—” ' “Damozel,” murmured Gaynor. “Damsel,” repeated Jerry—she could be very stubborn. “And draw: ling in that come-and-kiss-me-quick before-I-die voice of hers, “Jerry, darling’—can you feature that, Gay? Darling ! ‘Jerry, darling, would you —that contraption off your head and drive over to the Hall with me to give your opinion on a new filly I've just purchased.” She looked at him bitterly. She said in a swift, bitter voice: “Thanks, but I happen to be busy; and this— this contraption cn my head happens to be a dust-cap.” | Alan said cruelly: “Well, whatever it is, it is perfectly hideous. And there’s no earthly reason why you can’t get up from that ridiculous ' say ‘Alan, surely the place’—mean- ing myself, naturally—‘must bore you.’ But he always smiles in that swift, fascinating way of his, and says: ‘Oh, no, Patricia. This place could never bore me.’ Only his eyes are on me, and they say, ‘you’ in- stead of ‘this place.’ ” Gaynor interrupted with a sudden deep weariness. “Patricia, I can’t listen any longer. There's too much to be done.” She went down the steps and , position and ceme with me for a around the house, carrying the pail Her face was Jralnad of every ves- She said slowly, “No | earthly reason except that I don't care to.” “Ob,’ he said, and looked out &t the garden. | Gaynor stared blindly down at the wet scrubbing-biush. There! she | and soap and scrubbing brush with her. Of course that was what he want- ed to discuss—Patricia. Patricia,. | with that aloof, intriguing little pose: of the untouchable ice-princess, made: him uncertain, unsure of himself and his suit. He thought, no doubt, Gay-- nor could help him; would, no doubt,. ; thought. Perhaps that took a little say: “Now listen, Gay, do you, or dos mind asking Chloe to make some iced tea ?’ to get rid of me, of course. But at that, I reckon you'd better make the tea, Gay. She meant you, of course; she knows old Chloe is napping this time of day.” Jerry, satisfied with her beauty labors, turned toward the door. She said, “I'll take it in for you, Gay. You'd better hurry.” Gaynor gave a bitter little laugh “Why? He won't go for ages yet.” Jerry paused, her mouth rebellious. “You bet he won't. She’ll spin his visit out for all it’s worth—the sneaky ’fraid-cat! Gay, what do yoa suppose they talk about gall that time in there alone? Do you think he kisses her?” “I don’t know—or care.” Gay scrubbed the basin with fevered en: ergy. “And you can make the tea— I'm busy.” Jerry ran down the curved stairs singing. | Gay sat suddenly down on the bathroom floor and leaned her head against the tub. Didn't care! she had said. Oh, liar, liar. When she suffered agonies during these visits of Alan. When it was only in a frenzied activity that she could tranquilize heresif. flying past her: | ; Sometimes she saw him, but not ‘often. Sometimes Patricia would call her to mix him a special mint julep as only Gay could mix it. Or he would come out of the drawing-room just as she was passing through the hall on her way upstairs. Or they would pass each other in the garden. On the garden-meeting occasions, he always stopped her: “Where have you been, Gay? What have you been doing 7” Where? Anywhere that was away from him and Patricia. Doing? Any- thing that would keep her from thinking of him and Patricia. “Oh, just for a walk—picking huckleber ries for dinner.” She heard Jerry stairs and rose. “Oh, Gay, Alan wants to see you a minute.” Jerry looked in at the doorway. Her eyes glinted mali- coming up the ‘with you— 1 ciously. She said: “When I went in | 'with the tea, he gave me another look—so I stayed. Pat was furious. As if TI care!” Then, remembering her mission: “He wants to ask you something about a dog.” Gay went down to the hall. Her eyelids drooped over the hot flames of her eyes. Something about a dog! She did not seem to see that he had - intended to shake hands. Patricia, in her graceful Queen Guinevere attitude by the door, said, “Alan’s collie—" Her words died away upon Gay- nor’s consciousness. Alan’s collie— the cause, the helpless deus ex ma- china of their first meeting—— She heard Alan's voice explaining something. “I took one of ’em tc the vet in town, but I'm going for her in the morning and I thought— She nodded without actually know- what he thought. What did it mat- ter? Gaynor was scrubbing the front veranda the next morning. She wore a checked gingham dress, its sleeves rolled up above her elbows, a pair of almost shapeless golf brogues—Jer- ry’s, as Gaynor didn’t play golf and had, therefore, no use for such ac- coutrements—and upon her small head a weird-looking turban. Her face was unpowdered and more than a little shiny. ! So she wasn't, one may see, exact- |ly prepared for Alan. She heard a sharp scrunching in the driveway and before she could make a dignified re- treat, there he was. | He drove the huge shining dragon 1 he erroneouely called a car, and on ‘the seat beside him was one of Mrs. Thistle’s progeny. It yapped at Gay- nor ungratefully. “Good morning,” said Alan, smil- ing. “I've brought Mary, Queen of | Scots, to call on our way home from | the veterinarian’s.” Gaynor sat back on her heels and stared at him. She said, “Neither Patricia nor Jerry are up yet.” Then, accusingly: “It's not nine e¢’clock. He was still smiling. “Well, I on- ly just stopped to show you how ! splendidly our orphans are doing. This little fraud didn’t have a wrong with her—just tried to digest a few tacks, didn't you, old lady?” Gaynor let him talk to her profile. She went on scrubbing—what did it matter what she did? how she look- ed? She went on scrubbing........ Then suddenly, impatiently, he said: “Gaynor, for heaven’s sake stop that swishing a minute! I want to ask you something.” “Well?” Her tone was not ep- couraging. He said: “I want you to take that ‘ing—only Patricia and Jerry would of the conceit nut of him—trying to patronize me, condescending to no- tice me when there's no one else’ about to feed the flame of his vanity ....But her throat hurt her intolerably. ! Alan brought his gaze back to her. He said quietly: “I'm sorry, Gay, I | was so beastly rude. Won't you. show I'm forgiven by driving over to | the Hall with me after all?” At his tone, the citadel of her pride and resentment crumbled hopelessly. She said, in a swift, choked voice: “Alan, I'd love to. But I can't--I| really can't. I must finish this ver- | anda. Patricia's giving a bridge- | party and Aunt Chloe is too busy.” | “Perhaps later?’ But she shook her head. isn’t possible. do later.” Then Alan said deliberately, dis- tinctly: “Gaynor, when is your after- noon off?” “My afternoon off?” And she stared at him in blank amazement. | “That’s what I said: When is your | afternoon off? Perhaps on tha: day you might care to take a drive.” His intent, his meaning was un- mistakable. She put her hand to her mouth to hide its sudden quivering. He had deliberately, cruelly, shown her what she was-—a dull drab, an unattractive and uninteresting house- hold drudge, spineless, resistless, fu- tile, good only for the drab things of life, such as—as——And in that swift, bitter moment, the whole pan- orama of her twenty-one years went “No, it | I've the sandwiches to “Gay dear, give Jerry your dolly —don’t make her cry.’ “Gay, dear, I'm sorry, but you can’t go to the party with Patricia. Moth- er has a headache and needs her lit- tle nurse.” “Gay, dear, would you mind press- ing Jerry's pink organdy for the church supper?” “Gay, dear, have you time to mend the lace on Patricia's slip while she’s dressing ?” Patricia, Jerry—Jerry, always, always, always... She looked at Alan with blind, swimming eyes. She said, “I don’t have afternoons off. But perhaps tomorrow——"" He said, tickling Mary of Scots ab- sently: “Well, then, I want you to spend it with me, if you don’t mind. As a matter of fact, I want to talk | discuss something with | you. What time shall I come and fetch you?” She still looked at him blindly. “What time?” he said again, a trifle sharply. She said faintly: “About four o'clock. Only please don’t come to the house. I—I'd rather meet you at the fork in the road.” He said, that sharp note still dom- inant in his voice, “Why?” Her eyelids fluttered. ‘Oh noth- Patricia— expect to come too. And you said you wanted to—to discuss something with me.” He laughed. “So I do. And I cer- tainly don’t want Patricia or Jerry— especially Patricia—to hear it. At least, not just yet.” He flicked his cigaret to the sunny lawn. “Well, tomorow at four-—the fork of the road. Cheerio till then.” And with a sort of Fascist salute, he was gone, roaring down the drive- way. Gaynor, on her mat, suddenly bur- ied her face in her damp, reddened hands. She heard Patricia’s soft drawl at the upstairs window: “Gay, who was that ?” Gay said through her fingers, “Alan Colford.” She heard the sudden sharp rat- tle of blinds above her. She looked up and saw Patricia’s dark, miracu- lously smooth head and flame-silk- covered shoulders thrust out of the window. “Alan? What on earth did he want at this time of morning?” Gay gathered up her scrubbing par- aphernalia. “Nothing. Only stop ped in on his way back to the Hall with the collie puppy.” Patricia was frowning. Something seemed to annoy her. She said sharp: ly, as if realizing Gaynor’s position and attire for the first time: “Don’t tell me he caught you in that-—that awful make-up!” Gaynor’s pointed little chin went forward. “He did. What about it? What do you care? It wasn't you was it?” Patricia laughed softly down at her. “Rather not! But after ali, Alan is a gentleman, and gentlemen are inclined to be fastidious about-- about the appearance and habits of their finance’s family.” Gay said, not looking up at Pa tricia: “Fiance? You mean—” But what a silly, what a ridiculous question! What could Patricia mean except just what she had said? Patricia never exerted herself to say things = to Gaynor that she didn’t mean. Patricia now said: “You know ex- actly what I mean. Not that we've actually come to any definite under. standing. Alan is absurdly shy for so dominant a personality. But a girl always knows a man is in’ love with her, and heaven only knows Alan has demonstrated his interest in this house. Every afternoon and practic- you not, think I've got a chance? I'm mad about Patricia, but she’s so. much the unapproachable Queen. Guinevere—’* But even Queen Guinevere had succumbed to Sir Lancelot. Alan, contrary to habit, did not drive or ride over that afternoon. “On account of my bridge” Patricia. explained. “He loathes a lot of silly- women.” “Hot apple sauce,” said Jerry. Gay said nothing. But at six o'clock the telephone: shrilied peremptorily. “For me,” said Jerry from the ham- raock. “For me,” said Patricia from the: piano. “Fo’ Miss Gay,” said Aunt Chloe- from the dim hallway. Gaynor came out of the pantry. She said into the mouthpiece: “Hel: lo? Yes, this is Gaynor....Oh, no—no. of course I've not forgotten... What?" Before three?.. Before two? Why, 1 don’t know if I can make it... Well, if it’s that important, III’ try. Good-- by.” She hung up and went back to- ward the pantry. “Who was it?” said Jerry in the: doorway. “What was it?” said Patricia on. the drawing-room. threshold. “Someone,” said Gay decisively, “and something for just me.” And: the pantry door swung to behind her.. Jerry went back to her hammock. Patricia went over to the mirror to- powder her nose. Bui Alan did not drive over to the Oaks that evening. It was ten minutes past the hour when Gaynor arrived at the fork. He: was there, waiting for her in the blue shining dragon, and they drove off in the direction of town. But direct- ly they had gone a few hundred: yards, he reached into his pocket. “Look™ he said exultantly. “Ive- something to show you.” And he. brought forth a section of a New York paper. “Wonderful luck Gay. Here, look at this.” And he laid the paper on her knees and pointed with his finger. It was an article, illustrated with. sketches of gigantic steel. structures and a blurred photograph of Alan. It announced, in discreet. headlines, that the plans of one of Alan Pell: Colford, son of the famous “Steel” Colford, had been accepted for the: construction of a stupendous bridge: to be swung across some. terrific, un- pronounceable chasm in Peru. and’ that said Alan Pell. Colford: would: himself superintend that. construc- tion. It said a lot. more.. But Gay: nor saw only the last. words she hag’ read. “Operations will start imme- diately and Mr. Colford expects to: sail next Saturday.” The paper was a week old. Why; Saturday was—was day after tomor-- row! She sat back, aghast at the wave: of desolation that swept over her. Day after tomorrow! He said: “What is it, Gay? Aren't you pleased? You know I once tol¢ you that this was my life’s ambition: a man’s work—no, more than that—- a work for the gods.” She said her eyes fixed unseeing- ly on the white ribbon of the high-- way: “Of course I'm pleased. Only —only it came so suddenly—the thought, I mean of your going.” He accelerated the speed of the dragon. It roared along the road. He said at last, “That's why TI had to see you today, alone, without Jer ry or Patricia.” ‘ Patricia! The thought of her leap- ed suddenly into Gaynor’s numbed consciousness. What about Patricia ? No wonder Alan felt he needed aid in that direction. Only the evening in which to get properly engaged, plans formed and future dates set. They were roaring through: a. small hamlet where a few stately old man- sions still. stood, unchanged, behinc the high. pickets of their fences: Buf several of them: carried’ discreel boards attached to their gate-posts Antiques. Ye Olde Booke Shoppe The Lindens—Iluncheon, tea, dinner Begore its green-painted gates Ala: stopped the car. He said: “Gay, I want to talk t¢ you and I can’'t—driving this nois; blunderbuss. Let’s have tea here.” She said idiotically, “But it’s to: early.” Oh, to put off, to put of forever that which he had to say t her! But he got out and held open th door for her. “Well, we can have a: ice, then. It doesn’t really matter. No escape. She followed him u the walk to an awninged verand: where one old lady sat sipping lemon water and reading a paper: They sat down at one of the littl green tables. They waited. Finall an old darky wandered out smiled a them toothlessly, repeated their or der. ‘“Yassuh—two iced teas,” an wandered off, to return a few minute later with a pitcher of lemonade. “We said iced tea——" began Alar “Yassuh—but Ah reckon you all’. like dis hyar lemonade bettah.” H wandered off. Alan began to talk about Sout America. Gaynor merely listened an suffered, waiting for that time whe he had finished. “It will be far from an easy lif: Gay,” he said. “Nothing—certaix ally every evening. TI sometimes (Continued on page 7, Col. 1.)