Beth's wonder-winter : A story

By Marion Ames Taggart

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Title: Beth's wonder-winter
        A story

Author: Marion Ames Taggart

Illustrator: William F. Stecher

Release date: March 23, 2025 [eBook #75689]

Language: English

Original publication: Boston: W. A. Wilde Company, 1914

Credits: Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BETH'S WONDER-WINTER ***





Beth’s Wonder-Winter




BOOKS BY MARION AMES TAGGART

THE SIX GIRLS SERIES

  SIX GIRLS AND BOB. A Story of Patty Pans and Green
  Fields.                                   330 pages.

  SIX GIRLS AND THE TEA ROOM. A Story.      316 pages.

  SIX GIRLS GROWING OLDER. A Story.         331 pages.

  SIX GIRLS AND THE SEVENTH ONE. A Story.   358 pages.

  BETTY GASTON, THE SEVENTH GIRL. A Story.  352 pages.

  SIX GIRLS AND BETTY. A Story.             320 pages.

  SIX GIRLS GROWN UP. A Story.              343 pages.

  HER DAUGHTER JEAN. A Story.               336 pages.

  BETH’S WONDER-WINTER. A Story.            352 pages.

  Price, $1.25 each net

  These volumes are attractively illustrated and
  bound uniformly.




[Illustration: At every beat of his small hoofs she loved him better
(_Frontispiece_)]




  Beth’s Wonder-Winter

  _A STORY_

  By
  MARION AMES TAGGART

  _ILLUSTRATED BY_
  WILLIAM F. STECHER

  [Illustration: Docendo discimus]

  W. A. WILDE COMPANY
  BOSTON      CHICAGO




  _Copyrighted, 1914_,
  BY W. A. WILDE COMPANY
  _All rights reserved_

  BETH’S WONDER-WINTER




  _Dedicated
  to
  Little Frances
  with great love_




CONTENTS


      I. WHEN THE MAIL CAME IN                    11

     II. WHEN THE TRAIN PULLED OUT                23

    III. THE CHANGELING                           38

     IV. THE FAIRY-LAND CHILDREN                  54

      V. ALL SORTS OF NEW STEPS                   69

     VI. “THE ISLAND DAY”                         84

    VII. PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS                   99

   VIII. TANAGERS AND BLUEBIRDS                  116

     IX. AFOOT AND ON HORSEBACK                  136

      X. THE HOSPITAL ON THE HEIGHTS             155

     XI. KRIS KRINGLE’S JINGLES                  174

    XII. THE HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS                 194

   XIII. “HOLLY AND JOLLY RHYME”                 212

    XIV. DIRK ENTERTAINS                         232

     XV. CHRYSALIS AND THE COUNTESS              251

    XVI. THE SHROVE NIGHT MASQUE                 271

   XVII. THE RIDE DOWN THE QUIET ROAD            291

  XVIII. “FLORIDA PASQUA”                        310

    XIX. THE WONDER-WINTER MELTS IN SPRING       328




ILLUSTRATIONS


                                                PAGE

  At every beat of his small hoofs she loved
  him better (_Frontispiece_)                    153

  “Oh! good-bye, Aunt Rebecca”                    29

  Beth ran over to the gracious lady              49

  “I’ve been waiting to show it to you”          233

  The prince ... slipped a ring upon each hand   307




Beth’s Wonder-Winter




CHAPTER I

WHEN THE MAIL CAME IN


“Beth Bristead, did you tear--how did you tear your apron so?” demanded
Beth’s aunt. She held up the accusing rent to explain the change in the
form of her question; it left no room for doubt that the apron was torn.

Beth, small and quiet for her eleven years, answered unexpectedly:

“I didn’t tear it, Aunt Rebecca. It tore itself--kind of.”

“Kind of! Elizabeth Frances, aprons do not tear themselves, and you
have always been perfectly truthful--I brought you up so,” said Aunt
Rebecca sternly.

“Yes’m,” said Beth, flushing all over her sweet little round face.
“I’ll tell you,” she began, forced to explain by her habit of obedience
and her truthful upbringing, “I took it off and hung it on the low
boughs of the tree when I climbed it--it was the apple tree, the old
Baldwin apple tree down by the well we never use. And when I came down
I was in a hurry, so I guess I took it off snatchified, because it
caught and tore. I suppose if I’d have been slower I’d have felt the
caught place and unhooked it, but--it just slit.”

“It looks as if it did! You’ll have to mend it neatly, put a patch
under it and fasten the frayed edges before you sew. What were you
doing up in an apple tree, a great girl like you?” said Aunt Rebecca.

“Oh, dear! must I mend it? It’s a three-cornered tear!” sighed Beth. “I
s’pose I ought, because it’s my apron--though I’m sure I never wanted
it.”

“It’s your tear, too,” observed Beth’s aunt dryly. “You haven’t told me
what you were doing up in the apple tree, nor why you had to take off
your apron when you climbed.”

Beth looked around the familiar room and glanced appealingly down
at the worn carpet footstool. Then she looked higher, at the big
rocking-chair with the cushion tied on its back, the cushion that
always went flip-flap above Beth’s head when she sat in that chair,
because she was not quite tall enough to lean against it. Then her eyes
rose to the narrow mantelpiece above the resolute stove, faithful to
its office, but hideous to look upon. She looked at the blue vase with
the pink roses, at the pink vase with the yellow chrysanthemums on it
which stood, a pair, yet not matching, one on each end of the shelf.
She looked at the clock that stood in the middle, with Time and his
scythe reclining on its top, at the chubby china boy with a muffler
around his throat and a match box on his back, and at the china lamb,
which flanked the clock on either side, but none of these lifelong
friends gave Beth any suggestion for her explanation. There was nothing
to do but explain without help, though she knew that Aunt Rebecca would
not understand.

“I climbed the tree, Aunt Rebecca, because I was playing ‘Watchman,
tell us of the night,’” Beth said slowly. “I was the Watchman and Shep
was the Traveler-o’er-yon-mountain-height--there wasn’t anybody else to
be it--don’t you see?”

“I certainly do not see,” said Aunt Rebecca in a tone which implied
that her not seeing was much to Beth’s discredit. “That is a hymn, not
a game, and what can it have to do with climbing trees?”

“I was the Watchman,” explained Beth patiently. “I had to climb a tree,
or something, to get up high enough to be him. Don’t you know what it
says, Aunt Rebecca? I saw a picture once like it; the watchman is up in
a high thing, like a square steeple, walking back and forth--I couldn’t
walk back and forth in a tree, but it was the highest thing I had.
Don’t you know, Aunt Rebecca?”

“I knew that hymn and many another long before I was your age, Beth; I
took the Sabbath school prize for the greatest number of hymns, as well
as the greatest number of Bible verses committed to memory, when I was
not quite ten,” said Aunt Rebecca with a sort of humble pride. “But I
fail to see why you took off your apron, even if you were turning that
hymn into a game--and it never occurred to _me_ when _I_ was a little
girl to do such a thing as that.”

“You couldn’t possibly be a Watchman telling us of the night with a
great, long blue gingham apron on, Aunt Rebecca!” said Beth earnestly,
though hopelessly.

“Then I advise you to play something else,” said Aunt Rebecca. “Now you
will have to mend your apron, and most likely it will take so much of
your playtime to do it that you won’t play anything to-morrow.”

“Aunt Rebecca,” Beth burst out with a vehemence unlike her subdued
little self, a vehemence that crimsoned her face to her straight light
hair, brushed tightly back and braided beyond all chance of a lock
escaping into disorder, “Aunt Rebecca, I hate aprons!”

“Do you?” remarked her aunt. “Well, they’re fitting and proper for you
to wear, none the less. You’ll find that there are a great many things
that are good for you which you may not like.”

“I’ve found it out already,” sighed Beth. “I found it out when I was
young, but I knew it ’way down in my stomach last summer when I was
sick and the doctor left me medicine. But aprons are not good for me;
they’re only good for my dresses, and I really don’t see what’s the use
of dresses when they’re always covered up in aprons. When they come out
of aprons they’re always outgrown, and you give ’em to Emmy Jackson. My
Sunday dress is the only one that has the least, wee chance to show.
I think aprons are cruel--that is they are if your dress is pretty.
Sometimes to get along with it at all, I have to play that my dress is
a princess and my apron a wicked fairy smothering her.”

“All good little girls wear aprons,” said Aunt Rebecca somewhat at a
loss how to answer Beth’s remarks, which were prompted entirely by a
sincere desire to let light into her aunt’s mind, and not in the least
by the spirit of disobedience, or a desire to rebel against the order
of things as they were, including aprons.

“Oh, no, Aunt Rebecca,” said Beth eagerly. She took the worn
footstool and sat down upon it, folding her hands to discuss the
matter thoroughly. “That isn’t a contradicting contradiction; I just
mean--well, I mean _no_; all good little girls do not wear aprons,
truly. I have seen pictures and read stories of little girls that
were as good as they were lovely--you could see it in the pictures,
and the stories always told you so--who never wore aprons at all. In
the stories you often read exactly what the girls wear, and they are
perfectly be-au-ti-ful dresses, but not a single apron. If they wore
aprons the story would sometimes say: ‘Reaching her arm up ’most out
of joint she buttoned her apron as she went down-stairs.’ Or, maybe:
‘Her mother called her down to see the minister, and she pulled off
her apron to be fit to be seen.’ But they never say anything except
something about her throwing her hat off, or pulling off her coat, or
putting on her gloves, or something nice--never a single apron in a
story. And it’s the same in pictures. I don’t know a picture of a girl
in an apron. And in the fashion books you never see a girl in an apron.
They are always all fluffy and sweet, but they don’t cover it up. And
these books say they are ‘Styles for Girls of Eight to Twelve.’ That
means they show what girls wear, doesn’t it? And not an apron!” Beth’s
voice rose triumphant. “If you could wait, Aunt Rebecca, I’d get some
of the books Miss Tappan left when she sewed here last week, and show
you.”

“Never mind,” said Aunt Rebecca. “Those are stories and fashions for
children who don’t live as you do. Their lot is not your lot.”

“Oh,” sighed Beth.

It was a saddening sort of an explanation, but it seemed to cover
the ground. She had received this answer, or something like it, a
great many times when she showed signs of discontent. This did not
happen often, for Beth was a contented little soul, naturally good and
docile. Sometimes, but not often, she wistfully wondered what it would
be to have life more flowery, so to speak; she wondered if mothers
made things brighter. Aunt Rebecca--her great-aunt--had brought her
up kindly; Beth was grateful, but Aunt Rebecca had not a mind that
considered the merely ornamental, the merely pleasant things, worth
cultivating. And Beth loved pretty things, and joyous things like a
sweet-loving humming-bird; she was like a little humming-bird, flying
about in a stony place.

“Some people’s lot is to be like the lilies of the field, or the
butterflies,” said Aunt Rebecca severely. “They live careless, gay
lives, spending a great deal, and never considering. You should be
glad, Elizabeth, that your lot is different.”

“My lot is a lot of aprons,” said Beth. “Do you think butterflies
can help it, Aunt Rebecca?” Then, without waiting to make clear her
not-particularly clear question, Beth hurried on. “Sometimes, Aunt
Rebecca, I like to make believe that everything happens wonderfully. I
make believe we are rich, as rich as Greasers----”

“Crœsus, child,” corrected Aunt Rebecca with a short laugh.

“Oh,” said Beth. “And we can have everything on earth we want--only I
don’t know just what you would like, Aunt Rebecca, to have a perfectly
glorious time. So I always just hurry over that, making believe you
can have every single thing you want, so you can decide that yourself,
and I can go on making believe for myself, without worrying about you.
And, my goodness, what don’t I have! Dresses--oceans of them, and I
wear the splendidest ones every day, and don’t mind at all whether
they fade, or get spotted, or what happens! And I live in a palace,
and hardly walk at all, just order the horses, you know, and go! And I
travel, and I eat such lovely things that ice-cream isn’t worth talking
about, and I smell flowers all the time, because I have acres of them,
even in winter, and---- Oh, mercy! It’s a beautiful make-believe, but
there isn’t much danger of its coming true. There aren’t any fairies
nowadays; I guess there never were any in New England, and it would
take fairies and fairies to bring it true! Do you think it’s a lovely
make-believe, Aunt Rebecca?”

“No. I think it’s very bad for you to let yourself covet luxury that
isn’t possible for you to have, Beth,” said Aunt Rebecca. “You will
grow up a discontented, envious woman if you allow your mind to dwell
on riches which can never be yours.”

“It doesn’t make me feel wicked, Aunt Rebecca,” said Beth slowly. “It
is like a great secret garden where I go to play. It’s fairy-land;
there aren’t such lovely things anywhere as I make believe I have, so I
don’t think it makes me wicked, Aunt Rebecca. It’s just dream things.
Of course I know I’ll never see them, so I don’t think of them that
way.”

Now this is a workaday world, and Beth was quite right in saying that
there are not fairies, at least not at work on many mortal lives, but
this is what happened just as the little girl ended with a wistful, yet
happy sigh.

Lydia Tappan, the village dressmaker, came up the street, and in her
hand she held a letter. She turned in at Aunt Rebecca’s gate and walked
up the flagged walk, and opened the door in the simple fashion of the
place, without the ceremony of knocking. She entered the sitting-room
before Beth could get up from her footstool, as she hastened to do,
like the polite child that she was, respectful to her elders.

“I was down to mail a letter, Rebecca,” said Miss Tappan, “and I
thought I’d bring up your mail. You’ve got a letter from New York; I
wasn’t aware you knew anybody there.”

Aunt Rebecca took the letter, opened it and began to read. “Mercy upon
us!” she murmured, turning over the sheet to see the signature. Then
she went back to the beginning and read steadily on to the end. Beth
thought that she had never seen Aunt Rebecca look so excited as she did
when she let the letter fall into her lap at last, and sat staring at
the little girl.

“Well?” hinted Miss Tappan impatiently, eager to be let into the
mystery.

“It’s from Beth’s mother’s brother,” said Aunt Rebecca.

“Isn’t that an uncle?” cried Beth instantly sharing Aunt Rebecca’s
excitement.

“Well?” repeated Miss Tappan.

“He is James Cortlandt; he is worth millions,” Aunt Rebecca went on,
ignoring Beth. “He has a family of three children, two girls and a boy.
This letter is from him and his wife. They want I should let Beth go on
to them to spend the winter. They say they want to know their sister
Nannie’s child and want her cousins to know her. I don’t know what to
think, Lydia. Of course they have everything heart could wish, but I
don’t know them, and I don’t want Beth to be spoiled. It’s the thin
edge of the wedge, Lydia.”

“You couldn’t spoil Beth so easy,” said Miss Tappan. Neither woman
seemed to remember that the small person they were discussing was
waiting, wide-eyed and marveling, for what should come next. “They
make a good deal of Beth here, in school, everywhere, and she’s always
the same sensible, steady, old-fashioned little soul. She’d take the
splendor just as she takes everything, with a pleasant, obliging smile,
and be happy in it, just as she’s happy when folks here are good to
her. I guess I’d risk it. Besides, you don’t seem to me to have the
right to keep her from getting acquainted with her mother’s folks, if
they want her. It will be a great advantage to her to see the world.”

“H’m! That’s as it may be,” said Aunt Rebecca. “There’s some sides of
the world better unseen.”

“The world’s round, Rebecca; it hasn’t any sides. To fit it you’ve got
to be sort of rounded yourself. I always felt it was a pity we stayed
so close right here all our lives. How’ll you get Beth there?” asked
Miss Tappan. She knew Aunt Rebecca well enough to see that she had
decided that Beth was to go.

“They’ll send a maid on here to fetch her, if I say she may go,” said
Aunt Rebecca. “Do you understand what’s happened, child?” she added,
turning to Beth. “Your Uncle Cortlandt, in New York, has asked you on
to visit him for this winter. Do you want to go?”

Beth ran over and threw her arms around Aunt Rebecca. To her surprise
her aunt’s arms closed around her plump little figure uncomfortably
tight; Aunt Rebecca was not given to embraces.

“It would be lonely, Aunt Rebecca; I’m afraid I’d be homesick often.
But one winter isn’t long when it’s so near Christmas already--only
seven weeks off! And if I was dreadfully homesick I suppose they’d let
me come home. Don’t you think it must be wonderful in New York? Miss
Bradley was there on her trip last summer; she told us about it in
school. They have so many things, railroads in the air, and railroads
down under the ground, and ferry-boats, and big churches, and parks
of wild animals, and statues, and fishes in places where they keep
them--all kinds, and buildings so high you get a crick in your neck
looking up at them. Miss Bradley said we were to remember it was next
biggest to London. Janie and I were crazy to go when Miss Bradley told
our class about it. I think, even if I was a little homesick, I’d just
love to go, Aunt Rebecca, if you don’t mind,” said truthful Beth.

“Well, I suppose you have to go; I don’t suppose what I want has
anything to do with it, nor homesickness either,” said Aunt Rebecca
crisply. “I shall write and tell them to come after you on--let me
see!--say the twentieth; that will be in about ten days from the time
they get my letter. Your aunt says she prefers to buy your winter
clothes there; I suppose she thinks you wouldn’t be fitted out here the
way her children are; neither would you. I guess you’ll be one of those
children you were talking about, who don’t wear aprons, this winter,
Beth,” Aunt Rebecca ended with a laugh that did not sound amused.

“I’ll wear them if you want me to just the same as if I was home!”
cried Beth catching the note of regret in her great-aunt’s voice and
generously responding to it. Then the magnificence of what had happened
rushed over the little girl, almost overwhelming her. “Oh, it has come
true, it has come true! And I thought it never could!” she cried. “It
will be my make-believe land, and I’ll be in it, alive, really me, just
Beth Bristead! Oh, I’ll write you, Aunt Rebecca, I truly will, though
I de-spise writing, so you sha’n’t miss me! And I’ll come back so good
you will be thankful, and I’ll remember everything you ever told me to
do, and I won’t forget a single thing I see, so I’ll be better than
newspapers next summer. Oh, Aunt Rebecca, to think such a little while
ago when I was telling you about it we never thought it could come
true, and now it has, it has! May I go right away and tell Janie Little
that I’m going? What will she say! What will all the girls say! Oh,
Aunt Rebecca, I think I’ll never live to get to New York, I’m so glad.
It will be a wonder-winter!”

Beth flew off to get her hat. Aunt Rebecca and Miss Tappan heard the
front door slam and looked out of the window. They saw Beth wildly
struggling into her jacket as she tore off down the street to find her
best beloved playmate and tell her the great good fortune that had
befallen her. They knew that the child trod upon air, that it seemed
to her that fairies were speeding her flying feet, showering upon her
gifts beyond belief. They were glad in her joy, but Aunt Rebecca knew
that she would sorely miss her little Beth.




CHAPTER II

WHEN THE TRAIN PULLED OUT


Beth sat by the window in spotless order. Her hands were clasped in
her lap; she was so still that her favorite doll, sitting stiffly
opposite to her, seemed, by contrast, to be romping. But the reddened
tips of the clasped fingers betrayed the severe pressure that held
them so motionless, and the pallor of the usually rosy round face, and
the dilated blackness of the blue eyes told the effort which kept the
little girl so quiet at her post. Beth was watching for the arrival
of her Aunt Alida Cortlandt’s maid, who was to carry her off to the
crowded metropolis. Beth had never seen a maid--she had seen “girls,”
“help,” even “servants,” but a maid! Somehow she had gathered from
her beloved story-books vague ideas of maids as exalted persons who
beautifully served beautiful princesses, or noble ladies. The coming of
one of these to the brown village house which had been Aunt Rebecca’s
home for more than fifty years, and Beth’s home for a fifth of that
time was the beginning of the wonderful experiences into which the maid
would lead the little girl.

Outside in the hall stood Beth’s small trunk, locked and strapped,
and plainly tagged in Aunt Rebecca’s clear handwriting. The knowledge
that it was there made it harder for Beth to watch quietly out of the
window. Aunt Rebecca had rebelled against Mrs. Cortlandt’s suggestion
that Beth should be fitted out with winter clothing in New York. Aunt
Rebecca “guessed that her nephew’s daughter wasn’t going to visit her
mother’s folks as if she hadn’t had a friend in the world till they
remembered to ask her!” She had prepared what seemed to Beth a lavish
wardrobe, and had packed it in the little trunk that Beth had always
admired as it stood in the attic under the eaves. Miss Tappan had made
the navy blue coat and gown to match which Beth wore then, ready to
travel in. She liked it so much that she was glad that it had three
tucks in the skirt, so that if New York air made her grow fast the
skirt could be let down three tucks’ length, and she could wear her new
suit all winter. It had a hat to match; a round navy blue felt, trimmed
with navy blue ribbon that was not precisely the same shade as the hat,
but was the nearest to it of all the ribbons Miss Ludd, the milliner,
had. It also had a bunch of blue quills that caused Beth delightful
anxiety, because of their tendency to split at their tips when she put
her hat into its box.

A public carriage drove up the street and stopped at the Bristead door.
Beth drew a quick, gasping, inward breath.

“Aunt Rebecca,” she said low, but with an intensity that made her
voice perfectly audible in the next room where her great-aunt was
cutting out work for the sewing society, “Aunt Rebecca, she has come!
Oh, is that a maid?” she added.

For Beth saw a tall person descend from the carriage, pay the driver
and turn toward the house. She was clad in taffeta so shining that she
looked like a perfectly new, very good quality of stove-pipe; the gown
fell around her in such unwrinkled stiffness that it increased the
stove-pipe likeness. Her hair was black, so smooth and solid in effect
that it carried out the suggestion of her being made of sheet iron. She
moved with great dignity, and looked the brown house up and down with
an air so superior that Beth felt a sudden fear of her. She could not
have told what she had expected a lady’s maid to be like, but certainly
not like this alarming person.

Ella Lowndes, who was Aunt Rebecca’s “help,” opened the door.

“Come in,” Beth heard her say. “Miss Bristead’s in, yes, and the little
girl is all ready to start away with you.”

“You’d better lay off your things,” Beth heard Aunt Rebecca saying.
“I’ll see that you have luncheon right away. This is Elizabeth
Bristead, Mr. Cortlandt’s niece, who is going back with you,” she added
as Beth came shyly forth from her observation post by the window.

“How do you do, Miss Elizabeth?” said the maid with an unexpected
touch of Irish in her speech. Beth had never known any one with that
accent who was not jolly, and the maid looked more serious--and
older--at close range than when she had come up the walk. “No, Miss
Bristead, thank you, I don’t care about any luncheon,” she went on. “I
came right out here from Boston--I was over night there--and if you
don’t mind there’s a train back at half-past eleven I’d like to be
takin’. Then we’d catch the mid-afternoon New York express to New York,
and be gettin’ there early in the evenin’. I don’t want to be hurryin’
you, but if Miss Elizabeth is really ready--Mrs. Cortlandt asked me to
make the best time I could; she’ll be missin’ me if I’m gone a second
night from her. They was goin’ to send up the motor car for me to
bring the young lady on in it, but Mr. Cortlandt ran down to Lakewood
to a speed thrial his club has to-day. He took the small car, but he
wouldn’t let any shoffer but Mr. Léon Charette run it for ’um, and
there’s no other he would thrust to bring the big car up here after the
little girl, so I took the train.”

Aunt Rebecca almost gasped, Beth actually gasped; Aunt Rebecca because
this torrent of words overwhelmed her; Beth because she had no idea
what these words were all about. If the maid had said “chauffeur”
instead of “shoffer” Beth would still have been in the dark as to her
unknown uncle’s reasons for letting his niece come to him by train.

“Beth’s trunk is all ready; there isn’t a thing to do but get her coat
and hat on,” said Aunt Rebecca. “It seems ridiculous to come all the
way from New York and turn right around without so much as a cup of
tea, but if you’re in such a hurry--I suppose Shakespeare knew when he
said what had to be done might as well be done quickly. Beth, get your
things.”

“Now, Aunt Rebecca?” cried Beth. But she departed on her errand
instantly, and returned with her hat on backward above a face purple
from all sorts of emotions which there was no time to sort out,
unrolling her cashmere gloves as she came.

“You don’t seem to have looked in the glass,” commented Aunt Rebecca
as she took off the excited child’s hat and righted it. “Here, I’ll
hold your coat; pull your sleeves down first.” She lifted Beth’s coat
over her shoulders with such vigor that Beth herself was raised on her
tiptoes. “There’ll have to be somebody get her trunk down to the depot
so’s it’ll go on the train with you,” said Aunt Rebecca. “Oh, you kept
the carriage!” she added, glancing out of the window. “Then I don’t see
but that you’re ready to go on your travels, Beth.”

“Mrs. Cortlandt said I was to be sure and tell you not to send anything
whatever for the child to wear, Miss Bristead,” said the maid rising.

“I’ve provided for my grandniece all her life so far,” said Aunt
Rebecca decidedly, “and when she starts she’ll go as I send her, which
is properly clad and made comfortable. When she’s in Mrs. Cortlandt’s
house she’ll wear exactly what that lady considers proper, same’s she
wore here what I considered proper, but she’s going from home with all
a well brought up little girl requires. I shall do my part, and Miss
Beth’s trunk goes with Miss Beth.”

Beth marveled at Aunt Rebecca’s courage, and at her knowledge of the
way to address a maid; she quite glowed with pride in her.

The maid drew herself up stiffly, but she said kindly: “I’m sure I’ve
no objections, madam, to whatever you like to send; it’s only the
matter of a baggage check in me pocketbook to me, and it’s natural the
way you feel.”

She considerately preceded Beth out of the room, her silken skirts
rustling more than any skirts of Beth’s acquaintance as she went. But
Aunt Rebecca had no farewell to take privately.

“Be a good child,” she said, “and remember all you’ve been taught.
Have a good time, but see to it that it is a _good_ time--don’t you be
naughty. And no matter where you go, nor what you see, don’t you lose
hold of your good Bristead principles. Speak the truth, be obedient,
first to what you know is right, and secondly to those who are placed
over you, and mind your manners. Then in New York, or up here among the
Massachusetts hills, or wherever you find yourself, you’ll find you’re
fit to be there, and you’ll always come out right whatever befalls you.
Good-bye.”

She kissed Beth sincerely, but with no more display of emotion than she
would have shown on ordinary occasions, if on ordinary occasions Aunt
Rebecca ever kissed.

Beth threw her arms around Aunt Rebecca and kissed her again and again
with the full consciousness that this was a crisis, an era in her life,
upon which no calm embrace would be suitable.

[Illustration: “OH! GOOD-BYE, AUNT REBECCA.”]

“I’ll be as good, as good as goodness, Aunt Rebecca! And I’ll be
dreadfully homesick and lonely without you, but I know I shall have a
beautiful time. Please don’t let Tabby forget me, and if she should
have an all yellow kitten while I’m gone, you will keep it for me,
won’t you? Oh, good-bye, Aunt Rebecca,” Beth cried with a last frantic
hug and desperate kiss. Then she ran out of the door laughing and
crying, darted back to bid Ella Lowndes good-bye, finally rushed down
the walk and into the station carriage. The driver leaned over and shut
the door, turned his horse, guiding him with the reins laid over Beth’s
trunk on end beside him, and drove down the street.

Beth watched the familiar buildings drop back of her with a puzzled
sense of being in a dream. Except for a trip to Boston for a day she
had never been away from the world these buildings represented; the
Centre Church, the small shops, the new hall, the brick schoolhouse,
the library. New York would certainly be different from this; Boston
was different, and Beth knew to a figure how much smaller than New York
Boston was.

The maid did not talk; Beth glanced at her uneasily. She had no idea
how to address her, and she looked capable of resenting the wrong form
of address. Beth decided to wait for her to begin the conversation; she
was so unexpectedly elderly that that was surely her right.

The maid bought Beth’s ticket, checked her trunk for Boston, and that
left little time to spare before the train came. Beth mounted the steps
with rapidly beating heart and flutteringly took the inside seat by the
window which the maid indicated.

“You’ve been to Boston, it’s likely, Miss Elizabeth?” said the maid at
last to Beth’s relief.

“Yes, several times,” said Beth. “But I’ve never traveled anywhere
else. Have you traveled much?”

“I came across the ocean when I wasn’t much above your age. I’ve
traveled pretty much all over America with different ladies, and I’ve
been much about Europe, Miss Elizabeth,” said the maid indifferently.

“Oh, my! Have you?” cried Beth. “I’m not Miss Elizabeth, please. Aunt
Rebecca doesn’t call me Elizabeth unless she’s displeased with me, and
nobody else ever does. I’m Beth.”

“You’ll have to be called Miss Beth then, for it’s not suitable for
your uncle’s servants to call you by your name, so free,” said the maid.

“Isn’t it?” asked Beth. “Of course I don’t know as well as you do. Ella
always calls me Beth, but she’s just Ella. What ought I to call you,
please?”

“Anna Mary. I was a twin, and they named me twin sister the same name,
only the other way about: she was Mary Anna,” replied the maid.

“How interesting!” cried Beth. “It’s not a long ride to Boston, is it?
Not half as long as it sounds when you say you’re going there.”

“And a good thing it isn’t, for there’s no Pullman car on this train,
and it’s tiresome,” returned Anna Mary.

Beth subsided. She did not know what a Pullman car was; it oppressed
her to know that Anna Mary was finding this delightful trip tiresome.

They arrived in Boston early. Anna Mary took Beth for a light lunch in
the station restaurant, explaining that they would have a good dinner
on the train to New York. But the lightness of Beth’s lunch proved
weighted by her healthy appetite; she ate an excellent lunch, though
Anna Mary condemned everything they had, scornfully.

They crossed the city to the other station from which they were to
start for New York. Anna Mary bought Beth’s ticket and two seats in
the Pullman car, and looked after Beth’s trunk competently. As soon as
the express for New York was made up Beth and Anna Mary boarded it.
Beth followed her tall guide through the vestibule entrance to a car
like nothing in her previous limited experience of travel. All inlaid
in various beautiful woods was this car, fitted with heavy shades,
hung with curtains at its wide plate glass windows. It was carpeted in
soundless velvet carpeting and furnished with great swinging chairs,
upholstered in green velvet. Velvet cushions waited tired travelers’
feet before willow chairs, velvet cushioned also, which sat at the ends
of this car, and long, narrow mirrors between the windows gave back
the smiles in a pair of happy eyes to Beth as she followed the colored
porter down the aisle. He preceded them, carrying Anna Mary’s coat
which she had promptly handed him, and led the way to the seats whose
numbers she gave him, recorded on the checks which she had purchased in
the station. Anna Mary had increased in awfulness since she had stepped
on the lowest step of the car. The porter eagerly established her in
her chair, hung up her coat, and seemed relieved that she expressed
herself satisfied with the location of her chairs.

Beth climbed into her own great chair; it was only too comfortable; she
was almost lost in its hollow, and its depth of seat prevented her feet
from reaching the floor. But the observant porter quickly brought a
velvet cushion for both Anna Mary and Beth, and the little girl settled
back into luxury that showed her why Anna Mary had called the car in
which they had begun their journey “tiresome.”

Anna Mary bought three magazines for Beth and a bunch of violets, and
finally a box of chocolates from a succession of boys that passed
through the car. Beth could not help knowing that Anna Mary spent more
than two dollars on these gifts. It was such a great sum to expend so
recklessly on her small self that Beth was almost as much troubled as
pleased by such extravagance. She conveyed her feeling to Anna Mary.
The maid laughed.

“All ladies have such thrifles in traveling Miss Beth. You’ll have to
get used to more than that, my dear,” she said.

Beth tasted the chocolates thoughtfully. It was true, then, the
unlikely things she had read in stories, of girls who thought no more
of two pound boxes of candy, nor thought as much of them, as Beth
thought of buying a quarter of a pound of cough drops in a white,
scalloped edged bag at Armstrong’s, the druggist’s, at home!

The train proved to be a fast one; Beth had never ridden so fast.
They whirled past landscapes that were shaken down into a confusing
whole made up of trees, fences, hills, river, ponds and towns on
a grayish-yellow November background, much as Mr. Armstrong shook
together the ingredients of a prescription in a bottle.

Beth kept swinging around in her chair at first to talk to Anna Mary,
but Anna Mary was plainly not inclined to conversation. She fell
asleep as soon as Beth discovered this fact, and let her alone; the
little girl happily resigned herself to looking out of the window, to
turning the pages of her magazines, to watching the other passengers,
and at last to enjoying the wonder of the great thought that she, Beth
Bristead, was rushing toward New York at a fearful, yet safe speed, in
such a beautiful car that it hardly seemed possible the great city held
anything finer.

It was growing dusk when Anna Mary awoke with a start. She smiled at
Beth with great kindness and approval. “Well, you are a good child,
whatever else you may be!” she said. “I think I lost meself a few
minyutes. Now, we’re goin’ to have our dinner. It’s early, but we’ll
take our time at it, and be nicely back here for a while before we get
into town.”

She arose and Beth followed her. “Leave your hat and coat here, Miss
Beth; there’ll nobody touch ’em,” Anna Mary said, and Beth rather
anxiously obeyed.

Anna Mary led the way from that car to the next one. It was entered by
a passage that turned sharply around a corner, shutting off the second
car from first sight. When they came around this corner Beth exclaimed
rapturously. There was a brilliantly lighted dining-room awaiting them,
more brilliant and gay than any Beth had ever seen. Small tables, snowy
white as to covers, glittering with clear glass and even with flowers
on them, stood before each window. Colored waiters in white linen,
matching their gleaming teeth, but contrasting strikingly with their
complexions, stood about, or flew around, napkins on arm, trays in
hand, serving those already seated at the tables, waiting for others
who were to come--among them Anna Mary and delighted Beth.

“I hope you are hungry, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary taking off her
gloves as she and Beth took the chairs an eager waiter had pulled back
for them.

“I really am,” said Beth surprised to find it true. “I don’t see how I
can be, so soon, and I’ve been eating chocolates, too, but I really am.”

“Will you pick out what you want, or will I order for you?” suggested
Anna Mary.

“Oh, you, please,” cried Beth, and Anna Mary ordered. She proved to
be an excellent judge of a good dinner. Beth wondered if she thought
it was Thanksgiving that day, instead of next week. Oysters, soup,
lobster, broiled chicken, several unfamiliar but delicious vegetables,
salad--which Beth did not like--ice-cream and fancy cakes, which Beth
decidedly did like--and a second order of it, at that!--coffee for Anna
Mary, weak tea for Beth, to whom it was a dissipation. All this Anna
Mary ordered as if it was a matter of course, and partook of critically.

Beth leaned back in her chair at last and sighed, then laughed.

“I was thinking that it seemed as if that sigh could hardly get out,
I had eaten such a big, such a very big dinner,” she explained. “Anna
Mary, I never had such a wonderful dinner! I think Cinderella couldn’t
have had a better one if you had been the fairy godmother.”

This was not what Beth meant to say, but Anna Mary understood her
meaning. “You will soon see real dinners,” she said, implying that
this was “about like a box of crackers,” thought Beth, stunned by the
prospect before her, and watching Anna Mary as she unrolled a large
bill from the fat wad in her pocketbook and handed it to the waiter.
She watched with greater awe as the waiter offered Anna Mary her change
on a small silver tray and Anna Mary gathered it up, leaving half a
dollar, a whole shining fifty cent piece, on the tray for the waiter to
take. This he did with a bow of profound respect.

“Anna Mary,” began Beth after they had returned to their chairs in the
drawing-room car, “is it really like this, only more than this, in New
York?”

“It’s a great town, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary. “There’s folks in
it, like your uncle, who live like princes of the blood, going from
glory to glory. And there’s many more comfortable by hard workin’, and
there’s more than there should be livin’ not much better than in ash
barrels, like the poor homeless cats you do be seein’ after dark. But
for the most part, yes; it’s like this, only more so. And you might be
puttin’ on your hat now, Miss Beth, for we’re gettin’ in.”

The train slowed up, stopped. Anna Mary took Beth’s hand and led her,
bewildered, not sure whether she were awake or dreaming, down a long,
cold concrete avenue between tracks, through hurrying crowds, under
electric lights, into a screaming, rushing, roaring street of cabmen,
travelers, trolleys. This was New York!

Anna Mary put Beth into an electric cab, gave an address, and stepped
in herself. The doors that shut them in like a sort of folding lid
closed upon them and the cab started. Never before had Beth ridden in
a vehicle running without a track, without visible power to propel it.
She held her breath.

The cab skidded along through the crowded cross street, turned a
corner sharply, swung into a broad avenue alive with other electric
cabs, horse-drawn cabs, fine carriages, two-story green stages with
winding stairs up their backs, but with no horses to draw them; past
streams of people going both ways, bright-faced girls, men in queer
high hats that looked like mourning to Beth, with swinging coats that
showed shining white linen, or black silk mufflers. She caught glimpses
of lovely ladies in carriages, hatless, with flowers or feathers in
their hair, gleaming with jewels as their beautiful cloaks parted,
gowned in silks of the most exquisite tints. She saw others, walking,
with lace mantillas over their hair, like the Spanish ladies in her
geography, and with long coats that showed only beautiful ruffles as
their wearers held up skirts and hurried to the theatre. She passed
tall houses, some of them dark and solemn, some all alight, with
pictures, great chairs, all sorts of brilliance, revealed through their
lace-draped windows.

“Oh, am I really, really here? Am I seeing it, truly, Anna Mary?”
gasped Beth.

Anna Mary caught her meaning. “You’re awake, Miss Beth; it’s New York
fast enough,” she said with the pride of an adopted citizen in the
vast, splendid city.




CHAPTER III

THE CHANGELING


The cab stopped before a tall house, dressed in brown from head to
foot. “It looks like Aunt Rebecca when she has on her brown mohair,”
thought Beth, and the humorous resemblance cheered away a slight
feeling of fear that crept over the little girl as she realized that
she had come to stay long in this big brown stone house, so unlike the
brown house in the village from which she had come.

The cab doors parted and swung back without a touch. It was magic, Beth
thought, till she remembered the driver somewhere up aloft behind her.

Anna Mary delayed long enough to pay this lofty personage, who touched
his tall hat in acknowledgment of his fee; Beth watched it all with
wide eyes as she waited on the pavement.

“Now,” said Anna Mary, and Beth followed her up the steps.

A smiling young woman in a cap opened the door. “Oh, Anna Mary!” she
said, but her eyes were on Beth in her home-made blue garments.

“Where’s Mrs. Hodgman?” asked Anna Mary resenting this maid’s unspoken
criticism of Beth’s appearance. Anna Mary had a personal pride in
everything and everybody belonging to the family which she served.

“Mrs. Hodgman is in her room down-stairs,” said the maid. Just then a
serious looking woman came up from below, and Anna Mary went toward her.

“Mrs. Hodgman, this is Mr. Cortlandt’s niece, Miss Elizabeth Bristead,
but she is called Miss Beth. I’ve this moment come back from fetchin’
her. Miss Beth, this is Mrs. Hodgman who looks after your aunt’s
housekeepin’ for her,” said Anna Mary.

Puzzled Beth held out her hand. “I’m very well, thank you,” she said,
before Mrs. Hodgman had a chance to ask after her health.

The housekeeper smiled. “I’m glad to hear it, my dear. You certainly
look so,” she said. “Mrs. Cortlandt and Mr. Cortlandt are out, Anna
Mary. Mrs. Cortlandt thought that you would come, but she wasn’t sure,
because you forgot to telegraph. She left word that she should not be
in before one, if she came as early as that, and if the little niece
came that we were to make her comfortable. She said that you could stay
with Miss Beth until she came home, for fear she might be lonely. She
said you need do nothing in her room till she came, but stay up-stairs
to make the child happy.”

“I suppose her room is ready?” asked Anna Mary. “I think she had better
not meet her cousins to-night. Miss Beth, come and have supper, and
then we’ll go up-stairs.”

“I don’t think I’m hungry,” said Beth cautiously, remembering how her
appetite on the train had surprised her.

But Anna Mary did not wait for her to make sure; she led the way down
the hall. “She’d better have supper in the breakfast room, don’t you
think, Mrs. Hodgman? It’s more cozy,” she suggested.

Anna Mary pulled aside a heavy portière and touched a button. The light
that leaped into the flower-shaped bulbs around the room revealed
rose-colored silken covered walls, high wainscoting of a wood as
fine and glossy as the silk above it, beautiful gold and rose window
draperies, and furniture so fine that even Beth felt its perfection.
She caught her breath.

“Is it a room, a room to use?” she cried.

“It’s the breakfast room, Miss Beth,” said the housekeeper. “It is said
to be one of the most beautiful rooms of its kind in New York. I’ll see
that a supper is sent up, Anna Mary. Riggs is out to-night, so Frieda
will serve it.”

She left the room and Anna Mary removed Beth’s coat; then they both
waited. It did not seem long to Beth before another maid came and began
to lay a place at the table; she was so much interested in looking at
the sparkling glass, the massive silver on a highboy at one end of
the room, at the pictures, the carvings, all the marvels surrounding
her, that she would willingly have waited far longer for the coming of
supper. But now the deft maid silently spread a drawn-work cloth at
one end of the table, set it with china so frail, so beautiful that
Beth was not quite sure whether it was china or confections. Then she
brought steaming chocolate in a pot that matched the tall cup which
had especially fascinated Beth, cold chicken in a bed of cresses, the
thinnest bread that Beth had ever seen, cakes that made all else of
no consequence, and two or three fruits preserved in their own syrupy
juices.

“Supper is served for your young lady, Anna Mary,” said the maid
speaking low.

Anna Mary pulled back Beth’s heavy chair and the wondering child took
her place. But this time she could hardly eat, delicious as everything
was. The breakfast room had so filled her that food had no place after
it.

“You’re not makin’ out much, Miss Beth, but maybe it’s as well. It’s
likely late for the likes of you to be suppin’,” said Anna Mary kindly.

“I go to bed at half-past eight at home,” said Beth, glancing at the
little sparkling clock that struck once to say that it was one-quarter
after nine.

“Well then, we’ll have to hurry to catch up with the time that’s behind
us,” said Anna Mary, and took Beth’s hand to get her away from a room
that she saw had fascinated her.

She led her to an elevator in the hall. Mrs. Hodgman again met them at
its door. “The little girl has been given the blue willow room on the
third floor, Anna Mary,” she said. “Good-night, my dear; I hope you
will rest well and waken very happy in these new surroundings.”

“Thank you,” said Beth. “I hope you will, too.” She was so bewildered
at finding an elevator waiting for her in a private house that she did
not know what she said; hitherto elevators had meant to her stores or
hotels in Boston. This one was padded and cushioned in golden browns;
it had mirrors all around its sides above its padded wainscoting.
Beth felt as if she were being put into a jewel box, for the elevator
was small. “I know exactly how my garnet ring felt when it came,” she
said. Fortunately Anna Mary did not hear; she would have thought Beth’s
journey had tired her into delirium.

The boy in a mulberry uniform who ran the elevator stopped it almost as
soon as he had started it.

“This way,” said Anna Mary, and took Beth up the hall to a door which
she opened. The room it revealed was lighted, the bedclothing was
turned back, a fire burned on the hearth.

Beth stood still uttering a faint: “Oh!”

The room was not large, but it was square. Its woodwork was snowy
white, its floor covered with a blue velvet carpet so thick and soft,
so beautiful in shade that Beth dared not move across it. A white
dresser stood between a cluster of blue flower lights; a white dressing
table stood opposite between another such group of lights. Willow
chairs, blue cushioned, or all snowy white, stood around; a teakwood
table and a teakwood bookcase gave the tone needed to bring out the
delicate beauty of this room, and the bedstead, a four poster with a
blue tester, was made of willow, like the chairs, and covered with a
white silk counterpane, embroidered with blue violets strewn all over
its surface. Blue velour curtains over snowy lace ones shut off the
light from the two windows and made a background for the whole.

“It isn’t my room, Anna Mary?” gasped Beth. Anna Mary had fearlessly
crossed the delicate carpet and had opened a door and hung Beth’s
coat--oh, if Miss Tappan could have dreamed of this room when she made
that coat!--in what Beth supposed was the closet, and turned to her to
get her hat.

“Whose else?” demanded Anna Mary. “In here’s your dressin’ room and
wardrobes, Miss Beth. There’s runnin’ water here; you’ll likely share
your cousins’ bathroom; I’ll show you it.” She led the way through the
dressing room and through a small square entry with four doors opening
on it, Beth’s door and three others.

“Those doors lead to your two young girl cousins’ rooms, Miss Natalie
and Miss Alys’s apartments, and this is the bathroom which they use,
and you will use it, or they wouldn’t have given you the room you
have--it’s a family room, do you see? Guests never are put in this wing
of the house, not outside guests,” explained Anna Mary.

“Yes,” said Beth, but she did not see in the least. All that she saw
was a room that convinced her the whole thing was a fairy story into
which she had got by some means, much as Alice fell into Wonderland,
for no mere bathroom could be like this! The ceiling was thick, cloudy
glass; through it a clear, soft light, like moonlight, flooded the
room. The floor was white marble; at one point it began to slant down
till it disappeared in a lake of water that gently rose up in varying
depths to meet it. Up the white walls climbed vines abloom with pale
tea roses; Beth had to touch them to be sure that they were painted.
Over beyond the lake, which was the beautiful substitute for the
tubs that Beth had seen, were water-lilies floating on a little pond
separate from the lake--and these were real--they were growing there;
Beth touched them and they bent under her finger and gave out their
exquisite perfume.

“Mr. Cortlandt designed this swimmin’ tank himself, Miss Beth. It is
the most beautiful private bathroom in town, they say,” said Anna Mary.
“Your cousin, Master Dirk, has a much larger swimmin’ pool, but then
his is the one off the gymnasium, and it’s used for that too; the young
ladies’ bath is for them alone--only now you will use it.”

“How shall I ever, ever tell Aunt Rebecca so she’ll understand? I don’t
understand myself,” said Beth going back to her blue room in the wake
of Anna Mary in a sort of trance. “My cousins are not really young
ladies, are they?” she asked arousing to what Anna Mary had said.

“Miss Natalie is fifteen years old, Miss Alys is something above
twelve, and Master Dirk is nearly eleven,” said Anna Mary. “Your trunk
hasn’t come, Miss Beth--those baggage transfer men, you can’t be
dependin’ on them! I’ll borrow a night-dress of Miss Alys’s from her
maid--she’s not much bigger than you, though she is older.”

Anna Mary disappeared. When she came back Beth had folded her gown over
the back of a chair, and was brushing her hair with gingerly touches,
born of her misgiving in using the wrought silver backed brush which
she had found on her dressing table.

“Oh, that will never do, Miss Beth!” cried Anna Mary, and Beth flushed
deeply as she said:

“I was afraid it wouldn’t, Anna Mary, but there wasn’t any other brush
here. Mine will come to-morrow, won’t it?” She hastily replaced the
elaborate brush on the table.

“It’s not the brush I meant,” said Anna Mary appropriating it. “But
you must wait to have your hair brushed. I’ll do it to-night, but after
this there’ll be some one to wait on you--I don’t know whether it will
be Célie, Miss Natalie and Miss Alys’s maid, or another one. But it’s
not proper for you to dress your own hair. Sit there, Miss Beth, in
that low chair before the dressin’ table while I brush your hair. Why,
it’s very nice hair, Miss Beth!” Anna Mary added, as Beth obeyed her
and she began to brush out its crinkled masses. “Now to think such fine
hair should be braided till a body would no more notice it than she
would a manilla rope; it’s a cryin’ shame, so it is! We’ll have your
hair washed till it’s as fluffy as corn silk and as bright, and we’ll
dress it suitable, Miss Beth, and you’ll see! You must have a dressin’
slip of some sort to put on when your maid’s brushin’--but Mrs.
Cortlandt will look after that. Now, Miss Beth, here’s the night-dress
I borrowed from Miss Alys for you. Will I help you, or will you do for
yourself from this on?”

“I always dress and undress myself, Anna Mary,” said Beth guessing at
her meaning. “Oh, Anna Mary, you’ve brought something instead of a
night-dress!”

She checked herself from saying “a party dress,” but that was what she
thought Anna Mary lifted from the bed and shook out, of its folds--it
was a gown of soft china silk, trimmed with delicate narrow lace and
tied with long white ribbons.

“This is a night-dress, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary glancing with
understanding at Beth’s plain little white underwaist, and red and
gray striped flannel petticoat. Beth caught the look and took the
night-dress without another word. When she had put it on and had tied
its ribbons and settled the lace around her tanned little hands she
knelt beside the wonderful willow bed, and buried her face in the
silken down comforter which had been revealed when Anna Mary folded the
violet-embroidered counterpane. Beth still said “Now I lay me,” like
the simple little girl that she was, but it is doubtful if she could
get her mind on her prayers with the silken night-dress caressing the
bare soles of her feet, and when she was about to lay her down to sleep
in such a bedstead.

“Oh, Anna Mary, it can’t be true!” she sighed rapturously as a faint
suggestion of a delicate odor met her as her head sank into the pillow
and Anna Mary returned to be sure that she wanted nothing more. “I
couldn’t want anything more, Anna Mary, because there isn’t anything
more. And there’s no use going to sleep to dream of fairy-land, the way
I did at home, for I see more fairy-land with my eyes open than I can
dream. I’m perfectly happy, but I don’t think I can sleep, Anna Mary;
it’s all so wakeful-wonderful!”

“Try, Miss Beth,” urged Anna Mary. “There’s so much for you to enjoy
you want to get up bright and rested. Will I turn off all the lights,
or leave some for you?”

“Maybe you’d better make it dark, Anna Mary, please, though it does
seem a shame to waste such a room in black darkness. Good-night, and
thank you very much,” said Beth pressing her hot cheek into the cool
linen covered pillow and watching the turning of the switch that shut
from her vision the beauties amid which she lay.

The light from Fifth Avenue gradually brought out some of the
furnishings of the room in a gray dimness. The padded fall of the
horses’ feet on the asphalt road below kept the little girl awake for
a while, but the weariness of healthy childhood conquered at last, and
Beth slept sound through the night and late into the morning.

It was Anna Mary who came to call her. Beth sat up, shocked to see by
the little clock on the bookcase that it was nearly nine o’clock.

“Anna Mary!” she cried springing out of bed. “What time do you have
breakfast?”

“Your cousins have theirs at eight, Miss Beth; your aunt wishes them to
be at their lessons with their governess by nine. Sometimes your aunt
does not breakfast with them, but most times she does,” said Anna Mary.
“Your uncle went away early in his motor car, so this mornin’ your aunt
breakfasted in her room. It doesn’t matter at all, and it’s lucky you
slept so well. Your cousins do be crazy to see you, but it’s too late
for this mornin’. Your aunt sent me to fetch you to her sittin’-room
when you’ve dressed and breakfasted. She’s going to take you shoppin’.”

“Oh, help me hurry, please, Anna Mary, if you’ve time,” pleaded Beth.

“Isn’t that what I came for?” demanded Anna Mary obligingly getting
down to pull on Beth’s stockings, though the little girl had no idea of
receiving that sort of service.

It was a hurried toilet, and a hurried breakfast; it impaired
Beth’s appetite to feel that her aunt was waiting, first to make her
acquaintance, and then to take her out. She could not realize what Anna
Mary told her of Mrs. Cortlandt’s needing longer than Beth was giving
her to get through her daily duty of reading letters and dictating
replies to her secretary. At last she followed Anna Mary to her aunt’s
sitting-room door and for the first time shrank somewhat from the
ordeal of meeting new relatives.

“Yes, come in,” called a pleasant voice as Anna Mary knocked. Beth
slipped within the door and stood shyly on the threshold. She saw a
slender, dark-eyed lady seated at a table before the hearth. She held
out both hands to Beth and cried sweetly: “Is this my dear little niece
from the Massachusetts hills? My dear, you don’t know how glad your
uncle and I are to have his beloved sister Nannie’s little girl come to
us! Come here and let me kiss and kiss you!”

[Illustration: BETH RAN OVER TO THE GRACIOUS LADY.]

Beth ran over to the gracious lady, melting in the warmth of this
tender greeting, spoken in a beautifully modulated voice. She returned
Mrs. Cortlandt’s kisses with her warm young cheek pressed against her
Aunt Alida’s fragrant cool one, and gave her adoring love to her on the
instant. She was a vision such as Beth’s eyes had never rested upon,
beautifully gowned, exquisitely dainty, charming and pretty, and young!
Beth had never associated aunthood with less than fifty years, basing
her impression on Aunt Rebecca.

“We are going out immediately, Beth--the dear little quaint name!
It precisely suits you, little pigeon!” she cried touching a silver
call-bell on the table. “Frieda,” she said to the maid who responded,
“call up the stables and bid John have the horses here as soon as he
can; in the victoria, tell him, Frieda. And, Frieda, Miss Beth and I
will lunch out. Tell Miss Natalie and Miss Alys that their cousin will
be here this afternoon when they return from their ride at four. Tell
them that they must wait patiently till then to see her.

“And now, little Beth, amuse yourself as you can while your aunt has
Anna Mary get her ready to take you out for your first glimpse of the
marvelous New York shops,” Aunt Alida added when Frieda had withdrawn
noiselessly to do her bidding.

Beth was already clad in her coat and round hat with the ribbons whose
difference of shade was more apparent here than it had been at home.
There was no difficulty in amusing herself; Aunt Alida’s sitting-room
was a treasure house about which Beth wandered with hands carefully
clasped behind her back, inspecting and marveling. The time seemed
short until Aunt Alida returned wrapped in heavy furs, her handsome
face shaded by the great plumes on her velvet hat.

Beth got into the victoria and sank back on its mulberry-colored seat
letting the footman draw around her the great bear robe, knowing
now without doubt that she was Cinderella under the blessed spell
of her fairy godmother’s magic. The footman climbed up beside the
coachman, folded his mulberry-colored arms across his mulberry-colored
breast--Beth did not yet know that Aunt Alida’s livery was
mulberry-colored. The coachman gathered up the reins, holding his whip
stiffly from under the fur cape that covered his mulberry-colored
shoulders. The splendid horses, quite as splendid and prancing as any
that drew the chariots in the June circus procession at home, started,
champing their way slowly down the broad avenue beginning to fill with
gay equipages, private and public.

Beth could hardly reply to Aunt Alida’s remarks. Her aunt saw that
the child was swallowed up in the brilliant novelty of the great city,
deliciously quivering lest they run into, or were run into by the
vehicles that crowded the thoroughfare increasingly as they descended
toward Murray Hill. The sun was shining from a cloudless sky, the
rare, fleckless, one might almost say animated sky of a perfect autumn
day in New York. The metropolis was giving its best--and New York’s
best is much--to the little girl who had come to see it. Aunt Alida
kindly let Beth alone to drink in and enjoy her first impressions in
her own way. At a point where another broad street, this one alive
with trolley cars, crossed the avenue on which they drove, Beth saw
that their driver bore to the right, increasing the dangers of this
hair-erecting drive by threading his way across the double lines of
trolleys. He stopped at last before a large store; its windows were
full of entrancing things. The footman sprang down to open the door,
and stiffly touched his hat to Beth as she descended, to her great
embarrassment. She followed her aunt into the shop, straight to an
up-stairs department. Mrs. Cortlandt asked to be shown something the
name of which Beth did not catch. The saleswoman brought her boxes upon
boxes of the daintiest white things--and they were all exactly the size
that Beth could not help seeing would fit herself!

Aunt Alida began to buy; Beth had never seen any one buy in this way.
“Send me six of these, a dozen of those,” she ordered, and paid for
nothing. But Beth saw that the people in the shop served her eagerly.
Mrs. Cortlandt went swiftly from room to room. In the room where she
looked at bewilderingly charming gowns, coats, guimpes, she began to
consult Beth.

“Since these are to be yours, my dear, you may as well tell me what you
like best of those I am willing that you should have,” she said.

To be hers! It took her breath away; it was impossible to prefer amid
such equal beauty. Somehow Beth knew that a long coat, soft white furs,
three hats of various types, each perfect of its kind; several dear,
simple house gowns, street gowns, party gowns, frail white guimpes,
shoes, an eider-down wrapper that made one long to be a little ill
to wear it all day; a cunning miniature dressing wrap, like a grown
lady’s, bedroom slippers, dancing slippers, a fan, gloves, and at last
a bathing suit, had all been ordered home by her aunt--and they were
all, all for Beth Bristead!

Beth walked behind her aunt to the ribbon counter where she bought a
quantity of soft, wide ribbons, “for your hair, little Beth,” Aunt
Alida explained.

For her hair! The beautiful ribbon that Aunt Rebecca’s sewing society
had bought to make a ruffle around the sofa pillow they raffled at the
fair was not as fine as these ribbons! Beth pinched herself; she was
in an ecstasy, but it couldn’t possibly be real! She experimented with
her soft flesh to see if it still was hurtable, every-day, little girl
flesh.

“Now, Beth dear, we are going to lunch,” announced Aunt Alida. “I have
had a few things sent out to the carriage for you to wear at once, and
the rest will be delivered by to-night. I am ravenously hungry! Aren’t
you hungry, little niece? You look--well, you look dazed, but I’m glad
to say I think you look happy. Aren’t you hungry?”

“No, Aunt Alida, thank you; I’m not hungry--I’m a changeling,” said
Beth solemnly.

“Which is a totally different complaint,” laughed Aunt Alida. “You
funny morsel of a lassie! Aren’t you fond of pretty things, Bethie?
Isn’t it fun to be a changeling? I give you my word I’ve had a
perfectly beautiful time playing the fairy that changes you! Aren’t you
happy, little niece?”

“Happy! Happy!” echoed Beth in a rapture beyond expressing.




CHAPTER IV

THE FAIRY-LAND CHILDREN


Beth and her aunt came home a little before three. Luncheon in a hotel
restaurant, Pompeian red and bronze in coloring, with flowers on every
table and ladies at every table, also, whom one could hardly tell from
the flowers, and an orchestra playing such music as Beth had never
heard, completed the bewilderment of the morning. The little girl
returned to her uncle’s house like a small blossom overfull of honey;
she had seen so many splendors that she could take in no more.

Mrs. Hodgman followed Mrs. Cortlandt to her sitting-room where Beth had
also been taken.

“Mrs. Cortlandt,” the housekeeper began, “I have arranged for a maid
for Miss Beth, if you approve. Frieda would be glad to serve the young
lady. There is a maid whom I can take on in Frieda’s place, if you are
satisfied to promote Frieda to the position of Miss Beth’s maid.”

“Frieda--that is the pleasant girl who serves my breakfast when I take
it in my room? Yes, she will do excellently,” approved Mrs. Cortlandt.
“Will you kindly have her sent to me at once? Since Miss Beth’s maid is
already at hand she may begin her duties now. Thank you, Mrs. Hodgman.
I hope the change will not incommode you; it is troublesome to train a
new--parlor maid, wasn’t Frieda?”

“Yes, madam, but I am sure that the girl who will replace her comes
with an excellent training,” said Mrs. Hodgman. “Frieda shall come to
you at once, Mrs. Cortlandt.”

Beth listened half in dismay. What should she do with a maid? Or,
rather, what would the maid do to her? Yet, evidently, she was to
have one, a whole maid of her own, precisely as if she were the
Princess Elizabeth whom she often had played at being, at home in the
old-fashioned garden!

Mrs. Cortlandt opened a pile of personal letters which her secretary
had laid on her table for this end. Beth was admiring the tiny jeweled
blade that her aunt used, when Frieda knocked.

“Ah, Frieda! yes,” said Mrs. Cortlandt. “You are to be my little
niece’s new maid. I hope that you will serve her well. If you need
instruction in your task go to Anna Mary for advice; she will guide
you. Go with Miss Beth to her room now, and help her put on a blue gown
which I brought home with me, and which has been sent up-stairs. There
are ribbons, shoes, stockings with it, you will find. By the time she
has been made ready her cousins will return from their ride, and will
not be willing to wait longer to meet her. Come to me, Beth, here,
after you are dressed. And, Frieda, there are a good many things coming
for Miss Beth, an outfit more appropriate to town than the clothes that
she wore in the country. When they are delivered please put them away
in her wardrobes, and mark the underclothing with her initials, please.
You understand lettering?”

“Yes, madam; I was taught in Germany,” said Frieda.

“Then well taught,” said Mrs. Cortlandt with her smile that won all who
served her to serve her well. “Run away now with Frieda, Bethie dear,
and come back to me as soon as she has made you from an outdoors girl
into a little house-girl.”

Beth went obediently. She was not sure which was her room, but Frieda
led the way up-stairs to it directly, and Beth’s heart leaped again as
she opened the door upon its beauty, now illumined by the long light of
mid-afternoon, and the fire still burning on the hearth.

“Could you sit there, Frieda, and let me sit here while you talk to
me?” suggested Beth settling herself into the lowest and loveliest of
the willow rockers before the fire.

“You could sit there, Miss Beth, but I certainly couldn’t sit here,”
said Frieda. “Even if it would be right--and it wouldn’t--I have to
open these boxes and get out what your aunt wants you to wear this
afternoon.” And Frieda rapidly began her work.

“Oh, let me see them, Frieda. I saw so many that I don’t know which
Aunt Alida took, and I don’t know which of those she took she brought
home in the carriage!” cried Beth falling out of her chair in the
keenness of her interest. “Don’t you ever sit down and do nothing in
New York, Frieda? It’s only because it’s my first day that it rushes
so, isn’t it?”

“I can’t say that’s it, Miss Beth,” said Frieda. “If you’d come here
from Germany you’d think things rushed all the time.”

“Some day, if ever we can sit down, you’ll tell me about Germany,
won’t you please, Frieda? I always thought it must be heavenly to live
in a country where storks stood on one leg on the edges of chimneys
on straw-covered roofs, as they do in Germany, in my Grimm’s Tales,”
cried Beth. “Isn’t that the dearest dress? Don’t you imagine Aunt
Alida brought it home with us so I could put it on before my cousins
saw me, and so they wouldn’t think I didn’t look nice? Of course I see
already that Miss Tappan, who made my winter suit, isn’t quite such a
fine, fine dressmaker as she looks where Aunt Rebecca lives--where Miss
Tappan and I live, too.”

“Miss Beth,” said Frieda, wisely avoiding the question, “I’ve laid
everything out, even your wrapper, and now, if you please, I’ll have to
dress you; we haven’t any too much time.”

“All right,” sighed Beth. “Will you tell me how to begin to let you
dress me, Frieda? I always dress myself, you know.”

Frieda laughed outright; she was a young and pretty maid, much nearer
Beth’s idea of a maid than Anna Mary, whom, Beth reproachfully reminded
herself, she had found most kind. But she was glad that Frieda was
young and pretty.

“Well, then, Miss Beth,” Frieda instructed her, “first of all, if you
will sit on that higher chair, please, I will put on these nice silk
stockings and your slippers.”

Beth complied. When they were on she surveyed her slender legs and feet
with undisguised admiration. “I never knew they could look like that!”
she sighed, remembering the sturdy straightness of the lines of her
feet in their old-time coverings.

Swiftly Frieda divested the little girl of the plain underclothing,
stitching, buttons and a narrow edge of Hamburg embroidery its only
ornaments, which Aunt Rebecca had made. In its place she clothed
her in the dainty French garments of Aunt Alida’s buying, tucked,
lace-inserted, ruffled, and cut on lines of beauty.

Beth laid her discarded underskirt beside her new one, contrasting
them. “Poor Aunt Rebecca!” she said. “But she wouldn’t mind if she
understood--but she never, never will! They look exactly like the two
aunts who got them for me.”

Frieda was not heeding Beth’s audible reflections. “Now, Miss Beth,
your hair,” she said, and Beth, profiting by her experience of the
previous night, seated herself before the dressing table. Frieda
threw over her shoulders a butterfly garment made of handkerchiefs,
apparently, and began to brush Beth’s abundant hair.

“To-morrow, if you please, Miss Beth, you must let me shampoo it till
it is like yellow thistle silk,” said Frieda. “This is the best I can
do now.”

Frieda’s best was a very good best. Beth stared at herself amazed. Her
hair fell in a pretty mass of color around her shoulders. It rippled up
from her temples, yet shaded them lightly as it had never done in all
its straight-brushed-back existence. A great bow of soft wide ribbon, a
plaid of rainbow colors, stood straight up on the top of Beth’s head,
like a sort of aureole of fashion.

“Mercy, Frieda! How did you ever do it?” cried Beth, appreciating the
extreme glory of the bow that Frieda had tied.

First a white guimpe, so delicate in texture that its wee tucks seemed
impossible, then a blue gown over that, bright yet dark, touched here
and there with white lace and glimpses of a red that was like the
sunset, half melted into gold, and Beth stood before the glass not
knowing whether or not to believe her eyes.

The face that blushed back at her was Beth Bristead’s face, in spite
of the new and stylish arrangement of the hair, but--it was pretty! It
was even very pretty! It had never occurred to Beth before that she
was a pretty child, and the discovery overtopped the bliss of owning
such a beautiful gown. It was wonderful--all of it, the dear slippers
and silken stockings, the pretty gown, but above all the pretty Beth!
Being a sweet-natured little soul Beth’s first impulse on making the
discovery of her own prettiness was the wholesome impulse of loving
gratitude. She felt a great wave of love for Frieda who had dressed
her so well, and she worshiped the Aunt Alida who had bought her the
treasures which had turned the little brown wren from the brown country
house into this brilliant blue bird of paradise, fit for a New York
cage. If Aunt Rebecca could have read her heart then all her fears that
luxury would spoil little Beth might have been set at rest, for if good
fortune makes a person loving and grateful no amount of it can harm her.

“Frieda, Frieda, Frieda!” Beth cried, and threw her arms around her
maid, just as she stooped to pick a tiny white thread off the hem of
Beth’s skirt.

“It looks beautiful, Miss Beth; it’s no wonder you’re pleased,” said
Frieda, discreetly. But she looked pleased herself, and inwardly
thanked her stars that she was to serve such an affectionate and
unspoiled little lady. “I think you’re ready now, and your aunt will be
looking for you, Miss Beth,” Frieda added.

Beth started for the door. “I ought to pick up the room, Frieda,” she
said, stopped by the orderly habits in which Aunt Rebecca had trained
her.

“That’s partly what I’m for, Miss Beth. It isn’t your work,” said
Frieda, beginning it.

“I wouldn’t mind stopping for it, Frieda; I think I’d like to do it; I
think I’m scared to go down alone,” said Beth. But she went on her way,
none the less.

Her aunt heard Beth hesitating at her sitting-room door before she
gently pushed it a little farther open. “Come in, Bethie,” she called.
Beth saw her in a silken wrap lying on the couch before her hearth fire.

“Come over here where I can see you, little niece. Will you please
touch that button beside the door to turn on the centre lights so that
I can see you better?” Mrs. Cortlandt said. “Why, what a fine little
bird these new fine feathers have made of you!” she cried starting up
in genuine pleasure.

Beth flung herself on her aunt’s shoulder, forgetting fear in her
gratitude, responding to the smile in Aunt Alida’s dark eyes.

“Aunt Alida,” she cried, “I’ve got to kiss you! I’m ’most crazy, I’m so
happy and I look so nice, and I’ve truly got to kiss you!”

Mrs. Cortlandt laughed as she received Beth’s violent kisses. “Did you
think I should object to being kissed?” she asked.

And then there came a hurrying of feet up the padded stairs and three
figures burst into the room. Beth straightened herself and looked at
them, for she knew that they were her cousins.

She saw a tall girl with dark eyes, more flashing, brilliant eyes than
Aunt Alida’s. She wore a riding habit, its skirt caught up slightly,
showing russet riding boots. She wore a short coat and a hard hat and
carried a stock in her gauntleted hand; the severity of her costume set
off the brilliant beauty of her young face. Beside her stood another
girl, not much taller than Beth, and fair, like Beth, but she had none
of Beth’s rosiness, nor was she as pretty. She, too, wore a riding
habit, green, like her sister’s, but with a soft hat, and she carried
a whip. Behind the two girls was a boy, short and sturdy, with the
elder girl’s dark eyes, and the younger’s fair hair, but the boy’s hair
was cut so short that its color hardly mattered. His face was full of
mischief that seemed to run over into the room--as it often did, in
fact, as Beth was to discover later.

“Children, this is Beth,” said Mrs. Cortlandt. “Here is your own
cousin, though you never have seen her before. Beth, this is Natalie,
Alys and Dirk.”

Natalie and Alys kissed Beth and murmured a greeting; Dirk shook hands
with her so limply that it was surprising when one saw how firm knit
and strong his hand was. Then the four stared at one another for a
moment of criticism.

Natalie spoke with the advantage of her fifteen years. “Alys and I are
going up to get ready for dinner. Won’t you come up to our rooms and
chat? We have a new box of chocolates,” she said.

“Yes, Natalie, that’s a good suggestion,” said her mother with an air
of relief. “Carry Beth off with you; chocolates sweeten the hardships
of getting acquainted. Your uncle will dine at home to-night, Bethie;
he is anxious to know his sister’s little girl.”

Dirk disappeared after the fashion of a lively small boy who neither
wants girls nor is wanted by them. Natalie tucked Beth’s hand under her
arm with her riding stock, and Alys followed them up-stairs.

Natalie led the way to the door just beyond Beth’s room. She opened
it, revealing a large chamber, furnished in Tuna mahogany, hung with
old rose and dark reds, carpeted with plain velvet carpet in a reddish
brown, a curious, splendid room which made a becoming setting for
the slender dark girl it sheltered, as Beth dimly perceived without
understanding it.

Next to this room, connected with it, was a beautiful green room,
furnished in bird’s-eye maple, a green carpet rug on its floor, green
and white empire brocade on its walls, green curtains, and a stand of
waving ferns in its northern window.

This was Alys’s room, and Beth exclaimed: “Isn’t this a dear room! It
looks like ‘By cool Siloam’s shady rill.’”

Natalie and Alys stared; they did not know how large a part in Beth’s
education hymns had played. But Alys was pleased; she gave Beth the
first smile that she had accorded her. The smile deepened as Beth
darted forward, espying on a cushion a plump tiger kitten, who raised
a short, cheerful little face that looked smiling, and a pair of large
eyes, as Beth buried her fingers in fur that was as fine and soft as
chinchilla.

“What a darling!” she cried fervently.

“She’s a perfect angel!” cried Alys thawing fast. “She talks all the
time, answers each time we speak to her, and she knows as well as you
would what I say when I ask her where her ball is. Poppy, where’s your
ball?” she added to prove her words.

The kitten stretched and jumped down. For an instant she poised on her
forefeet in descending, and Beth laughed.

“We’re afraid there is something wrong about her; she can’t
quite control her hind legs,” Natalie explained the movement.
“Poppity-pippity-wum!” she added pettingly.

“M-m-m-m!” cooed the kitten answering, as Alys had foretold that she
would do.

Poppy brought out a worsted ball for which she had been hunting under
the chairs and triumphantly laid it at Alys’s feet.

“Didn’t I tell you she was an angel?” cried Alys. “We call her
Poppy because she pops up so queerly in her back legs. Oh,
Poppity-pippity-wum, you blessed Poppy-pip!” She snatched the kitten to
her breast and buried kisses in her soft fur.

A maid came in and Natalie spoke to her in French; awestruck Beth knew
that it was French because there were French market gardeners near her
home.

“My bath is ready, so you must excuse me, Beth,” said Natalie. “Alys
must go to get ready for hers, too. We always swim a little after
riding. Will you stay here with Poppy? Then you can sit with us while
we have our hair done, and we’ll eat chocolates and get acquainted.”

“I’d like to go into my room to write a note to Aunt Rebecca,” said
Beth shyly.

“Why, of course. You won’t get another chance to-night,” agreed
Natalie. “Run along, little Coz.”

Beth ran. She closed her door and wrote rapidly with a pencil on a pad
which she found waiting for her, a pad not like her school pads, but
one of the finest paper.

“Dear Aunt Rebecca,” she said. “I am well. I got here very well. Anna
Mary is kind; she was a twin, and the other one was called Mary Anna.
Aunt Alida is prettier than any picture in all the magazines. She is so
kind I love her most to death. Natalie is pretty; Alys is light like
me. There is a kitten that is lovely named Poppy because her hind legs
sorter pop up when she jumps. I don’t know about Dirk. The house is so
beautiful that words could never tell, you couldn’t think what it was
like. Fairies never had such a house. I’ve got more lovely clothes than
a princess and a maid all my own. Her name is Freedah--I don’t know if
that is right spelling. The house is all over servants everywhere. You
wouldn’t wonder. Anybody would want to be a servant here. There is an
ellyvator like my garnet ring box. My room is blue velvet and wood-fire
and silk quilt and comforter--you never saw such a house. My love to
Janie and all the girls. I will write them if I can. In New York you
can’t write, I guess. My love to Tabby. My love to Ella Lowndes; tell
her I have a whole maid to help me, all my own. My love to Miss Tappan.
My love to you. I hope you are well. I shall be perfectly good for I
ought to be because everybody makes me in a fairy story. Your loving
niece, Elizabeth Bristead. P. S. New York is very bright. The cab that
took us here is run by something without horses and a man up behind to
steer. It is very strange. From Beth.”

Beth hastily put her letter into its envelope, and ran back to
Natalie’s room. She found both her cousins in their wrappers, Natalie
having her hair arranged, Alys waiting her turn and both eating
chocolates. Dirk bounced up behind Beth as she started to go in and
made her jump.

“Go away, Dirk; we don’t want you,” cried Natalie.

“Go straight away,” added Alys.

Dirk grinned and entered behind Beth. “I’m going to have some candy,
too; I heard what you told Beth,” he said. “And _she_ wants me.” He
looked wickedly at Beth, whose face plainly declared her opinion of his
intrusion.

“May I direct my letter with ink? I haven’t any. And when does the mail
go out?” Beth asked.

Dirk promptly stood on his head. “Whoop-ee!” he shouted. “The mail go
out!”

“Dirk!” said Natalie sharply. “We put our letters in the mail boxes,
Beth, and we don’t know when they go out; they are taken up every--oh,
often; I don’t know when. And you will find ink in my desk over there.
Alys, help Beth.”

Alys lazily arose and showed Beth where to find what she wanted.
“Célie, prennez cette lettre avec les autres,” she said to the maid.
Her French was not equal to Natalie’s, but it made Beth feel quite
overcome to find her cousins speaking another tongue.

“Do you love to dance?” asked Alys suddenly.

“I don’t know how,” admitted Beth sadly.

“We’ll teach you,” said Natalie quickly. “Alys, Célie is ready for you
now. Take a chocolate, my dear Beth; take a handful. Come with me and
help me get into my gown. I’m going to hurry dressing to-night.”

Beth went with Natalie into the adjoining dressing room. She felt like
a very little girl. To be sure at home big girls of fifteen seemed
older than she, but Natalie was almost a young lady--still she was
kind. And Alys seemed worlds away from this little country cousin.
While she found herself wishing that Dirk actually was worlds away, he
called after her:

“Look out, Beth; Nat keeps mice in her dressing room!” With which
pleasant fiction he disappeared, and Beth heard him sliding down the
balustrade in the hall with a wild whoop which was like the whoops of
the boys at home, whom she and Janie Little always feared.

After a time Natalie was ready for dinner in a crimson cloth gown that
made her look “like an Indian princess,” thought Beth vaguely. Alys
was dainty in her pale pink. Both girls wore their hair rolled behind
their ears and tied in great drooping bows. Their hands were white,
with nails like ivory tips. Beth glanced at her own firm little tanned
hands, and their round little nails that showed the marks of gardening
and climbing. “I’m going to grow them!” she thought, and followed the
girls down-stairs.

Mrs. Cortlandt met them. She was all in black lace, with American
Beauty roses at her belt. Beth looked up at her aunt’s white shoulders
and down at her train.

“Is there a party?” she asked timidly.

“Only ourselves, Bethie. You’re the only party, and you’re such a very
little party!” laughed Aunt Alida, tucking the little guest under her
arm.

They went down to the library, and from the depths of a great chair
arose a tall gentleman in evening clothes; at a glance Beth saw that
she looked like him, but she was afraid of him, none the less.

“Jim, here is Bethie,” said Aunt Alida, and Beth found that the tall
man was kissing her most tenderly. “My dear, you look like your mother,
and I’m much obliged to you,” he said.

Then a solemn person, also in evening clothes, whom Beth had not seen,
drew aside the portière.

“Madam, dinner is served,” he said softly.

Mr. Cortlandt bent and put Beth’s hand through his arm. “Allow me to
take you out to dinner, Miss Bristead; Dirk, offer your mother your
arm,” he said.

Beth was so frightened that for a moment she wanted to run away or
cry--both, perhaps. But she looked up sideways into her uncle’s face
and caught the twinkle in a pair of blue eyes decidedly like the pair
that looked back at her every day in her glass. So she altered her
mind, and laughed instead of crying.

Thus with perfect cheerfulness Beth went out to her first formal
dinner.




CHAPTER V

ALL SORTS OF NEW STEPS


Only on the first morning of her visit did Beth oversleep. The second
morning she was up bright and early, so early that, with some misgiving
of doing wrong, she had dressed before Frieda came to call her.

“I couldn’t lie still, Frieda,” she said apologetically. “I did leave
my hair for you to do; I knew I could never make such a bow as you
tie. But I wished I was a lot of girls to dress; I didn’t know what to
do, I’ve been up so long. I wanted to make my bed, but I was afraid it
would be wrong to make a bed in New York. I always made my own bed at
Aunt Rebecca’s.”

“It’s hard to get out of the habit of a thing,” said Frieda, uncertain
what she ought to reply to this statement.

“Yes,” cried Beth eagerly. “Aunt Rebecca says we ought to be very
careful about habits. She says they are just like poppies in a
vegetable garden; you get the package of seeds in the first place
yourself, but after that they keep on growing in spite of you. Still, I
must say I like poppies in the vegetables; they look perfectly lovely
in through the peas and standing up over the beets and the spinach. But
Aunt Rebecca always made me watch when the dear little seed cups turned
brown and told me to gather all the seeds. But they came up every year
just the same. She says that’s the way with habits. Only I’m not as
sure as I ought to be that I was very, very careful to catch every
single seed! They are so tiny! It was hard not to spill any, but I’m
not certain sure I cared if I gathered them when the wind blew and they
were bound to spill. I guess we don’t always care if we don’t get over
our habits, either. I have the habit of reading when I eat, and I don’t
believe I ever tried my best to get over it--it is just like poppy
seeds, after all!”

“We put poppy seeds on the top of our bread in Germany,” said Frieda
gathering up Beth’s hair in her left hand, preparatory to tying it with
the admired bow. She found Beth lovable, but perplexing. “You mustn’t
make your bed, Miss Beth,” she added. “Even I wouldn’t do that; that’s
the chambermaid’s work.”

“I should think it would be dreadfully hard never to do something
somebody else ought to do when there are so many people to do every
little thing,” said Beth. “That’s even a lovelier, stickier-up bow than
the plaid ribbon last night, Frieda,” she added, beaming at the blue
ribbon now crowning her. It matched the pretty gown waiting its new
wearer--for that was the way Beth thought of the dresses her aunt had
bought her.

“They all are like lovely New York pieces of nice girls, waiting to
get acquainted with me,” she had said to Frieda the previous night when
her maid was folding and hanging up the beautiful garments which had
come home for Beth.

“You are ready now, Miss Beth,” said Frieda. “You will find all the
family in the breakfast room, where you had supper the night you came.
Mrs. Cortlandt always comes down when Mr. Cortlandt is at home. She
likes to have her family breakfast together, and she won’t let her
children get up late.”

“I’m to do lessons with them,” said Beth rather sadly. “Aunt Alida said
that she didn’t want me to lose a whole winter’s study, so of course
I’ll do what she likes me to, but I’m scared. Natalie and Alys speak
French, Frieda!”

“Well, I’m sure you speak English enough to make up for it,” said
Frieda, puzzling Beth by this indirect tribute to her unconscious
quaintness, the result of a life spent with eccentric Aunt Rebecca, and
with the books which were the little girl’s preferred comrades.

Beth went down the broad stairs and hesitatingly found her way to the
door of the rose-hued breakfast room. It was a morning room, flooded by
the early sunshine; it was more beautiful seen by the strong eastern
light for which its colors were planned than it had been under the
electricity. Beth stopped on its threshold, forgetting to salute the
assembled family.

“It looks like ‘Brightest and best of the sons of the morning’!” she
cried.

“Beth, what do you mean?” demanded Natalie. Beth’s uncle put down his
paper to listen to her answer.

“The hymn, you know,” explained Beth, “and the room; it’s so--so, as
if it would ‘shine on our darkness,’ you know, when you come into it
from the hall.”

Riggs, the butler, with the greatest difficulty suppressed a smile
which would have been so unbecoming to his office that it would, so
to speak, have unbutlered him if he had not been able to prevent its
coming. Happily he succeeded, but Aunt Alida laughed, and Uncle Jim
shouted, though Beth could not see anything amusing.

“Here’s your place, beside your old uncle; come and take it, little
Puritan,” he cried. “Do you know what you are, Beth?”

“Yes, but not what you mean I am,” said Beth, unexpectedly, with a
twinkle exactly like her uncle’s in her own blue eyes.

“You are a Survival and an Anomaly,” said Uncle Jim gravely.

“Oh, dear!” said Beth, pretending to sigh, appreciating these
formidable words as fun, even though she could not understand them.

“You are a Survival of our grandmother’s day, and consequently an
Anomaly in modern Gotham,” explained Uncle Jim, without letting light
upon the subject. “Don’t you like grape fruit, little S. and A.?”

“It is a little bitter,” said Beth trying to keep from shuddering as
she spoke.

“It is like adversity, has a certain bitterness, yet sweet are its
uses. Riggs, take Miss Elizabeth’s fruit and pass her Master Dirk’s
jam. Dirk doesn’t like grape fruit either, Beth,” said this gay uncle,
whose boyishly breezy manner was a delightful surprise in a full-grown
man.

“Is that all of Dirk’s name, Uncle Jim? It--isn’t it a New York way of
saying Dick?” asked Beth.

“No, indeed!” cried Uncle Jim. “That is a Dutch name. Don’t you know,
my dear, that we are of Holland Dutch descent, and are immensely proud
of it?”

“We are? Oh, you mean--yes, I see! My mother was. The Bristeads are
Massachusetts people, Aunt Rebecca says. She says a Bristead marched
out with the Lexington men, on the 19th of April, 1775. Aunt Rebecca
says he played the fife all the way to the fight and then fought like
fifty,” said Beth proudly.

“You mean like fifety,” said Alys. “Don’t give us history at breakfast,
Beth.”

“I advise you to take history wherever you can get it; you need it,”
said Natalie.

Beth finished her breakfast in silence. She dimly felt a little snubbed
by Alys; besides the rose room was so jewel-like in its beauty that she
was glad to enjoy it while her uncle and aunt discussed plans in which
she did not know that she had an interest, but which concerned her
closely.

“Now for the day’s work!” said Natalie when she arose from the table.
“You haven’t seen the schoolroom, have you, Beth?”

“I haven’t seen lots of the house,” said Beth.

“That’s so; we’ll show it to you! Not this afternoon, because Alys
and I are going to start you as a dancer to-day. To-morrow is dancing
class day, and I’m going to have you know a little about it before
you see all the girls. But the next day--that will be Sunday?--after
church, then, we’ll take you all over this house. Now come up with us
and show us what a learned person you are, Elizabeth Bristead. They say
all Massachusetts children speak Greek just as naturally as they wear
spectacles. But you don’t wear spectacles, do you?” Natalie stooped to
look close into Beth’s eyes as if to make sure that this surprising
fact were really true.

Beth laughed. Natalie’s mixture of big girl kindliness with perfect
friendliness was winning Beth’s affection fast; it was not a hard thing
to do, for Beth was as inclined to love as a heliotrope is inclined to
the warmth of the sun.

She slipped her hand confidingly into her oldest cousin’s and they
preceded Alys up-stairs. Dirk lingered to prove how easily he could
overtake the girls two steps at a time. Beth knew that he had
succeeded, because Alys screamed and sat down on her feet to protect
her ankles from his energetic pinching. Dirk stood in awe of his
father, but once safe from his eye Dirk lost few opportunities of
making Alys’s life a burden. He was planning like pleasures in Beth’s
case, whose gentle, shy and sweet manner promised her an easy victim.

“What a schoolroom!” cried Beth stopping short. “Why, I never saw such
a schoolroom. There’s nothing in our school at home like it! Is it all
for you alone?”

“No, it’s for you too, this winter,” laughed Natalie.

It was a large room, square and sunny. Its burlaped walls were covered
with copies of famous pictures and casts from glorious sculptures.
Tables, and four desks, chairs, globes, instruments which Beth did not
understand, all these the little girl saw in her first amazed look
around the room. A bookcase full of books of all sizes, that looked
as if they might also be of all sorts, filled one end of this magic
schoolroom’s great width.

“No wonder you speak French,” murmured Beth.

“Don’t you?” asked Alys.

“Not a single word,” said Beth slowly and impressively. “Do you use all
these things?” she added.

“We draw from the casts, and we use the instruments in our chemistry
and astronomy, and that is our own school library,” said Alys, “and
our piano. You see we have special teachers for various branches, and
lessons in certain things on certain days.”

“And we learn riding and swimming and gymnastics out of school, and
that’s the best of it,” said Dirk. “To-day we’ve got to have history
and literature, and writing compositions--that’s all one woman----”

“He means the teacher,” interrupted Alys. “But Miss Deland is a lady,
not a woman.”

“And it’s the worst of the lot,” Dirk concluded.

The “lady who was not a woman” arriving at that moment cut off further
explanations. Beth saw a girl with a clear, strong face and the busy
air of kindly preoccupation that meant that Miss Deland was a student
who loved her work.

“This is the little cousin whom you expected?” she said at once. “How
do you do, my dear?”

“Very well, thank you,” said Beth faintly, overcome by the depths of
ignorance which Miss Deland was about to discover in her.

Miss Deland lost no time. “Ready, Natalie, Alys, Dirk,” she said.
“And----”

“Beth Bristead,” Natalie said. “Beth may sit here, mayn’t she, Miss
Deland?”

She moved a chair near the window as she spoke, and pushed one of the
small tables in front of it.

Then the work began. To Beth’s relief there was no hint of any tongue
but her own. She listened for a while, and, listening, plucked up
heart. Natalie was reciting in English history. Beth could not have
repeated Natalie’s lesson, but it sounded half familiar to her. She did
not know it, but she was a fortunate child in having been given the
freedom of a library of English classics in Aunt Rebecca’s house, which
lacked so much of other, less important things.

Alys’s recitation was in United States history, and this Beth knew
thoroughly; she cheered up more and more as she saw that, though
she was going to be crushed by her lucky cousins’ accomplishments,
there would be studies in which she would not disgrace them. After
the three Cortlandts had recited Miss Deland set them to writing a
synopsis of what they had repeated. While this was doing she examined
Beth. When the examination was over Beth found herself before the
bookcase at the end of the room talking excitedly to Miss Deland about
the many favorite volumes she was finding on its shelves, with the
sudden conviction that private lessons with a governess was the most
delightful thing in the world, instead of the ordeal that she had
dreaded. The morning ended with a story which Miss Deland set each
of her four pupils to write, the subject being one that she herself
suggested. Beth was surprised to see Natalie and Alys struggling with
their task; Dirk wrote faster than either of his sisters. Beth, who
had written stories ever since she could remember, and who cherished
the hope of one day being a great author, finished her story first of
all. It was the one Miss Deland selected to read aloud, “because”--Miss
Deland actually said this!--“it was by far the best of the four.”

Beth went to lunch a happy Beth; it was hard to feel that her cousins
could speak French, draw, play, dance, ride, knew astronomy, chemistry
and nobody could say what else, and that she, Beth, could do nothing in
particular. She was properly glad to excel them in something.

“We are going to be excused from our exercise this afternoon, Beth,
to teach you to dance,” said Natalie. “We always go out after lunch,
but we aren’t going to-day. You see next week is Thanksgiving, and we
are going to give a dance. It is to introduce you to our friends. Of
course, dear, my friends are too old for you, and Alys’s are, too.
Dirk is nearest your age, but his friends are all boys. So we’re going
to ask our own set, just as usual, but we are going to invite their
younger brothers and sisters for you.”

“Please don’t, Natalie,” said Beth. “I shouldn’t know what to do with
them.”

“You don’t have to do anything with them,” said Alys. “We’re going to
give a dance. It’s going to be a fancy dress dance, all in Puritan, or
colonial costume, because it is Thanksgiving. It will be lots of fun.”

“I’m going to dress up as a turkey gobbler and scare you girls to
death,” said Dirk.

“You’d better go as a goose,” said Natalie.

“No, let him go as a gobbler, then he can have his neck wrung,” said
Alys sharply.

“I’ll be an Indian and scalp you!” shouted Dirk turning red with rage.

“I guess it would be more like you to be Miles Standish that took care
of the poor Pilgrims, because you are the only boy of this family,”
said Beth hastily, with her sweetest smile. Quarrels made her quite
sick and she threw herself into the breach to prevent this one. Dirk
stared at her. It was true that he tormented his sisters and was rather
a trial, but they had never tried coaxing him into better ways. They
considered him a nuisance and let him feel it; it was a new experience
to Dirk to find a girl implying that a noble part would become him.

“Yes, I guess I would! A lot I’d take care of ’em,” he muttered, but
his wrathy look subsided, and he glanced at Beth with an expression
that made her resolve to be friends with Dirk, awful as she had been
thinking him.

“Well,” Natalie resumed after this cloud had blown over, “you have only
till next Thursday to learn to dance, Beth. So come up-stairs and begin
this minute. You’ve simply got to two-step and waltz by then or you
won’t have any fun. You come up-stairs and Alys and I will take turns
playing and teaching you, and to-morrow you are going to dancing class
with us.”

Beth meekly obeyed. For the next two hours her cousins relentlessly put
her through vigorous dancing lessons in the schoolroom. At first she
could not move her feet, but having an ear for rhythm she did better
after a while, and by the time her teachers gave up for the day Beth
could dance a two-step, after a fashion. Dirk came in and rewarded Beth
for her kindness after lunch by offering to be her partner. Natalie and
Alys were so surprised that they could hardly believe their ears; Dirk
had never been known to do such a thing before in his ten years of life.

The next day was Saturday and in the morning the four children were to
go to dancing class.

“Why, Frieda, isn’t it a school?” cried Beth coming in from her bath to
see a froth of dainty things laid out on her bed, ready for her to put
on.

“It is, and it isn’t; you’ll see,” said Frieda. “Mrs. Cortlandt picked
out what you should wear.”

So Beth, still wondering, submitted to being dressed; everything that
Frieda put on was so beautiful that she soon began to be glad of any
excuse for wearing it. All in white Beth found that she was to be clad,
white stockings, white slippers, foamy white skirts, one above another,
and finally a white gown over them all, fine and simple, with only hem
and tucks to ornament it, but showing through its delicacy the deep
lace of her skirts. The only color about Beth was in her cheeks, her
dilated blue eyes, her flying golden hair, for this Frieda had crowned
with an immense white bow, the climax and queen of all preceding bows.

“Well, I look exactly, just exactly like the loveliest dressed girl in
Miss Tappan’s fashion books,” said Beth, surveying herself in a sort of
delirium. “I wish, I do wish that Janie Little could see me! But what
on earth do girls wear here at parties, Frieda?”

“Dancing class, where you meet all the young ladies you know, Miss
Beth, has to be dressed for much the same,” said Frieda. “This is only
what a quite young young lady like you must wear; just fine white
things.”

“Then do let me hurry to see Natalie and Alys,” cried Beth.

Frieda wrapped Beth in a long, loose cloak and she found Natalie and
Alys’s splendors similarly eclipsed when she came out and met them in
the hall. At the dancing school she forgot to notice what they wore,
but she saw that Alys had never before been so pretty, and Natalie was
as handsome as a tanager.

The room was full of girls, all so exquisite in tints of hair, eyes,
cheeks and clothes that Beth forgot her own white daintiness.

“It is only more fairy-land,” she thought. “Aunt Alida was right; she
had to make me a fairy, too, or they’d have driven me back to mortals.”

Natalie and Alys introduced Beth to girl after girl, brought boys to
her and introduced them also, and, worst of all, took Beth to ladies
who were sitting about the room and introduced her to them as their
cousin who was spending the winter with them.

Beth grew so confused that she hardly knew how to carry herself.

“I know you hate it, Bethie, but they are mama’s friends and she would
like it; besides, if there are any children’s parties this winter--and
there will be--you must be asked,” whispered Natalie. “Now you go into
the practice class for beginners, and when the time comes to dance Alys
and I will dance with you, to start you. Then you must accept every
invitation you get to dance; it’s polite and practice, too.”

Bewildered Beth found herself in a line with much smaller children
taking steps forward, back, to the right, to the left, following the
tireless motions of a small man who set the children example in front
of the line, gesticulating to mark time, and moving so lightly that
Beth wondered if he had the usual sort of feet.

The music to which the class danced was rendered by a beautiful
piano, violin and flute trio. After she grew accustomed to being where
she was, Beth began to hear it better, and, hearing it, she lost
consciousness of herself, and danced. The girls’ teaching had been
good; followed now by the winging effect of the entrancing music it
took Beth out of the awkwardness of beginning. When the line stopped
practice and the teacher gave the signal to dance Natalie and Alys flew
to Beth.

“We’re proud of you, Beth!” cried Natalie. “You’re going to make a
dancer! You quiet little mouse, who’d have thought you’d have done so
well!”

“I don’t know. Hurry up, Natalie, let me dance!” cried Beth with
sparkling eyes.

She danced and danced, not always well, because there were ever so
many dances that she did not know, but with an enjoyment that made her
partners forgive her mistakes. She never actually danced badly, because
her ear for rhythm carried her through.

Célie, who had come with the children, wrapped Beth up at last to go
home. She was flushed and trembling with delight; her white slippers
tapped the floor and she pranced to the music echoing in her brain.

“Oh, I was always sorry for Cinderella when the clock struck twelve,
but I never knew how awful it was for her! I don’t want to go home; I
want to dance and dance and dance!” she cried.

“You shall, but not all at once, Beth!” laughed Natalie. She found
herself growing as fond of this enthusiastic little cousin as if she
were Beth’s elder sister.

Beth lay back in the corner of the carriage, then sat upright, and
ended by tumbling over into Natalie’s lap as they drove home. The
November air was sharp, with the hint of snow in it, but it was June
and rosetime to Beth in that carriage.

“I’m so happy, Natalie!” she cried. “It’s so lovely in New York, you
can’t think unless you haven’t always been here! And it’s so nice to
drive in this dear carriage and look so pretty, and have all those
lovely other fairy girls dancing all around you! Isn’t it a queer thing
that fairy stories aren’t half as nice, not near half as nice as what
is true?”




CHAPTER VI

“THE ISLAND DAY”


“If you don’t feel like going to church you may say so, Beth,” said Mr.
Cortlandt at the breakfast table.

“Oh, I do!” cried Beth. “I love to go to church. I like so very much to
sing hymns. Sometimes I wish we could have hymns instead of a sermon,
but Aunt Rebecca says that’s all wrong. Of course you don’t mind some
sermons, but I do get crawly-creeps all over sometimes, when they last
dreadfully long and are all about places and people with hard names.
That kind always end up: ‘You will see from this, my brethren,’ but I
don’t see a thing from it, usually.”

Uncle Jim laughed his merry laugh and Beth laughed, too.

“Everything is so different here, I suppose church won’t be the same,
either,” she said.

“Well, we’ll try it, if you’re so disposed, Miss Bristead,” said Uncle
Jim.

“Come up-stairs, Beth; we must get ready,” said Natalie, glancing at
the clock as it chimed a happy little air, and then struck ten soft
notes.

“Must I change my dress?” asked Beth glancing downward at the soft
blue cloth that was far prettier than her Sunday gown at home.

“Dear me, yes!” said Alys. “Why, that’s a morning house dress. You must
wear your suit, Beth; not the long coat which you’d have to wear over
this.”

“I wish we could have a Pilgrim party to church; I’d like to wear my
Indian blanket there,” muttered Dirk wrathfully, with a presentiment of
the discomfort of his coming starched collar.

Frieda made Beth proper in her blue suit, with its underlying hint of
gray. Aunt Alida, artistically studying Beth’s eyes, had chosen blue in
Beth’s new outfit wherever she could, but there were so many shades and
kinds of the color that Beth wondered. Here was the blue of the sky in
April, with a drooping hat of a lighter shade of the same blue, with
long loops of ribbon velvet of a much darker shade, and a soft bunch of
ostrich tips, like the ribbon, in the front. Beth saw that it was most
becoming to her. She turned away from a long survey of the effect with
a laugh and a blush.

“It is nice to be pretty, Frieda,” she said frankly. “I never was
before, and I sha’n’t be when I go home, but while it lasts it is about
the nicest thing in the world to be pretty.”

“You ought not to talk that way to Frieda, so confidingly, Beth,” Alys
rebuked her as they went to the elevator.

“Oh, Frieda knows; she saw the things Miss Tappan made for me, and
she knows,” said Beth lightly. She was too content to mind what Alys
thought, suddenly feeling perfectly sure of herself. “I think it’s
silly to try to cover up anyway, Alys. People always see through you,”
she added.

Natalie laughed. “You’re a funny little thing, Beth,” she said.
“Sometimes you seem about seven years old, and then you say something
as old as sixteen--like that.”

“It’s because I’ve always been a good deal by myself. I think when you
don’t know many girls you keep little, yet then older people make you
old, only differently,” explained Beth, with correct understanding of
her own case but not the clearest way of stating it.

She looked at Natalie, glowing in her brown cloth, with the tawny touch
of red in her hat, and her soft brown furs, at Alys in sage green with
her white hat and its green plumes, then she looked again at her own
blue figure in the elevator mirrors. Aunt Alida was better than a fairy
godmother; she certainly knew how to dress her girls.

In the hall below they found Dirk awaiting them, the image of Sunday
correctness, brushed and shining in his dark clothes with his bright
scarf, and an innocent look of peace on his round face that entirely
misrepresented his state of mind.

The carriage was waiting and they heard Mr. Cortlandt hurrying his
wife for the horses’ sake; the wind was sharp. Pretty Aunt Alida came
down the stairs all in soft gray, gown, coat, hat and furs. She swayed
in a flower-like way as she walked; Beth thought there never was such a
lovely creature. She thought it so earnestly that her eyes declared her
thought, and her Aunt Alida stooped to kiss her.

“We all look beautiful,” Beth said as her uncle came down also, in the
dignity of long coat, gray gloves and gray tie. He threatened Beth with
his silk hat.

“Get out with you, you base flatterer!” he cried, driving her before
him down the steps.

The three girls sat opposite to Mrs. Cortlandt and her husband, Dirk
between his father and mother.

“We shall have to get a three-seated family coach if these young women
grow any larger,” said Mr. Cortlandt as the footman shut the door,
and the horses began to move at an unwillingly decorous pace down the
avenue.

It was a bright and beautiful avenue, alive with churchgoers, driving
and afoot, and with gay turnouts on their way to the park, on pleasure
bent.

“You have not seen the park yet, Beth, nor the museums, nor Riverside
Drive--you haven’t begun to have a good time yet,” cried Natalie,
remembering how much there would be to show Beth.

“I should think I had begun to have a good time!” said Beth. “I began
the moment I started for here with Anna Mary.”

It was not far to the church, not much over half a mile; Beth wondered
why they had not walked to it. It was a great stone building; into its
threefold entrance on the avenue a stream of beautifully dressed people
was flowing. Beth fell back with Natalie to enter in the wake of her
aunt and uncle and Alys and Dirk.

A shadowed beauty awed the child as she passed in. Soft light from the
rose window over the door and from the long stained glass windows all
along the body of the church seemed to Beth to be part of the soft
harmonies with which the great organ bore them down the long avenue of
the dim aisle.

Dirk contrived to be first in the pew, at the head of which Mr.
Cortlandt halted to admit his family. Beth came next, then Alys,
Natalie, with Mrs. Cortlandt next to her husband at the end. Instead
of the pulpit at which Beth was accustomed to look up, with its table
below it and its high backed chairs flanking it, here was a beautiful
altar, flower burdened, backed by a window through which the light fell
as if heaven were but dimly veiled. There were noble carved stalls in
row upon row within the inclosure of a rail before the altar, their
dark wood contrasting perfectly with the gold and bronze-touched wall
of strong, rich coloring.

Was this indeed a church? the little visitor wondered. It was no more
like the Centre Church to which she had trudged beside Aunt Rebecca
all her short life than Uncle Jim’s palace of a house was like Aunt
Rebecca’s brown clapboarded house. Beth did not dare think of fairies
as at work on a church; it must be that their work was supplemented
by angels here, but it was all one in its dream-like beauty with the
fairy-land in which she was dwelling this wonder-winter.

They were in good time for Beth to see all this before the service,
but hardly had she taken it in than she heard the sound of singing,
faint, yet clear and sweet, like a thread of sound dropped down from
heaven to earth. It scarcely surprised Beth that she should hear the
angels singing, since the miraculous was now her daily experience, but
she held her breath to lose nothing of their strains, and the tears
sprang to her eyes for the joy of it.

Then the congregation arose with a surge of silken garments, doors at
the head of the side aisle swung open, the music swelled into a full
burst of melody with articulate words, and a stream of white-robed
little boys, larger boys, big boys and men, filed into the church,
singing, singing as Beth had never heard any one sing before. She could
not remember to be disappointed that these were the voices of men, and
not of angels, so heavenly beautiful was their singing. On they came,
the wee boys holding a hymn-book that looked too heavy for their chubby
hands, raising their soft eyebrows into acute angles in the earnestness
of their efforts, with pure, clear child voices singing marvelously.
Then there came a boy walking alone, a boy about as old as Beth. His
voice soared up and up, high above all the others, singing deliciously,
so sweet, so touchingly sweet, that not only Beth’s but many older eyes
were wet with the emotion its sweetness called forth. Then the lovely
boy altos streamed by; then the tenors and the basses of the men,
holding up the children’s voices as the stone columns of the church
held up its vaulted roof. Behind their choristers came the clergymen,
robed also, and solemn, and the service began. Beth could not follow
it, but she listened to the musical reading, the chanting, the bursts
of responsive chanting from the choristers, who had ranged themselves
in the dark carved stalls on each side of the altar.

No chance here for a little girl to sing her beloved hymns, but Beth
could not regret it, for here was music that left no room for regret,
nor wishing.

The sermon was short, too, and one that Beth understood and liked. She
thought that the service was not going to be long enough, but Dirk
evidently was not agreeing with her. Beth felt him fidgeting at her
side, and at last she received a pinch that made her jump and barely
keep from crying out. She turned red with pain and anger, and threw
Dirk a look of such hurt reproach that he reddened in his turn, looking
as ashamed as he properly should have been.

“Just for fun,” he whispered by way of apology, but Beth shook her head
hard. Dirk understood that she meant that a pinch that hurt as that one
did was not her idea of fun anywhere, least of all in church.

When the service was over once more the congregation arose with the
rustle of silks and waves of perfume, and the choristers went away as
they had come, white garments swaying as they sang and sang, the sound
dying away in the distance into silence with a far-off “Amen,” as it
had grown out of that silence and had swelled into beauty in their
coming.

With a sigh that it was all over, Beth turned to follow her cousins
out of the pew. Alys was immediately before her, and as she started to
step into the aisle, she tripped and almost fell. She turned furiously
upon Dirk, who was that moment pressing past Beth in his haste to
get out. Alys’s face was crimson, her eyes blazed with anger, she
raised her hand, but, remembering where she was, dropped it again and
continued her way out of the church in a towering rage.

“We are going to walk home, lassies,” announced Mr. Cortlandt over
his shoulder to his daughters and his niece. Beth was glad of this.
The sun had brightened while they were in church, and the avenue was
filled with two streams of story-book people, beautifully dressed, gay,
prosperous-looking, handsome. It was a joy to Beth to be one of the
children who were part of the crowd, moving visions, surpassing the
loveliest in Miss Tappan’s books in the far-off, humdrum days.

When they had reached home and Beth came running down-stairs after she
had laid off coat and hat, she found her aunt looking troubled and her
uncle talking sternly to Dirk in the library.

“You shall certainly be punished, sir,” he said. “If it is amusing to
you to trip up your sister you must be taught not to amuse yourself.
Fancy Alys almost falling in church because a great boy of ten tripped
her!”

Dirk looked sullen; his face was dark red; he frowned fearfully. Beth
knew in an instant that Alys had thought that Dirk had been responsible
for her accident in leaving the pew, and had complained to her father
that her brother might be punished. In the little time that she had
been in this household Beth had discovered that her uncle took a
hopeless view of Dirk, and was ready to believe him guilty whenever he
was accused, on the general ground of past experience.

“Oh, Uncle Jim!” she cried, “Dirk isn’t to blame for Alys’s tripping! I
know exactly what he was doing, and he didn’t have a thing to do with
that, truly.”

“Then what did I trip on?” demanded Alys, who had been enjoying Dirk’s
discomfiture.

“I don’t know, Alys, but Dirk didn’t do one single thing to you. He
was--he was right behind me, and I know,” cried Beth. She did not say
that Dirk was pinching her again, but this was the case.

“Why didn’t you say so, Dirk?” demanded his father.

“What’s the use?” sulked Dirk.

“I shouldn’t think you’d take his part, Beth; he hasn’t been very nice
to you since you came,” said Alys.

“Well, I suppose he doesn’t like me; everybody can’t like
everybody--every other body, I mean,” said Beth. “I don’t think that
has anything to do with what’s fair. And I do know Dirk didn’t trip
you.”

“That’s the right spirit, Lady Beth!” cried Mr. Cortlandt heartily, as
Mrs. Cortlandt said:

“Oh, I’m glad, little son, you weren’t unkind to your sister!”

“I beg your pardon, Dirk, for pitching into you without hearing your
side first,” said Mr. Cortlandt, speaking as one man speaks to another.
“Shake hands, Dirk.”

“Oh, that’s all right; I don’t mind. I did something else,” muttered
Dirk giving his father a limp little hand.

After dinner he came upon Beth alone in the library.

“Say, you’re all right,” he began in some embarrassment. “I ain’t going
to forget what you did.”

“Well, you didn’t trip up Alys,” said Beth.

“No, but I pinched you like fury in church, and I was pinching you when
she slipped up. I guess most girls would have let me take what was
coming to me, and be glad I got it. I won’t bother you any more; I wish
you were my sister and Alys was my cousin. I ain’t going to forget it,
Beth Bristead, and if you want anything any time, say so,” said Dirk.

“I want something now,” said Beth with a little laugh. “I want you to
show you’re nice, instead of trying to make everybody think you’re
horrid.”

“Oh, come off!” said Dirk much embarrassed, but inwardly pleased. “I
guess I ain’t going to pretend.”

“All right, then it’s a bargain,” Beth triumphed. “And I’m glad it all
happened, because that’s exactly what you do every minute--pretend
you’re a rude, disagreeable boy, and I know better! I’m awfully glad
you’ll stop pretending, Dirk!”

“Oh, say!” exclaimed Dirk. But he grinned, for there was no denying
that Beth had the best of him.

Natalie and Alys came into the room. “Now we’re going to show you the
house, Beth,” Natalie announced. “You’ve seen this library and the
dining-room, and that’s all you have seen, down-stairs. On this side
of the hall is the drawing-room.” Natalie threw open the door as she
spoke, and Beth cried out delightedly.

The floor, inlaid in beautiful woods, was partly covered with rugs of
the finest colors and textures--before the fireplace lay a great tiger
skin. The walls were hung with silken tapestries of green and silver,
the furniture “did not match,” Beth noticed in surprise; there was
gold, dull enough to accord with the silver; there was white, and there
were rare woods, and there were cushions and upholstering of the same
green as the walls and of darker shades of the same tone. Beth did not
know why it was such a beautiful room. She did know that she had never
seen one so splendid.

“This is the conservatory,” said Alys, leading the way. And there
off the drawing-room, Beth found herself “knee deep in June,” in a
conservatory filled with bloom and with the green of the tropics, its
damp, rose-scented air seeming, most of all that Beth had seen in this
wonder house, the work of fairies on this chill November day.

“This is father’s billiard room,” said Dirk who had followed the girls.

“Beth won’t care for that,” said Alys. “This is the music room. We’ve
come around a square; that door across there leads back into the
library.”

The music room was vaulted, finished in dark woods, paneled from floor
to ceiling. One end of it was occupied by a great organ, built into the
wall; a piano, harp and several small instruments rested against the
walls at intervals.

“Can you play them all?” gasped Beth, wide-eyed with awe.

Natalie laughed. “No, indeed, but mama gives musicales in the winter,
and she has people come who can play them. This is the picture gallery.”

“All these?” murmured Beth vaguely.

This was a long room, its walls covered with green; a railing ran
around it three or four feet from the wall. Pictures and still more
pictures hung from floor to ceiling against these walls, and rare
marbles and bronzes stood on pedestals in spaces built for them against
heavy draperies that threw into relief their perfect loveliness, their
glorious strength. Beth did not know that her uncle’s collection
of paintings and sculpture was famous in the city, but she dimly
understood that here was a world of beauty whose existence she had
never guessed.

“Oh, me,” she sighed gratefully, “what a lot of things there are to
know, and what a happy world it is!”

“Mama will tell you about the pictures some day,” said Natalie. “Father
will, if he finds you can learn to love them. He doesn’t like to waste
time on people who never could care for them. Now come up-stairs and
see the ballroom. That is built out over all these rooms, the music
room, the billiard room and this gallery.

“Turn on the lights, Alys; it is getting dusky, and anyway this room
is best by electricity,” said Natalie as they paused in the great
arched doorway of a room so big, so splendid that this time Beth could
not so much as breathe as she looked down its great length. It was
a room all white and gold as to walls; its high paneled ceiling was
painted with a design of flowers and long, eddying links of Greek
maidens in floating draperies and happy children and birds flying;
the painted poem of beautiful motion. Against the doors and windows
hung curtains of deep-hued golden silk and velvet; the polished
floor reflected the countless lights that flashed from the cut-glass
chandeliers. At one end of the room was a screened balcony for
musicians and around it at intervals were deep recessed niches, resting
places for dancers, while luxurious and curious seats stood about, to
offer hospitality to onlookers. There were galleries for like purpose
on three sides of the room.

“Do you use it?” asked Beth in a whisper.

“We haven’t had anything here for two winters,” said Natalie. “Mama
says we may dance here Thanksgiving night, when we have the costume
party. When I come out--just think, it will be in three years,
Beth!--we are going to have a ball that is going to be a dream. You can
be planning your gown till it comes off, Beth.”

“I shall be at home then,” said Beth wistfully.

“Well, I rather think you will be here!” declared Natalie. “Now we’ve
found you we aren’t going to lose you, little cousin, and you will
be at my coming-out party, even if you aren’t old enough to be out
yourself.”

“We’d better leave the gymnasium till another time,” said Alys. “Beth
has seen all there is now, except the rooms in the basement, and the
gymnasium.”

“Do you suppose there is another house in New York as splendid as this
one?” asked Beth overcome by the wonders displayed to her.

“Oh, yes; finer,” said Natalie. “But there are a good many not so fine.”

“I don’t see, Natalie, how you can ever be good enough,” said Beth
solemnly.

Alys laughed, but Natalie said: “Sometimes I feel that, too, Beth. I
hope I can use it all as I ought. Mama tries to have us remember we’ve
got to do a great deal more than just enjoy our wealth. It is hard not
to forget, and take it all just as Jack Horner took the plum.”

“Off in a corner and thinking how good he was!” cried Beth quickly.
“You won’t be that kind, Natalie!”

“Do you like my house, Beth?” asked Mr. Cortlandt when Beth came alone
into the library after her tour to find him, sitting with a book laid
face upon his knee, looking into the fire.

“It is like Jerusalem the Golden,” said Beth seriously. “‘I know not,
oh, I know not what joys await me there.’ There’s no palace in all the
stories I ever read half so wonderful, Uncle Jim! I can’t think I’m
really seeing.”

“You look like your mother, Beth,” said her uncle unexpectedly, as he
watched the earnest little face.

“No one ever told me about her, Uncle Jim,” said Beth coming over to
perch on his knee as a matter of course. “Will you tell me about her,
please? It would be nice for Sunday night.”

“There are two lines of Jean Ingelow’s that I always think of when I
think of her,” said Uncle Jim.

  “‘A sweeter, woman ne’er drew breath
   Than my son’s wife, Elizabeth.’

Only she was my sister and not an Elizabeth. Do you like Sunday night,
little Beth?” asked her uncle stroking her soft cheek.

“Oh, yes,” said Beth. “I think Sunday is like an island day, with all
the other days rolling around it, like waves, while it is all still and
peaceful. This has been a dear Sunday, Uncle Jim. Will you tell me more
about my mother, more than those lovely lines, please?”

“Yes. Put your head on my shoulder and I will tell you about her,” said
Beth’s uncle. “I loved her dearly, dearly, and so did every one else.”

They talked for a long time in the gathering darkness, lighted only
by the flames of the wood-fire, leaping and falling in the sombre
beauty of the library. Here Mrs. Cortlandt found them when she came
down-stairs later, both of them pensively happy in the memory of Beth’s
sweet mother, whom she had never known.




CHAPTER VII

PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS


The next morning Beth opened her eyes upon a chill gray world. She
jumped out of bed and into her cuddly bedroom slippers and drew aside
her window curtains. The asphalt pavement seemed to have spread out
and up over the whole sky; air, clouds, people and city walls looked
of a piece and a color with the hard iron-gray road, giving the avenue
the effect of an asphalt tube, bottom, sides and top alike. Snowflakes
drifted through the air as if they did not half like it and found it
too bleak to call down their comrades to make a cheerful snow-storm.

Beth remembered that it was Monday morning and that Aunt Rebecca and
Ella Lowndes had deep-seated objections to bad weather on washing day,
“because it made the whole week crooked.” She hoped that the sun was
shining in Massachusetts, and her heart leaped joyously as she realized
that she was in fairy-land-come-true, where there were no washing days
with their hurried, light dinners, but where the sun always shone, no
matter what was the weather. Her feet in their fleecy blue slippers
danced a few steps until the lavish blue satin bows on the slippers
waved blithely, and she hurried to begin dressing, meaning to surprise
Frieda when she came by being nearly ready.

There was to be a holiday from lessons for the Cortlandt children
because it was Thanksgiving week. Alys said “that was a good way to
make sure they were thankful.”

After breakfast Beth found herself alone, and she wandered into the
conservatory. Entering it was to leave November far behind, to breathe
the warm, soft dampness of the southern midsummer. Beth closed the door
behind her and stood still, delicately and ecstatically sniffing the
fragrant air.

“It’s just like a hymn,” said Beth, folding her hands with a sense of
reverence and lifting her happy little face higher as she spoke aloud
after the fashion of her solitary play days. “It’s like:

  “‘What though the spicy breezes
     Blow soft o’er Ceylon’s isle,
   Though every prospect pleases,
     And only man is vile’--

Mercy, no! It isn’t like that last part one bit, for Uncle Jim isn’t
any more vile than--than nothing at all--than those white carnations
over there! I love him with all my heart and soul! I guess it’s more
like:

  “‘And Sharon waves, in solemn praise
     Her silent groves of palm,’

because there are whole rows of palms over there. Well, at any rate,
I just wish Janie Little could smell these flowers. Janie loves nice
smells so! She thinks smelling a peppermint stick is ’most as good as
sucking it. I don’t, but I’d rather smell all these flowers mixed up
than pick them. And those birds! I wonder who feeds them.”

“I do, my dear,” said a voice, and Beth faced about with a jump to see
Mrs. Hodgman.

“Do you take care of all of them? Good-morning, Mrs. Hodgman,” said
Beth.

The housekeeper laughed. “Good-morning, Beth,” she said. “I have one
of the maids, or sometimes the gardener here to help me take down the
cages, but I give the little creatures their baths and food--it’s such
a pleasure to do it, and they all know me.”

She whistled a low note and the canaries nearest her, of the fifty
that hung in the conservatory, fluttered to the bars of their cages
and answered her, with their heads inquiringly tilted to see what Mrs.
Hodgman had for them.

“Oh, I should think it would be a pleasure!” cried Beth rapturously.
“It makes you feel as if you would write poetry to be in this warm,
soft, flowery place with all those birds hopping and singing, doesn’t
it? I feel as if poetry would just burst right out--only it doesn’t! Do
you call the man who grows flowers in a greenhouse a gardener? I was
wondering what you would call him.”

“The man who has charge of this conservatory is the gardener
transferred from Mr. Cortlandt’s country house, otherwise we might call
him the florist,” said Mrs. Hodgman. “Now, my dear, I must leave you,
for Mrs. Cortlandt gives a small dinner to-night, and I have much to
look after this morning.”

“Do you think I may stay here a while, all alone with the birds,
and would you mind not telling any one I was here? Because I should
like very much to play something. It would be that I was a kind of
enchantress who could turn a bare day like this into a summer day on
a magic island, and all these birds and flowers would be under the
spell, obey me, you see, and I’d play they all knew me and were bright
and beautiful--as they truly are--but nobody could see them, or get on
the island unless I touched them with my wand, and I never touched any
one unless they had done something lovely and kind to earn the touch,”
explained Beth, feeling that she owed Mrs. Hodgman the explanation if
she asked to be left alone by her. “I could play it better if I knew no
one knew where I was; it makes it more like a secret, invisible island.”

“Bless you, little Beth, you may stay here as long as you like, and
play all the pretty fancies you can fashion,” said Mrs. Hodgman
heartily, kissing the round, soft cheek turned up to her. Then she
hurried away, leaving Beth to a glorious kingdom of fact and fancy.

This was why no one could tell Beth’s Aunt Alida where the little
girl was when she wanted her an hour later, for Mrs. Hodgman had gone
out and nobody else had seen her. The household had begun to get
excited when Mrs. Cortlandt remembered that nobody had looked in the
conservatory for Beth, and she hurried down herself to try this last
hope of finding the child in the house.

As she opened the door Beth’s happy face met her eyes, flushed with the
warmth of the conservatory and her interest in her fascinating game.
She looked so rapt that Mrs. Cortlandt forgot that she had been anxious
about her and cried out:

“Why, you funny little Bethie! What are you doing here by your serene
self, and why do you look as if you were floating on little pink
clouds, child?”

“I’ve been having such a lovely time, Aunt Alida!” said Beth, coming
down to facts by an effort. “I’ve been playing this was a magic island.
It’s wonderful to play things right in the middle of things more fairy
than your play is! To have all these birds and flowers true when it’s
so cold and snowy! Aunt Alida, your real fairy-land is nicer than book
fairy-land!”

“Dear little girl, the best of all is to have the eyes that see
fairy-land anywhere,” said Aunt Alida, kissing Beth just as Mrs.
Hodgman had kissed her.

Beth had never been kissed in all her life as much as she had been
since she had come to New York, Aunt Rebecca not being prone to kisses,
but she liked it very much and responded with a warmth that showed she
was learning how to show the love that filled her heart.

“I’ve been looking for you, Beth,” Aunt Alida said, “because we have
important matters to decide, you and I. You know that our costume
party is almost beginning--Thursday is Thanksgiving day--and we have
nothing ready for you to wear. I think I shall make you into nothing
more alarming than a little Puritan maiden, Bethie. The kerchief and
cap will suit your serious little face. Will it also suit your serious
little taste, dear?”

Beth laughed. “I don’t know what it will be like, Aunt Alida, but you
know what’s nice for me. I’m afraid to go to your party, Aunt Alida;
I’m afraid of people I don’t know.”

“Nonsense, Beth! You will know these boys and girls when you’ve met
them, so who will there be to fear? Alys is to wear a stiff brocade,
copied after an old portrait of a Cortlandt of the early 1700’s; we
think Alys will rather suit the stiff old gown. And--here’s a secret,
Beth! Natalie is to be a young and pretty witch, all in crimson, with
a black bodice. And we are going to have a dance which Natalie is to
lead alone, all the others following her. The dance will represent the
hunting of a witch in the foolish, cruel old days. Do you think that is
a fine idea, little niece? I’m proud of it, for it is my own.”

“Oh, yes,” breathed Beth, bewildered but impressed.

“Then come along, Bethie, and try on your costume,” cried Aunt Alida
triumphantly. “I ordered it several days ago and the dressmaker has
sent a woman to try it on; she is waiting in your room. You can’t
imagine what fun it is to have three big-little girls to gown for a
costume party! It’s like having one’s dolls come back a thousand times
nicer than they used to be.”

She tucked Beth’s hand under her arm and hurried her to the elevator
and up to her room. A woman arose as they entered, holding in her hands
a soft gray-blue silken gown, straight and full as to skirt, long and
plain as to waist, with delicate muslin sleeves appearing under the
silken ones, and a soft muslin kerchief swinging from its shoulders,
ready to be crossed over Beth’s palpitating heart. Surely she had been
mistaken in thinking this a dull, dreary day, Beth said to herself, and
surely the land of magic was not imaginary, nor bounded by the glass
walls of the conservatory!

“Hallo, Priscilla!” called a gay voice, and Beth turned to see
Natalie’s eyes dancing at her from out the folds of the portière
between her cousin’s dressing room and her own. “You can’t see me, but
I can see you!” laughed Natalie. “You’re not to see me until the great
day--you dear little Priscilla! You’re too sweet to be real. Bethie,
I’d come and hug you and find out if you were real, only I can’t
without showing you my gown.”

“I’m real,” said Beth. “I look like a picture in the glass, but
pictures can’t curtsey, Natalie. Look!” She took her soft gown on each
side between a thumb and forefinger and curtsied solemnly and low. Her
face was all rosy pink and her eyes shining with delight. “If only Aunt
Rebecca could see me!” she sighed. “She loves our Puritan ancestors so,
and she’d never believe how I look.”

“She shall see you!” cried Aunt Alida. “I’ll tell you what we’ll do,
Bethie. We’ll have a miniature of you painted on ivory, just as you
look this moment, and we’ll send it to your Aunt Rebecca for Christmas!
No photograph could do justice to those soft tints.”

“Painted? Of me?” gasped Beth. “Aunt Rebecca has a miniature; she
says it’s her grandfather Bowen’s second wife; she was a Southerner.
It’s perfectly lovely. Aunt Alida, I’ll have to stop talking to you,
because I can’t say new things when you do new things! Only I’m most
sure Aunt Rebecca will say it’s ministering to my vanity to have my
picture painted; she always was afraid Miss Tappan would make me vain
if she trimmed my dresses much--she always told her not to minister
to my vanity. But Miss Tappan doesn’t know how to make people look
fine enough to be really vain--you do, Aunt Alida! Still, I don’t feel
spoiled; I just feel--happy!”

Once more Aunt Alida kissed Beth, and the little girl felt sure that
the dressmaker’s woman gave her hair a slight caress as she took off
the lovable Puritan gown to which Beth had lost her heart completely.

On the great night of what Beth liked to call in her thoughts “her
first ball,” Thanksgiving night, Beth stood before the mirror in her
beautiful blue room while Frieda fastened the silvery blue gown that
fell to Beth’s slippered feet, and laid over her shoulders the soft
white fichu, and fastened on her flowing hair the tiny lace cap that
added the last touch and turned Beth into something between her own
ancestress and a great doll.

“Oh, oh, oh!” gasped Beth. “I don’t see how they ever let the
Puritans leave England if they wore such things! Isn’t it the dearest,
be-eau-ti-fulest gown, Frieda? Come in,” she added in reply to a knock,
and Anna Mary presented herself in the doorway.

“Mrs. Cortlandt sent me up to make sure everything was as it should
be,” she said. “Frieda, have you that bit of a cap fastened strong?
With Miss Beth’s hair flyin’ like the corn silk that bit of a fairy
gossamer thing will get away from it like a cobweb on the grass of a
May morning. Just a taste more of fold in that lace fish-u,” added
Anna Mary bringing the lace closer around Beth’s round throat and
pronouncing the syllables carefully. “What do you represent now, Miss
Beth? It looks ancient.”

“I’m Priscilla Alden,” said Beth proudly. “I’ll tell you,” she went on
as Anna Mary knelt to sew a little tuck under the broad tuck of Beth’s
skirt in a spot where it was too long. “Priscilla was so lovely that
Captain Miles Standish loved her, but he didn’t dare say so, so he sent
John Alden--he was a nice young man near Priscilla’s age--to ask her to
marry him, but Priscilla saw John liked her himself, so she asked him
why he didn’t ‘speak for yourself, John,’ and I suppose he did, because
they were married.”

“Now it hangs straight,” said Anna Mary, bending down to bite off her
thread and coming up so purple in the face that Beth felt apologetic.
“And that’s a foolish story, Miss Beth, if you don’t mind my sayin’ so.
There’s no captain I’ve ever seen at home in Ireland--and I’ve seen
plenty--would be sendin’ a boy to do his wooin’ for him. Let me look
how Frieda’s got it in the back, that fish-u.”

“It’s a lovely story, Anna Mary; I must have told it bad---- Oh, oh,
oh, Natalie! Just look at Natalie!” screamed Beth, forgetting all about
the Pilgrim lovers as Natalie appeared in the doorway, holding back
the portière. All in crimson and black was Natalie, short skirt, high
heeled shoes, pointed hat, black and crimson, with a crimson satin
cloak floating from one shoulder. She was so brilliant of color, so
radiantly handsome that the two maids shared Beth’s enthusiasm.

“Sure they never hung such witches, Miss Natalie!” cried Anna Mary.

Alys followed her sister. Beth and the maids were not able to
appreciate the perfection of her copy of an old portrait in brocades
and laces, still they saw that Alys’s gown was most beautiful. But
Natalie’s glorious dark beauty in the witch costume of shining red silk
swept everything before it.

“We must hurry down, if you’re ready, little cousin,” said Natalie, and
Beth found herself descending to the lower floor in the small elevator
in the wonderful company of a great lady of the seventeenth century
and such a witch as Anna Mary truly said had never been hung on Boston
Common.

Aunt Alida came to meet them. “You dear, satisfactory trio!” she
cried. “If you’ll have as good a time as you look--dear me! That’s a
queer sentence! However, I mean I’ll be delighted if you are as happy
as you are nice to look at, little daughters and niece. Jim, Jim, do
come here and see our Court Lady, our Priscilla--and our witch.”

Beth caught the slight emphasis that Aunt Alida put on the last three
words, and hoped that Alys would not notice it. Uncle Jim beamed on
them, all three; it seemed to Beth that Uncle Jim cared more for the
frolic than for his elder daughter’s beauty. “There’s Dirk!” cried
Beth. There _was_ Dirk in doublet, boots and a sword.

“What are you?” asked Beth eagerly.

“I’m a fool to let ’em get me such togs,” growled Dirk. “Mama says I’m
Miles Standish. Search me! I don’t know what I look like! Say, though,
Beth, the sword’s decent, ain’t it?”

“You look fine, Dirk,” cried Beth, and Dirk could not detect mockery in
her honest eyes.

No one could hear what they said so the boy unbent a little to her
sweetness. “You’re a peach,” he said earnestly. “You look like one of
the kids they take out in the mall, in that long dress and baby cap.
But you’re out of sight, all right. I guess I’ll dance with you, ’cause
I’ve got to dance with somebody and you’re the best there is.”

“Yes; I’d rather dance with you,” agreed Beth “When are they coming?”

“Who? The rest of the show? Some of ’em are here now, getting their
things off, and----”

“Oh, there’s the music!” cried Beth, as the small orchestra of strings
began to play in the music room.

“Sure. They’ll put ’em in the ballroom when the time comes,” said
Dirk, wondering to see the rapture in Beth’s eyes.

After that Beth hardly knew what happened. She floated on the lovely
music through an enchanted region, into which there began to come
quaint and beautiful figures, some of them tall and nearly grown up,
like Natalie, some of them midway, like Alys, some of them small like
herself; figures in strange, picture garments that made them seem
unreal, even when they were introduced to her by her cousins and she
found herself dancing with them. Because it was a dream and she was not
really Beth Bristead!

Beth was not shy and afraid as she had expected to be. She danced down
and around the great ballroom, carried along by that fairy music, so
happy that there was no room for fear. Never had she heard such music,
trod such a slippery floor, reflecting hundreds of lights, making the
space under her feet as brilliant as the high ceiling. She could not
be afraid of the children whom she met in fairy-land! So Beth smiled
blissfully at them all and answered happily when they spoke to her,
feeling as if these strangers in old-time costume were all old friends.

She had no idea of how proudly, with what pleasure her aunt and uncle
watched her, nor that Natalie and Alys had to acknowledge many kind
speeches made by the older girls about their pretty little cousin. She
did not know that Dirk’s gloom was increasing; she hardly knew that
she was happy, because she was so full of happiness that there was not
room left for knowing it. A blissful little Beth, she danced through
an evening of hours which she had never before sat up to see, floating
through fairy-land on the wings of fairy music.

Dirk looked sullen and cross when he came to take Beth to supper, but
Beth did not see it.

“Oh, Dirk,” she sighed, “isn’t it lovely, lovely! There’s a book at
home, an old history all full of pictures, and it’s just as if they had
come to life! Yet I think it’s more as if the garden had come alive.
And the music! I feel as if I was a little pink cloud! You know; the
kind that is so fluffy and looks so happy when it blows along in the
sunset.”

“Well, I’m glad you like it!” growled Dirk disgustedly. “If ever you
catch me togging out like this again! It’s hotter’n fury in this
double-thing-doublet! And even the sword bothers the life out of me. If
I was up in the gym and had some of the fellers I could get some good
out of this sword. Come on, Beth; we’ll have a supper anyhow that’ll be
big enough to bust this old doublet--wish ’twould!”

“Oh, Dirk; I thought everybody was having such a lovely time; I’m so
sorry! But you will have a good time when we dance the dance that
Natalie leads, the one that means chasing the witch, won’t you?” cried
Beth falling into line with her discontented cousin for the supper
march.

“Not on your life!” returned Dirk glumly.

In the supper room Beth forgot Dirk as soon as he had gone to get her
refreshments, for here was another realm of enchantments. There were
clear soups in fairy cups, cold turkey, salads, dear little triangles
enclosing turkey or lettuce; a sort of unearthly delicate bread, cakes
such as no mere mortal could have made, of which Ella Lowndes would
never dare to dream on her baking day, little cakes iced in all colors,
flavored by fairies with unknown, haunting flavors. There were ices in
the form of little turkeys, as a reminder of the day, and chocolate
with whipped cream on its surface, served in cups that were surely
flowers changed by enchantment into porcelain. In the middle of the
table stood a mammoth turkey and when everybody had had all and more
than they could possibly eat Natalie, as the witch, was called upon to
cast a spell upon him and make him give up his treasures.

So Natalie thrice waved her witch’s stick around his head, and the
mammoth turkey, by some secret magic, spread his wings and showered
upon the table bonbons, snapping mottoes, little flags and candies that
looked like cranberries, but which proved to be something beyond and
above the flavor of any candy that Beth had ever tasted.

Then the music called “the Pilgrims and Strangers,” as Uncle Jim
dubbed his young guests in their ancient gowns, back to the dance. Beth
went gladly, delicious though the feast had been. Never in her life
before had she danced except around a crowded parlor at home with one
of the little girls as partner while another played for their dancing
tingling tunes with an unvaried bass. This vast room, ice-smooth floor,
these throbbing violins, ’cellos, and harps--ah, that made dancing
another matter!

“Happy, Bethie?” asked Aunt Alida, detaining Beth for an instant as
she passed her, moving with a light, floating step of her own to the
exquisite music that recalled the guests.

“Oh, happy, Aunt Alida! You think we’re all awake, don’t you? I’m so
afraid I’ll wake up!” said Beth leaning her head against Aunt Alida’s
pale gray gown. “What do you represent, auntie dearest? Are you
anything historical or Thanksgivingy?”

“It is only the children who represent something, Bethie. This isn’t my
party, you know; I’m not a part of the party. But perhaps I represent
Plymouth Rock--I’m nearly its color,” laughed Aunt Alida.

Beth found herself one of the last to enter the ballroom after she had
kissed Aunt Alida and hurried on. Dirk was looking for her, for they
were to be partners in this merry witch chase. The children were paired
and drawn up in a long line with beautiful Natalie at their head. Beth
and Dirk slipped into their places in the line, the few stragglers were
summoned, and all was ready.

The orchestra burst forth in a strain of wild, sweet, strange music
which Beth did not know was Hungarian, but which she dimly felt
harmonized with Natalie’s crimson figure as she darted forward in a
swinging, swift dance-step down the room. The others followed her at a
signal, giving her a good start. Then Natalie “led them a dance” indeed!

Up and down, over, across, straight, zigzagging, darting, turning,
Natalie danced, and ever following her came the pretty line of boys and
girls in their quaint costumes, following as if Natalie were a sort of
Pied Piper and they were her victims, or as though she were a witch,
indeed, who had bewitched them.

Faster and faster the thrilling music rose, faster and faster Natalie
led her winding pursuers, till at last, at a signal from Mrs.
Cortlandt, the whole long train broke and spread out, encircling
Natalie and taking her captive.

“The witch! We’ve caught the witch! What shall we do with her?” cried
Dirk who had long ago forgotten his dislike of costumes and had danced
the game-dance with gusto.

“Burn her! Hang her! Set her free! Hold her! Make her pay her forfeit!”
cried various voices. They all turned to Mrs. Cortlandt for her
verdict; she was to decide what should be the witch’s sentence.

“If she can lead you in singing as she has in dancing she shall go
free!” cried Natalie’s mother.

The orchestra began to play “My Country ’Tis of Thee,” and Natalie
began to sing. She had a sweet, clear young voice and she was fully
able to redeem herself. The dancers followed her in this, as they had
in dancing. It was a pretty chorus. But a strange thing happened. One
by one the singers fell silent as they failed to remember the words.
Only Beth, out of her careful training in such things in her old,
so-different home in the Massachusetts hills, knew the anthem quite
to the end. She sang it fearlessly in her sweet little voice, like a
little song sparrow. And the Thanksgiving dance ended with Beth in
her soft, silvery blue Priscilla gown singing “My Country ’Tis of
Thee,” standing amid the silent circle of costumed young “Pilgrims and
Strangers,” her happy, flushed little round face uplifted, her heart
overflowing with true Thanksgiving gratitude and love. And Uncle Jim,
watching the child, said under his breath: “God bless the dear little
soul!”




CHAPTER VIII

TANAGERS AND BLUEBIRDS


“You haven’t had your gym suit on once, Bethikins!” said Natalie
reproachfully.

“Oh, yes, I have; I tried it on the minute it came--the minute I got
off my dress to go to bed the night it came,” Beth corrected herself
with her usual painstaking fidelity to the exact letter of the truth.

“Trying on doesn’t count; you haven’t worn it,” said Alys.

“Trying on counted a lot to me,” Beth corrected her. “It’s like a
bluebird.”

“Funny you said that! Mama said we could be the Tanagers and Bluebirds,
our gym club. All the girls must wear crimson or blue,” cried Natalie.

“All the girls?” echoed Beth inquiringly. “Do you have outside girls in
it? I’d be afraid to try if strange girls come.”

“Our best friends come,” said Alys. “We have a perfectly magnificent
instructor and our gymnasium is better than the other girls have--most
of them haven’t one at all--so mama lets us have the girls here and
form a club.”

“You needn’t be afraid of that lot, Beth,” Dirk said derisively.
“They’re not much at it. I bet you’ll show ’em something after you get
the hang of it. You walk like a kid that could do gym stunts. Yes, they
ask the girls in, but I can’t ask any of the fellows! What do you know
about that? I practice with ’em, ’cause father wants me to get the
lessons when Bob Leonard’s here, but not a boy but me in it! Tanagers
and Bluebirds! Well, I guess! Sparrows, that’s what! I wear black.”

“Who’s Bob Leonard? That can’t be a girl?” asked Beth, suppressing a
desire to laugh.

“It is Mr. Robert Leonard, our teacher,” said Alys, looking severely at
her unabashed brother. “He was a great--athletic, or whatever you call
it----”

“Athlete,” Natalie corrected.

“Athlete, then, at college. His father lost his money and Mr. Leonard
has to teach and do things like that, while he is studying law. Dirk,
mama dislikes you to be impertinent.”

“Who is?” demanded Dirk. “Bob Leonard suits him. You can’t go around
mistering a fine chap like him. He can do anything; he’s awful strong
and clean-cut. Besides, he likes it. Bob Leonard’s the way to speak of
him; I’ll leave it to Beth after she sees him. Girls are the limit!
They think you’re fresh if you don’t mister every one. It’s the people
you like you treat like that, that’s dead easy to see.”

Beth felt a return of the vague regret that she had felt before. Now
that the first dazzling wonder of her new surroundings was somewhat
less blinding she began to wish that Dirk meant a little more to his
sisters. Natalie was sweet temper itself; she did not often find
fault with Dirk, as Alys was only too ready to do at the slightest
provocation. But Natalie treated him with kindly indifference, as if a
small boy mattered little and must be left to himself until he found
his way into big boyhood, when he might matter. Dirk was always on the
defensive toward the girls and often was on the offensive. Beth knew
that the three were really fond of one another, but it troubled her
tender little heart that they sometimes scarcely seemed so.

“I’ll like the gymnasium--if I’m not afraid. Maybe Dirk will start
me in it?” she said with the smile that Dirk inwardly felt was
irresistible. The wistful look in her eyes, born of her regret for the
sharpness Alys and Dirk showed each other, made the boy say promptly:

“I’ll see you through, Beth; you stick to me. I’m a cracker-jack on the
bar, if I do say it.”

“Better get ready, Bethie,” advised Natalie. “Mr. Leonard comes in an
hour.”

Beth ran away on this hint to her own room where she found Frieda
reading. The girl arose when Beth entered and said apologetically:

“I seemed to have nothing to do, Miss Beth, so I was reading a little.
I’ve tightened all the buttons on everything you have ready made and
there’s nothing needs mending yet.”

“I should think those German letters would be as hard to read as it
would be to sew pine boards together,” said Beth, missing the point
of Frieda’s apology. “I’ve got to put on my gymnasium suit, Frieda.
I don’t think I knew it was regular lessons; I thought the gymnasium
was just for fun. Natalie says they’re taught. I’m glad now Aunt Alida
bought the suit. Anything was good enough to play in, but a regular
teacher is different.”

“Oh, sure, Miss Beth,” said Frieda with conviction as she hastened
to get out Beth’s gymnasium uniform, “it’s all different from that.
There’s nothing here that anything you happen to have is good enough
for; it’s all got to be just the way it ought to be.”

“Isn’t that true, Frieda!” cried Beth, struck by this summing up of
what had amazed her.

She regarded her slender legs admiringly as they appeared, like slender
black stems out of particularly full calyxes, below the puffy dark blue
silk bloomers which she had donned. “I’m afraid my great-aunt Rebecca,
at home, would not think this was a nice costume. She says a great deal
about being feminine in all your ways. Maybe she’d think bloomers were
not feminine--though in the pictures of Turkish ladies they always wear
them and have their heads tied up so you can only see their eyes. They
must think noses and mouths aren’t feminine there.”

Frieda had long ago given up even the hope of following the course of
Beth’s rapid thoughts; she wisely confined herself now to the main
point as she replied:

“Wait till you get the tunic on, Miss Beth. It’s just a regular dress.”

It was and a remarkably pretty one. It fitted the round, childish
slenderness to perfection, falling softly in deep silken pleats
below the knee bands of the doubtful bloomers. Deep Van Dyck points
of lace formed a collar and, reversed, made effective cuffs on the
sleeves. A cap with a jaunty feather was the unnecessary last touch of
completeness.

“It won’t stay on,” said Beth, surveying herself with undisguised
delight in the long mirror. “But it’s the loveliest cap ever! I feel
just like Claverhouse with the Bonnets of Bonny Dundee. You don’t know
about that, do you, Frieda? You couldn’t, because, if you’re German,
you read mostly about the Watch on the Rhine, I suppose. It’s almost
the best of all those splendid things--all those English and Scotch
Middle Ages poems which I’m crazy about.”

Beth began to caper all around the room, watching ecstatically the blue
silken figure that followed her, capering as she did, in the mirrors of
her dresser, dressing table and cheval glass.

“I’m one of the bluebirds, and I feel like flying!” she panted, obeying
an inviting gesture from Frieda to sit before the dressing table and
have her hair made tight for the exercise to come. “Frieda, isn’t it
the very best thing in all the world to be a little girl and jump and
fly around? It’s like ‘We are Seven’--I had that to say in school--‘A
little child, that feels its life in every limb.’ Isn’t it the best
thing, just glorious?”

“It is, Miss Beth, when you’re like that. Some isn’t,” said Frieda,
stooping as if to pick up something. Beth thought her voice had an odd
sound; she squirmed around in her chair and caught the glimmer of the
tears which she had suspected were in Frieda’s eyes.

In an instant warm-hearted Beth was on her feet and had her arms around
her pretty young maid. “Frieda, dear, what is it?” she murmured in the
voice that few had ever resisted in her short life. “What makes you
feel bad? You have to tell me, because you _have_ to, and I want to
know! Please, Frieda!”

“It’s nothing to bother you with, Miss Beth. I didn’t mean to cry ever
so little. It’s my little sister. When I think of her it hurts, and
gymnasium and dancing days I have to think of her,” said Frieda, with a
sudden sob at the end of her sentence.

“What is it, Frieda? Is she one of those you just spoke of who isn’t
like that?” coaxed Beth, so sympathetic that she adopted Frieda’s
grammar.

Frieda nodded. “She’s only nine years old, but she’s that lame she
can’t walk only on crutches, and on them but a little way,” said Frieda.

“How awful! What’s her name, poor, poor Frieda? Can’t any one make her
well?” cried Beth, her own eyes overflowing.

“Her name is Lotta, Miss Beth; we mostly call her Liebchen. It might
be a great surgeon could cure her: the doctors told us it might be,
but---- Well, Miss Beth, you know great surgeons come high, and there’s
many more children besides little Liebchen,” said Frieda.

“Tell Aunt Alida and my uncle!” cried Beth, her face lighting up with
the conviction that nothing more would be necessary. Then, as Frieda
shook her head, Beth cried: “Don’t you know they’d want to know it,
Frieda, and help?”

“I know people don’t want to be bothered with their servants’ troubles,
Miss Beth. I wouldn’t take the liberty. My mother told me never to let
the people I worked for see me look sad. She was at service, too, in
her young days, in Germany. She knows; she worked for hochwohlgeboren
dämen,” said Frieda proudly.

“For what?” cried Beth.

“Hochwohlgeboren--high-well-born ladies. That’s what you call them in
Germany,” explained Frieda.

In spite of her sympathy Beth’s laughter rang out.

“To their faces?” she gasped. “Oh, Frieda, isn’t that funny! When
all we say is just ‘noble ladies’! Well, but your mother didn’t know
kind, dear, sweet Aunt Alida. And Uncle Jim! Look at all the things
they’ve given me--and you to put them on for me! Of course they’ll have
Liebchen cured! I shall tell them about her myself.”

“Miss Beth, you mustn’t, really!” cried Frieda alarmed. “They might
be angry with me for talking to you; they might think I told you about
my sister to get you to ask them to help her, and as sure as I stand
here I never thought of it! Please don’t tell them, Miss Beth dear. You
don’t understand how life is here, yet. It might cost me my place to
have told you about my family and got you interested. I can’t always
get such a good place as this, Miss Beth--and I’d hate to leave you, if
you’ll let me say that much.”

“I’d hate to have you, Frieda!” cried Beth giving her maid a warm
little impetuous hug. “I think you’re the nicest girl! And you’re
young and pretty. I like Anna Mary, of course, but I really don’t know
what I’d do if I had to have such a solemn, rather frightening person
to wait on me. Don’t you worry one bit, Frieda. You’ll see! The gym
club is the Tanagers and Bluebirds. That’s what the girls are called.
And I’m one of the bluebirds. Don’t you know the bluebird stands for
happiness? Well, then! I’m going to be a real bluebird. But it will be
Uncle Jim and Aunt Alida who will be more really bluebirds than I can
be, because they can have Liebchen cured. I just know it will all turn
out like a story. My! Aunt Rebecca isn’t one bit right! She is sort of
afraid of money, but it’s like having a big, bottomless fairy chest
that you can dip into and bring up most anything, for anybody! Does
Liebchen speak English, or is she too young to have learned it?”

“She was born in America, Miss Beth. I was only six years old when I
came here,” replied Frieda.

Beth was half-way to the door, suddenly realizing that she might be
late in the gymnasium. She paused to say:

“Isn’t that strange, Frieda? It must mix up families dreadfully to
come to America. Queer to be German and have an American sister! You
see if you don’t have a well-and-strong American sister! I’m sure the
bluebird name is going to work.” With which this particular little
bluebird flew out of the room, her short, full silken skirt fanned
out by the opening of the door until it took only a slight effort of
imagination to see her wings.

At the door of the gymnasium Beth paused. The hum of voices, the
pounding of heavy weights, the muffled pad of feet told her that while
she had been getting ready and talking to Frieda the girls, of whom
she was considerably afraid, had arrived. Summoning her courage she
opened the door gently and slipped in through the smallest opening that
allowed her to do so.

The scene before her was so pretty that Beth forgot all about the
timid Bluebird hovering on its threshold. Sixteen girls in various
shades and designs of warm red and brilliant blue costumes were
running, fencing, tumbling, perching on horizontal bars, swinging
dumb-bells, stretching their flexible young muscles in all sorts of
ways to get them into order for the real business of the day. Among
them, in a sense, but quite apart, stood Dirk in black, his black silk
jersey ornamented with a monogram combining the blues and red of the
club colors. Dirk’s expression was disdainful, yet Beth saw at a glance
that he was enjoying his boyish sense of superiority over inferior
girls. He was the first to espy Beth and beckoned to her frantically
to hurry on. A tall young man, splendidly vigorous and strong, with a
friendly, jolly face Beth guessed was Mr. Leonard, the instructor. She
felt immediately that he was full of a big-boyishness which justified
Dirk in saying that it was suitable to call him “Bob” Leonard. Dirk
came over to escort Beth into the room; he meant to carry out his
promise and see her through.

Natalie swung down from a bar on which she had been perched, like
a great tanager in her vivid scarlet gymnasium suit. Natalie was
perpetually taking away her little cousin’s breath by her tropical
beauty, seen in a new setting. Beth looked at her now quite overawed,
and Natalie laughed, pleased by the adoration she saw in those honest
blue-gray eyes.

“Come along, Cozbeth! Isn’t that a nice name? Not Elizabeth, but Cousin
Elizabeth, then just little Cozbeth! Come along, Bethie dear, and get
acquainted with the girls and everything,” Natalie said, joining Dirk
and Beth. She led the way across the floor to Mr. Leonard.

“Mr. Leonard, this is a new bluebird we’ve captured. My cousin, Beth
Bristead, from Massachusetts. Beth, this is Mr. Leonard who teaches us
more than we are clever enough to learn,” said Natalie.

Beth smiled back with her ready friendliness to the friendly smile
Mr. Leonard bent upon her. But she found time to notice how grown up
Natalie’s little speech sounded and to think that Natalie had inherited
from Aunt Alida her pretty tact, as well as her dark eyes.

“Now, face the music, Cozbeth!” whispered Natalie, wheeling Beth
around toward the girls. “Tanagers and Bluebirds, here’s the new
Bluebird. Some of you know her already. I’m not going to introduce you
all separately. This is my cousin, Beth Bristead, and she’s our duck,
as well as our Yankee bluebird.”

Beth’s face was crimson, but she smiled bravely, trying to conquer her
shyness.

“We’ll begin now that your cousin has come, Miss Natalie,” said Mr.
Leonard.

“Oh, were you all waiting for me? Isn’t that dreadful!” cried Beth.
“But, Natalie, I had to talk to Frieda. Her little sister’s lame and I
want to tell Aunt Alida----”

“Mama isn’t here, Beth dear. We have to do our ‘gymsticks’ now. That’s
what Dirk called gymnastics when he was a little tot,” said Natalie,
disengaging herself, now that she had done her duty by Beth, and going
to join the older girls, her special chums.

“I’m going to start Beth in, Mr. Leonard; you can go on with the
class,” said Dirk.

“That’s right. She can begin with the simple exercises, you know, and
watch the others. Dirk can start you just as well as I can, little new
Bluebird,” said Mr. Leonard, moving away with that merry smile of his
which won Beth’s instant affection.

“Isn’t he nice!” she cried fervently. “You don’t call him Bob when you
speak to him, do you?”

Dirk hastily scanned Beth’s face for the rebuke that was farthest from
her thoughts. Not seeing it, he shrugged his shoulders and said easily:

“You can’t do that, you know, unless you had settled with him to do
it. ’Twouldn’t go here in class, anyway. But no fellow would tag such a
dandy chap as he is with mister when you talked about him. Nice! Well,
I just guess! He’s the jimmest of all the jim dandies you ever saw!”

The class had fallen into line and Mr. Leonard, altering his mind,
beckoned Beth and Dirk to join it. He put them through a rapid sword
practice, with short sticks instead of more dangerous weapons, right
and left, forward thrusts, falling back, advancing, one hand on hip,
the other making swift play with the wands.

At first Beth was awkward, half afraid, but in five minutes this had
gone from her, and she was almost keeping up with the older, more
experienced girls. Her muscles were supple and sound, thanks to her
freedom to romp and play in her old Massachusetts country village life.
That life was now seeming more and more like a dream as the new life in
this great city grew familiar.

Alys was especially good in this practice. There was a cat-like grace
about Alys and she moved as quickly, almost as lithely as a cat.
She, too, was a “Bluebird” but in pale blue. Aunt Alida chose shades
for Alys which harmonized with her delicacy of coloring and which
emphasized the whiteness of her fair skin.

After this exercise Mr. Leonard took his pupils through trapeze
exercises which made Beth gasp with an admiration that held fear of the
day when she should be expected to attempt such feats.

Dirk did not allow her long to admire them; he forced Beth into laying
the foundations of her athletic education. He was much surprised to
find her his equal in climbing.

“Goodness, that’s nothing!” panted Beth when Dirk expressed this
surprise. She sat easily on a swinging bar, her arms around its
supporting ropes, while she tightened her slipping hair ribbons and
readjusted the cap which was secretly her pride and which Dirk could
not persuade her to lay aside.

“At Aunt Rebecca’s Janie and I climbed everything we could get up.
I have been in trees almost half the time in summer; seems as much,
anyway. I always could climb, but you ought to see Janie! She isn’t as
plump as I am; she isn’t plump one bit; she’s thin. She goes up into
anything like a squirrel. We play the loveliest things, Dirk; I know
you’d like them. And you’d like Janie. She’s my best friend. She’s just
as nice as she can be. I wish Janie was here in New York, too!”

“Are all the girls nice down there?” asked Dirk. “I’ll bet I wouldn’t
like Janie any better, anyhow!”

“I’m glad you like me, Dirk, because we’re cousins and because I like
you and I love loving, anyway,” said Beth, not evading the compliment.
“But Janie is lovely. I suppose all the girls aren’t nice anywhere;
there are some at home I don’t care about. Janie and I think it can’t
be wrong not to like girls who aren’t the kind you are meant to
like. Janie has a very nice mother, so she thinks that’s the reason
I like her. But I haven’t any mother at all. Of course Aunt Rebecca
has brought me up very carefully. I think she’s brought me up more
carefully than a mother would. Mothers don’t seem to have to be so
careful as great-aunts do; it comes kind of easy to them to bring up
their children, sort of mixing petting and punishing. Aunt Rebecca
never petted. I used to wish she would, a little, but now I’m glad she
didn’t because I know she doesn’t miss me as a petting person would
miss a little girl they’d brought up.”

“Do you play with boys down there?” asked Dirk diffidently.

“No,” said truthful Beth, “not really. Parties don’t count. Of course
when you ask girls to a party you have to ask boys too, though I never
could see why. Boys are----” Beth stopped short. The speech she thus
checked would not have carried out her resolution to be especially nice
to Dirk.

“Boys are no good,” Dirk finished for her with some bitterness. “That’s
what Nat and Alys think and they don’t try not to show it, like you.
Nat isn’t so bad, but Alys! I’d be sorry for boys if they weren’t as
nice as some girls!”

“They are, Dirk; they truly are!” cried Beth eagerly. “That’s just it!
It’s _some_ boys and _some_ girls, both ways, nice and not nice! It
isn’t _all_ boys and _all_ girls, either way. I think you’re ever so
nice; I think you’re nice as a boy and not just as a cousin. And I’m
sure Alys does, too, only sometimes sisters and brothers get into a way
of fussing; I’ve noticed that at home. Don’t you tease Alys?” suggested
Beth gently.

“Sure thing,” admitted Dirk promptly. “But she’s the kind you want to.
I started in to tease you, but after you held your tongue that Sunday
and got me out of a scrape I didn’t want to any more, you can bet your
last on that! You’re the kind you don’t want to tease. Alys is looking
for trouble with me so she gets it. I’d hate to bother you, Beth,
honest. You don’t get mad; you look so surprised and sorry it’s no fun.”

“You bother me when you bother Alys, Dirk dear,” said Beth, seeing her
chance.

“Honest? Oh, come off! What do you care?” stammered Dirk.

“I love loving; I just said so,” laughed Beth, tactfully trying not to
seem to preach. “It’s such a fairy-land in this house it worries me if
you and Alys aren’t just as cozy together as Queen Mab and--and--King
Mab! Who was the king of fairy-land?”

“Never heard. Oberon,” said Dirk in one breath. “Look here, Beth, if
you’ll kind of stick up for me I’ll do it--stop teasing Alys, I mean.
Only I’ve got to have a chum in this house. And if Alys gets funny I
think I might get back one or two at her.”

“Oh, I’ll be a chum; I’d like to,” cried Beth. “Natalie is too big for
me and Alys is older than I am, more--less--Alys seems older than she
is. I miss Janie; Janie and Tabby, though Poppy is a lovely kitten.
That’s a bargain, Dirk. And I sha’n’t be half so nervous when I know
you aren’t going to be mean to Alys.”

Dirk looked at Beth’s round, rosy, placid face and laughed outright.

“Are you nervous, Beth?” he asked.

“When people are rather scrappy around the place it makes you feel
as if a thunder-shower was coming up. It’s a nervous thing to expect
snappings,” returned Beth, laughing too, as she uncoiled her arms and
prepared to descend from the swing.

Dirk followed her and took her down the room to initiate her in the use
of dumb-bells. He was much pleased to find that she could not swing one
of more than half the weight of his greatest dumb-bell. He looked up to
this sweet cousin at such a rate that it restored his manly sense of
superiority to find her muscular strength unequal to his own.

The Tanagers and Bluebirds ended with a game of basket-ball, red
against blue. Beth had never seen the game, so could not serve her side
well this first time. She asked that Dirk might play instead of her and
his baseball skill so well fitted him for this game that the Bluebirds
won. Beth saw with pleasure that Alys smiled approval on her brother
who had helped her side to victory.

“Gymnasium isn’t so bad, is it, Bethie?” asked Natalie, when all the
girls transformed by street clothing had gone. The maids attendant on
her cousins’ friends had appeared from somewhere below stairs at the
end of the afternoon’s exercise to get the pretty maidens out of the
tanager and bluebird plumage into the costumes of ordinary mortals. It
still oppressed Beth’s simple soul to find all the world served to such
a degree.

“It isn’t bad at all; it’s perfectly splendid. And I wasn’t afraid
after the first, because nobody noticed me. Dirk and I had quite a nice
time. And Mr. Leonard you couldn’t be afraid of because there’s nothing
about him that is one bit frightening,” said Beth.

“I’m glad you like him, Bethie; we all do,” said Natalie. “You like
everything and everybody, Cozbeth. I never saw such a honey pot.”

“Well, that’s all you know about it, Natalie,” declared Beth earnestly.
“I dislike lots of things and lots of people. But you don’t have
anything or any one here I can dislike. Aunt Rebecca says it uses up a
lot of valuable strength to dislike. She says it’s better to go around
the object you dislike, and try not to see it, than it is to go around
disliking it. What she means is to dislike anything once for all and
drop it. Aunt Rebecca is a lady who never feels half-way, I think. You
know what it says in the Bible about lukewarmness? Well, Aunt Rebecca
won’t ever have that text to think about on the last day.”

Natalie’s laughter rang out so heartily that it brought Alys running to
hear the joke.

“I’d have to repeat the whole speech, and then it wouldn’t be the
same,” sighed Natalie, not trying to explain. “Beth is so much in
earnest and is such an old-fashioned little thing! Bethie, I don’t
believe you were born eleven years ago! You’re exactly like a little
piece of old flowered silk, or one of those samplers, or a cup of
sprigged china that you see in old colonial collections!” cried Natalie
with an inspiration.

“Kind of faded and musty?” suggested Beth with a twinkle. “Besides,
you don’t have to go to colonial collections to see them, Natalie. We
have them at home. Aunt Rebecca has my great-great-great-grandmother
Bristead’s sampler. It has pine trees, baskets of flowers, two kinds
of alphabets and the text about serving the Lord in your youth worked
on it. She signed it, working, you know: Amelia Elizabeth Barlow. She
married great-great-great-grandfather Bristead afterward, of course.
And there is almost all of a sprigged china tea set in our house.”

Alys stared. “Isn’t your great-aunt who brought you up, Beth, quite
poor?” she asked.

Natalie frowned and blushed, but Beth was unconscious of offense.

“You mean how could she have these things, Alys?” Beth said. “Aunt
Rebecca hasn’t much money. I suppose here she would be quite poor,
but there she isn’t. It doesn’t cost much to live there and Aunt
Rebecca has all she wants, I guess. She is the biggest giver there to
things--like the church and missions and those things, you know. She
doesn’t ever spend for little things. I like little things, myself!
Sometimes I think wicked thoughts, like wondering if a perfectly
beautiful dress and hat for me would be nicer than sending to heathens.
Now I’ve had things here lovelier than I ever saw I shall never dare
think wicked thoughts again, because when you’re bad, and don’t get
punished for it, it makes you so ashamed you simply have to be good.
You see it never could seem as though we were poor at home because we
are Bristeads. Aunt Rebecca says: ‘Let the new people have the fine
clothes, Beth; we can afford old ones because everybody knows what the
Bristeads did for their country before the Revolution and all through
it and pretty much ever since.’ Of course I’m glad of what Aunt Rebecca
calls ‘our honorable inheritance,’ but I often think good ancestors
must like to see you in a becoming dress, that hasn’t been turned.
But Aunt Rebecca isn’t poor, Alys. I don’t believe she ever thinks
much about money at all; just spends what she can afford and thinks it
doesn’t matter for her that it’s so little.”

“That’s a long speech, Cozbeth, and it’s a very nice one,” said
Natalie heartily. “I think you’ve told us about what really means fine
ladyhood. But don’t think the Cortlandt side cares too much about
money, either, Bethie. Mama never measures people by a bank book;
neither does father. They’ve always told us to be glad and thankful we
had such a lot entrusted to us, but to remember that it _was_ entrusted
to us, and that it was a tremendous responsibility to face and that
we must never forget that money was only outside; that what we _were_
mattered. Mama is very much the same sort of fine lady your aunt is,
only one has a great deal to do with and the other only a little,
perhaps.”

“Goodness, Natalie, don’t you suppose I know Aunt Alida?” cried Beth,
surprised.

She could not yet see, as Natalie and Alys could, the great importance
that wealth gives. “Really and truly Aunt Alida makes even less fuss
about money than Aunt Rebecca. Aunt Rebecca makes a little tiny fuss
about _not_ making a fuss, and Aunt Alida goes right along, as quiet!
I’m glad she and Uncle Jim are the way they are, because I’m as sure as
sureness they’ll have Liebchen cured!”

“Who in all this world is that?” cried Alys, but Beth shook her head,
laughing.

“I’m going to tell them about her first!” she cried, whisking into her
room like a blithe bluebird into its nest in the crevice of a tree and
closing the door to forbid following and further questioning.




CHAPTER IX

AFOOT AND ON HORSEBACK


One of the strangest things in all her strange new life to Beth was
the fact that although one lived in the same house with people it might
be quite impossible to see them without planning for it. Sometimes her
Aunt Alida breakfasted in her room, lunched and dined out and Beth
could not see her that day. Mr. Cortlandt’s morning hours varied. He
was not often away, except when he and his wife were absent together,
for he was exceedingly fond of his home and of his lovely wife, but
sometimes he breakfasted early, sometimes not at all at home, but at
the Country Club where he went to play golf till the snow flew. He was
never at home to lunch and if he had a dinner engagement on successive
days it happened that Beth might not see him for several days. Even
Natalie and Alys were sometimes hard to catch; Dirk was always to be
found at certain hours, but during the daytime Natalie and Alys had
their youthful engagements which separated them from their cousin for
hours. It seemed to Beth hardly possible that a family could live under
one roof in such separation, when it was a most affectionate and happy
family.

Beth thought of the close intimacy of the simple households she
had known “when she was little.” She began to think of her life in
Massachusetts as something that had happened years ago. A change as
great as the one that had befallen Beth acts like years in putting
previous ways and days far behind one.

Beth wondered what Aunt Rebecca would say to this feature of the
new life. She did not speak of it in the journal-letter which she
faithfully wrote each day and which she dispatched to her great-aunt
every Monday and Friday in order that Aunt Rebecca should always have a
letter on Saturday to reread on Sunday. When Beth gave this bi-weekly
letter to Frieda to be included in the household mail she found it hard
to realize that Ella Lowndes, or maybe Janie herself, would bring it
up to Aunt Rebecca’s from the small post-office. How could it be that
the old, simple life was still going on while Beth was in fairy-land?
Beth was sure that she never could make Aunt Rebecca understand that
members of a family might not live in constant touch with one another
and yet be happy and fond together. She could see Aunt Rebecca’s look
of disapproval and hear her say “there must be something wrong about
it.”

For two days after her first lesson in the gymnasium and her discovery
of Frieda’s lame little sister Beth could not get a chance to tell Mr.
and Mrs. Cortlandt about Liebchen.

The third morning the entire family met at breakfast and while Beth
was turning over in her mind the wisdom of broaching the subject then
and was deciding against it, Mr. Cortlandt said:

“Any engagement for to-day, Miss Bristead?”

“No, Mr. Cortlandt, nothing particular,” returned Beth, laughing back
at the laugh in her uncle’s eyes.

“Will you go with me to be shown something that I hope may interest
you?” asked Mr. Cortlandt.

Beth saw that her aunt and the three cousins looked merrily excited,
that there was some sort of new and delightful secret known to all but
herself.

“I’m pretty sure I’ll be delighted to go, sir,” said Beth. “When?”

“As soon as breakfast is over and the mail disposed of,” said her Uncle
Jim. “Did you ever see my stable?”

“I didn’t know you had one, here; I suppose I would have known you must
have one in the country. I’d love to see it--if there are horses in
it,” said Beth.

“A stable without horses would be rather worse than a horse without a
stable in New York,” said Uncle Jim. “We’ll visit mine after breakfast.”

“What kind of a dress do you put on to visit city stables, Aunt Alida?”
asked Beth seriously when they left the table.

Aunt Alida laughed. “Frieda has a costume for you that came home last
night; you are to wear that,” she said. “Don’t be alarmed when you see
it about looking conspicuous in the street. We shall go to the stable
in the car, though it isn’t far.”

Beth silently went away, returning her aunt’s significant smile with a
puzzled but affectionate one.

She found Frieda awaiting her in her room. On the chair before the
dressing table lay, of all things, a trig, diminutive riding habit of
dark blue, skirt, short coat, knowing little hard hat, gauntlet gloves
and all, while across the end of another table lay a silver-mounted
riding stock. There was no mistaking the size of these garments, for
whom they were intended, yet Beth stopped short and gasped, as she so
often did at the succession of wonders she was encountering daily.

“Oh, Frieda! Oh, Frieda, for me?” she cried. Then she had a second
thought, a prevention of possible disappointment. “Do they wear riding
habits in New York just to visit stables?” she asked.

“No, Miss Beth, I don’t think they do,” replied Frieda, trying not to
smile. “I think your uncle wishes you to ride. Miss Natalie, Miss Alys
and Master Dirk ride, you know.”

“Indeed I did know it, Frieda!” cried Beth. “If I might ride--but you
can’t, if you don’t know how, can you? And I’m sure there isn’t room to
learn here.”

“There are riding academies, Miss Beth. You can learn here much better
than you can anywhere else, because here’d be first-class teachers,”
said Frieda, ready to defend the city that had adopted her. “I think,
if you please, Miss Beth, you had better make a little haste. They want
to start quite soon.”

“You’ll have to do more even than usual to me, Frieda; I don’t know
one bit how to get ready in a riding habit,” said Beth.

Her eyes were flashing with joyous excitement. The thought that this
entrancing little habit might foretell her little self on the back of a
living horse was almost too much rapture to bear. She could not talk,
but silently watched Frieda gather her thick fair hair into a compact
braid and loop it at her neck with a broad blue ribbon. Then she
silently allowed her maid to divest her of her dainty morning gown and
slip over her groomed head the riding skirt that was so entirely the
correct sort that her head swam with the joy of it. A tailored little
vest preceded the perfect-fitting coat. Beth surveyed herself in the
glass, while she absent-mindedly pulled on the gauntlet riding gloves
which Frieda offered her.

“I’m so glad I could cry!” said Beth tremulously, tears actually in her
shining eyes. “I’m not going to believe I am going to ride for fear I
couldn’t bear it if I didn’t. When Janie and I used to put on grown-up
skirts and get up on the apple tree boughs to pretend to ride we never,
never could have dreamed one of us could ever look like this! It’s
exactly like the ladies in the pictures in the Waverley novels! I’m
going to remember it’s enough to have such a riding habit to visit the
stable in, and not mind if I don’t ever ride.”

This time Frieda allowed herself to laugh at her small lady.

“That would be a queer reason for your aunt to take such pains in
having this habit made, Miss Beth. You’ve no idea the pains she took,
stealing your gowns from me so the tailor shouldn’t make a mistake in
fitting and yet you know nothing of it,” she said.

“I shall never live long enough, nor be good enough, nor--nor
anything!--to show Aunt Alida how I love, love, adore her!” cried Beth.

She took her hat, set it on her smooth hair, caught her breath and
snatched the hat off again. She made a deep bow to herself in the long
glass, saluting with the hat in her hand, in quite a soldierly way.

“Hail, Elizabeth Bristead, my lady!” she said. “You are wonderful,
because you used to be nothing in all this world but little Beth! Come,
my lady; we’re going to ri--to visit the stable!” Whereupon with a
grand parting flourish of the hat, she set it once more upon her head
and ran out of the room, quite as though she were still “little Beth.”

“Oh, doesn’t she look fine!” cried Natalie as Beth appeared. The others
were assembled, waiting her. “Her face rising up out of that habit
looks like a pretty doll’s face over the top of a black Christmas
stocking.”

“Natalie, Natalie!” laughed her mother. “Does this mean a poet or
a painter? But you _are_ a satisfactory small thing in that habit,
Bethie!”

“I ought to be! I wish I could thank you,” cried Beth, giving her aunt
a hug that emphasized the wish.

“Come now, gushing ladies of assorted sizes, the car’s chugging away
outside impatiently,” Mr. Cortlandt protested.

So they all gathered up their coats and went out. They filled the
tonneau of this car, which Mr. Cortlandt kept for city use, so
completely that Alys groaned as she adjusted herself into as small a
wedge as she could and remarked that she was glad they were not going
far.

They rolled leisurely around two corners and ran along a few blocks on
an avenue, then turned into a cross street and, a short distance down
its length eastward, stopped.

“Is this--why, yes, it is a stable!” cried Beth. “I had been looking
for a regular barn.”

“Painted red, with a wooden cock, or a trotting horse on the roof to
tell which way the wind blew?” laughed her uncle. “Not here, my niece!
Here we go into an opening in a long line of brick, much as the cave
men used to go into caves to stable their horses and goats. And we go
up-stairs to visit the horses.”

Beth jumped out, swung by her uncle’s outstretched hands.

“It doesn’t matter; I’m sure it will be all right when we get there.
Everything here is different, but perfectly splendid,” Beth cried,
ready to be delighted, which is half the recipe for having a good time
anywhere.

The stablemen greeted Mr. Cortlandt with hearty liking shining through
their respectful salutations. One of them hailed Dirk with a slap on
the shoulder which Dirk returned by a friendly poke. Beth noticed that
Dirk seemed quite transformed by this visit. At home the girls led;
Dirk was, as he would have put it, “not in it,” but here in the stable
his sisters suddenly shrank into nobodies of importance and Dirk became
the one of the Cortlandt children who mattered.

“Your horse is all right, Master Dirk,” the man who slapped Dirk said.
“He may have had a little cold, but I think he was just playin’ off.
They’re foxy when they don’t want to go. ’T any rate there’s not wan
thing wrong wid him now.”

“Has Dirk a horse? A horse his very own?” Beth whispered, awestruck, to
Alys.

“We all three have,” said Alys. “Come on; we’re going to see them.”

Nothing that had happened so far had so completely overwhelmed Beth as
this statement. A horse! each of her young cousins owned a whole horse,
a live, entire horse! She followed her aunt and uncle up to the second
floor of this curious stable in a maze of wonder.

They turned to the right. There were ten airy box stalls, nearly
as big as small bedrooms in the New York flats which Beth had never
seen. Eight of these stalls were occupied. Beth did not recognize
her uncle’s carriage horses, because she had never seen them without
their harnesses, but she had no eyes for them, nor for the beautiful,
slender Virginian saddle horses which occupied five of the stalls.
All she could see was a pony in the eighth stall. He was not tied
and he whirled about and trotted up to the stall door when he heard
his visitors coming, lifting his head and sniffing the air with his
short, somewhat turned-up nose, hopeful of a treat, while his bright
eyes peered out under his heavy thatch of forelock. He was the color
of coffee-and-cream, with a long, thick tail and mane, almost brown.
He was not a Shetland pony of the smallest type, but a stocky little
fellow about four feet high and that is large for a pony, since four
inches more than that is the greatest height allowed them by the proper
authorities.

“Oh, what a dar-arling!” cried Beth. “Is that yours, Dirk? Will he
bite?”

She was at the pony’s head as she spoke, half timorously, wholly
ecstatically allowing herself to be sniffed for sweets.

“No; that one’s mine, that chestnut, and he’s the best of the bunch,”
replied Dirk, going over to his horse’s stall, yet keeping his eye on
Beth to see the fun.

“Well, maybe, but this pony! Yours, Alys?” persisted Beth.

“I thought, perhaps, you would ride him, Beth,” said Mr. Cortlandt
quietly.

“Me! I ride him? This angelic dumpling!” cried Beth beginning to
tremble.

“Isn’t that a new brand of dumpling?” inquired her uncle, as everybody
laughed. “Of course you’re to do as you choose about riding your own
pony. You may ride, or sell, or give him away, but I thought you’d like
to ride him. He is your own, to do with as you please.”

“Mine? My own! This--this---- Oh, Uncle Jim, Uncle Jim!” And Beth,
shaking like a leaf with the excessive, unbearable joy of this
discovery, put her head down on the lower and closed half of the stall
door and sobbed outright, while the pony nosed her, unheeded.

Only for a moment did Beth’s joy so overwhelm her. Then she sprang up,
frantically hugged her amused uncle, crushed her aunt in a tempestuous
embrace and spun Alys, who happened to be nearest her, in a wild dance
for an instant, much to that dignified young person’s horror, for the
stablemen were standing by greatly amused.

“My pony, my darling!” Beth cried, whirling over to the stall again.
But here caution checked her raptures. “What can I do to him? Will he
let me hug him?” she asked.

“I’ll take you into his stall, miss,” said the man with whom Dirk
had seemed to be on such friendly terms. “He’s used to me and I’ll
introjuice you like.”

He opened the stall door and Beth followed him within, to be introduced
to her own, her very own pony.

“You brought no sugar? Of course not, not knowin’ what you was comin’
to see! Here’s some then. I keep it handy in my coat-tail pockets, not
knowin’ whin I’ll be wantin’ it to reward one or another of the horses.
They’ll do much more for you, miss, if they know you’re like to be
givin’ them a bit of a treat now an’ thin.”

“Everybody will,” returned Beth gravely, to the man’s manifest delight.

She offered the pony a lump of sugar, at first with a hand somewhat
shaky and too ready to withdraw, but quite steady at the second lump.

“Oh, how beau-tifully mousy-velvet his nose feels!” cried Beth. “How
shall I ever go to sleep to-night? And how shall I ever, ever tell
Janie and Aunt Rebecca about him?”

“We must start now, Bethie,” said Mr. Cortlandt. “Tim will saddle the
pony; we must get off.”

“Get off? That’s exactly what I should do, Uncle Jim!” cried Beth. “You
don’t mean I am to ride right straight off, to-day? I don’t know how to
ride.”

“But the rest of us do! I shall keep you beside me, between Dirk and
me. The pony has been trained for a little girl’s use; he knows how to
be ridden, if you don’t know how to ride him. Saddle him, please, Tim,”
said Mr. Cortlandt.

“Yes, sir. Sure, all you have to do is to sit like he was a
rockin’-chair, keepin’ your lines so you do be feelin’ his mouth easy,
an’ your backbone straight, miss,” said Tim. “Come now, shake hands wid
your new mistress, Trump, an’ it’ll be out you go! Put your hand down,
miss, an’ bid him shake hands good-bye an’ he’ll do it.”

“Is his name Trump? I shall never call him anything but my dearie, my
darling! Shake hands, Trump, you blessedest thing, you!” Saying which
Beth held out her hand, palm uppermost, as Tim had bidden her, and
Trump obligingly raised his right forefoot and offered his clean little
hoof to be shaken, to the unspeakable rapture of his new owner.

Tim brought forth the most knowing looking, perfect miniature saddle
and bridle and put them on Trump, first brushing his already speckless
coat lest a bit of dust should escape his vigilance.

His assistants were saddling and bridling the other horses. If Beth had
been wise enough in horse lore she would have known that there were few
such beautiful creatures anywhere as the five horses making ready for
her relatives’ ride. But, small as he was, Trump filled her eye to the
exclusion of all else.

The horses were led down the incline which was their stairway while the
riders descended the steps. Mrs. Cortlandt discovered that Beth was
trembling and rightly construed it as not entirely caused by her joy.

“You’re not to be afraid, little Beth,” she said, putting her arm
around the little girl. “We would not for the world let you go into
danger. Trump will trot along with his big comrades as quietly as a
kitten. We tried him before we bought him; Tim’s little girl rode him
and she does not know how to ride. It is the easiest thing in the world
to sit on that broad, steady back of his and he will never play you a
trick.”

“I seem to be too--too much little Beth Bristead, still, to ride in New
York,” said Beth faintly.

“Bless your heart, dear, pretend you’re Miss Elizabeth Bristead, then!”
laughed Aunt Alida. “I think when you’re mounted confidence will come.
Besides, we are going over country roads just as soon as we can reach
them.”

Aunt Alida’s prophecy came true. When Beth was mounted on her
entrancing gift, with her lines in her gauntleted hand, her stock held
at precisely the correct angle, as she was bidden to hold it, and
especially when she found how easily Uncle Jim could reach down from
his splendid chestnut Virginian and touch Trump’s bridle, and when she
heard that rhythmic tread of horses’ feet and knew that her own, her
_own_ pony’s feet made part of it, horsemanship flowed into her like an
inspiration. To her uncle’s satisfaction and Dirk’s undisguised pride
she held herself bravely erect, her cheeks reddened with excitement,
her eyes were almost black, her lips parted with her rapid breathing
and she laughed aloud as, having gained a quiet avenue, the horses
began to trot and plucky little Trump kept up with them, in spite of
his difference in length of legs.

It was a wonderful ride, that first one! Though it was but the first of
many to come, each a rapture, none other ever could be that first one
of all, with Trump newly owned. Oh, to watch those quick little ears,
that tossing, ambitious little head and to know they were _her_ pony’s
ears, it was _her_ pony’s head! To feel the strong, warm body bearing
her along and to know that as long as life was in it that was to be its
duty! To pull off her glove and pat the sturdy neck, the thick mane,
and to know the whole wonderful little fellow was her Trump, her own,
Beth Bristead’s! Suddenly Beth lost her fear of moving in her saddle
and bent forward to lay her face on the mat of mane.

“Oh, Trump, my darling, my darlingest! How I love you! And you are
mine to have and to hold, for better or for worse, till death doth
us part! And you won’t die, my preciousest, because I’ll love you so
you can’t!” she whispered close to the ear that she believed moved in
response to her words and not because her breath tickled it.

They rode out into the country, the pretty, hilly country that lies
north of New York. It was a warm day. Winter had not set in, although
it was early December. The fields were brown, but the air was soft, and
though there were no birds, except the winter ones, the sunshine was so
warm that one felt as though a robin or a bluebird might sing from any
orchard that the horses trotted past.

“We are to lunch at a good place not far beyond here, Beth, and if you
are tired I’ll telephone back to have Tim come out in the car and take
Trump home for you,” Beth’s uncle said, after a long silence between
them.

“I’m not tired, Uncle Jim. I’m too happy to speak; that’s all,” said
Beth. “At first I was boiling over, but now I’ve boiled down quiet and
it’s all the stronger. It’s exactly like preserves--or soup.”

Mr. Cortlandt threw back his head to laugh as boyishly as Dirk, who
shouted at this speech.

Reluctantly Beth allowed Trump to be taken from her by a groom when
they had arrived at their destination for lunch. It seemed impossible
that any one they did not know could be trusted to feed and properly
care for a pony so small and so precious as Trump.

After a lunch that included all the things that young palates like
best and for which the riders were hungry enough to have enjoyed it if
it had been of the plainest sort, Beth and her uncle sat down in one
vast lounging chair in a glass-enclosed corner of the hotel piazza to
rest and chat while one of them smoked.

“I’d like to tell you about Frieda now, Uncle Jim, if you feel like
listening,” began Beth, reaching up a hand to caress the collar of her
uncle’s coat.

Mr. Cortlandt took the wandering hand prisoner in one of his and
stroked the fingers. “Who is Frieda, Bethie?” he asked.

“My maid,” said Beth, not yet lost to the strangeness of this
statement. “I’ve been wanting for days to tell you about her.”

“Better have your aunt hear it, if it’s about your maid,” said Mr.
Cortlandt.

“It isn’t exactly; it’s Liebchen,” said Beth.

“Better call your aunt over anyway, for you seem to be wandering in
your mind, Bethie,” laughed Mr. Cortlandt, and he beckoned his wife to
a chair beside his.

She came over from where she was sitting and took it.

“Beth has something to tell us about Frieda and Liebchen; I hope you
may know what she means, Alida,” Mr. Cortlandt said.

“Frieda did not mean to tell me, Aunt Alida,” Beth hastily made sure
of this explanation. “I was talking to her while she was dressing me
the other day and it all came out without her knowing it would. She
felt afraid it was wrong, or that some one would think it was.”

“But you know, Beth, that I am not an ogre,” suggested Aunt Alida. “So
tell me about it.”

“Frieda has a little sister nine years old. Her name is Lotta, but they
call her Liebchen. I think that is nice. I wonder if I could call Trump
Liebchen sometimes! She is an American, because she was born here,
but she is German Frieda’s full sister. She is a dreadful cripple;
she can only walk a few steps with crutches and she can’t walk at all
without them. When I asked Frieda if she couldn’t be cured she said it
would cost a great deal, if it could be done. I--I----It seems so sad,
doesn’t it, to know that a little girl, only nine years old, and so
sweet they call her Liebchen, is a dreadful cripple?” Beth ended her
story lamely; she could not bring herself to suggest to her uncle that
he might have Liebchen operated upon when she came face to face with
that issue.

“And you thought that we would see what could be done for the child, if
we knew about it?” asked Mrs. Cortlandt.

“You could do less for me, Aunt Alida!” cried Beth eagerly. “You are so
good to me, but I don’t need another earthly thing! Wouldn’t it be fine
if Liebchen could be cured?”

“Have you seen her, Beth?” asked Mr. Cortlandt.

“No, but I can imagine her, all pale and peaked, just lying there, and
poor, and only nine!” cried Beth eagerly.

“An operation is exceedingly expensive, Beth,” said Mr. Cortlandt
solemnly. “It would require a skilful surgeon, of course, and a
thousand dollars would hardly cover the cost, probably.”

“A thousand dollars! Oh, Uncle Jim! Isn’t that fearful! But if I could
do something--couldn’t I sell something, or----” She stopped, unable to
suggest anything practical.

“There is Trump,” said Mr. Cortlandt thoughtfully, watching Beth’s
face. He saw her turn red, then white and heard her catch her breath.
“I have just bought that pony. I know he would sell easily--would you
care to give up Trump to help that child, Beth?”

Beth turned her face to hide it in her uncle’s shoulder. She breathed
hard and fast. He heard her whisper: “‘The sacrifice of a broken heart
Thou wilt not despise.’ And it will break it. Uncle Jim,” she said
sitting up, a poor, white, strained looking Beth, “I will try, I will
try to--to give up Trump.”

“You’re the trump, my Bethikins!” cried Mr. Cortlandt just as Aunt
Alida exclaimed:

“James Cortlandt, you shall not torture my little Beth!”

“No, you won’t give up your Trump; he is yours for keeps! And, yes,
I will see what can be done for this little Liebchen, American sister
of your German maid! If she can be cured, cured she shall be! I’ve
three healthy youngsters of my own and a plump, sound little niece,
any of whom might have been crippled. And I’ve been entrusted with
so much money, Bethie, that even if it cost two thousand dollars to
cure that child it would not entail sacrifice on any of us to pay the
bill. As time goes on I shall want you to learn what all this power
means, Beth, my dear, and to help my girls and boy to use it wisely,
unselfishly. I think you are going to be exceedingly helpful in that
way, with your warm little heart and your sensible little head! We’ll
look into Liebchen’s case at once, Bethie, and I’m much obliged to you
for ferreting it out for Aunt Alida and me--aren’t we, Alida?”

“Of course we are, Jimmy dear!” cried Aunt Alida. “And it will count
for Beth that she would have given up her dear pony, if she had to,
rather than let Liebchen remain a cripple. So she will have a part in
two ways in the cure, if it ever is a cure.”

“Oh, what dear, dear uncles and aunts you are!” cried Beth, her eyes
wet with happy tears. “And why do people say that money is bad? It is
perfectly beautiful to go about doing things!”

“Poor and rich, it is all one, Bethie darling,” murmured Aunt Alida,
her lips touching the little girl’s hair as she leaned forward in
her chair to answer Beth. “It is the heart that makes poverty into
riches, or, when it is a hard heart, turns riches into the most ghastly
poverty.”

Beth rode home that afternoon blissfully, but seriously happy. Trump
was hers, the sacrifice was not required of her, and at every beat
of his small hoofs she loved him better. Yet she was thinking long
thoughts, for a child of eleven, and she saw the road of her coming
years stretching out before her, as the road she was riding stretched,
growing denser, fuller with every pace, but full of beautiful and
glorious possibilities. It led her into the world of grownupdom, where
there were to be great tasks to fulfil, great good to be done. And
little Beth, true to her great-aunt Rebecca’s old-fashioned, good
training, prayed in her heart that when the time came she might not
fail.




CHAPTER X

THE HOSPITAL ON THE HEIGHTS


Christmas has a way of jumping out at the world as if it had crouched
down low behind Thanksgiving Day and hidden. Then, suddenly, out
it pops crying: “Ah, ha! You didn’t know I was so near, did you?”
Whereupon everybody gets quite flustered and is set rushing and
hurrying upon shopping and working to make up for being caught unawares.

Christmas played this favorite trick upon the Cortlandt family this
year. He popped out upon Mrs. Cortlandt one morning at breakfast in the
sunny, rosy breakfast room which had so entranced Beth on the night of
her arrival.

“Mercy, Jim!” Mrs. Cortlandt cried as her husband opened his newspaper.
“I suppose I knew in a vague way that this was the tenth day of
December, but I haven’t taken in the fact in connection with Christmas!
Children, we must make out our lists to-day; there are but two little
weeks left! How has it happened?”

“I’ve made mine,” said Natalie, “and Alys has nearly finished hers. We
found out last night that it was dreadfully late.”

“Bethie, you never did real Christmas shopping, did you?” Mrs.
Cortlandt said. “It’s fun, no matter what the papers and magazines say
about it--though of course one does go to bed each night of the final
days feeling that she can’t possibly resume shopping in the morning!
But one always can! Have you made out your list of friends you will
remember?”

Beth shook her head. “No, Aunt Alida,” she said. “There’s the beautiful
miniature of me you’ve had made for Aunt Rebecca. I thought maybe I’d
make Aunt Rebecca a pincushion for her spare room; it’s shabby--I
mean the one she has now is--and I’d like to make something for Janie
and four other girls, only I don’t know what to make.” Beth’s brow
wrinkled; her eyes looked troubled. She, for one, had fully realized
that ten days of December had fled and that she did not know how to
prepare for Christmas in her new surroundings. What, for instance,
could she make for this, her recently discovered family? They all
had more than she could possibly have imagined. Beth’s fingers were
not skilful at fancy work, but buying gifts, and gifts for people so
endowed--she would never be rich enough to do this, even if she could
think of anything to buy.

“Are you old-fashioned about Christmas, too, Bethie? Do you feel that
you must put part of your own strength and time into your gifts, not
buy them?” asked Aunt Alida. “I have a suspicion that Janie and the
four others would rather have a pretty bit of jewelry to wear than
anything you could make. Girls all love rings and bangles and chains
and dangles.”

Uncle Jim had been listening behind the outspread page of his morning
_Sun_. Uncle Jim had a habit of hearing when one thought him otherwise
occupied, and of being interested in problems that one would not have
expected a grown man to understand. That was the main reason why Uncle
Jim was so lovable.

Now he emerged from his paper and looked around its edge at Aunt Alida.

“I believe I forgot to say that Beth has a Christmas account to draw
upon,” he said carelessly, as if Beth were not within hearing. “Santa
Claus deposited a hundred dollars in my hands for her. She will find
it in your care, Alida; I might not be near by when she wanted to draw
upon it. Santa said he did not approve of our buying gifts to be given
in Beth’s name; he said he wanted her to do her own deciding and buying
so he handed over to me for her use the sum I mention. I forgot to
speak of this before.”

“Oh, Uncle Jim!” cried Beth, as she always did at each new instance of
her uncle’s generous thought of her.

Words failed her, but the thrill in her voice, the quick flush and
dilated eyes took their place. There is no telling what Beth might
have done as the magnitude of her personal wealth sank into her
consciousness. A hundred dollars! That would be almost enough to paint
the old house at home, Beth thought; they had been wishing to have it
painted.

Just then Riggs emerged from behind the swinging door and offered Beth
the muffins with his unbending gravity. It prevented any outburst of
gratitude to her uncle on Beth’s part, for Riggs’ solemn dignity froze
Beth’s blood.

Mr. Cortlandt was satisfied with the look in Beth’s eyes as she mutely
thanked him. More and more he saw his little sister, Beth’s mother,
whose life had been so short, in the sweet face of the child she
had not lived to kiss a second time, and more and more he delighted
in giving Beth pleasure, as if he were reaching backward over the
years to make that lost Nannie happy. He nodded at Beth with entire
understanding and affection.

“Don’t forget that you are due at the hospital to-day,” he reminded
her. “Santa Claus mustn’t crowd out your crippled Liebchen, you know.”

“I am going to take Beth there at half-past ten,” said Aunt Alida.
“Send these letters to my room, Riggs, and have these destroyed.” She
indicated the two piles into which she had divided her morning mail as
she spoke. “Beth, dear, tell Frieda that after she has made you ready
she may make herself ready to go to the hospital. I will take her with
us on this first visit to her little sister.”

“She’ll be glad, Aunt Alida--I hope she will be glad after she gets
there!” added Beth. “They are going to tell us whether Liebchen can be
cured, aren’t they?”

“Yes. They operated yesterday afternoon. I am sure I hope the poor
child may walk again,” said Aunt Alida, rising from breakfast.
“Natalie, Alys, Dirk, I want a good report from the schoolroom to-day.
Beth is playing at education this winter, as she is playing at being a
visitor to Wonderland, but it must be real work for you, my dears.”

“Yes, mother,” said Alys dutifully. Alys was the one who was most
inclined to slip as easily as possible through lessons. But there was
a quality in this marvelous Aunt Alida’s gentleness that made her
children obey her when she issued one of her rare commands.

Beth ran up to her room, not waiting for the elevator and the others.
She opened the door of her room; its delicate beauty seemed to come
forward to meet her, as if she saw it for the first time. There was a
bunch of violets and ferns on a small teakwood table; their sweetness
filled the air, spring seemed to be flooding in at the windows through
the delicate net, past the folds of the blue velour curtains, on the
brilliant light of the cloudless sunshine of a New York early winter
morning.

“Oh, Frieda, what a lovely, lovely young room this is, all white and
blue!” cried Beth. “Where did the violets come from?”

“Miss Alys left them. She said you’d know why,” said Frieda.

Beth flushed with pleasure; she did know why. Alys had been a little
bit cross the night before and she and Beth came near having a small
quarrel. These violets were to say Alys was sorry.

“She’s dear, too!” cried Beth, in high satisfaction, meaning that
Natalie and Dirk were not her only lovable cousins, though so far she
had to try not to like them a great deal better than Alys.

“Aunt Alida said that you were to go with us to the hospital, Frieda.
You are to get ready after you have helped me dress. But I will dress
myself, so you can get ready now,” said Beth indistinctly, her face
buried in the violets.

“Mrs. Cortlandt is too kind!” cried Frieda tremulously. “I was
wondering how I ever could wait till you got home to hear about
Liebchen.”

“Especially as we may not come straight home,” added Beth. “Aunt Alida
is going to get ready for Christmas as fast as she can; she didn’t
know how near it was till she happened to see the newspaper date this
morning. If you will do my hair, Frieda, I can go on dressing alone. I
do wonder what Aunt Rebecca would have said if I had had to have help
getting dressed at home!” Frieda threw Beth’s dressing scarf over her
shoulders as the little girl seated herself before the dressing table.
Beth adjusted the pale blue ribbons that tied the neck and sleeves with
the satisfaction this dainty garment always inspired.

Frieda shook out the fly-away masses of Beth’s pretty hair with much
the same satisfaction that Beth felt in the filmy scarf. Beth’s hair
was growing beautiful under her maid’s skilful treatment and Frieda
liked nothing so much as adorning Beth. She had lost her heart to her
little lady at their first meeting and, since Beth had tried to help
Liebchen, Frieda’s love for her was with difficulty kept within the
bounds of a maid’s relation to her charge--not that Beth would have
minded if it overstepped those bounds!

“When I was in Germany, Miss Beth, the young countess I served had
hair much like your own, but I truly believe by spring yours will be
handsomer than hers was,” said Frieda, holding the golden strands
toward the light.

“A countess! Frieda, honest?” cried Beth deeply impressed. “I thought
you were only a little girl when you left Germany.”

“I went back to an aunt to be taught a lady’s maid’s work, Miss Beth,”
said Frieda. “And my aunt got me into the service of the Herr Graf von
Witzleben, to attend the young Grafin Elise. I was glad to come back to
New York, Miss Beth. But she had beautiful hair, Grafin Elise. I mean
to make yours handsomer.”

Beth sighed, a long breath of emotion. “I’ve read about earls and
countesses all my life and I’ve seen pictures of them going around with
coronets and long velvet gowns, in ballads and English history, but I
never, never in all this world expected to have some one do my hair and
brush it till it was better than the beautiful hair of a real, live
countess, whose hair she had brushed before mine! Frieda, there isn’t
a single thing, not one single thing, I honestly believe, that is in a
story-book that doesn’t come out of it and get into my true story this
winter! Nor in fairy stories, either. When I go back home again I’m
pretty near sure I won’t know whether I was a real girl this winter, or
one I read about.”

For once Frieda permitted herself to laugh outright.

“There couldn’t be a story too good for you, Miss Beth dear,” she
said. “And as to noble ladies in Europe they’re not so much different.
A fine lady is a fine lady; if you call her just ‘Miss’ and she’s an
American, or if you call her ‘my lady’ and she’s something else. She’s
only a lady all the same and it makes nothing out what you call her.
Mrs. Cortlandt is a far grander lady to my thinking than the cross
mother of my little Lady Elise over there, not to speak of how handsome
the one is and how awful plain the other was. It’s likely there’ll be
some nobility from Europe dining with your aunt this winter; they’re
often over, and you’ll see lords and ladies are just like Mister and
Missuses.”

“Then I’d rather not see them,” said Beth decidedly. “I should not want
to stop thinking a noble earl was above a man. Only I do think Uncle
Jim could be a king and not be one bit more splendid than he is as his
regular self.”

Beth, her hair in perfect order, insisted upon being allowed to
finish her toilette unaided while Frieda made herself ready for their
expedition. The result was that young mistress and maid were ready
at the same time. Beth ran down to her aunt’s room to report herself
dressed and Frieda repaired to the maids’ sitting-room to wait till she
should be called.

Beth found Anna Mary folding a soft pink wrapper and packing it into
a suit-case in which already lay lace-trimmed white garments and some
attractive looking books. Anna Mary’s face expressed grim disapproval,
but in reality she had eagerly sorted out these gifts for Liebchen and
she felt pleasure in making them ready to go to her.

Aunt Alida gathered up her splendid furs, nestling her chin into their
cloudy softness as she smiled over them at Beth.

“I have had Anna Mary get together some outgrown garments which
belonged to Alys,” she said. “They should be nearly the right size for
Frieda’s little sister. And the girls selected a few of their fairy
tales and a story they thought Liebchen would enjoy. Mrs. Hodgman is
having a basket of fruit and jellies made ready. Shall we go now, Beth
dear?”

“I’m ready, Aunt Alida, and Frieda came down when I did. How lovely
it is, Aunt Alida, to look the way you do in those furs and yet be as
good as you are beautiful, taking things to the hospital!” cried Beth
sincerely.

Anna Mary looked up with a smile and Mrs. Cortlandt actually blushed.

“You funny little Beth,” she cried. “Do you think it proves goodness to
like to give pleasure to a sick child? A Hottentot would want to.”

“You’re not very Hottentotish,” remarked Beth, following her aunt out
of the room, while Anna Mary brought up the rear with the suit-case.

In the hall below they found Mrs. Hodgman waiting with a maid in
charge of a basket that in itself was as refreshing as an orchard;
green and white it was, made of shining braided straw, with a big tonic
red bow triumphing on its handle.

“The car is at the door, Mrs. Cortlandt,” said Mrs. Hodgman. “Kitty,
you may set the basket in the car and then call Frieda. I have grapes
and oranges, Mrs. Cortlandt, and several glasses of jellies and
preserves, lemons, in case the child is feverish, figs--I can’t recall
precisely all that was put into the basket. Here are the flowers you
ordered for Miss Beth to take.”

“I am sure the basket holds all that it possibly can of the wisest
selection, Mrs. Hodgman,” said Aunt Alida, with the smile that made
every one who served her feel rewarded. “Here is Frieda. Good-morning,
Frieda. Don’t look so anxious, child; I am sure we are to hear the best
of tidings. Come, my Bethie.”

They repaired to the car, the chauffeur held the door open and arranged
the robes, while Anna Mary gave a touch to Mrs. Cortlandt’s furs that
was not needed and which showed that austere person concealed affection
for her mistress under her severity. With less noise and fuss than a
car that held itself less proudly would have made, they got under way
and glided smoothly over the asphalt, up the avenue.

“Take the park to a Hundred and Tenth Street, Léon,” Mrs. Cortlandt
ordered the chauffeur, catching the gleam in Beth’s eyes as she looked
over the bordering wall of the park at the trees and the sunny malls
with the prettiest children in the world romping down them.

Léon Charette obediently turned in at the entrance gate and they
slowly made their way northward, one of a procession of cars and
carriages going in the same direction, though not in such numbers as
would be out later in that glorious day.

Beth could hardly sit still; the splendors of human beings, big and
little, of cars, above all the perfect horses and the beauty of the
park had not grown familiar to her. Central Park was like an enchanted
forest of her wonder tales; it gathered up romance, poetry, the Field
of the Cloth of Gold and fairy revels, and made them visible to her;
made her even a part of them.

“I never, never can make Janie understand how it looks,” Beth sighed,
out of a long silence.

“You must have your Janie here for a visit another winter,” laughed
Aunt Alida.

Beth thanked her with a look, but did not reply. She pondered this
suggestion for a long time. “Another winter!” Did Aunt Alida expect
her to spend another winter in this new world? What would Aunt Rebecca
say to that? And poor Aunt Rebecca, alone in the old house! Was Beth a
heartless child to let her pulses leap and her breath come quick at the
thought of coming back to this enchanted life?

“I’m pretty sure I should be homesick after I had time; you do like
things you have first, even if they aren’t very likable,” Beth said,
unexpectedly to herself, aloud.

Aunt Alida laughed again; she seemed to guess Beth’s train of thought.

“And some of us manage to like things because we ought to, but not
many of us, and it is not a genuine singing-in-the-heart liking when we
do!” she said.

“No, it isn’t,” agreed Beth gravely. “It keeps quiet. I guess it takes
all its breath to be a liking at all, so it can’t sing.”

The car turned out of the park, westward, at the uppermost gate. It
came into a broad street through which one caught a glimpse of heights
that Beth had not seen before, crowned by a great cathedral and a
building which Aunt Alida pointed out.

“There is the hospital, Beth,” she said. “That is our destination.”

“It looks kind and not in the least sorry,” said Beth.

At the hospital Mrs. Cortlandt led the way into the entrance hall. Léon
carried in the basket, Frieda took the suit-case. An attendant came
forward and, when Mrs. Cortlandt explained her errand, ushered them
into a waiting-room and disappeared. In a short time they were bidden
to follow a pleasant-faced young woman, in a uniform and cap, to see
Liebchen.

“She is in a remarkably satisfactory condition,” smiled the nurse,
looking at Frieda, divining that she was chiefly concerned in this
report. “It is too soon to tell how much has been accomplished by the
operation, but the child is doing remarkably well.”

Frieda caught Beth’s hand without knowing that she did so, and Beth
returned its pressure. When big things arrive, little things, like
differences in station, disappear like wax in heat.

Mr. Cortlandt had taken a room for Liebchen. When the door opened Beth
saw at once that it was a pleasant room, sunny and attractive, though
plain and white. On the bed lay a child, pale and thin, but with eyes
alight as she watched for the opening of the door. She was a decidedly
pretty child, but there was something so sweet in her face that one
thought more of its lovableness than of its prettiness.

“Oh, meine Frieda!” cried Liebchen holding out her hands; her arms she
could not move.

“Liebchen!” cried Frieda, and kissed the little creature with all her
heart. “And here is Mrs. Cortlandt who is doing it all for you, kleine
Liebchen. And Miss Beth,” added Frieda.

Liebchen smiled shyly, but with eyes warm with love. “I should say
thank you, only it gives no big enough way to say it,” Liebchen said
softly.

“Frieda, help Beth open our budgets, please,” cried Aunt Alida, nodding
at the child and rightly guessing that their baskets would further
acquaintance.

Beth had the covering Japanese napkins off the basket in a twinkling.
In no time at all Liebchen’s room looked like a creditable pantry;
fruit and glasses of good things adorned the dresser and table and
window sill, while Liebchen’s nurse looked on with her face quite shut
up with smiles.

“I do so like to take care of a child whose case allows dainties!” she
cried.

Liebchen was overcome when the contents of the suit-case, the fine
night-gowns, the lacy skirts, the soft wrapper, like a great rose,
overflowed on bed and chairs.

“Oh, my, oh, my, oh, my!” cried Liebchen. “It won’t be enough for me to
walk; I’ll have to dance when I’m up once!”

“You may dance, little Liebchen; if you can walk you can dance!” cried
Mrs. Cortlandt. “Frieda, you are to stay with Liebchen until the nurse
says you must go. Miss Beth will not be at home for some hours, so you
are welcome to stay. I am going to ask that my little niece be shown
the wards, hastily, for we have scant time, but she has never seen a
hospital. Do you think we may go through a ward or two?” she added to
the nurse.

“Surely. I will ring for an attendant,” said the nurse, carrying out
her intention.

Beth went over and bent down to Liebchen. “You’re a dear and I know you
will run like the other kind of a deer soon. And I’m so glad, you don’t
know!”

Liebchen put a hand on each of Beth’s cheeks to draw her face closer
and kiss it. “I love you, love you!” she whispered. “Frieda told me I
should, but you are a million times prettier and nicer than I thought
you were. If I get able to walk do you s’pose you’d let me come and
button you up the back some day, ’stead of Frieda?”

Beth laughed. “We’ll do something better than that!” she cried,
not knowing what it would be, but full of undefined intentions for
Liebchen’s future gladness. “Good-bye, Liebchen! It’s such a nice name,
only you can’t say dear, or anything with it, because it’s that itself!
Maybe I can come again, but anyway you will come to see me and that’s
better.”

She waved her hand back as she stood in the doorway. Of all the
happiness she had tasted in her life Beth had never had a sip of
anything so sweet as the thought that she had brought about Liebchen’s
chance to get well. And, besides, it was delightful to feel that
Liebchen was such a _little_ girl regarded from the summit of Beth’s
additional two years!

Under the guidance of a hospital attendant Beth followed her aunt into
one of the great public wards of the hospital. It was not visiting day
nor hour, but Mrs. James Cortlandt was a privileged person, as Beth
discovered. She did not know then, but later on learned that her uncle
was a large contributor to this hospital and that her beautiful aunt’s
father had been one of its founders.

The ward was wide and long, marvelously clean, with its white plaster
walls and row upon row of narrow white iron beds. But Beth walked
silently down its length, and, after a few steps, slipped her hand into
Aunt Alida’s. The patients on the beds looked comfortable, but there
were so many of them and most of the faces were worn, as if the pain
that brought them hither was only a small part of suffering patiently
borne. One or two of the beds had screens around them. Beth wondered
why, for she saw that Aunt Alida tried to withdraw her attention from
them. She guessed that within the screens were worse cases than those
allowed to lie in the sunshine of the undivided ward.

At last the visit was over. Beth drew a breath of relief as they came
down into the entrance hall. In the car she snuggled close to Aunt
Alida and slipped a hand into her roomy muff.

“Didn’t you like to see the hospital, Bethie?” asked Aunt Alida.

“It is sad, don’t you think so?” said Beth. “Liebchen was all happy; so
was her room. But so many, so dreadfully many, all sick at once! And
lots more we didn’t see! All in rows, sort of like ears of corn. It
seems awful to be sick in a row like that!”

“That isn’t the way to look at it, Bethie,” said Mrs. Cortlandt,
succeeding in stifling a laugh. “If these people had not a bed in a
hospital row, where do you suppose they would be ill? Many of them
in homes far more crowded than a row, without order or cleanliness,
without any one who understood nursing, without the implements of
nursing. Some of them would not have any home to be sick in, not even
the crowded tenement room. The hospital is not a sad place; it is a
cheerful place. Since there is sickness and suffering, the one comfort
is that the hospital gives the poor a chance to get well again. The
ward is bright and sunny. I’m always thankful there are hospitals when
I visit one. Try to see the glad side of things, not the sad side, my
Beth!”

“Yes, Aunt Alida, I do. Only that made me think of that psalm I
learned by heart last: ‘A thousand shall fall at thy side, and ten
thousand at thy right hand.’ I felt as if all those little beds were
pavements and I was walking on people fallen on them, ‘at my side and
at my right hand,’ don’t you know? And it does smell perfectly awfully
strong of carbolic!” Beth ended with a shudder.

“Don’t you like carbolic, Beth? I don’t mind it; it is so clean!”
laughed Mrs. Cortlandt. “Say to yourself: ‘I don’t like carbolic, but
neither do all those wicked little harm-working germs!’ Dear Beth, the
main thing to think of when you see any form of suffering is what a
blessed thing it is that mankind has been taught to be merciful, and to
wonder what you can do to help the sadder side of the world.”

“Just as you do!” cried Beth with a closer snuggle. “Only to think that
Aunt Rebecca was afraid I’d be spoiled if she let me come to New York
where you were rich and worldly!”

This time Mrs. Cortlandt did not try to keep back her laughter; it
rang out girlishly. “You funny little Beth, there are two ways to love
the world. One is to take all it can give you and pay no debt to it,
but to live so selfishly and heartlessly, so wickedly, in all sorts of
ways, that you help to make it a worse world than you found it. And
the other is to take its gifts gratefully and try to repay them, and
live so kindly, so lovingly, so purely that you leave the world when
you die, a trifle better than when you came into it. And people with a
little money can do either of these things as well as richer people.
Don’t you see, dear, that worldliness and other-worldliness are in each
heart, not in a safe deposit vault?” said dear Aunt Alida.

“Of course I see, Aunt Alida! I shouldn’t wonder if people were
worldlier when they hadn’t much world and wanted it, than when they’ve
lots of it,” said Beth.

“Harken to the philosopher Elizabeth!” laughed Aunt Alida. “‘Far-off
hills are green,’ chicken; I suspect that is often true. Now let us
discuss giving instead of having. Tell me your Christmas list and what
you mean to give each one on it. It is high time we were about our
Christmasing.”

“I don’t have to make a list, Aunt Alida. I can easily count up all I
want to give Christmas presents to; I did this morning, at breakfast.
Only there are Natalie, Alys and Dirk; I couldn’t put them in when they
were there. And I never could think of a quarter of what they have, so
I’m sure I’ll never be able to think of one thing they haven’t! I might
just as well try to think of something for the Queen as for them! I was
wondering if you could tell me, Aunt Alida?” suggested Beth.

“Alys asked me to get her a certain bangle. I’ll leave it for you to
get, if you like it, Beth. And Dirk wants a fountain pen ‘that will
fount,’ as he says. Natalie--what was it Natalie spoke of the other
day? A little hanging model of a Grecian lamp. She wants it to burn all
night, instead of electricity or gas. Your eldest cousin is reaching
the æsthetic age, Bethie! How would those suggestions please you? It is
such a comfort to know what a person wants! I was going to fulfil these
desires of the children’s, but I’ll hand them over to you, if you like.
We are on our way to the shopping district; you shall see the lamp and
the bangle,” said Mrs. Cortlandt, throwing herself into Beth’s plans
just as heartily as she lent herself to more important things.

Beth felt this and allowed herself to hug her aunt, albeit they were
driving slowly down the western side of the park and emotions are not
ordinarily displayed in the cars and carriages there.

“Aunt Alida, you are perfectly angelically darling!” Beth declared.
“You never seem to think anything doesn’t matter, and you never have
one bit a there-go-along-and-play, child, and-don’t-bother-me way! You
don’t even think it.”

“Beth, child, how could I think all that? There aren’t enough hyphens
in my mind to string so many words together in my thoughts!” cried Aunt
Alida. And, quite unashamed, she hugged Beth back again.




CHAPTER XI

KRIS KRINGLE’S JINGLES


“It’s funny,” said Beth thoughtfully. “New York seemed to be doing all
sorts of things when I came, and till now, and now it doesn’t seem to
be doing anything else but get ready for Christmas.”

“Those are not really automobile horns you hear; they are Kris
Kringle’s jingles!” laughed Natalie, pausing with the slender tip of
her small screw pencil on her lip.

“What did Helen Van Voort send us last year, Nat?” asked Alys. Her brow
was drawn by a vertical line of puzzle and her voice sounded worried.
“I can’t remember whether she joined the C. C. C. or not, so I can’t
tell whether to put her in the much or little column.”

“She sent us each a flower pin, don’t you remember? You liked mine
better than yours. They were good ones. She belongs in the muchies,”
replied Natalie.

Beth looked her curiosity over this cryptic conversation. Natalie saw
the question in her eyes and laughed again.

“The C. C. C.’s are a club of girls. The three C’s stand for
Commonsense Christmas Contributions. I named it. It means that the
members will not go above a dollar in buying Christmas presents. Some
of the girls joined and some didn’t. I’ll tell you one thing: it sounds
all right, and we did it because there is such a crowd of girls whom we
all know that it runs up to a fearful sum to buy decent things for each
one! Besides we know a few who are really nicer girls, come from better
families, than some of the richer ones, yet who haven’t enough to spend
to afford fine gifts all around. But you have to work so hard to think
up things for a dollar, and then spend so much time chasing around
shops to get them, that you really might as well spend more than a
dollar--it costs more than money to get through. Alys and I gave it up;
some of the girls hold on. It’s terrible to try to remember which are
Three C’s and which aren’t! You must send little gifts to the members,
of course, or they’ll be disgusted that you got something expensive for
them, when you’re supposed to know they’re C’s.” Natalie reached the
end of this lengthy explanation with relief.

“But you have a long list!” cried Beth, glancing at the pad on which
Natalie had been setting down names and at its counterpart on Alys’s
knee. Only in a few cases had there been an article written down after
a name and of these several had an interrogation mark after them,
showing that these articles had not been finally decided upon.

“About seventy-five, not counting the family and the servants!” cried
Alys fretfully.

“But at a dollar apiece--would that be little to spend for Christmas?”
asked Beth.

“Tell us about your Christmases, little Cozbeth,” said Natalie gently.

“At home?” asked Beth, flushing. “Well, there aren’t any big stores in
town. Some people send to Boston for their presents; lots of people buy
from catalogues. Of course we have a Sunday-school celebration. Aunt
Rebecca mostly gives me sensible things, things I’d have to have some
time. Janie and I----” Beth stopped. She found it hard to describe the
little gifts that she and Janie made each other with those long lists
lying under her eyes upon her cousins’ knees. For the first time since
she had really known them, she felt half afraid of Natalie and Alys.

“Janie and you got each other some nice little thing that you each
knew the other wanted, or else made something,” Natalie said, with her
mother’s tactful kindness. “That’s the best way to keep Christmas, but
you can’t help doing as Romans do when you’re in Rome. Did you decide
on everything you were going to get, Beth?”

Beth shook her head. “There aren’t many people I know,” she said,
holding up a sheet of paper. “Janie and Daisy and Nell and Edith
and May and Ruth--that’s all the girls. I’m going to subscribe for
magazines for Aunt Rebecca; she’s crazy to read and she has used up
’most everything in the Public Library. I put down some sensible things
for some people who haven’t any money. And I’m going to buy a lovely
rose pink dress for Miriam Gaines. She’s a cripple from scarlet fever,
but she’s young and I’m pretty sure she’d love a pink dress. People
will all ask her why I ever in this world got her that, why I didn’t
buy her a dark wrapper that would be useful. But I’m going to get a
sort of dancing dress, ready made, as rose colored as it can be, and
I sort of know Miriam will have a fit over it. I believe she’ll think
she’s going to get well, else such a dress wouldn’t come for her; I
can see her just living on it! And on Fourth of July, or days like
that, I guess she’ll get her mother to put it on her. I think Christmas
presents ought to be lovely, useless things that make you think things
like fairy tales, even if they never come true. It seems to match Santa
Claus stories better than sensible things do. Maybe they are useful
things, if they make people happy.”

“Where could you have learned such heart wisdom, my Beth?” asked Mrs.
Cortlandt. She had come in quietly behind Beth and her voice close
beside her chair made the little girl jump. “That’s the trouble with
this campaign for useful Christmas gifts; people test usefulness by the
sense of touch. If you three lassies are ready, we’ll go shopping.”

“We’ll never be ready, mama,” sighed Alys. “We may as well start out
and get what we know we want; it will take nearly every day from now
on, anyway.”

Beth’s eyes dilated, then she looked a little cast down. “It wouldn’t
take long to get my things, but I’d be glad to have them in the house a
while to gloat over them,” she said.

Mrs. Cortlandt laughed, as she always laughed at Beth’s funny
seriousness.

“Here is half of your Christmas spending money,” she said,
straightening Beth’s hair ribbon by way of a caress. “Your uncle left
me the hundred for you, but I brought you only half; you will have to
shop more than once.”

“Half!” cried Beth, turning pale at the thought of being responsible
for such a sum. “Fifty dollars? Oh, Aunt Alida, you’d better let me
leave almost all of that here! Aunt Rebecca carries large sums like
that in the waist of her dress when she goes to Boston to shop--she
doesn’t often go! But I’d not have any place to carry it safely,
because I button up in the back and I’d never be able to get it out.”

At this speech Natalie and Alys collapsed and Aunt Alida fairly shook
Beth in a funny ecstasy of enjoyment of her.

“Uncle Jim was quite right: you are an Anomaly and a Survival, you
little animate New England primer!” she cried. “Keep your purse hand
in your muff till you are ready to use the money, and touch your
selections with one hand only! Meet me down-stairs in half an hour,
lassies.”

Aunt Alida hurried away with this injunction and Beth seized the
opportunity to consult her cousins in regard to a gift for her, just as
she had consulted Aunt Alida for them.

“Oh, no one ever knows what to get for mama,” cried Alys. “Lots of
her friends ask us, but we never know. We three are going to have our
pictures taken for her and, if we can, we are going to get father to
sit, too. That would really please her, for there is no picture of him,
except dreadful snapshot things, since we were babies. You have your
picture taken with ours and we’ll get them framed prettily. You have
yours alone, and then in a group with Dirk and us, and help us coax
father to sit, and that will be the best thing you could give mama.”

“Isn’t that a little--sort of conceited? In me, I mean. Not you,
because of course she’d love a picture of her own children. But
wouldn’t it be queer in me to think she’d rather have my picture
than--well, anything else?” asked Beth.

“Now, Bethie, don’t pretend you don’t know that mama loves you!” cried
Natalie.

“Yes, better than our other cousins, her own nieces and nephews.
She’d love a nice picture of you. There’s a splendid place on the
avenue where we’re going; real portrait pictures they take,” Alys
chimed in. “Oh, and why not send one to all your old friends in
Massachusetts--send it instead of a Christmas card, to tell them where
your present comes from! And two or three different ones to your friend
Janie.”

“Alys has an idea, Beth!” added Natalie, refraining from suggesting
what a hole this would make in Beth’s Christmas allowance and privately
resolving to get her father to pay so much toward these pictures that
Beth should never know what their actual cost had been.

“Well,” Beth submitted to their wisdom. “And for Uncle Jim? Is there
anything on earth he wants? I thought I’d like to make him and your
mother something.”

“Make father a case to carry his traveling slippers in,” said Natalie
promptly. “You can easily do it; just an oblong with a flap; he will
put it in his bag when he goes away for a night. It is a case to keep
the slippers from touching other things--a white tie, for instance!
If we don’t get ready we shall keep mama waiting. She always allows
us enough time and then has no mercy on us for being behindhand. Mama
demands punctuality from us in all our engagements.”

“Aunt Rebecca always says ‘procrastination is the thief of time’ and
that if I get into the habit of being late I’ll be doubly dishonest,
stealing my own time and other people’s too. It’s really strange how
much alike Aunt Alida and Aunt Rebecca are in their way of seeing
things, though they certainly aren’t one bit alike any other way, and
Aunt Rebecca never would believe they could be alike at all,” said Beth
scrambling her papers and pencil together and hastening off to prepare
for her first extensive shopping on her own account.

It was noon when the Cortlandt car joined the line of its fellows
skirmishing in and out before the doors of the great shops in and
around Thirty-fourth Street. It deposited its four occupants at a vast
plate glass doorway and disappeared to allow its successor to come up
and to wait until it should be summoned to resume its passengers.

With what seemed to Beth like superhuman swiftness Natalie and Alys
selected the gifts upon which they had already determined, said
briefly: “Charged and sent,” and went on to the next purchase.

After a while Beth, too, woke up from her maze and decided upon her
gifts for the girls at home. She found herself in possession of four
bangles, almost alike, slender golden hoops, for the four girls who
stood in the second tier of friendship toward her; these bangles were
to be marked with the girls’ initials and sent to her uncle’s later,
each in an alluring square box with white velvet lining.

She also found that she had bought for Janie an exquisite little circle
brooch, set with sapphires, which, Beth foresaw, would match Janie’s
eyes, and which Beth found appropriate, as well as satisfactory,
for the clerk assured her that brooches of this sort were called
“Friendship circles,” and that their endlessness was an emblem of true
friendship, such as she knew hers and Janie’s would prove to be.

Aunt Alida, too, bought in this shop, so glorified by great spaces,
fine bronzes, glittering gems, that it seemed ridiculous to speak of
it as a shop. She bought swiftly and decidedly, at times secretly, so
that the lynx-eyed girls did not know what it was that she had quickly
ordered “charged and sent.” But she selected many things that Beth did
see, with awe and admiration. Trinkets “for her girls’ other cousins,”
she said, for her friends, silver mesh purses, beautiful things in
leather and glass, as well as in gold, silver and jewels.

Beth recalled the three little shops at home, the gimcracks that were
not pretty, nor useful, which appeared in them at this season, Janie’s
and her own shopping in them, their long discussions over articles that
cost about a quarter, or half, of a dollar, for which they had long
saved their spending money! She deliberately pricked herself with the
pin of Janie’s brooch to see if she were really here in the body, not
dreaming in her small iron bed, in that far-off Massachusetts chamber
which was hers.

Natalie saw her do this and demanded the reason for it.

“Nothing,” said Beth blushing. “Have you other cousins, Natalie? I
haven’t any but you. It seems queer that you have any but me.”

“Mother’s sister’s boys and her brother’s girls,” replied Natalie. “The
girls are in California; Aunt Justine is not well. The boys are living
in Washington, the state. Uncle Hubert wanted them to study scientific
agriculture, so he bought a big farm there. I suppose they will come
east again. Of course you haven’t any cousins but us; father had no
other sister but your mother, no brother. Oh, I forgot there might be
Bristead cousins! Aren’t there?”

“No,” said Beth. “My father was the youngest of five children and the
other four died of diphtheria, all together, when he was a baby. It
must have been awful for their mother. Of course it kept me from any
Bristead cousins, too.”

“We will lunch now, my dears; it is high time,” Aunt Alida interposed
just then, opportunely, for Natalie hardly knew how to reply with
proper sympathy to this story whose tragedy seemed spent and impersonal
now.

Aunt Alida took her three to lunch at a place of the utmost perfection.
Beth was getting used to imposing restaurants and they no longer took
away her appetite. But the music of the small, but excellent orchestra
made eating difficult; Beth was helpless under the spell of good
music. Aunt Alida had chosen this place for its orchestra, knowing how
Beth would enjoy it; for her own part she preferred music and eating
separate.

“Is that three-quarter, or four-four time, Aunt Alida?” Beth asked
after a long silence.

“Six-eight, dear. Why? And I didn’t know you had been taught music,”
cried Aunt Alida.

“I was beginning to be taught; a new young lady came to live in our
town and she was teaching me. I hadn’t gone far. The reason I asked was
that I was trying to eat my roll in time and I couldn’t make my teeth
keep right with four-four counting. No wonder, if it was six-eight! I
didn’t have much in six-eight time, but I like it; it seems to go right
along, so smooth and nice,” said Beth.

And this speech caused Alys to choke so violently over her lunch that
it was a long while before she could stop coughing and eat again in any
time whatever.

“I think I shall send Anna Mary with you to do some of your shopping,
Beth,” said Aunt Alida. “She can take you to places where you can buy
your serviceable articles for the people at home who have, as you said,
‘no money,’ and where you can find the rosy evening gown at lower
prices than in this neighborhood. It will not matter if the dancing
gown is not the very last utterance of fashionable magnificence, will
it, dear?”

“No, indeed!” cried Beth. “I’ve been wondering if there weren’t any
places in New York where they kept bargains. I think a bargain evening
dress would be just the thing for a lame girl who wouldn’t ever wear
it, don’t you?”

“I really do,” smiled Aunt Alida. She laid a crisp bill on the salver
the waiter offered her and arose without waiting for him to return
with change. Nothing so impressed and distressed little Beth’s frugal
mind as the reckless way in which her aunt and uncle left change to be
gathered up by those who served them in public places.

“Now, girleens, no more shopping to-day!” announced Aunt Alida as they
entered the car. “I am going to a tea this afternoon and this evening
to the opera, so I must rest and dress for the tea. Natalie, you and
Alys and Beth had better ride; the afternoon is beautiful. I hope Dirk
may be found to join you. We’ll drive around by the stable and tell Tim
to be ready to go with you at--half-past three.” Aunt Alida consulted
the tiny watch on her wrist before mentioning the hour.

“That’s good! I’ve been wishing for Trump, Aunt Alida,” cried Beth.

“I’ve no doubt he wishes for you, or at least would like to go out,”
said Aunt Alida. “Beth, what else do you wish for? You are too big to
write letters to Santa Claus, so you must be big enough to consult on
your own Christmas presents.”

“Aunt Alida, there isn’t a thing, not one thing that I really want,”
declared Beth earnestly. “There are lots of things I see that I’d like
to have when I see them, but I see so many that I forget what they were
the next minute. I honestly believe I’d like a doll that was very, very
beautiful. I always thought there must be a perfectly lovely doll in
the world, not like any I ever saw. But I couldn’t play with her if I
had her, because when you get old for dolls they seem to stand off and
not play with you. I’m just crazy about them, but I don’t know what
to do with them the way I did. Janie could help me, but I couldn’t do
it alone. So I don’t need even the doll. It is just like ‘Hush, my
dear, lie still and slumber’; don’t you know? ‘All my wants are well
supplied.’ And they certainly are.”

“Couldn’t Alys and I play dolls with you?” asked Natalie.

Beth shook her head decidedly. “I don’t believe you could have played
dolls with me if you were Janie’s age; Janie’s not as old as I am,”
she said. She looked at Natalie and Alys’s charming costumes, at their
dawning young womanhood with penetrating eyes. “You are too far-off,”
she added. “Alys is farther off than Natalie, though she is younger.
You have too much. When you get bigger you have to want something in
order to love dolls. I can’t play with them, but I love to cuddle them.”

“So do I, Beth,” said Natalie.

Mrs. Cortlandt looked at Beth, wondering for the unnumbered time at the
thoughtfulness that this simple little girl sometimes displayed. When
it came to heart knowledge, Beth always seemed to understand profound
things that she could not possibly know.

“Yes, I guess you would like to cuddle them, Natalie,” said Beth,
regarding her oldest cousin attentively. “Your eyes look cuddly.”

Aunt Alida telephoned the stable after they reached home, to save time,
and sent the girls thither in the car after they had put on their
riding habits. Dirk proved to be at home and he joined the riding party.

Tim had been bidden to ride beside Beth who, though she had by
this time ridden several times in the park, was still lacking in
self-confidence. Another groom accompanied Natalie and Alys, who were
good riders, for such young ones, and who needed no more than an
attendant should anything go wrong.

“I can’t help being glad, Tim, that Trump is no taller,” said Beth, as
she and faithful Tim turned in at the park entrance in the rear of the
small cavalcade. “It would not be far to fall off, if I had to fall.”

“No, Miss Beth, and I’m suspectin’ that had something to do with Mr.
Cortlandt’s pickin’ the pony for you. That and his gentleness,” said
Tim. He had become utterly devoted to Beth since he had esquired her.
“She was that quaint and old-fashioned and sweet,” he told Mrs. Tim at
home.

“I thought it was, Tim. I’d be afraid on a real horse, but Trump is
like a footstool. He trots beautifully, though, doesn’t he? And he is
the sweetest thing! I’m afraid to begin to love him, because it will
be spring so soon and I’ll have to go home and leave him. But I don’t
have to _begin_ to love him, because I just worshiped him the moment I
saw---- What is that, Tim?” cried Beth sharply, interrupting herself.

“Sure it’s some kind of a to-do with a child,” replied Tim.

Tim on his horse and Beth on Trump hastened forward; the rest of the
party was already out of sight around a curve of the bridle path. A
small crowd had collected at a point a short distance ahead of Beth and
her escort; they saw the gray form of a tall park policeman dominating
it.

“I’ll have to run you in,” Beth heard the policeman say as she came up.

“Oh, what is it?” cried Beth, and a boy beside her explained that the
forlorn little girl, whom the policeman held by the arm in a state of
collapse, had been accused of snatching a lady’s purse and throwing it
into the shrubbery on the mall beyond the bridle path, intending to
find it later. But that the lady had felt the child’s touch and had
pursued her here, whither the small footpad had run to escape her.

“Oh, I’m sure she didn’t!” cried Beth, slipping from Trump’s back to
Tim’s horror and pushing her way over to the child. “You didn’t steal
the purse, did you?” she cried.

The child looked up into the anxious face, scarcely older than her
own, but far plumper, rosier and happier. She saw the pity in the sweet
blue eyes and her own dark ones filled with tears.

“No, miss; oh, no, miss!” cried the little creature. Her thin body
shook with sobs and she broke into passionate weeping, interrupted by
Italian words.

“Why, there’s a purse!” cried Beth. Her eyes had spied a mesh purse
dangling on the end of a long silver bar, held by a silver chain
around the neck of the child’s accuser. The bar sustained an immense
pillow muff. The muff nearly hid the purse, but its gleams chanced to
fall under Beth’s eyes as she looked at the excited woman, who was
eagerly clamoring for the arrest of the small robber and her immediate
deportation to the reformatory. “Is that the purse you lost?” cried
Beth.

The woman looked down, lifted the purse as if she suspected it of being
capable of further tricks, and detached it gingerly from the muff bar.

“It was twitched--I suppose the muff bar caught it----” muttered the
woman, and stopped, ashamed of her accusation and annoyed by the angry
murmurs of the knot of people which had collected.

The poor frightened child, who had been in danger of arrest, sank in a
pitiful heap of sobbing weakness on the ground, utterly unable to stand
when the relief from her danger brought its reaction.

“I’ll walk, Tim, and let her ride Trump; it isn’t far,” said Beth.
“Get on my pony, dear; he’s very low and very gentle; all you’ll have
to do is to sit on him. I can’t ride, but I never have a bit of trouble
staying on,” added Beth to the prostrate little victim.

“No, Miss Beth dear,” said Tim, inexpressibly touched and pleased. “I
wouldn’t dare let you walk home, in your habit, too; they’d sure be
blamin’ me. Here, boy; go call a taxi and there’ll be a quarter in it
for you,” added Tim to the boy who had explained the situation to Beth.
“Be quick with you!”

The boy ran off, open-mouthed with admiration for this little lady who
had appeared in time to effect such a rescue.

Natalie, Alys and Dirk rode back with their groom to find out what had
happened to Beth. When they heard the story Alys was half inclined to
be annoyed at the oddness of it, but Natalie beamed on unconventional
little Beth, and leaned over to pat Trump as a means to squeeze Beth’s
hand slyly.

“You are going to be a little Saint Elizabeth, doing something for the
unlucky ones all the time; I see that!” whispered Natalie.

“What a right all right you are, Beth Bristead!” cried Dirk, forgetting
his audience and speaking aloud.

“She surely is!” cried a red-faced old gentleman standing by. “And I’m
glad to learn her lovable little name.”

Beth was thankful when the messenger returned announcing that the
taxicab, which he had fetched, was waiting at the head of the next path
leading out from the bridle path to the drive.

“May I go with Dirk to see her off, Tim?” asked Beth.

“Sure; I’ll wait ye here,” replied Tim, already with Trump’s reins in
his left hand.

Beth and Dirk led the trembling little Italian-American to the cab,
escorted by a considerable proportion of the crowd. As they put her in
Dirk asked her name and address.

“Annunciata Carmaldo,” the child told them, and that her home was quite
across the city, in Second Avenue. She seemed to find the cab a species
of smelling salts, for she revived from her fainting condition and
began to sit up erect, even to assume small airs of importance, the
moment she took her place within it. She bridled behind the doors which
shut her in, her dark eyes peering over them, like a small seal in a
tank.

“Maybe we shall see you again some day,” said Beth, bidding her
good-bye. And, to her great embarrassment, the child leaned out and
kissed Beth’s hands, raising them to her brow with fervor of adoration,
while tears ran down her thin, pretty face, telling Beth of the
gratitude for which the small Italian lacked all English words.

“Now that,” said Beth emphatically to Dirk as the cab rolled away and
she and her cousin started back to their mounts, “that is what I call
an adventure!”

“Were you really going to put that little Italiano on your pony and
walk home, Beth?” asked Dirk, eyeing the little girl as if she were an
entirely new specimen.

“Yes, of course; why not?” said Beth.

Dirk looked at her again, slapped his leg and laughed.

“Well, if I ever!” he cried, not explaining to Beth’s eager questioning
what he meant.

That night Beth sat in her aunt’s room watching her made ready for
the opera. It was an unfailing delight to Beth to see her beautiful
aunt robed in her evening splendors, to watch the wonderful costumes
adjusted and the flashing jewels placed in her dusky hair and on her
white throat, scintillating among the laces on her breast.

Aunt Alida was to Beth the embodiment and illumination of all her
dreams, a sort of combination of a royal princess, a fairy queen and
a household goddess and mother whom she might worship, but must love.
It had become a habit with Beth, and, consequently, with her cousins
since she had come among them, to go to Mrs. Cortlandt’s room when she
was dressing for a great occasion to absorb her loveliness and do her
homage. Aunt Alida found no flattery that she received later in the
evening in the great world half as sweet as this admiration from her
children.

To-night Beth thought Aunt Alida had never been so beautiful--but she
thought that each night! Anna Mary fastened a tiara of diamonds on
her lady’s hair and clasped a long chain of perfect blue-white stones
around her throat.

“You look like Iris!” cried Beth, as she caught the rainbow colors that
flashed at her from the jewels.

“What do you know of Iris, small niece?” asked Uncle Jim, entering in
sequence to his knock on his wife’s door.

“I know she was the rainbow and so is Aunt Alida,” Beth answered. “You
look just as nice, in all that white linen front, as Aunt Alida does,
Uncle Jim, but men can only be fine and nice; they can’t be wonderful.”

“Dear me, no; I should never so much as attempt to be wonderful,
Bethie,” laughed Uncle Jim. “What’s this I hear about your wanting to
give your pony to a beggar maid, while you walked? Saint Martin divided
his cloak with a beggar; I don’t know which of the saints, if any, gave
up his undivided horse to one.”

“She wasn’t a beggar, Uncle Jim,” Beth set him right. “And it was only
while she was faint and had to get home. Was it wrong? Dirk roared
laughing at me, but he wouldn’t tell me why.”

“It’s an unlikely thing to happen in New York,” said Uncle Jim.

“In New York? Oh! It’s--I suppose it would be something like my wearing
the aprons here I used to wear at home?” Beth looked meditative.

“Do you like New York, Bethie?” asked her uncle, tipping up the
thoughtful face.

“I just love it!” cried Beth fervently. “I used to be sort of jealous
of it, in history, you know, its being settled before Massachusetts. I
had to remember it was settled by the Dutch, and that Massachusetts had
the Pilgrim Fathers to get over that 1614 date, when Plymouth was 1620.
But now I don’t mind at all; I’d just as lief. It’s such a splendid
place and it’s so good to me and I’m so happy here that I wouldn’t care
if it had been Lief Ericsson settled it in the year 1000!”

“That’s fine and generous of you, Elizabeth, and I thank you in New
York’s name! But after all it was settled by your Cortlandt ancestors,
so you needn’t mind,” said Uncle Jim.

“I don’t think I ever realized I had Cortlandt ancestors then,”
said Beth. She sprang up to hug him--carefully, because of his
easily-crushed expanse of linen--for she thought her last speech made
him look sorry.




CHAPTER XII

THE HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS


“It’s always nice when you begin,” said Alys.

The three girl cousins were gathered in Natalie’s room doing up
Christmas gifts. Rolls of white tissue paper, of crêpe paper figured
in glowing poinsettia and holly; yards and yards of Christmas ribbons,
white, with holly or poinsettia designs, or plain holly red; tufts
of jewelers’ cotton clinging to everything it should not touch and
leaving fuzzy white down behind it when it was removed; Christmas seals
of varied designs and Red Cross seals; piles of cards; higher piles
of holly boxes of all sorts and sizes; labels asking aimlessly that
something should not be “opened until Christmas,” all these things
covered the room “except the walls and ceiling,” as Beth had said.
She had added that it “was nice when we began,” showing that she was
getting a little tired of the work, and Alys had retorted that it is
“always nice when you begin.”

Beth had only a few packages to do up; they lay together, completed,
and now she was helping her cousins with what looked like their endless
task.

“It’s pretty hard to keep up the way you begin in anything,” said
Natalie thoughtfully disentangling the end of the last opened piece of
poinsettia ribbon from a roll of plain red. “It’s fun getting things
around and starting in, but you--one--get--gets so discouraged when
things are all around and mixed up!”

“I wouldn’t try to use two pronouns in one sentence, Nat; that is what
_I_ call mixed up,” laughed Alys. “Better stick to ‘you,’ if you start
with it, even if it isn’t so elegant. Well, all I know is my fingers
are turning into chop-sticks; they’re getting all stiff and queer tying
these little fiddling bows of narrow ribbon! Wouldn’t it be easy if
we could order Christmas presents sent right to the people from the
stores?”

“With price tags on and the shopping slip done up with them, instead of
a Christmas card?” suggested Natalie. “No, I don’t mind getting tired
doing this, because it adds at least as much again to the presents to
have them come done up so fascinatingly. I wouldn’t care for mine if
they came in brown paper, so I’m willing to work to make Christmas
nice. But I’m ready to own up that it’s the hardest job I ever have in
the whole year.”

“Mama won’t let us hand it over to any one else to do,” Alys explained
to Beth. “She says it isn’t the right idea at all to have the maids do
it. I suppose it isn’t.”

“No; I can see that,” said Beth. “It wouldn’t be so hard if we hadn’t
got everything out at once. It’s so--crazy!”

“Have to,” said Alys. “Else you’ll find you used your boxes wrong, or
used up all one kind of paper that you simply had to have for something
else.”

“I’ve got the worst job of all!” said Dirk, coming into the room,
followed by his mother. Dirk wrote so plain and good a hand that his
share of the Christmas preparations was to address the packages. In
return for which the girls did up his gifts for him. It is doubtful if
Dirk appreciated this; it would not have troubled him if he had handed
each of his boy friends a present, quite unadorned, with the brief
remark: “Here; that’s for you!”

“Not anything like through, are you, girls?” asked Mrs. Cortlandt.
“Don’t get too tired. If you can’t finish, Natalie may sleep in one of
the guest rooms, or with Alys, and you may leave everything as it is
when you stop for the day, and resume in the morning at the point you
leave off.”

“I wish Natalie would sleep with me!” cried Beth. “My presents are done
up, Aunt Alida. That pile, there.”

Aunt Alida had quick vision for shadows on young faces, quick ears for
tones in young voices. She thought that she detected wistfulness in
Beth’s face and voice then, and rightly interpreted it as a half wish
on Beth’s part that she had as many friends to make merry on Christmas
as her cousins had. And Aunt Alida never saw anything that she might
improve without at once trying to improve it. She had an inspiration
now.

“I wonder how it would do for Bethie to have a tree and invite the
guests to it?” Mrs. Cortlandt suggested.

“Beth! Why, she doesn’t know----” began Alys and stopped herself.

“No, I don’t know any one but the girls’ friends, the Tanagers and
Bluebirds, and those girls,” said Beth, finishing Alys’s sentence for
her.

“I don’t mean that sort of a tree, Beth! And you do know one girl whom
we don’t know at all--Annunciata Carmaldo, wasn’t she? And Liebchen is
rather especially your acquaintance,” said Aunt Alida, smiling down
on Beth. “I mean a tree for girls who may not have a Merry Christmas
without it. Suppose we have a fine big tree set up in--perhaps the
billiard room? And trim it and light it as well as we know how, and
let it be Beth’s tree, and let Beth issue the invitations! She can get
introductions to poor people through--let me see! I think Anna Mary
would help us splendidly; she is exceedingly good and charitable under
her glum exterior, and is constantly working for the poor herself. We
might let this tree be our only tree this year and for ourselves do
something else--a hunt for presents, or something of that sort. What do
you all say to giving Beth a Christmas party, a tree for children who
need happiness?”

“Fine, beautiful mother!” approved Natalie with a warm look in the dark
eyes which smiled at Mrs. Cortlandt.

“Say, wouldn’t that be great! Fun alive!” cried Dirk.

“I think it might be very nice indeed,” said Alys slowly.

Beth had risen, dropping all the Christmas materials which filled her
lap.

“Aunt Alida,” she said earnestly, her eyes moist, shining through
the rapturous tears, “all my life long I have thought how perfectly
beautiful it would be if I could do something like that! You read about
it in books, you know, how rich girls have trees, or something, for
poor children. I think I’d be so happy I couldn’t bear it to have a
tree like that! Do you think they could sing hymns around the tree? I
do love hymns, ’specially Christmas ones. It wouldn’t be my tree; it
would be all, every bit yours, but if you called it a little bit mine
I’d be so glad! It would be so much like Bethlehem, you see.”

“Gee!” exclaimed Dirk too surprised to help it. “Why?”

“Oh, I don’t know. All the poor shepherds, and bringing poor children
in, and--and ‘suffer little children,’ you know,” stammered Beth, too
embarrassed to put her thought into coherent words.

Mrs. Cortlandt drew Beth to her and kissed her with great tenderness.

“Little Elizabeth, are you going to be one of those who love, like your
namesake, the ‘sweet Saint,’ Elizabeth of Hungary? Dear heart, we will
have the tree and if you can give my children some of your sense of the
approach to Bethlehem it will be more than a merely Merry Christmas, my
precious little niece,” she said softly.

That afternoon the great tree was ordered. It was a beauty, so big
that the dealer who sold it had been fearful that it might not find a
purchaser.

Suddenly Beth found herself swept into the vortex of rapid, late
Christmas preparations on a mammoth scale. Aunt Alida insisted that all
possible decisions should be left to Beth.

Beth, at her aunt’s suggestion, asked Anna Mary to help her to select
the guests.

“Do I know any poor children, is it, Miss Beth?” cried Anna Mary. “Do
I not? Sure they do be no lack of them in a big city! I have a niece
that’s a Sister of Charity and there’ll be no trouble whatever in her
puttin’ us on the thrack of as many destitute little ones as we want. I
myself know five families this minyute which has thirty-five children
between ’em, all between three and fourteen years of age. And that’s a
good start for us.”

“Thirty-five! Five into thirty-five--that’s seven apiece, Anna Mary!
Isn’t that a lot?” cried Beth.

“They’re not divided up just evenly, Miss Beth; one family has nine and
one has but four. But sure it is a lot, and more than a lot, for there
isn’t enough to take care of the quarter of ’em in a way even plain
folks would call takin’ care of ’em,” said Anna Mary with feeling.

“Aunt Alida said about fifty would be right, but she said not to worry
if there were one or two children over. She doesn’t want to leave
out any we find, who really ought to come, just to keep to a certain
number,” Beth explained.

“I’m to go with you and the young ladies to the photographer’s.
Miss Natalie arranged it with her mother that we might have a while
too long, so we could go to the photographer’s unsuspected by Mrs.
Cortlandt. Then you and I are goin’ huntin’ for guests, Miss Beth. Mrs.
Cortlandt said I might take you to the children’s homes, if I was sure
there’d be no diseases for you to catch,” said Anna Mary.

“I had chicken pox--twice, Anna Mary, and whooping-cough and measles
when I was small, and last year I was a sight with mumps, so there
can’t be much for me to take. I’ll be ready in half an hour--you said,
half an hour, Anna Mary?” asked Beth.

“Half an hour, Miss Beth, if you please. And Miss Natalie said she
had picked out what you were to be photographed in; Frieda laid out
some frocks for her to choose between, and I have the one in the case
our young ladies are takin’. It’s a fine white one, Miss Beth, quite
simple, and most suited to you. Miss Natalie has wonderful taste for so
young a girl,” added Anna Mary, seeing the question in Beth’s eyes.

Beth found the photographer’s another item in her list of “things that
were different.” At home one climbed two steep flights of stairs to get
to the photographer’s studio and after this breath-taking feat, one
found it a small room, stuffy with mixed odors of chemicals, littered
with photographs on sundry tables standing about and with dismaying
groups and single enlargements, framed in dark mouldings, standing
against the walls.

Here one arose in an elevator to enter a still and tasteful reception
room, white with the light of the top floor of a large building, and
was shown into a dressing room, quietly sumptuous, where a maid was in
attendance, in case the visitor had not brought her own maid to make
her ready for the great business of a portrait.

Anna Mary being in attendance upon the three young girls, the
“stationary maid,” as Natalie called her, was not required. Anna
Mary laid out the three white frocks in which the girls were to be
photographed and then dressed them. She shook out Natalie’s abundant
hair, her glorious hair, so dark, yet full of warmth, full also of
bends and turns and wilfulness. She brought Alys’s pale hair forward
where it would show to the best advantage, and brushed Beth’s fine
masses of shining gold into a mist that was hard to curb. Then they
were ready and went out to take their places before the camera. Here
two surprises awaited Beth. One was Dirk who, having steadfastly
refused to be one of the party, had altered his mind at the last moment
and now appeared in his finest attire, grinning sheepishly.

The other surprise was the photographer who was a woman! It had
never occurred to Beth that a woman could do more than take Brownie
snap-shots, but this woman proved entirely capable. She posed the
group of four skilfully, with the grace and dignity of a portrait by
Reynolds. Then she photographed the three Cortlandts together, Beth
insisting on a group without her. Then each one separately, till at
least a dozen negatives had been made and the artist--for the name
rightfully belonged to this photographer--expressed herself satisfied
with her results.

“Just one more--you with me, little Cozbeth!” cried Natalie. “I want it
as a Christmas present to myself.”

Beth willingly agreed, and for a moment the dark hair and the fair
hair blended as the two girls were posed before the camera, Beth’s
face upturned to Natalie, Natalie’s handsome head bent downward to
the younger girl whom she was beginning to love with a fervor that
surprised herself.

“Now we part, Bethlein,” said Natalie, this picture taken. “Alys and I
are going to lunch with Hedda Gabbler.”

“With--what is her name?” cried Beth, emerging from the skirt Anna Mary
threw over her head.

Natalie laughed. “That’s the name of a play; we call Doris Belmar that
because she’s such a talker,” she explained. “You’re going with Anna
Mary, slumming. Don’t get stolen, or murdered or anything! Good-bye,
Beth.”

“Good-bye,” echoed Beth, and her cousins left her to follow them a few
moments later, Dirk having taken himself off with evident relief the
instant the last picture of himself had been secured.

“It’s a taxicab we have to use to-day, Miss Beth; your uncle has the
small car and your aunt is usin’ the horses, after the young ladies are
left at Mrs. Belmar’s.” So saying Anna Mary handed Beth into a cab that
they found waiting at the door, and then stepped in herself. She had
sent the case containing the frocks home by a messenger.

“I’d just as lief have a taxicab, Anna Mary. I think I like them
better,” said Beth as theirs started. “I play I am in a boat and that
the crowds are what the books call them, ‘a sea of faces,’ and we go
plunging right through the waves. I’m always a dolphin or a mermaid.”

“Well, Miss Beth, it’s not a play that I’d care for, both of them bein’
fishy and I’m not partial to fish, nor to the sea, for I was that sick
when I came to America that I never went back, though my youngest
brother do be still livin’ near by the city of Cork and I’ve plenty
cousins at home in Ireland,” said Anna Mary, with her serious air of
superiority. “This is gettin’ over to the poor parts, Miss Beth, which
so far you’ve not seen,” she added.

The cab was going eastward and then northward. “First we shall find
that little Italian girl you saw in the park,” explained Anna Mary.

Beth murmured an assent, but she was too much occupied with the
new scenes before her to do more. Rapidly the New York she knew was
changing into something as different from itself as her old home was
different from it. Shabbiness was creeping over it like a sort of
cloudy twilight. The buildings looked battered; so did the people
passing them, and swarms of children, who were too small to go to
school and too small to play on the sidewalk, were nevertheless playing
there in every block.

“It’s here,” announced Anna Mary when the cab stopped. She helped Beth
out, gathered up her skirts and gingerly led the way into a tenement
house.

“Try not to touch the railin’, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary, mounting the
stairs.

Anna Mary knocked at a door which proved to be the right one. It was
opened by a woman dressed in bright colors, gold hoops in her ears;
a black-eyed baby, held against her shoulder, frowned timidly at the
sight of strangers.

The woman seemed to speak little English, but to understand perfectly
what Anna Mary said when she explained slowly, in carefully chosen
words, that Beth was the little girl who had been the means of saving
Annunciata from arrest as a thief and that Annunciata was to come on
Christmas eve to a tree at Beth’s home. Anna Mary laid down a card that
bore Mr. Cortlandt’s name and address, explaining that this was to tell
Annunciata where to go.

“Ye-es, a-tanka you. I not speeka, Annunciata speeka. I un’erstan’, no
speeka, me. Annunciata glada go see. Lika lil’ lady moocha, say great
times tanka she. Annunciata coma sure--sure!” said the woman with a
smile that revealed two rows of gleaming white teeth.

Beth smiled her best to supply deficiencies in the conversation, but
the room looked dreary to her, though it was not half as bad as those
she was to see later. Some attempt at decking it had been made. A
bright lithograph of Raphael’s Madonna della Sedia hung on one side
of the room, on the other another high colored lithograph of the
crucifixion. Paper flowers and a decorated candle stood on a shelf
beside the first picture; there was something besides mere eating and
drinking and their scarcity here, but poverty was written plain on
the room. Beth felt a shocked pity, as if New York, which had been so
abundantly kind to her, was not hospitable to these emigrants.

She followed Anna Mary back to the cab and peered thoughtfully out
over its doors as they went on, through various streets. They stopped
when Anna Mary, consulting a list given her by her niece, the Sister
of Charity, indicated that they should stop, and, getting out,
climbed dark stairways, to wind through darker passages, filled with
indescribable odors that had the effect of having been there for ages,
and entered homes that consisted of two or three stuffy, forlorn little
rooms, sometimes of but one room. The pleasure that Beth had imagined
they should confer was rarely shown. The children might be glad later
on, but the mothers to whom they announced the Christmas tree took it
stolidly, sometimes almost suspiciously. It did not seem to make them
glad.

After a while this pilgrimage led Beth, with Anna Mary, to the five
families of which Anna Mary had told Beth, the five with thirty-five
children among them. None of the others had been as poor. They lived
on one floor. There was little light in their rooms, but this may have
been a good thing, for there was too much revealed by what light there
was, too much and too little. There was no adornment here, only the
least furniture, and yet hardly any space. But the worst was that the
mothers looked so pitifully thin and worn, so dull-eyed and gray of
skin. Beth noticed with surprise that Anna Mary’s forbidding manner
fell from her like a shell which her heart had pierced, that she was
soft of voice, tender of touch, mild-eyed and very, very gentle in
these barren places; altogether a new and lovely Anna Mary.

“It’s goodness!” thought Beth correctly. “It’s goodness and kindness
and it must be there all the time! She’s a dear and she must come here
often, for they know her so well! So she’s not just Anna Mary, who is
a maid that looks as if she wore taffeta inside and out; she’s a good,
good woman!”

And this was an important discovery, not merely because it set Anna
Mary in her true light, but because it showed Beth that goodness was
the one real thing that counted.

At last the visits were all made and Anna Mary put Beth into the
taxicab for the return home. It was a quiet Beth that looked out
over the infolded cab doors with her big, gray-blue eyes, seeing the
melancholy streets through which they were passing as part of the
poverty which she had, for the first time, realized to be a fact.

Anna Mary watched her, unseen, and finally aroused her from her
thoughts.

“Is it plannin’ the tree you are, Miss Beth, that you’re so quiet?”
she asked, though she knew Beth was not thinking of the tree.

Beth turned to her with a long, indrawn breath.

“No, Anna Mary. It doesn’t seem as though there could be trees,” she
said. “Is it like this all the time? And in all those houses we didn’t
go into?”

“Maybe it was too hard on you seein’ it, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary
sympathetically.

“But New York isn’t all splendid and happy, then,” said Beth. “I
thought it was a fairy-land.”

“There do be bad fairies, Miss Beth. All big cities have the two sides
to ’em, the grand side where people spend money like water, and the
awful side where even water is scarce. Then there’s a fine lot between;
people workin’ hard, but gettin’ good times out of it and nice,
comfortable little homes. I think your Aunt Alida wanted to learn what
you’d make out of seein’ these miseries,” said Anna Mary.

“Can we help it?” asked Beth. “I never can, because I shall not be rich
myself, but can any one?”

“It’s a great puzzle, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary. “No end of things
there are makin’ and keepin’ these people poor. The wisest and best
heads in the world are always puzzlin’ over helpin’ it, and by this and
by that they’re always thinkin’ they’ve found the cure, but it’s not
so easy. Sure, you can help it, Miss Beth. Helpin’s not curin’, but if
every one helped, then the cure’d be worked. And as to your bein’ poor,
do you imagine your aunt and uncle, havin’ found you and found you what
you are, lovin’ you as they do, won’t take care you have plenty to help
with, if you’re minded to use it that way?”

“Will they?” cried Beth, plainly not thinking of this in connection
with her own life. “How shall I help?”

“First off it needs wantin’ to, Miss Beth, real wantin’, so other
things don’t crowd it out. And then it takes lovin’, lovin’ in
the right way, so you don’t mind when the poor unfortunate people
disappoint you and are ungrateful, or turn out ill. Then the way can’t
be missed. It’s much the kind of lovin’ that was shown all His life
long by our dear Lord, whose birthday you’re goin’ to make glad for the
children you’ve been askin’. And the only way I know to help the people
is His way; just go about teachin’ and feedin’ and maybe dyin’ for ’em,
if needs be, prayin’ they be forgiven for they know not what they do.”
Anna Mary spoke with profound emotion in her usually dull voice. Her
face warmed and quivered with feeling and Beth sat looking up at her,
drinking in her words, her own sweet little face responsive to the
chords Anna Mary touched, her eyes dimming with tears, yet kindling
with her inward resolve to help in this way, if the opportunity came to
her.

Beth put her hand over the back of Anna Mary’s when she stopped
speaking.

“I’m glad I came with you to-day, Anna Mary. I think you have shown me
better than even Aunt Alida could; you seem to know closer, if that’s
the right way to say it. And I’m glad you are the one that came for me,
to fetch me from Aunt Rebecca’s here. Maybe it means that some day I
can help and you are going to show me how and were sent to fetch me for
that reason, only no one knew it then,” she said in her earnest way.

“Bless the dear child!” said Anna Mary fervently. “Sure, Miss Beth,
I’ve loved you from the first minyute I set my two eyes on you! Now
don’t be thinkin’ sober thoughts so near Christmas and you but a slip
of a girl! All you must think of now, dear little Miss Beth, is that
you’re going to make fifty-three of these poor children perfectly happy
at the tree; we’ve asked fifty-three, Miss Beth!”

“Isn’t it splendid!” cried Beth, brightening. “But is it right to
forget, Anna Mary?”

“It wouldn’t be, if broodin’ over poverty did any good, Miss Beth,”
said Anna Mary sensibly. “But worryin’ never did, nor ever will help
anything; more by token it works the other way, makin’ the worrier no
good when the time does come to help. It’s plain now you’re meant to be
a happy little girl, enjoyin’ what’s sent you with a grateful heart.
It’s a mystery, Miss Beth, that one has and the other hasn’t, but so
’tis! The way I look at it is that God is a weaver, weavin’ our lives
and all the world, and not one of us sees the pattern He’s set. But
if we’re a gold thread in it, then we must let Him use us like pure
shinin’ gold in the pattern. And if we’re just a bit of gray wool, or
maybe cotton, we must let Him weave us in just as satisfied. Sure, when
it’s all made and done with, what difference will it be whether we’re
less or more?”

“Oh, Anna Mary, what a lovely, lovely little sermon!” cried Beth.

“I didn’t get the weavin’ idea out of my own head, Miss Beth,” said
Anna Mary honestly. “But it’s been a great comfort to me since first I
saw it in a bit of po’try.”

Beth ran up the steps of her uncle’s house, her seriousness dispelled
by the last part of her drive. The gay splendor of the avenue late in
the afternoon, the line of prancing horses and beautiful private motor
cars, coming back from the park, the promenaders, the children so
perfectly dressed, so rosy, so well-tended, swinging and pulling along
on their uniformed attendants’ hands, who could believe that this city
was the other side of the one Beth had just left and who, at eleven
years old, could, or should, resist its brightness?

“Say, Beth, the tree’s come!” cried Dirk from somewhere up-stairs the
moment Beth was admitted. He slid down the banisters and came up like
an acrobat, with a bow before her. “They’ve set the tree up in the
music room. Mama decided we’d need the organ and piano and things;
she’s had canvas laid to save the floor. That oak floor’s her joy. But
maybe it isn’t a tree! Well, I guess! Come on and see it before you go
up-stairs. How many poor kids did you catch?”

“Fifty-three. We couldn’t possibly leave out any, and Aunt Alida said
not to mind if there were a few over fifty,” said Beth, following Dirk.
“Dirk, it’s exactly like the parable, going out into the highways and
byways, you know, to make them come in to the feast.”

“Well, wouldn’t you think they’d fall all over themselves to come?
Ought not to take any making, ought it? How’s that? Isn’t that a peach
of a tree?” added Dirk, throwing open the music room door with a
flourish.

“I never, never saw such a tree--except growing,” cried Beth in a
rapture, but tempering her statement to the exact truth. “Dirk, let’s
play we are Druids, going to be converted on Christmas, but Druids now.
And let’s pay it homage. Big evergreen trees always make me want to
worship them!”

“How would you do it, play Druid?” asked Dirk, interested, but at sea.

“I don’t know; let’s sing ‘O Tannenbaum’!” suggested Beth. So taking
hands they sang the beautiful German song to the pine tree, though Dirk
could not carry a tune well, and Beth’s German went no farther than the
first stanza, which she had once learned in school.




CHAPTER XIII

“HOLLY AND JOLLY RHYME”


Christmas eve was a busy one. Other years the young Cortlandts’ tree
had been trimmed for them, but this year the fact that the tree was
intended to give poor children pleasure seemed to alter every one’s
attitude toward it.

Beth took it for granted that she and her cousins were to trim the tree
themselves, and it so fell out. Beth was given authority over it, as it
was to be her party, and, after she got over being afraid to decide any
question put to her lest she should decide wrong and spoil the tree,
she enjoyed her dignity just as much as she enjoyed the glittering
ornaments of many sizes, colors and clever designs which had been
ordered in dozens for her tree.

She asked to have Tim from the stable “to do the ladder part,” as she
put it. Tim was sent for and came willingly, glad to have a chance to
do something for Beth that was not in his regular line of employment,
and which therefore seemed particularly a personal service to her.

Tim was as full of quips and quiddities as his race usually is and,
while the trimming of the tree progressed, got his young employers
into gales of laughter with his nonsense, his wit and pranks. At last,
when he danced a breakdown on the top rung of the ladder--or pretended
to--whistling an Irish air, with his face a network of laughing
wrinkles, the children laughed till they begged Tim to stop, in mercy
to their aching sides and weakened knees.

“I never thought it could be so much fun, just getting a tree trimmed
for a Christmas tree,” sighed Beth. “I don’t wonder holly and jolly
rhyme!”

“So does melancholy,” suggested Natalie.

“Melancholy doesn’t rhyme with holly all the way through; it doesn’t
rhyme in meaning, but jolly does. Melancholy rhymes only at the very
end--when it stops being melancholy!” cried Beth, with an inspiration,
much pleased with her own cleverness in making this discovery.

“Bright Beth!” applauded Alys. Beth felt as though she hardly knew Alys
to-day, she was so gay and merry, with all her stiff little ways gone,
frolicking like the big-little girl she really was.

“Oh, say, Tim, you mustn’t smoke up there among those branches,
honest!” cried Dirk peering at Tim on his lofty perch near the ceiling
of the high-vaulted music room.

“I’m not smokin’, Master Dirk,” said Tim, stooping to peer back again,
his short pipe in his mouth.

“You’ve got your pipe in your mouth,” persisted Dirk.

“Faith an’ I’ve got me foot in me shoe, but by the same token I’m not
walkin’!” said Tim with his chuckle. “It’s just suckin’ it I am, Master
Dirk, for the comfort of its society! Do you want the string of bells,
sort of like a wreat’, just below the highest angel at the top, Miss
Beth, or do you want them glitterin’ things that look like white of
eggs an’ mercury, mixed, to make dyin’ by mercury poison easy?”

“Oh, Tim, you are so funny!” sighed Beth, for Tim’s remark about his
shoe had sent them all off again in shrieks of laughter. “I think the
bells, please.”

So Tim festooned the strings of party-colored bells just below the top
of the tree, singing the while in a high falsetto:

  “’Tis the bells of Shandon,
   That sound so grand on
   The pleasant waters
   Of the river Lee.”

“Now the tree is done!” cried Alys, clapping her hands. “And there
never could be a more splendid one! I’m going to see if mama is in and
call her to look at it. Then we must get dressed. What time is your
party coming, Beth? Six?”

“No, five. Don’t you remember Aunt Alida said we would have the
children come early and dine at half-past eight?” replied Beth. “You
may as well come down, Tim; there won’t be anything more to do with the
ladder.”

Alys had hurried away and returned with her mother, sleepy and pretty,
in a Japanese embroidered robe in which she had been taking a nap.

“Nobody around, is there?” cried Mrs. Cortlandt, peeping into the
room. “Except Tim, and he’ll never tell that I came down-stairs in
a wrapper! Alys wouldn’t let me delay. Children dear--and Tim and
everybody that helped”--she glanced at one or two of the maids who had
been working on the tree--“I never, never saw a tree that was more
grand and glorious! It’s not only Christmasy and shining, but it’s
actually beautiful! And truth compels me to say that not all Christmas
trees are that! And doesn’t it look big, now that it’s trimmed? What
fun it is! Beth, if your little forlornities aren’t overwhelmed with
delight they won’t be mortal children! You must go to get dressed; do
you know that it is nearly four o’clock? Dressing is going to take you
longer and be different from your expectations! No, indeed; you needn’t
ask a question for I won’t answer one! I’ve a Christmas mystery of my
own and I’m going to defend my rights! Tim, did any one tell you that
we expect you to bring your wife and children here to-night?”

“No, ma’am. But we’re not expectin’ it, ma’am,” said Tim. Beth saw
that Tim was ready to worship this lovely young Aunt Alida, whose
girlish happiness was not feigned; it bubbled up and overflowed out
of a heart that wealth, the world and its pleasures, flattery and the
power wealth gives had not tainted. Aunt Alida was, before all the
things that she had to be to the outside world, a loving, home-loving
woman; her merry way of enjoying little things, as well as big ones,
sprang from simple goodness.

“Well, perhaps you aren’t expecting to be bidden to our tree, but we
certainly expect and intend you to come, Tim, with Mrs. Tim and all the
Tiny Tims!” Mrs. Cortlandt laughed at her own application of Tiny Tim’s
name. “I don’t know in the least why you weren’t asked, except that we
decided on Miss Beth’s party so late and have been in a mad rush ever
since! Be off, Tim, and collect your family and come here with them at
five. Hurry; there’s not a moment to lose! I’m so sorry no one told you
you were coming! Wait! Call up your wife and tell her to begin to dress
the children; it will save time. Mr. Cortlandt put a telephone into
your house, didn’t he? So I thought. Call up your wife, then, and tell
her I truly beg her pardon, but to forgive me and hurry the children
here. Wait a moment! Léon is coming; I heard our horn and our engine.
Tell Mr. Cortlandt I asked him to let Léon take you home and bring you
all back in the car. Dirk, go with Tim and explain to your father how
Tim’s invitation was forgotten and ask him if Léon can’t help us out.
Be off, Tim; run, Dirk!”

Thus issuing her orders like a sort of breezy May morning, with the
cherry blossoms of her rose-colored gown’s embroidery wrapped around
her, Mrs. Cortlandt sent Tim and Dirk on their errand, and turned to
her three girls.

“Scatter, lassies!” she cried. “You’ve lots to do to get ready, and
lots to be ready to do!”

Natalie snatched Alys’s and Beth’s hand and rushed them out of the
room. Mrs. Cortlandt lingered long enough to give directions to the
maids for setting the room in order and making certain changes in its
arrangement, then she, too, hurried after the girls, and called to them
as they went to their rooms:

“I’ve selected your toilets, chickens. Please put them on as fast and
as well as you can and be down-stairs promptly at five.”

Beth opened her door with confident expectation of finding some new
delight awaiting her. Was there really no limit to Aunt Alida’s
cleverness, prompted by her loving heart?

“I hope I’ll be able some day to do something for her!” she said aloud.

Frieda looked up. “I’ve just had word from home, Miss Beth,” she
said, her cheeks crimson, her eyes shining. “Liebchen is coming here
to-night! She has walked without crutches. She is cured! Oh, Miss Beth,
Miss Beth!”

“Oh, Frieda, Frieda!” echoed Beth, hardly less moved. She threw her
arms around Frieda, who kissed her hot cheek, neither remembering any
difference in position between them, both overwhelmed with a common joy.

“What a beau-ti-ful Christmas gift!” cried Beth. “I was sure she
wouldn’t get here because we didn’t hear a word. Aunt Alida told me
I must hurry, Frieda, so I suppose we must put off being glad till
to-morrow. It’s a comfort that we shall be just as glad next year!”

“Forever, Miss Beth!” said Frieda. “If you hadn’t spoken to your uncle
Liebchen could not have been cured. I’d die for you and your good, good
uncle and aunt!”

“So would I! I mean for them!” And Beth laughed. “Is that my frock?
Won’t it frighten the children if I’m too fine?”

Across her bed lay a white lace gown, filmy and exquisite over its
white silk slip.

“They won’t see the frock, Miss Beth; there’s a--a something to wear
over it. The frock is for you to wear at dinner when they’re gone;
there’ll be no time to change,” explained Frieda.

“I don’t understand,” sighed Beth, contentedly resigning herself to
Frieda’s work on her hair. It was so delightful to be in the midst of
mystery and to postpone its solution a little longer!

Frieda shook out the little girl’s golden hair and brushed and brushed
it till it shone and flew around her shoulders in masses of living
gold, stirred by every breath. Then Frieda put white silk stockings and
white slippers on Beth’s feet and slipped carefully over the fly-away
hair, first the soft white china silk under-gown, then the gown of
white lace, as filmy as a web.

“It makes me look like a dandelion field with a big cobweb over it,
my hair all loose, and this webby lace,” said Beth, surveying her
reflection with unspeakable delight. She recalled the plain gowns,
shrouded in aprons which she had worn in her old home, with a wave of
pity for Aunt Rebecca.

“Aunt Rebecca thinks it’s wicked to love to look nice, but it isn’t;
it’s just being glad. Flowers and clouds and birds, everything is
pretty! I’m only glad the way they are! Poor Aunt Rebecca; I hope
she isn’t lonely without me now! She got a letter from me to-day and
I tried to put things she’d like in my box for her! She does love
molasses peppermints and sugared almonds, and I sent lots of them, and
some nice books and fine towels and handkerchiefs, and--lots of things!
I had to write her that it was my own money, or she’d be afraid Uncle
Jim was buying things for her. Poor Aunt Rebecca! It’s hard to make
people have a good time when they’re out of the habit of it. What’s
that, Frieda? What in all the world is that?” she added hastily, for
Frieda was bringing out a spangled garment and a long veil and pointed
cap, also shining at every turn.

“You’re all to be Christmas fairies, in costume, Miss Beth,” announced
Frieda in high glee. “Your aunt planned it as a surprise to you
and your cousins, and to make the party more wonderful to the poor
children. Yours is white and gold, as you see; Miss Natalie’s is red
with bits of pink, the way some roses are shaded. And Miss Alys has the
most splendid green, a shade that shows by electric light. Master Dirk
is to wear blue velvet and white, half and half, with cap and bells,
like the pictures you see of the men that made jokes for kings----”

“Jesters,” murmured Beth in a stunned way.

“And--but I mustn’t tell about your uncle and aunt!” Frieda stopped
herself. “Please bend quite low, Miss Beth. I must try not to muss your
hair and gown when I put on the costume.”

Beth bent her head, too overcome to say a word, and Frieda dropped
into place the loose gown, all in one piece, that fell to her feet,
completely covering her own gown. It was a golden silk, overshot with
white; it shimmered at every motion, and it was girdled and trimmed
across the breast with rhinestone chains that were almost as brilliant
as diamonds. A pointed cap of gold, like a big extinguisher, crowned
Beth’s golden head next, and from it floated a veil of the thinnest
gauze, all spangled over with tiny beads that took the light and gave
it back like dewdrops in the sun.

“I have to blink at myself!” cried Beth, swaying and prancing before
the glass. “Did you ever, ever see anything so sweet! And so shiny?
Frieda, how can Aunt Alida do such things, how _can_ she? I’m a fairy,
myself, Beth! I’ve been in fairy-land all this time and now I’m one!
I’ll never get over this, never! I don’t know who I am, but I’m
splendider than Beth was and prettier, and----Oh, dear, oh, dear! Talk
about Merry Christmas!”

There really seemed to be danger of Beth’s going off into a sort of
swoon of joy; her shining marvels so overcame her. But at that instant
Natalie and Alys came hurrying to Beth’s door, calling her excitedly,
and Beth came to life with a shout that would have done credit to Dirk
and a loud: “Come in, come in!”

Natalie and Alys opened the door and stood for an instant within it.

“My goodness me!” gasped Beth. “My goodness gracious!” she added as
Dirk joined them.

Dirk was a jester, clad in a beautiful motley of white and blue
velvet, fitting him like a sheath. His cap was hung with tiny bells,
he carried the jester’s wand, his shoes were the slender pointed-toed
affairs of the pictures, his round boyish face, red with excitement
and fun, looked like a kewpie’s peering through the cap front that
encircled his chin. But Alys and Natalie! Alys in a brilliant metallic
green, a straight, smooth mediæval sort of gown, like Beth’s, with
gold trimming, and a head-dress in the shape of a holly leaf, with
gold imitation coins on the points! And Natalie, surpassing them all
in beauty, in a similar gown of red velvet, slashed with pink, a cap
covered with holly berries, and imitation rubies studding her waist and
binding her throat, her dark beauty set off by the gorgeous color that
would have extinguished a less handsome girl.

“It’s really awful, it’s so splendid!” gasped Beth, while her cousins
went into raptures over her white and gold which turned her into a
fairylike creature, contrasting beautifully with their higher coloring.

“We’re going to have something by and by where we can wear these
things with some one to see them besides the poor kiddies,” said Alys
decidedly. “You’re beyond words, Beth; we all are. If mama can’t do
things right, then no one can! Hurry down; it’s time. I imagine there
are a lot of youngsters here already; they probably will come early. It
will be a mercy if we don’t have to send them home in ambulances; these
costumes ought to finish them!”

“Oh, my dears!” cried Aunt Alida meeting her young folk in the hall.
“How more than satisfactory you are! Are you pleased with my surprise
for you? Do you like the costumes?”

“I guess _like_ isn’t the word for it,” said Dirk. “But what’s the
matter with you?”

“Nothing, I hope,” laughed Mrs. Cortlandt. “I’m Frau Santa Claus.”

Aunt Alida wore a white gown with a white cloak swinging from her
shoulders, and a white cap, wreathed with mistletoe and holly, with a
single great poinsettia on its left side. Holly and mistletoe encircled
her waist and fell like the ends of a girdle on her white skirt. The
cloak and cap were made of material as thin as would submit to a bath
of alum in which they had been dipped. The alum had crystallized on the
cloth and the cap and cloak looked as if they were made of snow crust,
glittering under the electric lights.

“Aunt Alida, you are--I couldn’t say what you were!” Beth managed to
say.

“Prettiest thing in old New York all the time, but the greatest ever
to-night,” said Natalie, pretending to catch one of her mother’s
lustrous dark strands of hair under her cap, though it had not gone
astray.

“Well, if you aren’t the greatest mother on earth to get up all this,
and keep it to yourself!” cried Alys, also finding her voice. “Is there
a programme, mama?”

“I am Frau Santa Claus, you are Christmas spirits; we shall see
Herr Santa Claus a little later,” said Mrs. Cortlandt. “As to the
programme--I don’t know, precisely. You must each do all that you can
to be jolly and to entertain, and we’ll trust to inspiration for the
way as we go along. I think Christmas hymns first, however. I am having
the children ushered into the music room now. Mr. Leonard is here to
help us. He will announce the programme and lead the singing. Hark!”

From below came the sound of feet scuffling and trying to march to the
strains of an orchestra. The children were all assembled and were going
in to behold the tree.

“Orchestra, mama?” asked Natalie, for this was a further surprise.

“A small one. I thought at the last moment how much it would add to the
pleasure of those poor little souls,” whispered her mother. “Now we
must go down.”

She led the way in her snowy raiment to the music room and her
attendant Christmas spirits followed her, in single file, to spread
out the little procession as long as possible. The music came up to
meet them, the old Christmas hymns played perfectly by a famous little
orchestra. Beth was deeply impressed and much moved; it seemed to her
like all her dreams of Christmas, all the romance of olden time with
which her little brain was well stored, made visible and audible.

“Mrs. Santa Claus and her four Christmas fairies are coming,
children!” Mr. Leonard called, making himself heard above the music.
And Mrs. Cortlandt and the children came in.

The music room was nearly filled. The servants of the Cortlandt
household were gathered there; Tim and his family had come in good
time, thanks to Léon Charette and the car. There were a few of Mrs.
Cortlandt’s intimate friends, who had begged to be allowed to see the
fun, and Natalie, Alys and Dirk had invited a few of their favorite
friends. For the rest the room held only the poor whom Beth and Anna
Mary had searched out, except Liebchen, who stood--_stood_, if you
please!--having the best time of any one, no longer a cripple, but a
sound, healthy, joyous child, forever cured!

The faces of the children of the tenements were a study. Wide-eyed,
half-frightened, wholly bewildered, they clutched one another,
listening, looking, not understanding, but entirely sure that nothing
half as blissful as this night had ever crossed the bare fields of
their brief experiences.

Slowly Aunt Alida led her four beautiful followers into the room,
herself a vision of beauty. Awe fell upon the poor children and there
was a sound as if they all drew in a long breath together. The tree
blazed with a hundred electric lights, in small bulbs safely nestling
amid its green needles and its shining ornaments. Beth had not realized
when she was helping trim it how glorious it would be. Its slender top
reached high up into the vaulted ceiling. An angel, poised above it,
seemed to have called it up into being with his outstretched hands.

“Mrs. Santa Claus” and her train went back toward the organ. At a word
from her the organist began to play “Come hither, ye faithful.” Then
the orchestra and organ repeated it, and Mrs. Santa Claus called:
“Sing, children, sing for Christmas!”

At first few sang besides her own children and the servants, but soon
those of the poor children who could sing and who knew the hymn--and
they were many--joined, till at the last stanza there was a fine volume
of song, though words were largely lacking. One after another Mrs.
Santa Claus called for the best, the dearest of the Christmas hymns and
the children sang them, getting intoxicated with the sound of their own
voices blending with the orchestra.

“Hark!” cried Mrs. Santa Claus as the last note of “Silent Night, Holy
Night” died away. Stillness fell upon the room. “I hear bells!” cried
Mrs. Santa Claus. “It must be that my husband, Santa Claus, is coming!”

Sure enough. Faint, but clear, came the sound of sleigh-bells, then it
grew louder, was near! With a bound and a boisterous “Hurrah!” into the
room burst Santa Claus himself!

“Three cheers for Santa Claus!” cried Mr. Leonard, and led the cheers
which nearly took the roof off, for this part of the programme suited
the guests.

“Hallo, kids!” cried Santa Claus. He was a noble personage, all in red
velvet, whitened with snow, icicles hanging from his fur-trimmed cap,
toys bulging from his boots and many pockets. “Any boy here got a horn?”

Not a boy had, but Santa Claus had foreseen the lack and had come
provided.

“How can you make a lot of noise without horns?” he asked.

Turning to a great hamper that had been brought in behind him, he
pulled out no end of horns and summoned half a dozen boys to distribute
them.

“Oh, may as well give ’em to the girls, too,” Santa Claus chuckled.
“They aren’t always so fond of being quiet, either!

“Now,” announced Santa Claus, “I’m going to give out a present or two
I’ve brought for some of you. Each one of you has to stand up and take
what I send you. And after each present is given, blow your horns,
every one of you, and make a Merry Christmas of it!”

“Oh, Jim, it will deafen us!” murmured Mrs. Santa Claus, who in real
life, also, was this gentleman’s wife.

“Nonsense, Alida; the kids won’t have a good time unless they turn
loose some sort of a hullabaloo!” Santa Claus whispered back. “We’ve
got to stand it. Come, Snow White, it is your party. You go with me
giving out presents.”

Beth looked frightened. “Not unless the others go too,” she said.

So Natalie, Alys, Dirk and Beth began the little pilgrimage around
the room, distributing presents. There was a carefully prepared list
of names and a package for each one which held the useful, warm things
that each particular child most needed--Anna Mary had found out what
these were--and with them were toys, candies, nuts, fruit in abundance.
As each name was called and “Snow White” put into each pair of red,
roughened hands the gift that they were to carry away, a fearful blast
of tin horns arose, quite ear-splitting and unbearable, but which,
after a few repetitions, wrought the children into a frenzy of joy and
effectually broke up the last remnant of awkwardness.

It took a long time to give out the presents; Santa Claus beckoned one
or two of his friends, who stood laughing, covering their ears, yet
enjoying the scene immensely, to help Mr. Leonard and himself with the
task.

At last it was done and in the lull that followed Dirk and his boy
friends trundled into the room four great freezers of ice-cream, set on
flat wagons and decorated with Christmas greens. Then several of the
Cortlandt servants, who had left the room, returned, carrying baskets
of dishes and spoons, and trays heaped with cakes, iced in many colors.

“Well, what d’ye know about dat!” cried a small person, newsboy
by profession, with such deep emotion in his voice that the entire
roomful, great and small, shouted and the speaker tried to crawl out of
sight on the floor, to which he immediately dove, but was fished up and
set back on his chair by a relentless sister, a year his elder.

There was enough ice-cream for every one to have two big helpings and
cake for each one to eat his fill. If the children did not recognize
their treat as furnished by a famous caterer, they did know that “it
wa’n’t no slouch ice-cream,” as one child said, but decidedly superior
to that sold from the tail of pushcarts in their own neighborhood.

“Now, children dear, our Christmas tree has dropped all its fruits for
you. There isn’t anything more for us to do but to say good-night,
because you have far to go, many of you. Did you have a good time?”
asked Mrs. Santa Claus of the entire roomful.

“Yes, ma’am!” “You bet!” “Sure thing!” came back her answer in various
forms, but with one clear meaning.

Suddenly a big boy got on his feet, pushed up decidedly by many hands.
He looked red and miserable, but he stuck to his guns.

“Dey want I should give you t’anks, all of yous. It was great, biggest
ever. An’ we hopes yous all will git de best what’s comin’ any place.
An’ we wishes yous de biggest luck nex’ year. Much obliged.”

“Hurrah!” shouted Santa Claus. “It is we who are much obliged to you
for coming!”

Whereupon the orchestra played the gayest airs it could and the
guests reluctantly filed out of the beautiful room, turning back
again and again to look at the tree, shining in its Christmas green,
pointing upward. It told the children, if they had been wise enough to
understand it, that the spirit of Christmas is from above and that it
makes unfading spring time in a frozen world.

“Take off your costumes, children. Dinner will soon be served, though
I don’t see how we can any of us eat it! I’m deafened and worn out
with that riotous celebration--but it was beautiful! Your party was a
success, Bethie!” said Mrs. Cortlandt.

“_My_ party!” echoed Beth significantly.

The children laid aside their costumes, not without regret, and
appeared in their proper persons at dinner. Half a dozen of Mr. and
Mrs. Cortlandt’s friends remained to dine and Natalie and Alys were
allowed to ask a girl apiece.

After dinner they went back to the music room. Once more the great tree
was illumined; the servants were called in. The Cortlandts distributed
presents to their household, while the orchestra, which had been
retained, played softly and a sense of peace, of profound peaceful joy,
seemed to descend upon them, after the late hubbub. But it was the
peace of the memory of that earlier good time and that they had given
more than half a hundred children the Merry Christmas that otherwise
they could not have known.

Beth found herself snowed under with white parcels, tied with the
Christmas colors. As gift after gift came into her overflowing little
hands, she grew pale with excitement and sat down on the floor with
them all in her lap, too burdened with emotion and too many gifts to
stand up. Here she opened boxes and saw in a dazed way a little watch,
such a ring as she had coveted hopelessly, books, pins, trinkets of all
sorts, and at last even the perfect doll which she had said that she
would like if she were not too big to play with it. And she knew the
moment she saw it that it was so lovely that in some way she should
shrink to the proper size to play with it.

All the rest were getting presents, the servants, too. Beth felt that
no one could describe this sort of Christmas so that a person who had
not seen it could realize it. She foresaw herself trying to describe it
to Aunt Rebecca and Janie, and failing.

When the other packages were opened and examined Beth slyly opened
one that had come to her from Aunt Rebecca. It was with doubt she
opened it, fearing it might be something that her cousins would find
droll. But it was a miniature, a beautiful painted miniature that she
had never seen before. Aunt Rebecca had put a card in its case and on
the card was written in her fine, old-fashioned hand: “This is your
mother’s picture. I hope you will have a pleasant Christmas and be a
good girl.”

Beth quickly closed the miniature case and hid it in her frock. She did
not want to show it to her mother’s family then; another time, when
there was less excitement, she would show it to Uncle Jim and ask him
if it were like his sister.

“Each one must do something to entertain us,” announced Aunt Alida,
when the gifts had received full attention.

The Cortlandts were accustomed to this. Uncle Jim sang a song and did
some clever imitations. Aunt Alida also sang--she sang beautifully--and
she and Natalie danced a curious folk dance that Beth thought was
wonderful.

Alys recited; she had a dramatic gift. Dirk “did stunts,” as he put it,
fenced with Mr. Leonard, and showed his own athletic powers in solo.

“Bethie, we can’t let you off,” said Aunt Alida. “Please, dear! What
can you do? Sing? Recite? You aren’t too tired?” For Beth was looking
pale from her many emotions of the evening.

“No, Aunt Alida, but I don’t do anything nice,” said Beth mournfully.

“Recite something you have learned in school, honey,” suggested Aunt
Alida.

“I don’t know anything for Christmas, except the second chapter of St.
Matthew. I learned that by heart,” said Beth timidly.

“There could be nothing better, darling,” said Aunt Alida. “Please tell
us that story, Bethie.”

So Beth arose, pale and frightened, and began that simple gospel. Her
voice gained strength as she went on, forgetting herself, remembering
it was Christmas eve and carried away by what she was saying.

“That was best of all. It was like a benediction on our Christmas
festival,” said Aunt Alida kissing her as she ended.




CHAPTER XIV

DIRK ENTERTAINS


The Sunday after Christmas found Mr. Cortlandt kept in the house by
a cold. Beth sought him out in the evening and found him beside his
library fire. The logs burned cheerily, snapping and crackling; the red
flames and impish sparks looked most alluring on this cold night.

Beth came across the thick carpet without a sound of a footfall; in
her hand she carried the miniature which Aunt Rebecca had sent her at
Christmas.

“Uncle Jim,” she said, pausing.

Mr. Cortlandt started. “Why, Elizabeth-Beth!” he cried. “You must have
caught me napping. You made me jump. Glad to see you, puss. Come enjoy
my fire with me. Isn’t this a fire to enjoy?” He put out his left hand
and drew Beth down on the arm of his big leather chair, within the
circle of his arm.

[Illustration: “I’VE BEEN WAITING TO SHOW IT TO YOU.”]

“Fires look so glad, fires in fireplaces,” said Beth, perching herself
close to her uncle’s shoulder. “When they are burning houses they
dance even more, but they never look glad then; only cruel. I suppose
it is because in fireplaces they are doing their best to make us warm
and happy. Aunt Rebecca had the front of the old fireplace at home
torn out. They had boarded it up for a stove. Now it is the biggest,
splendidest fireplace! Sometimes we can get wood from the seashore--the
sea is about nine miles from Aunt Rebecca’s--and when we do we have the
loveliest fires, all colors in the flames! Uncle Jim, see what Aunt
Rebecca sent me. I’ve been waiting to show it to you.”

Beth held out her hand with the closed velvet case of the miniature in
its palm. Mr. Cortlandt took it, opened it, and Beth heard him draw in
his breath sharply as he leaned backward and held the miniature over
the back of his chair to allow the light from the reading lamp to fall
on it. For a moment he did not speak, then he said:

“Do you know how your great-aunt came by this picture, Bethie?”

“I didn’t when it came, but I had a letter from Aunt Rebecca yesterday
and she told me about it. My father had it painted. Aunt Rebecca has
had it laid away all this time to give me when I was old enough to
appreciate it, she says; I never saw it in all my life till it came on
Christmas eve. You know who it is? Is it good, Uncle Jim?” Beth asked
anxiously.

“It is perfect,” declared Uncle Jim, and his voice was husky. “Know
it, child? I not only know the miniature, but I know a great many
things when I look at it that I wish I could have known years ago.
But I was too young, too heedless, too thoroughly a boy to know these
things then. If you look in the glass, Beth, you must see for yourself
that it is an excellent likeness of your girl-mother, for it is also
a good likeness of you. You are like her, Bethie, but you are graver,
your eyes are not as laughing, until something makes you laugh. My
little sister Nannie overflowed with gaiety that was in herself; she
was a merry, soft-hearted kitten, but there was a fund of strength
beneath the gentle affectionate ways, as she proved, as she proved,
poor, steadfast little Nannie!”

Mr. Cortlandt was silent for a while and Beth did not interrupt his
thoughts, though she longed to ask questions.

“Beth,” Mr. Cortlandt began again after a few moments, “you said
something one day not long ago that gave me a pang. Do you remember
when you told me that you had once been jealous of New York’s
superiority in age to Massachusetts? You also said, when I told you
that your kindred had a part in its beginnings, that you had not
realized then that you had Cortlandt relatives. It made me feel sorry
and ashamed to know that this must be true.”

“Oh, but Uncle Jim, I know now! It doesn’t matter! I suppose I always
knew my mother had relations. I meant I never thought about them,”
cried Beth, her cheek instantly rubbing against her uncle’s, as if to
efface all regrets he might feel.

“Your part of it is all right, Bethie; mine isn’t,” said Uncle Jim,
stroking the fair hair which tickled him. “Tell me; what do you know
about your mother? What has your Bristead great-aunt told you?”

“Not much. I know she died when I was just born and my father
died four months before that. I know she wasn’t old a bit; only
twenty-three, but that is on her stone, if you count up. When my
father knew he couldn’t get well he took my mother to Aunt Rebecca.
I think that’s all I know. Aunt Rebecca never liked to talk about my
mother. She always said she would by and by. I didn’t know whether
that was because she liked her too well to talk about her, or not
well enough. It would act just the same on Aunt Rebecca. Of course I
wanted dreadfully to hear about her; any girl would,” Beth ended with a
suggested appeal to her uncle now to supply her lack of knowledge.

“Wouldn’t my knee be more comfortable than the chair arm?” asked Mr.
Cortlandt. “That’s better, more cozy, too! Well, Beth, I am going to
tell you about your mother. I was five years older than she was, so I
ought to have been more sympathetic, have stood by her. But in justice
to myself I think I may say that I did not in the least realize, as I
do now, that she must have longed and hungered for a brother’s kindness
in those bitter months of her widowhood; indeed I did not realize
anything about her, feeling that she had chosen her own lot and that it
would all come out right in the end. I was entirely occupied with my
own young life just then. Nannie was a lovely little creature; she was
trusting, gentle, loving, obedient, but when she fell in love with your
father she never could be persuaded to give him up. Your father was a
fine fellow, Beth; the Bristeads were good old stock, as you evidently
have been taught, and he was all he ought to be. But he hadn’t a cent
in the world, and no certainty of having much more, so your Grandfather
Cortlandt forbade his tenderly cared-for little daughter to marry him.
Father was afraid that Nannie would suffer. But Nannie would not give
up your father. Instead she gave up her home and its luxury and married
him. My father was furiously angry, angry with Nannie for disobeying
him, still more angry with your father for letting her share the risks
of his future, and he had not forgiven either of them when the end
came, so swiftly that there was no time to heal the breach. As you
say, your father had taken his young wife to his father’s home and to
the care of his father’s sister when he found he could not live. Miss
Bristead was too proud and too angry on her side that her nephew should
have been forbidden to marry the girl he chose, to let my father know
when Nannie’s husband died. If Nannie could have lived I know that my
father would have sent for her to come back and that she, with you in
her arms, would have nestled into her old place in her home. But Nannie
died and father was crushed, heart-sick with the worst of sorrow,
regret for a separation that death had made permanent. He was more than
satisfied to leave you with the Bristeads; he died four years after
Nannie’s death. I have always had in mind to look up Nannie’s child,
but the years slipped away without doing it. I, too, have had my share
of the pain of self-reproach that I thoughtlessly left my little sister
to her fate. Thoughtlessly; not unkindly, I am glad to say, for I never
shared father’s anger against Nannie. I heedlessly took for granted
that she was where she had chosen to be and that it was no affair of
mine. So you grew up a real little Beth Bristead, not knowing, as you
said, that you had Cortlandt relatives, till this winter. At last I
aroused to action and sent for you. Tell me, in your mother’s name,
that my carelessness is forgiven. For we love you so much, Beth, dear
child, that neither your Aunt Alida nor I, nor your cousins, for that
matter, will ever again let you slip out of our grasp.”

Beth kissed her uncle by way of an answer that she could not give in
words. The sad story of her girl-mother’s brief life had been told so
simply that she understood it, as far as any one, old or young, ever
can understand what they have not lived through themselves.

“Was it very wrong for my father and mother to disobey Grandfather
Cortlandt and marry?” asked Beth at last.

“Wrong, dear? Well, I am sure that they did not think so. I am certain
that they believed that they loved each other so truly that it would
have been wrong to act otherwise,” Mr. Cortlandt said. “But, yes,
it was wrong, though I am confident they did not see it. I have two
daughters of my own--and a niece!--and I should not be willing to
let them take the chance of poverty. Older people see these things
differently from romantic youngsters. Nannie and her lover ought, at
least, to have waited till he had proved what he could do for her.
They were young enough to afford to wait. But that is just why they
could not wait; young people never think they can waste a year or so.
It is only when there aren’t many years left that people begin to see
that there is plenty of time. That is a contradiction which I do not
expect you to understand, Bethikins! Ah, well! That story has had finis
written against it this many a day! I am sure that Nannie was happy for
the short time allowed her, and I doubt she was ever sorry that she
braved all things for your father. In any case her marriage gave you to
us, little Beth, so if the story that is finished has a sad ending, the
sequel to it is the happiest one possible.”

“Aunt Rebecca has tried very hard indeed to make me grow up properly,”
said Beth, with the funny little gravity that was the result of this
same “proper” growing up.

“I don’t suppose there could be a better foundation than her
old-fashioned, strict training,” admitted Uncle Jim. “Your Aunt Alida
is the best person in all the world to build beautifully on that solid
foundation. Between us all, Beth, you ought to turn out an ornament to
your sex and a glory to your country.”

Beth laughed, as her uncle intended her to; he thought there had been
enough serious talk and he wanted to see Beth’s eyes dance and her
dimple come.

“I may as well tell you, niece of mine, that your ‘Wonder-Winter,’ as
I hear you call it, is to be followed by a Wonder-Summer--or I hope it
will prove one! At any rate you are going with us to our summer home.
It is a pretty nice place, Beth; we think it is most beautiful, house
and grounds and neighboring ocean, and all our friends say so, too. We
have a little theatre there where my children give plays, and we sail
and bathe and are happy all the day long, and every day. You and Trump
will revel in it, I’m positive. So make up your mind that the winter
wonders will melt into greater summer wonders for you, Bethikins, my
dear.”

“Oh, Uncle Jim! Isn’t that splendid! I’ve been dreading spring!” cried
Beth. Then her face fell; she drooped in every muscle of her body. “But
Aunt Rebecca!” she sighed. “Don’t you think she must be lonely, Uncle
Jim?”

“Truth compels me to admit that I don’t see how she can help missing
you, Bethie,” her uncle conceded. “I have written to her, putting
before her the fact that she has had you ten years and a little more,
while we have only had you this winter--though that is our own fault;
that makes it all the worse! I asked her to tell me if she got on
fairly well without you, reminding her that we could do a great deal
for your happiness and to your advantage. Miss Bristead has replied
briefly that she is getting on well, that she would not consider making
any claim upon you that kept you from your best good, and that if you
wanted to stay with us longer and could assure her conscientiously that
you were safe, and not being harmed, she would consent to sparing you.
So, unless you think we are doing mischief to you, Beth, ours you are
to be for a long time to come.”

“Oh, doesn’t that sound just like Aunt Rebecca!” cried Beth. “She’s
so afraid I’ll not be nice! But she wouldn’t stand in the way, if she
died getting out of the way--I mean in the way of something best for
me. She is good; Aunt Rebecca really is good! But perhaps she won’t
mind much if I’m gone just this summer longer! There’s so much to take
up your mind in summer--preservings and cannings and fighting flies!
Aunt Rebecca won’t let one fly pull his head forward and rub it with
his feet in her house the way they do. She flaps him with a folded
newspaper before he can twiddle his feet once! She has a great deal
more to take up her attention in summer than she has in winter. Oh,
Uncle Jim, I guess the honest truth is I want to think Aunt Rebecca
won’t care if I’m away, I want to stay so dreadfully, dreadfully much!”

“The greatest good of the greatest number! On that principle you ought
to stay because there are so many of us to one Aunt Rebecca, and we
want you to stay ‘so dreadfully, dreadfully much’!” Mr. Cortlandt
affirmed this statement with a pat on Beth’s shoulder.

At this moment Beth’s girl cousins came into the library, followed by
Dirk with an air of wishing there were something to do better than
following them.

“Where in the world are you, Beth?” cried Alys, unnecessarily, since
her eyes were on her cousin as she spoke. “We’ve looked everywhere for
you. What can you and father be doing in this dim light?”

“Beth and I have been chatting in the firelight, Alys,” Mr. Cortlandt
replied for Beth. “Dim light and brilliant talk often go together.
Though has our conversation been brilliant, Miss Bristead?”

“It has been nice,” said Beth decidedly, slipping from her perch,
recognizing that the quiet hour she had enjoyed so much was over.

“I’m going to have a Twelfth Night revel--in the afternoon. You’re
asked,” Dirk announced to Beth, meeting her in the hall a day or two
after New Year’s.

“Beans in cake, king and queen, all those things?” cried Beth eagerly,
instantly reverting to her favorite ballads and romance at the name of
Twelfth Night.

“Beans! Beans in cake! You mean raisins, don’t you?” asked Dirk staring.

“No. But it was only one bean; I remember now. Whoever got the bean in
the cake was king of the revel,” explained Beth.

“Well, I’m the king of my own revel, only there isn’t a bean about
it and I’m not going to say I’m running it. I’m not going to ask one
single girl but you. I suppose Nat and Alys will be around, but I’m
not going to ask them; maybe they’ll have something else on the go.
I’ve asked the boys and you. We’re going to have it in the gym. Bob
Leonard’ll come. You wear that white and gold thing you had on at the
Christmas tree. We’re going to play something that’ll just come in to
fit. Will you come, Beth?” Dirk ended anxiously, as if he feared his
taste in revels might not appeal to Beth.

“’Course,” Beth accepted briefly. “Do I have to know ahead what the
game is?”

“No.” Dirk shook his head hard. “All you’ll do, most likely, is sit
around and look the part. You’re to be a captive white princess, if
you want to know, and we’re going to have a tournament, an Indian
tournament, about you.”

“Fighting? Does Aunt Alida know?” asked Beth nervously.

“Sure she knows, has to order the eats, doesn’t she? Don’t get scared,
Beth; nothing’ll happen,” Dirk assured Beth kindly.

Natalie and Alys had no more desire to go to Dirk’s Twelfth Night
party than he had to have them come. He scorned “a lot of girls”; they
looked down on “a little boys’ party,” so they were quits, each faction
comfortably superior to the other.

The girls went to lunch and to a matinée party with a friend of theirs.
Beth found herself wondering whether the honor of being the one girl
invited was not going to prove a burden. She watched Frieda making her
pretty in her Christmas white and gold costume with no little dread of
this Twelfth Night revel.

Dirk was waiting for her on the stairs. She found him a forbidding
brave in Indian costume, feathers, paint, tomahawk and all, and his
whoop hailing her sent her heart to the soles of her feet, though she
knew him, of course.

“Dirk, they won’t all yell like that, right in my ears, and flourish a
tomahawk, will they?” Beth protested.

“Oh, come now, Beth, be a sport!” Dirk reasoned with her. “I suppose
they will, else what would be the use of dressing up like Indians? You
stood the Christmas horns, you ought to be able to stand boys yelling.
If I’d thought you were going to be finnified-fine-ladyish, like Alys,
I wouldn’t have asked you, either.”

In her heart Beth wished he had not, but she felt in honor bound not to
be any more disappointing than she could help.

“All right, Dirk; I won’t mind--much, and I’ll play my best. What do
you want me to do?” she asked.

“I knew you’d be a sport,” cried Dirk, relieved. “Why, the fellows are
all in there. I bring you in as a captive, see? And they all set upon
us, but my tribe--we’re evenly divided--fights the hostile Indians, and
so I get over to my wigwam. We’ve got it all made up; they tackle me
when I go in. Then I leave you in the wigwam and we all fight; regular
gym stunts. Bob Leonard’s to be umpire and see it’s all on the level.
My side has to win, ’cause if it doesn’t, why, the other side gets the
captive, see? We’ll have to try, all right; we’re divided as fair as we
could make it.”

“What happens if the other side gets the captive--or if your side keeps
her?” asked Beth with pardonable anxiety.

“Why, why--I don’t know! We keep her, or we don’t; that’s about all;
win the fight, don’t you see? After that--well, after that I guess we
cool off and have the eats,” Dirk explained.

Beth laughed. “Sounds like ‘the king of France went up the hill with
twenty thousand men.’ I guess I needn’t mind playing that,” she said.

“Come on, then; they’re all waiting,” Dirk urged her. “I have to skulk
up to the gym door and open it as quiet! Bring my captive in on the
sly, see? They’ll all yell like sixty when they see us, so be ready.”

They did yell like sixty! Beth thought they yelled like ten times
sixty. In spite of her preparation for the onslaught she shrank back as
the horrid din smote her. Then she fulfilled her promise to play the
best she could and resumed her haughty bearing, the scornful, unmoved
pride of a noble white lady in the hands of savages, whose only weapon
against them was her contempt for the worst that they could do.

No one could distinguish friendly Indians from the foes of her
captor, for they were all in war paint and feathers, all brandishing
tomahawks and yelling insanely, and they all fell on one another in a
khaki-colored snarl of contest.

Gradually the snarl divided to Beth’s eyes and by degrees half fell
back and allowed the other half, with Dirk at their head, dragging Beth
by the wrists, to progress to the further end of the great room.

“Say, don’t come along so easy; you ought to hold back,” Dirk whispered
to her.

“No, I ought not,” Beth retorted. “If I couldn’t get away and knew it,
I’d come along quietly, to trick you. Hannah Dustin kept still till she
got her chance, then she killed the Indians and escaped. That’s exactly
the way I’m acting my part.”

Dirk was silenced. When Beth came down on him with an historical fact
he wilted--and Beth had an inconvenient number of historical facts at
her tongue’s end.

When Dirk, as chief, deposited his captive on a chair at the extreme
end of the gymnasium, called, for convenience, his wigwam, he went on
the war path again, and this time the fight was unimpeded by a captive
and was waged thoroughly.

Though she knew that Mr. Leonard would not let the boys get carried
away by the game, Beth’s heart beat hard with excitement. After a while
Beth saw that the fight followed rules and that Dirk’s side was, on
the whole, getting the best of it. Certain strokes counted as wounds,
others were reckoned fatal and on receiving these the brave thus hit
dropped out and was dragged aside. It was more interesting than Beth
had expected to find it, though as little like a Twelfth Night revel as
it well could be.

When Dirk’s side was reduced to three spirited braves, yelling defiance
to foes now outnumbering them by more than twice their number, Dirk
turned to his tribe, crying:

“Shall we fight till we kill them all? The palefaces will say the red
man never shows mercy. Let’s capture them and torture them and make
them work for us, but let them keep their scalps. Saying this the Big
Chief Ride-on-the-Wind sprang to the top of the highest pine tree to
overlook the field of battle.”

With which speech, modeled on his best Indian stories, Dirk made a
standing jump and rapidly swung himself to the top of the highest
trapeze in the gymnasium.

“And the band played ‘From the land of the sky blue water they brought
a captive maid!’” cried Mr. Leonard applauding his pupil’s feat.

Beth applauded, too, enjoying this part of the game immensely, when a
sharp rending sound penetrated the laughter and she saw Mr. Leonard’s
face turn ghastly white as he paused with his upraised hands arrested
in applause. It was but an instant, too brief to measure, the space
of an indrawn breath, and one side of the lofty trapeze parted, the
horizontal bar swung down on one end, swaying and twisting violently,
and Dirk plunged head downward, clutching at the bar, missing it,
falling headlong.

As death seemed to grip Beth’s heart in the horrible silence of that
instant, Mr. Leonard leaped forward, caught Dirk with his hands and
shoulders, sank beneath the boy’s weight, and received his fall, his
body a cushion for the impact which he had broken as he clutched Dirk.

Another instant, and no one spoke or moved, then the boys rushed
forward, shutting the group on the floor from Beth’s eyes. She arose
and tried to go toward them, but could not take a step. Then a great
shout rang out and the boys pulled Dirk to his feet and Mr. Leonard got
up, dusting himself, trying to laugh, but making a sorry failure of it
with his lips blue and drawn, his whole body visibly trembling.

“No harm done, Captive Maid!” Mr. Leonard called to poor little
quivering Beth as she stood clinging to her chair, looking out over the
boys’ heads with big eyes staring from a white, pinched face.

Dirk went over to her. “Scared, Bethie? Pretty close call. What do
you think of Bob Leonard now? Not a bump on me. I guess--I guess
mother----” Dirk stopped short. To his disgust he was crying, “in front
of the fellows!”

But no one seemed to mind. Not an Indian, foe or friendly, but that was
choking tearfully, so no one could criticize Dirk for being shaken when
he had so narrowly escaped death.

“Dirk, oh, Dirk, I was so frightened!” sobbed Beth. She longed to put
her arms around her cousin and cry herself quiet, holding him to make
sure she actually had him still, but she knew that Dirk would never
allow such a display of emotion before an audience.

Beth looked at Mr. Leonard. It seemed to her that he loomed tall and
marvelous and that she could see glory all around him.

“You saved Dirk’s life. What do you suppose Uncle Jim and Aunt Alida
will say?” she said, choking back the sob that tried to end her
sentence.

“Don’t you think they’ll overlook it?” Mr. Leonard managed to laugh
this time. “I merely jumped and caught Dirk. Didn’t I play first base
on the college team? I’ve caught harder and smaller balls than that.
You’d have jumped, too, Bethie; don’t make so much of what I did. It
was a good thing I was here, that’s all. What I’d like to know is what
made that trapeze give way. It’s the best apparatus on the market.
Indeed I don’t mean to make light of what has happened. Dirk had a
frightful fall. I am deeply thankful, deeply thankful that I could
catch him. Good old chap!”

He put his arm over Dirk’s shoulder with his fine young face full of
affection. Dirk looked up at him adoringly. “I tell you what, Bob
Leonard,” he said, “I’d just as lief have you save my life as any one.”

Then, in the nick of time to break up a nervous strain that threatened
to be too much for a boys’ frolic, what Dirk had called “the eats”
appeared. There were sandwiches and hot chocolate, cakes of many sorts
and ice-cream in forms, each form an Indian, except one, and that was
a lovely maiden in bisque and strawberry so disposed that one could
easily imagine that it represented pink and white youthful prettiness.

“Say, isn’t my mother just one! Goes and orders Indians for us and
never lets on, because I told her what we were going to play to-day!”
cried Dirk.

“Here, this girl’s for you, Beth, and the rest don’t matter. The
chocolate Indians are the nearest the real thing in looks.” Dirk passed
the cream as he talked and urged his friends to help themselves freely
to the cakes, which, to do them justice, they were perfectly ready to
do.

Beth could hardly eat; she chipped off the ends of her maiden’s hair
and nibbled a cake, but she still saw Dirk’s body dashing through the
air and her head swam. She wondered at the boys who, without exception,
though some of them began to eat slowly, all rose superior to nerves
and tucked away Mrs. Cortlandt’s refreshments rapidly. Even Mr.
Leonard, who was a boy, too, of a larger size, proved as equal to this
occasion as he had been to the danger.

After the refreshments there never seems to be much for which to linger
and Dirk’s Twelfth Night party broke up shortly. When the eating was
over the sense of solemnity returned and the boys were ill at ease.
Dirk was evidently glad when the last one had departed and he could go
to his room to resume the garments of the white race.

That evening at dinner Dirk was a hero. Natalie and Alys hung upon his
every word. Natalie visibly glowed when he ate with hearty relish,
apparently relieved by proof that he was thoroughly and boyishly alive.

Alys smiled at every word Dirk spoke; she spoke to him softly, with the
greatest affection, as though she feared to startle him if she used her
ordinary tone. She told him that if he still wanted the camera which he
thought better than his own, he might have it. She added that she was
sorry she had not given it to him at once.

Dirk grinned at this and openly winked at Beth, calling upon her to
share his glee over Alys’s conversion to him.

But Beth’s smile in return was full of unmixed joy; she did not think
it was funny that Alys discovered that her one brother was a precious
possession, after all.

Mr. Cortlandt watched Dirk in a hidden way and his face was full of
emotion. Aunt Alida toyed with her dinner and did not try to hide the
tears that choked her. No one could forget what a different household
theirs might have been that night but for Bob Leonard’s quickness of
mind and hand.

After dinner Beth saw her aunt fold Dirk in her arms and hold him close
while the lad dropped his head on her breast like a little child.

“My son, my one little, little son!” murmured Aunt Alida. “If I had
lost you I could not have lived!”

“I know it, mummy. I was glad right away Bob Leonard caught me, for
your sake,” returned Dirk. “I’d have hated like everything to have had
you come home if--if he hadn’t.”

Beth heard with surprise. She had fancied that Aunt Alida loved her
girls better, if there were a difference, than she loved her boy. She
treated Dirk with a playful carelessness and he rarely showed feeling
when he was with her, whereas the girls openly worshiped her beauty and
her charm.

Evidently this son and mother understood each other without
demonstrations. Beth wondered, feeling that she was learning a great
deal. She went to bed a tired little girl, worn out by excitement and
emotion. Her last thought on the borderland of sleep was a grateful one
that all her dear people were happy that night.




CHAPTER XV

CHRYSALIS AND THE COUNTESS


Beth had a slight cold so could not go out. Her birthday was
Valentine’s Day and her cousins hinted at some delightfully mysterious
way in which it was to be celebrated and for which she must be
perfectly well, so Beth was nursing her cold in the house, St.
Valentine’s feast--and hers--being but a week distant.

Liebchen and Annunciata had been sent for to spend the afternoon. Both
these children regarded Beth as a sort of distinct order of being,
compounded of equal parts of a good fairy, a dear little girl, an
almost-big girl--for they were both younger than Beth--a grand lady to
admire, a warm-hearted friend to love, and they proceeded to love her
in the combined ways and to the degree all these sides demanded.

When there was a chance amid her whirl of pleasures, Beth was allowed
to ask her worshipers to visit her. They had come to-day and Beth was
romping with them as she never could romp with Natalie and Alys. When
they went home there would be gifts for them, pretty ribbons, some
candy, a toy or two and perhaps a simple, pretty little frock. The
consciousness of this possibility, based on past experiences, added no
little to Liebchen’s and Annunciata’s enjoyment of the frolic while
they were with Beth.

Dirk had joined Beth and her guests and Beth had suggested and directed
a new play. Liebchen and Annunciata did not understand it, but it
necessitated dressing up so it did not matter why they had to do this
always agreeable thing. Dirk did not enter far into Beth’s enthusiasm
for the game, but, as he said, he “made a stagger at playing it,” and
Beth’s imagination did not need much fuel to feed its flames.

“I shall be Mary, Queen of Scots,” she elucidated. “You will be the
faithful Douglas, Dirk, who adores her and tries to make her life
in prison less miserable. Liebchen and Annunciata must be the four
Maries--I mean two of the queen’s Maries. They were her ladies in
waiting, you know.”

“Switched if I do!” declared Dirk. “Where do you get all this stuff,
Beth? History?”

“Well, not plain history,” admitted Beth. “I just love the Border
Ballads and all those things. And ‘The Abbot,’ you know, one of the
Waverley novels, is all about Queen Mary; I’ve read it and read it!
I play I’m Mary Queen of Scots half the time at home. Janie can’t
stand the Waverley novels; I looked over some I don’t care about,
either. But ‘The Abbot’ and ‘Kenilworth’ and ‘Ivanhoe’ and ‘The
Talisman’--goodness, Dirk, I should think you’d love them! I like ‘Guy
Mannering,’ too. Janie plays I’m Mary Stuart at Lochleven Castle pretty
nicely, though. I’ve just _made_ her listen to the best parts of ‘The
Abbot,’ so she could. She has to be Catharine Seyton, of course. When
she puts her arm through the bolt place to fasten the door--oh! Well,
we must play now. I’ll tell you what to say and do. You don’t have to
dress up much----”

“I’m not going to dress up at all.” Dirk decided that at once.

“I suppose your suit would answer,” said Beth doubtfully; she
recognized Dirk’s determination and that she should lose his support
unless she compromised. “Knickerbockers and a jacket are something like
trunks and a doublet. All right; you stay as you are. But Liebchen and
Annunciata must have long trained skirts and head-dresses and some
jewels; not many, because the queen could not give them much when she
was in misfortune. You wait here, Dirk, and I’ll take them to my room
to fix up. Aunt Alida gave me perfectly magnificent robes of state to
dress up in, old silk dresses of hers. We’ll be back soon.”

Beth hurried her two attendants away before her and presently they all
returned, splendid to behold in their finery.

Liebchen wore a blue moiré silk skirt that not merely trailed behind
her, but was so long in front that it had to be looped up through a
girdle around her hips, and this gave her quite the effect of a lady
of the period which she represented. Annunciata wore a yellow gown,
equally too long for her, equally puffy around her hips. Both had
head-dresses with feathers and jewels, both were decked with chains and
each carried a fan--merely as a touch of vague elegance. Beth, as the
hapless queen, wore a royal robe of purple velvet and a cap of lavender
with a long white veil flowing down her shoulders. Her head-dress came
down in a point in the middle of her forehead so that there, at least,
she looked like the portraits of Mary Stuart and a clever person might
guess whom she represented.

“Gracious! You do look like I don’t know what!” exclaimed Dirk
candidly. “I don’t blame whoever it was that did it for putting you
into prison, if there wasn’t any asylum those days! Now what do you
do--what’s the game, after you get togged out?”

Beth looked a little troubled; Dirk had laid his finger on the weak
spot in these imaginative plays of hers. Nothing actual ever came of
the dressing up; it all depended on how much the players could get out
of feeling their parts.

“Why, I don’t know,” she said slowly. “I think the captive queen had
better walk about her prison, under the guard of George Douglas--that’s
you. We can go through the house--nobody’s around--and pretend it’s
Lochleven Castle. My ladies in waiting will walk behind me and
sometimes I shall invite one or the other to take her place at my side.
We’ll come back up-stairs afterward and they will sing, I guess. The
queen’s ladies sang a good deal while she embroidered, or wrote Latin
prayers, or French poetry.”

“Well, if that isn’t a lively game!” cried Dirk with a shout of
laughter. “The queen must have had some head if she could write prayers
and poetry in two languages with people singing around her. If a bunch
of girls sang I think I see what my Latin and French exercises would
look like! Well, come on, if you’re going to promenade! Come on;
queen’s move! Bob Leonard’s been teaching me chess.”

Beth preceded down the hall, her step stately, her carriage aimed to
convey dignity, resignation and suffering. She felt that she actually
was the imprisoned queen and her eyes glowed with inward light as she
dwelt upon her misfortunes, a royal prisoner in this lonely northern
island castle, with hope fading day by day. She managed to overlook the
awkwardness of her ladies in their looped up gowns, even the schoolboy
suit of “George Douglas,” which distressed her till she forcibly
banished it from her mind.

The funny little cavalcade proceeded down to the lower hall and lifted
the curtain of the library door. Here the queen felt that she should
find the setting most like the dark castle of her imagination. “George
Douglas” held the leather curtain back for her and her attendants to
pass through.

To the children’s horror there sat at the further end of the room,
facing the door beside a tea wagon and a small table with an alcohol
kettle boiling upon it, Aunt Alida and a lady whom Beth and Dirk
thought they had never seen before. This lady laughed at the apparition
in the doorway and Aunt Alida smiled reassuringly to Beth.

“No harm done, Beth dear. Come in, please. Evidently you did not know
I was at home. Come and show us your costumes. To whom have I the honor
of speaking? I see it is not Beth Bristead,” said Aunt Alida, holding
out an inviting hand.

Beth came forward shyly, but smiling as she saw sympathy and
understanding in the stranger’s beautiful blue eyes. She was not
precisely pretty; beside Aunt Alida’s brilliant beauty she looked
almost plain. But her eyes were lovely, her bearing graceful and
refined. Beth decided on the spot that she was “nice,” and that she
need not mind being seen by this unknown lady in her costume.

“We were playing that I was Mary, Queen of Scots, Aunt Alida,” said
Beth. “Liebchen and Annunciata are ladies in waiting. Dirk is George
Douglas, only he wouldn’t dress up. Out of ‘The Abbot,’ you know.”

“Oh, really!” exclaimed Aunt Alida’s guest with an accent so
unmistakably English that Beth recognized it. “How delightful to find
children enjoying Sir Walter Scott! My little girl and boys won’t read
an older classic than Kipling and Barrie. Will you present me to her
majesty, Mrs. Cortlandt, please?”

“In real life this is my husband’s niece, Elizabeth Bristead, my only
son, Dirk, and two protégées of Beth’s. But now--Lady Harrowdene,
I present you to her majesty, the Queen of Scotland. Queen Mary,
graciously receive Lady Caroline Patricia, Countess of Harrowdene.”
Aunt Alida arose to make the presentation and her guest also arose,
making the profound courtesy required in a court presentation, her eyes
laughing into Beth’s with a look half maternal, half a playmate’s.

Beth caught her breath, her eyes widened in terror; she glanced at Aunt
Alida to discover whether this introduction was part of a play, too.
She remembered that Frieda had said that titled ladies came from across
the sea in winter and were entertained by her aunt and uncle, and Aunt
Alida did not seem to her to be making believe that her guest was a
noble lady. But it seemed quite impossible to Beth that a countess
should be present in the flesh, outside the pages of romance.

Lady Harrowdene bent her head respectfully and said: “Your majesty,
I rejoice to see that you are bearing so well the weary months and
years of your captivity. Though I am English, I am heart and soul your
slave, in spite of the circumstances which force me to live in the land
reigned over by Elizabeth.”

“Why don’t you say something?” Dirk whispered with a vigorous nudge. He
had great pride in Beth’s flow of antique-sounding phrases which she
usually employed in making believe.

“Are you really a--a countess?” Beth asked, staring wide-eyed at Lady
Harrowdene when she was thus goaded to speak.

Lady Harrowdene laughed delightedly. “You funny little thing!” she
cried. “Is that what is the trouble? Shall we stop playing Queen Mary
and her attendants and talk in our proper persons? Thank you; making
believe is a bit hard to keep up long. I think my title is all right.
Why do you question it? My husband is Lord William Bellair, Earl of
Harrowdene. Doesn’t that make me a countess, quite securely?”

“Yes, ma’am. Yes, my lady. I don’t know even how to say yes to a
countess! I didn’t really believe there were countesses and earls, not
_feel_ I believed them, till this minute!” cried Beth in a burst of a
sort of despair of meeting this occasion properly.

Lady Harrowdene laughed so heartily that the tears sprang to her eyes.

“Why do you care so much about them, my dear? Aren’t you a true little
American republican, believing--what is it that your Declaration of
Independence says? That all men are created equal? Why, then, do you
care about a title?” cried this merry countess when she recovered her
breath.

“It’s not that,” Beth tried bravely to explain. “It’s not the way
the Declaration meant, I care. It’s--it’s so strange, because you
read about earls and countesses in books and they always seem
so--interesting. Almost like fairies, only nicer, I think. And it
doesn’t seem as though they could be just going around now. Are your
children earls and countesses?”

“My oldest boy will be Harrowdene some day. My girl--she’s not as
old as you are--is the Honorable Constantia Bellair, because her
father is an earl. We call her Con, Connie, usually, quite as you are
called Beth. It really doesn’t matter about these things as much as
you fancy, my dear. I see, though, that it is the romance of it that
appeals to you, not the worldly side of noble birth. But I assure you
we are not particularly romantic, though I fancy you’d find plenty to
enthrall your dreaming little soul in the fine old Elizabethan house
at Harrowdene. One day you must see it, when your aunt comes over to
return my visit of to-day and brings your lovely cousins, as she has
promised to do. They used to call me Honorable Pat, Beth, before I was
married, because my father was also an earl. Now they call me Lady Pat,
and my husband makes stupid jokes on my name, all about his Pat-ent
wife; what a frightful wound he got when my father gave him a Pat--and
all that sort of thing, don’t you know? But this is when we are quite
in private and it doesn’t matter! I only mention it to show you that an
earl is quite merely a mere man! By the way, my dear, an ancestor of
mine, on my mother’s side, was one of the noblemen selected to witness
the execution of poor Mary Stuart. Pray don’t set that down against me;
I’m sure I should have tried to rescue her had I been in his place!”

Lady Harrowdene had talked on, evidently to set Beth at her ease, and
to accustom her to the shock of meeting English historical romances
clothed in flesh, which she saw was much the way in which Beth regarded
her.

The little girl had listened, enthralled. Lady Harrowdene’s beautiful
voice, her inflections, so different from those she had always heard,
made of the tongue they both spoke something so unlike its old self, so
attractively unlike it, that Beth could have listened forever, even had
not what Lady Harrowdene said been so interesting.

“Don’t be too disappointed, dear, that I am just an every-day twentieth
century woman and not a splendid creature of Queen Elizabeth’s court!”
Lady Patricia leaned toward Beth with the motherly look in her eyes,
and Beth went over to her at once.

“The daughter of a thousand earls, belted earls!” she murmured.

Aunt Alida and Lady Patricia dissolved in merriment at this, and Lady
Patricia hugged Beth vehemently.

“You dear, funny little creature!” she cried. “I give you my word that
I never had a thousand earls for a father in my life! And I’m quite
sure my father never wore a belt, except when he was playing tennis.
If it gives you satisfaction to think of me as a countess, pray keep
it well in mind. But if it is going to raise a barrier against our
intimacy, then please consider me only as the mother of five little
English people, Herbert, Richard, Constantia, Gilbert, and my rosy,
jolly baby James William. I had to keep up the family names and poor
Jamie took both his grandfather’s and his father’s! You would love
Jamie, Beth. He is nearly two years old. While I am away from him he
tugs at my heart-strings like a particularly strong Atlantic cable.
Dirk, dear, Beth and I are doing all the talking! You were but a little
lad when I was last over; I remember you, but you will not remember me.”

“Yes, I do now, Lady Harrowdene,” said Dirk. “You had the greatest
little terrier I ever saw.”

“I had, truly,” said Lady Harrowdene, greatly pleased. “He’s still
the greatest little dog in England. The children will not allow him to
leave them; he’s waiting my return with the rest of my family. You are
all going to see him when you go over. He will do tricks for you, fall
over dead, stand erect and salute at ‘God save the king,’ join in the
chorus with barks when he’s bidden--he has really quite a repertory
of accomplishments! I shall be glad to introduce you to Briton when
you come to visit me, and that must not be later than the summer after
next. Now then, Alida, are you ever going to tell them? If you don’t I
shall.”

“Do you think it’s fair to blame me for delay, Pat, dear? There has
been no lull in the conversation!” returned Aunt Alida.

Beth noticed with surprise this intimate use of first names; she
wondered when Aunt Alida had come to know so well this lady, separated
from her by the width of the Atlantic.

“Beth, you are to be given a birthday party! It must also be a
Valentine party, as you are a Valentine child. I had planned to
celebrate you, but Lady Harrowdene has a Valentine-birthday idea that
puts mine quite in the shade! It will---- Oh, Lady Pat, I believe I
will not tell her about it, after all! It is a week distant. We’ll let
Beth get gray and ugly puzzling over it; we won’t tell her another
syllable than that she is to have a party!” Aunt Alida stopped herself
short and laughed at Beth with her flashing dark eyes.

Beth did not grow gray, nor did she seem to those that loved her in
the least likelihood of becoming ugly as the week before her birthday
crawled past. But she gave a great deal of thought to the celebration
of the day. So did Natalie and Alys; Dirk professed indifference to
all parties, but secretly he speculated, too, on what new form this
celebration could take. Mrs. Cortlandt would not give either of her own
children the least hint about it, for fear Beth should hear it; they
all rightly thought that Mrs. Cortlandt was having a fine time keeping
the mystery shrouded.

St. Valentine’s day came at last. Early in the afternoon Frieda attired
Beth in the strangest costume! Beth did not know whether to like it
or not; she certainly had the gravest doubt of its suitability. Yet
Aunt Alida always knew, not merely what was pretty, but what was
appropriate. This gown was blue, light blue in its upper part, dark
blue below, and it had velvet stripes of yellow bordering its tunic and
rings of yellow velvet on the skirt. The material was the gauziest silk
imaginable; everything about the frock was exquisite, but the effect
altogether was, as Beth doubtfully told herself, “queer.” However,
she could not voice her doubt and in a moment Frieda had slipped over
the whole costume a straight, sheathing sort of a dull yellow silken
garment, like a scant raincoat. It had a yellow silk hood which Frieda
drew forward over Beth’s hair, carefully arranging it so that the
whalebones in it lay so that they would keep the hood from disarranging
her hair.

“For pity’s sake, Frieda, what is it? It makes me look like a big
chrysalis!” cried Beth, surveying her sleek gray figure in the glass
with disfavor.

Frieda clapped her hands. “Isn’t that fine, Miss Beth!” she cried.
“Just what it’s meant to look like! And to think you knew it at once!”

“Well, my goodness! I don’t want to be a chrysalis!” cried Beth. Then
she remembered and felt ashamed. “But Aunt Alida knows,” she added
loyally. “Anyhow, I should think she’d made you look nice often enough,
Beth Bristead, for you to wear what she wanted you to! Maybe Aunt Alida
wants me to be a chrysalis to eat salad! Am I ready, Frieda?”

“Yes, Miss Beth, you are. I’m to go with you to help you and your
cousins,” said Frieda, making sure that her black gown and white linen
cap and apron were as they should be.

“Going with us? Are we going somewhere, Frieda?” cried Beth.

But Frieda put her finger on her lip and shook her head to say that she
must not tell Beth anything, even at this late hour, and, taking her
coat, Frieda led the way to the elevator and put Beth in.

Down-stairs Beth found three other figures swathed like herself in
scant dull yellow silk--Natalie, Alys and Dirk. She stared, then began
to take a more hopeful view of the queer costume. If there were so many
copies of it they must have some fine purpose.

“All ready?” asked Aunt Alida, hastening out from the reception room
where she had waited for her flock. Beth saw that she was clad in
beauty unconcealed, so the cocoon-like sheath was not for her.

“Léon is at the door, children!” cried Aunt Alida, as always,
refreshingly excited and happy in the prospect of pleasure for the
children.

She led the way to the car, put the three girls in the back seat, took
Dirk with her in the middle seats, Frieda took her place beside Léon
and they were off.

They drove circuitously, from street to street, from Fifth Avenue
to Madison Avenue, in the blocks which lay between, and everywhere
they were joined by other cars, each containing one or more of the
mysterious silk-clad figures, wearing exactly the same long, dull silk
enveloping coats which Beth and her cousins wore. These cars fell in
line with the Cortlandt car till they had a lengthy procession of
various cars, all carrying human chrysalides. Everybody they passed
stared, but that did not matter. Most people smiled at the procession,
recognizing it as a children’s party of some sort.

The line of motors stopped in turn under the porte-cochère of one of
the most splendid hotels in the city and each discharged its burden of
guests and maids. The party was met by a preternaturally tall person in
quiet livery who said:

“Lady Harrowdene’s party? Thank you, madam. This way if you please,”
and conducted Mrs. Cortlandt and all her dull silken followers to
elevators which took them up to the second floor, where they were led
by the tall man who looked, Natalie whispered, “like the Washington
monument,” to a room opening out of a ballroom in which the children
heard violins tuning.

“Her ladyship is here, Mrs. Cortlandt,” said the tall man throwing open
the door. Then he bowed low and withdrew.

Lady Harrowdene came rapidly forward to meet them. “So glad you are
come at last!” she said. “Oh, no, you are not late, Alida, but I was a
bit early and waiting was tedious. How beautifully you have carried out
the idea! Aren’t they charming, the chrysalis-girls? Please present me
to my--and your--guests.”

One by one Mrs. Cortlandt introduced the young people, girls and boys,
to Lady Harrowdene. Beth thus knew for the first time who were invited
to her birthday party; she found that they were the Tanagers and
Bluebirds and the other young people whom she had met, her cousins’
friends. This did not lessen her shyness. Beth had never made the least
progress in acquaintanceship outside her family that winter, and now
the fear of what might be required of her at a party given in her honor
oppressed her.

Aunt Alida must have known this for she announced:

“This is Beth’s party, but she is as much in the dark in regard to it
as any of you. Lady Harrowdene has surprises for you all, so you are to
consider her as your hostess and Beth as a sort of Appendix Hostess. We
are all under Lady Harrowdene’s orders.”

“Very well, then,” began Lady Harrowdene, accepting her
responsibility; “you must know that you are each to consider yourself
a chrysalis, if you please! You did not know why you were bidden wear
that yellow silk covering, but this is the reason: you are each a
chrysalis. Now, we are to repair to the dancing room, each chrysalis
when it--‘it’ is surely the correct word for a chrysalis!--when it is
ready.”

She led the way, a dazzling apparition in white and green. Beth saw
with unspeakable joy that she wore on her hair something that must have
been a coronet! What rapture it gave her to know that her hostess, Beth
Bristead’s hostess at her birthday party, rightfully wore a countess’s
coronet!

  “‘Kind hearts are more than coronets
   And simple faith than Norman blood,’”

she said to her own great dismay, and not because that was what she was
thinking, but because Lady Harrowdene’s coronet put the words on her
tongue. She was horrified when a girl at her elbow heard her quotation
and laughed.

The ballroom was beautiful with flowers, the orchestra was playing
irresistible dance music as the chrysalides slid, in their quiet dull
color, into the brilliant light. The daylight was excluded by heavy
screens and the electric candles turned the February afternoon into
night.

In a moment every chrysalis was dancing and they danced for an hour.
Then the music died away into the faintest echo and the chrysalides
stopped dancing, wondering what was to happen.

A curtain concealing a stage at the end of the long room was withdrawn
by invisible hands and upon this stage flitted fairy figures, so
beautiful, so fairylike, as they half danced, half flew on the
invisible wires across the stage, that Beth caught her breath in
delight, so keen that it overwhelmed her.

The fairies--in reality they were professional dancers hired by Lady
Harrowdene--began a dance that seemed to call upon nature to awaken; it
was a Dance of Spring. With exquisite threadings of wind-blown mazes
they flitted, calling, hand to lips. Then they poised, listening, one
hand on hip, one at the ear, as the dancers leaned forward to hear if
their summons were heeded. Then they bent their graceful bodies low to
earth, lightly touching the ground. Then they sprang up with fawn-like
leaps, triumphing, the flowers which they had wakened and culled waving
in their hands above their heads. And finally they came to the front
of the stage, lips parted as if calling, waving their arms, extending
their hands, fluttering, waiting expectant, never still, yet waiting.

Natalie had been coached by Lady Harrowdene what to do. She stood at
the head of a long double row of chrysalides. At a signal from her each
chrysalis fell off and the boys and girls appeared in gorgeous colors.
At last Beth understood her gown of blues with the yellow velvet
stripes! She was a butterfly, they were each a butterfly, broken out of
a chrysalis, Natalie in gold, Alys in green, Dirk in browns and golds,
all the young guests in color combinations incredibly beautiful.

Natalie began to swing in time with the slow dancing on the stage; the
entire line of newly-emerged butterflies swung with her and followed
her as she broke into a dance. She led them around the room, dancing
as only Natalie could dance, improvising her steps and motions. The
professional dancers came down and danced with the children till,
finally, the line broke up into pairs and, all over the room, the
butterflies were waltzing, a sight so beautiful that, as Mrs. Cortlandt
said, it was the greatest pity that all the world could not be there to
see.

Then, as if Lady Harrowdene were in command of genii, the servants of
the hotel slipped into the room and began to serve refreshments. Aunt
Alida had attended to the selection of these, as more versed in what
these American birthday guests would prefer than Lady Harrowdene was.

All the edibles were valentines! Heart-shaped sandwiches, as well as
cakes; salads served in lacy paper, like old-fashioned valentines;
pâtés also lace-trimmed and heart-decorated; fancy ices in valentine
forms; sweets in pairs of love birds; chocolate in heart cups, its
whipped cream carrying out the old-fashioned valentine effect of lace
paper.

Somehow Beth found herself at the head of the central one of the
small tables which Lady Harrowdene’s genii had swiftly and noiselessly
set in place and covered with good things. To her table they bore a
huge valentine cake, decorated with all sorts of icing designs in the
valentine style, ringed around with eleven candles burning steadily.
Beth had to rise and cut the cake. She was so embarrassed that she
could only make the first incision, from which custom forbade her being
excused. Aunt Alida rescued her after that and cut the birthday cake
into slices herself.

“You are to sit still, Beth, please,” Lady Harrowdene said, signaling
to the servants when the supper was over.

Just as swiftly and silently as they had brought them, the men bore
the tables away, all but the centre one on which Beth’s birthday cake
stood and at which Beth herself was left, a solitary island entirely
surrounded by guests and shyness.

The orchestra, which had been playing beautiful soft music during the
supper, played a waltz. The butterflies once more spread their wings,
figuratively speaking, and danced. As they whirled around and past
Beth each butterfly dropped into the lap of this one little motionless
butterfly a package, tied with gay ribbons, decked with birthday cards
and flowers, till the small table was heaped and the small recipient
was nearly overcome.

“‘Please don’t open till Christmas,’ not till you get home at any
rate!” cried Alys. “Come and dance, Bethie, for it will soon be over
and this music is heavenly.”

It was; Beth thought so. Aunt Rebecca would have been surprised if she
could have seen her little grandniece dancing, for Beth had acquired
the accomplishment only this winter and was fond of it with all her
musical heart.

“The clock strikes twelve, Cinderella!” warned Lady Harrowdene. “Dear
guests, my party is over. I’m sorry and I hope you are.”

“It was the nicest party we ever had, Lady Harrowdene,” declared one of
the Tanager girls. “If you have parties like this in England I’m going
to live there as soon as I come of age.”

Beth came home excited, tired, but in a dream of bliss. The party had
seemed like a dream, but the proof of its reality was the snow of white
packages completely covering the floor of the tonneau of the car.

“Well, sir,” exclaimed Dirk, speaking out of a long silence on the way
home, “she’s a countess that counts!”

And Natalie, Alys and Beth enthusiastically agreed.




CHAPTER XVI

THE SHROVE NIGHT MASQUE


“Shall you be ready to meet Shakespeare when he comes here on Tuesday
night, Beth?” asked Mr. Cortlandt unexpectedly, emerging from behind
his morning paper. “It is the custom of some people to ‘get up’ handy
quotations from an author before meeting him, to have them ready to
use; it’s supposed to please him, but all real authors hate it. If you
like I’ll rehearse the balcony scene from Romeo and Juliet and we’ll
act it for Mr. Shakespeare when he comes.”

Beth smiled in a puzzled way, looking inquiringly at her uncle. She
knew there was some clue to the meaning of his nonsense, but she lacked
it.

“I saw an allusion to our ball in the paper, that’s what reminded
me,” Mr. Cortlandt went on. “You look blank, Beth. Is it possible you
haven’t heard of the ball?”

“Mama has been so busy about it we haven’t seen her much lately, and
Natalie and I never thought to tell Beth, because we’re not in it
anyway, so it doesn’t matter,” said Alys.

“Oh, dear me, it matters a lot!” exclaimed her father. “Where’s your
family pride, my dear? The Cortlandt ball is going down in the history
of New York! And I’m not sure you mayn’t see it. I think I’ll put in a
plea to the hostess to make an exception to the rule and let you young
people sit up that night to see the pageant. It will be worth looking
at and one night won’t ruin your budding beauty! I should like to have
Beth see it. We’ll hide you in the gallery, but we’ll costume you
first, so if you are discovered you’ll be in the picture.”

“What is it, Uncle Jim?” asked Beth, as Natalie and Alys clapped their
hands and softly cheered this decision.

“Fancy one’s own niece not knowing what I’m talking about when the
daily papers are eagerly discussing ‘Mr. and Mrs. James Cortlandt’s
Elizabethan ball!’” cried Uncle Jim. “That’s what it is, Bethie--an
Elizabethan Ball. It is to be a masked ball of the period when Bess of
England reigned, and Will Shakespeare was writing and acting at the
Globe Theatre in London, and Sir Walter Raleigh was spreading his cloak
for the queen to pass over the mud dry shod while, at the same time,
he was trying to spread her realm over the sea into our own Virginia.
There’s a royal prince visiting the United States just now, little
niece, whom your aunt and I have met several times; we are giving the
ball in his honor. It will be rather magnificent, we hope. It is to be
a Shrovetide Masque--now doesn’t that sound Elizabethan? Next Tuesday
is the day--Shrove Tuesday. There will be court dancing, gavottes,
minuets, those formal old dances which so well suit the brocades and
farthingales of that period, and there’ll be a play acted without
scenery, right on the ballroom floor among the guests, just as plays
were given in Shakespeare’s day. At midnight we unmask and sup, and end
with modern dancing. You children shall see it; I want you to.”

Beth listened, bewildered, to this amazing explanation in which a real,
live Royal Prince was mingled with ghosts of historical splendor.

“Do you think Aunt Alida will care?” she gasped, hardly knowing what
she said.

“If you sit up to see the ball? Not she, not after a moment. She’ll
never be hard-hearted enough to deny us,” declared Uncle Jim,
identifying his desire with Beth’s in the most satisfactory way.

Aunt Alida did demur for just about the moment which Uncle Jim had
allowed for her to hesitate, when he announced his decision to have
the children see the ball which all New York was discussing. But she
yielded her objections to breaking through her rule of “early to bed
and early to rise” for her young folk, and consented to let them be
hidden in the gallery at the end of the great ballroom to see the
spectacle which would be a lifelong memory of beauty to them.

This meant hurriedly planned costumes for the four. The ball guests
would be sure to invade the ballroom galleries and Aunt Alida did not
intend to allow the smallest blemish in the harmony of this great ball.
When the children were discovered, as they would be, looking on, they
must be found in the costume of the period of the ball, not in their
own twentieth century persons and frocks.

Poor Aunt Alida was dismayed at this additional task unexpectedly
fallen upon her, but Miss Deland came to her rescue.

“Let me attend to the costumes, dear Mrs. Cortlandt,” she said. “I’m
sure I can design them well enough--to be hidden away!”

Mrs. Cortlandt laughed, looking relieved. “You could choose costumes
quite pretty enough to put in the middle of the strongest limelight,
Miss Deland,” she said. “Lessons have been so neglected this winter by
our gadabout Beth that you hardly have had her in the schoolroom enough
to know what she looks like! But you can guess what will be becoming to
her!”

“I know Bethie’s sunny face better than you think I do, and I know how
well she loves English history,” said Miss Deland with a smile for Beth
that made Beth throw her arms around this lovable teacher and give her
one of her impetuous hugs.

“Miss Deland and I are very well acquainted, because I love her dearly,
Aunt Alida,” she said. “And she teaches me a great deal in a few days.
I’ve learned different things from the ones I learn in school at home,
but Miss Deland makes me know so much in an hour that you needn’t think
I’ve lost this winter--studying, I mean.”

“To be truthful, I’m not seriously worried about it, Bethie,” laughed
Aunt Alida. “And it surely ought to be a good way to become well
acquainted with a person to love her dearly! Then I’ll leave it to you,
Miss Deland, to turn the quartette into subjects of Queen Elizabeth,
and you really don’t know how much I appreciate your undertaking it for
me.”

“We must have a solemn consultation, girls and boy!” said Miss Deland,
as Aunt Alida hurried away. “Your gowns must be simple. We can have
them made at home. We’ll get a sempstress in and call upon Anna Mary
and Frieda to help; I can sew, too.”

“If only we could get Miss Tappan! She’s the dressmaker at home,” said
Beth. “She’s really quick, though she looks like some one who would be
dreadfully slow. She goes out by the day; she charges only a dollar
a day to old customers, like Aunt Rebecca. She mightn’t be able to
make Elizabethan dresses, though.” Beth looked doubtful and somewhat
troubled.

“It doesn’t matter, dear, does it? As long as we can’t get Miss
Tappan,” suggested Miss Deland. “The first thing is to decide on
the colors for each of you and then to fly off to the shops to find
materials suitable for our purpose.”

“Please, Miss Deland, I think the very first thing of all is to decide
what we are to be,” said Beth decidedly.

“Oh, that’s settled now,” said Miss Deland. “You are to be young people
of Queen Elizabeth’s time, probably children of some of her courtiers.
It won’t be necessary to decide which ones; you will be smuggled away
in a corner of the gallery.”

“Oh, indeed it is necessary!” implored Beth. “I want to know just
exactly who I am, so I can be part of it. You see, you can’t half see
a thing right if you are part of it and don’t know what part it is.
Mayn’t we decide that first, Miss Deland?”

“I’m sure I don’t care what I am; we’re only going to look on,” said
Alys, puzzled by Beth’s absorbing interest in imaginative things, as
she always was.

“Well, I want to look on right,” persisted Beth.

“I know! You shall be Judith Shakespeare, Beth!” cried Miss Deland,
with an inspiration. “And Dirk shall be Hamnet, ‘Will Shakespeare’s
little lad!’ Natalie shall be Susanna, Shakespeare’s oldest child,
while Alys--well, we will make Alys the Lady Alys Dudley, a relative
of the Earl of Leicester, the favorite of the queen, and pretend she
is entertaining Shakespeare’s young folk during their visit to London.
Will that please you, Beth dear?”

“I’ll love it,” declared Beth briefly, her face illumined. Miss Deland
saw that in an instant she had assumed her rôle and was become the
dutiful, proud daughter of the greatest of poets.

The mere detail of color and design for her costume Beth passed over
lightly, without much interest in it. Not so Natalie and Alys; even
though they were to be concealed from sight they cared a great deal to
have their costumes suit them.

Yellow for Alys, with her blonde hair; blue for Beth and crimson for
Natalie and wine-colored velvet for Dirk were settled upon. Miss
Deland bore the girls off in the Cortlandt car to do the shopping this
entailed.

For four days scissors, needles and sewing-machine gleamed and buzzed.
Miss Deland designed and cut out, Anna Mary and Frieda sewed and
Frieda’s mother was fetched in to help, a competent German woman whose
needle worked fast and skilfully.

Not for nothing had Aunt Rebecca insisted upon Beth’s daily “stint” of
sewing, in the old-fashioned way, bringing up a girl early to use her
needle well. Beth now came out strong in her hated accomplishment and
helped effectually in the hurried work under way. Neither Natalie nor
Alys could sew well enough to count in real work.

“It’s a fine thing, so it is, to know how to sew, Miss Natalie,” said
Anna Mary, biting off her thread, though she would not permit one of
the girls thus to risk breaking the enamel of a tooth. “Sure, if you
know how it doesn’t get in the way of buyin’ your clothes, nor of
hirin’ some one else to sew for you. But when you lose your money, or
happen to be where there’s no buyin’, nor hirin’, it gets sore in your
way not to know how to put a garmient together, nor the top from the
bottom of an unmade sleeve, no, nor a hawk from handsewin’, as the
sayin’ is.”

“‘A hawk from a handsaw,’” murmured Miss Deland in spite of herself,
much amused, yet knowing better than to attempt to correct Anna Mary.
“That’s Shakespeare, Anna Mary! You certainly sew wonderfully well and
wonderfully fast! I don’t know how we ever should have had the costumes
done in time, but for you,” she added hastily, seeing Anna Mary’s brow
darken.

“It would be a poor creature that was lady’s maid as many years as I’ve
been and couldn’t sew, Miss Deland,” said Anna Mary, mollified, but
accepting the compliment as her just due.

When the costumes were finished they were so charming that Aunt Alida
clapped her hands at the sight of the four figures arrayed in them,
declaring that it was a pity to hide such effects in the gallery. They
surprisingly brought out the characteristics of each wearer. Natalie
looked quite grown up in her stiff gown, a magnificent court lady, so
handsome that jealous Queen Elizabeth would never have suffered her
at her court. Alys looked dignified and impressive, but Beth looked
like what she was, a rosy cheeked little girl masquerading, and Dirk
might well have passed for what he represented, the one little son whom
Shakespeare loved and lost.

Shrove Tuesday night came, a warm night for the season. It would have
been the children’s privilege to have seen Mrs. Cortlandt dress, but
Beth refused to go, wishing to keep the coming wonders of the night and
the illusion of Elizabeth’s court to burst upon her in undivided glory,
its illusion perfect. She would not risk seeing one of the maskers
transformed from Aunt Alida into an Elizabethan lady. Since Beth would
not look at their mother till she appeared in the ballroom, the others
would not either.

All four slipped down into the vast ballroom early. The room was
groined and arched, with Corinthian columns supporting its galleries.
It suggested a Greek temple, but a temple devoted to the gods of youth
and joy. Its white and gold was hung with countless lights, wreathed,
grouped, scattered in curves and singly like electric blossoms in a
hanging garden. No plants broke the white lines of the columns and
arches, but garlands of unbelievable orchids fell carelessly from the
balconies, and chains of Killarney roses and ferns stretched from point
to point, filling the air with sweetness. The orchestra was placed
behind the diaphanous golden screen built for it. It was a screen of
white agate, cut into lace-like fragility in designs of ferns and
blossoms, like point lace; the light shone through the agate with a
delicate warmth that made the flowers alive, as if they really were the
white jasmine they represented, blooming in the moonlight. Framing the
screen was a golden fantasy of musical instruments, wrought in metal.

“It looks the way music sounds!” cried Beth rapturously, seeing the
golden screen with its agate carving for the first time illuminated.

At nine o’clock the orchestra began playing softly behind its screen.
Presently a fanfare of trumpets sounded beyond the ballroom, the doors
were thrown open, the orchestra burst into splendid music, which
Beth did not know was one of the Liszt Hungarian rhapsodies, and a
procession began to enter.

First came solemn men in a queer uniform, with staves; these were not
masked. They represented the beef-eaters, the yeomen of the Royal
Guard, who attended upon the sovereign at state banquets.

“Those are just men, hired,” said Dirk, craning his neck eagerly to
see the pageant. “Jolly! If there isn’t Tim marching in with them!
Daddy got him in as a beef-eater! Wait till I get at him to-morrow!”

Next came Mr. Cortlandt, walking alone. He too, being the host, was
unmasked.

“I never knew father was such a peach!” cried Alys, moved beyond
herself by the spectacle of her father in white satin, embroidered in
blues and golds, a blue velvet cloak swinging from one shoulder, a
plumed hat carried jauntily under his left arm. Jewels blazed from his
hands and throat, the clasp of his cloak, his knee and shoe buckles;
the collar of an order hung around his neck and a blazing star of
diamonds fell from it upon his chest.

“He’s just as handsome as he can be!” cried Beth. “All the time, I
mean, but now he’s handsomer than he can be--I mean he doesn’t seem
possible!” She was so excited that Natalie caught her by the arm.

“I’m afraid you’ll jump over the rail,” Natalie laughed, but her own
eyes were flashing and she looked as though she, too, found the pageant
almost too much for her.

Behind Mr. Cortlandt came his guests in pairs, lords and ladies of the
great and magnificent time of English Elizabeth. Such colors, such
brocades and satins, velvets, laces, feathers, fans, shoes, above all
such ropes and suns of jewels Beth had never believed could exist,
outside the stories of Eastern magic.

The five hundred guests came slowly on, stepping to the time of a
minuet which the orchestra was now playing. They were all masked and
the men vied with the women in gorgeousness of raiment and jewels. Each
man held the left hand of his partner in the entering march high in
the air, as in a minuet; with the other hand he clasped his feathered,
jeweled hat and the women with their right hand waved their fans or
toyed with chains of jewels, making them flash anew as they fingered
them.

Then came four especially graceful dames, walking backward.

Natalie pointed out one to Beth. “That’s mama. No one else on earth
could walk backward like that! See how graceful she is; best of them
all!” Natalie’s voice was excited; it thrilled with proud admiration of
her exquisite mother.

Beth arose to see better. Though she was masked Beth felt as sure as
Natalie was that the lady in cloth of gold, with a diamond plume in her
hair and diamonds radiating everywhere from her splendid costume, was
Aunt Alida.

“She is Mary Fitton; she told me, but she said I wasn’t to tell any one
till to-night,” announced Dirk proudly.

“Who is Mary Fitton?” asked Alys.

“I know; Miss Deland and I read about her last week,” cried Beth. “She
was a lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth, and Shakespeare wrote his
sonnets to her--maybe he did; they aren’t sure. Oh, look, look! There
is the queen! That’s why they are walking backward. She isn’t masked.
Oh, doesn’t she look for all the world like Queen Elizabeth?”

One of Aunt Alida’s friends represented the queen. She had the
requisite long, slender face and the glowing red hair. Taking the part
of the queen she required no mask, and indeed she was quite enough
burdened without it. Her dress looked as if it were made of a metal;
she had the great head-dress, the ruff, the heavy sleeves, the jewels
and large feather fan of the portrait of the queen which Elizabeth gave
to Sir Henry Sidney.

Behind this Shrove Night Queen Elizabeth came four more
ladies-in-waiting, and then the rest of the guests in pairs, as before.
The procession ended with unmasked beef-eaters, with their staves of
office, like those who had begun it.

The queen’s court made a circuit of the ballroom. Then the queen
took the throne prepared for her at the upper end of the room, her
ladies-in-waiting placed themselves behind her and Mr. Cortlandt stood
at his sovereign’s right. Two by two the courtiers came to the foot
of the throne, moving in a lovely slow dance, made a profound bow to
the queen and were presented to her by that resplendent gentleman at
the queen’s right who, as Beth tried hard to realize, was in actual
life her familiar Uncle Jim. She heard the great names of history
repeated as she leaned forward to see every detail of the beautiful
moving picture, Essex, Leicester, Suffolk, Bacon, Ben Jonson,
Raleigh--Raleigh, who, as he made his bow to the queen, threw his cloak
before her with a sweep of the arm, recalling the day he had spread it
as a carpet over the mud beneath her tread.

Beth knew it was a masquerade, a pageant, but she could not remember
that these were not the personages whose names she heard, that she was
a little girl in New York, not Judith Shakespeare in the London of
three centuries gone. She did not want to remember it; she loved her
transformation.

“Oh, there’s Shakespeare! He said William Shakespeare, Natalie! Look,
look!” cried Beth.

“Don’t act ‘Much Ado About Nothing,’ if it is,” laughed Natalie,
holding Beth down.

A gentleman in black velvet, plainly clad, with a quill in the hand
that carried also a simple hat, with a single black plume, was bowing
before the queen at the moment.

“Might one ask why so young a lady is so passionately interested in the
appearance of Shakespeare?” asked a voice close behind Beth.

All four children faced about with a jump. They did not know that there
was any one besides themselves in the gallery. Aunt Alida had arranged
that her dowager friends, and those who had come to see, not to take
part in the ball, were placed in the other galleries that, as far as
possible, the children might be alone. The gentleman who had spoken
had entered unnoticed by them. He had taken off his mask and showed a
pleasant, frank, manly face. He wore white velvet with crimson slashing
and a crimson cloak. Beth did not know him, and her glance at her
cousins showed her that he was a stranger to them.

“Mercy, you frightened me!” cried Beth. “Shakespeare? Why, I forgot it
wasn’t really him--he--for a minute. So of course it was exciting.”

“It is because it doesn’t seem to me to be ‘of course’ that I
wondered,” said the newcomer smiling at Beth. “I have known little
girls who would have met Shakespeare in the flesh quite calmly. Might I
ask if American children read the poet?”

“Why, you’re English, aren’t you?” cried Dirk, noting his accent.
“You’d better believe they don’t, not many of them. Beth’s death on old
things and poets and all that.”

“Are you Mr. Cortlandt’s children?” asked the stranger with a laugh
that won Beth at once.

“We are,” said Dirk, waving his hand toward his two sisters. “Beth’s
our cousin, Beth Bristead. Are you any relation to Lady Harrowdene?”

“No,” said the young man. “Not related to her; I suppose there is
a connection between us.” His blue eyes twinkled and Beth wondered
what the joke was which she suspected lurked somewhere in his remark.
“You seem a nice quartette of young people. Beth Bristead? Another
Elizabeth, I suppose?” Beth saw him look at Natalie with admiration in
his eyes, but he did not address her; he probably thought her too old
to dispense with the lack of an introduction.

“Yes, I’m Elizabeth, but not often,” said Beth. “We’re the Shakespeare
family ourselves. Natalie is Susanna, Dirk is Hamnet, I’m Hamnet’s
twin sister, Judith. We had to make believe Alys was Lady Alys Dudley;
we’re visiting her. We don’t know there ever was a Lady Alys Dudley,
but we needed her, so we made her up. I’m sure there must have been a
countess, or something, who would have had Shakespeare’s children stay
with her, aren’t you?”

“Certain of it,” declared their new acquaintance with conviction.
“You seem a bit young to be at a ball, or you would be too young to
be allowed at it in England. Miss Cortlandt--it is Miss Cortlandt?”
he bowed deferentially to Natalie--“may be in society, but the
others----?” He broke off, with a puzzled glance at childish Dirk and
Beth.

“We are not at the ball and I am only fifteen,” said Natalie with
dignity. “My father begged my mother to break the rule and let us see
this ball from the gallery, so here we are. We are in costume, because
mama was afraid if any one came up here it would be a discord in the
picture--I mean a blot on it--if we were in just our present-day
frocks. So our governess designed these costumes in a hurry. We aren’t
going to use our assumed names; we aren’t going to do anything but
watch, but Beth couldn’t watch unless she had been fitted out with
a name, so she’d feel part of it--like the right piece in a picture
puzzle! She’s a queer little Coz--aren’t you, Beth?”

“My word!” exclaimed the newcomer, with his hearty boyish laugh. “I
believe you! But that’s the artistic impulse, to preserve the unities!
I’d wager you’ve been feeling yourself the little Shakespeare girl and
that when you heard Will presented to Queen Bess a few moments ago your
first thought was: ‘There’s father at last!’”

“Oh, how did you know!” cried Beth, embarrassed, yet pleased.

The young man nodded. “It’s not so long since I was a boy,” he said.
“When I go home I shall have to tell my young nieces and nephews that I
found young Americans in New York caring more about our great poet than
they do. When I was a small chap it was I who liked making-believe. My
brothers and sisters, all but one sister, never were keen for it. I
used to play at being Clive, or else Wellington.”

“There’s nothing half such fun!” cried Beth. “Were you Wellington? I
suppose a boy has to play he’s a soldier, and, of course, Waterloo
is splendid. But I’m always Mary Queen of Scots, or something--’most
always Queen Mary.”

“Dear me, don’t you ever make believe you’re an American
hero--heroine?” asked the young man. “Nothing could have persuaded
me to be anything but an Englishman in my assumed parts. Like the
gentleman in Pinafore, don’t you know?

  “‘In spite of all temptations
   To belong to other nations
   He was an Englishman.’”

The young man sang these words in a low voice, mellow and pleasant in
tone.

“Do you think I’m not patriotic?” asked Beth, looking troubled.
“Really and truly I am! But you know all those early days my
ancestors were in England, so they belong to me just as much as
they do to--to Lady Harrowdene! Of course I had a grandfather,
great-great-greatest--who fought at Bunker Hill, though.”

“That wasn’t on the British side, I suppose?” the young man inquired
innocently.

“No, it wasn’t,” Beth admitted. “But if the king had only understood
he’d have seen we were good Englishmen when we wanted our rights, my
teacher says.”

“It’s good of you to be so generous to the memory of King George!” This
time the young man laughed with his head thrown back in high glee.
“What makes you so keen for olden days, little Miss Beth?”

“They’re so interesting,” said Beth promptly. “Knights and courts and
princesses and princes! Of course I love the United States best; it
_is_ best, but we haven’t anything but men and women, or a general, or
president. When you just say ‘prince,’ doesn’t it sound splendid? And
Your Royal Highness! Oh, it is much nicer to play about princesses and
princes!”

“Ah, here you are, prince!” cried a new voice at the back of the
gallery. “We’ve looked everywhere for you.”

Natalie and Alys looked around. Three ladies, still masked, stood
there. Beth sat absolutely still. “Prince!” What did it mean? But, yes!
Uncle Jim had said that there was a royal prince visiting New York in
whose honor this ball was given. It must be he, this pleasant-faced,
friendly young man to whom she had been talking freely of her plays,
Bunker Hill--oh, what had she said? Beth was so frightened that she
could not remember.

The prince had risen, looking like a schoolboy in April, caught going
fishing instead of to school.

“I stole away,” he said. “I wanted to see that wonderfully beautiful
scene from above and as a whole, not as an actor in it. Don’t scold me,
duchess! I found companions, also watching the ball. Duchess, ladies--I
do not know who the other two masks conceal--this is the Lady Alys
Dudley, of our gracious sovereign, Queen Elizabeth’s court. This is
Susanna Shakespeare and Hamnet. And this is Judith Shakespeare. Lady
Alys and children of the poet, this is her ladyship, the Duchess of
Ravenspur.”

The children had risen for this introduction. Natalie, inspired,
swept a deep courtesy and Alys followed suit. Beth tried to courtesy,
but failed; her knees refused to bend and come up again, keeping her
balance.

“It’s pleasant to meet Will’s children; we like well his plays at
court,” said the duchess, performing her part nobly. “Really, prince,
I must beg you to return to the floor with us. Do you realize you are
guest of honor to-night, that the ball is yours? Dancing is begun, the
formal dances, you see. There is to be an Elizabethan play soon. Mrs.
Cortlandt is wonderful! Pray come, dear prince.”

“You see, new friends of mine, what a price one has to pay for honors
in this world,” said the prince, turning to the children with his
bright, boyish smile. “Coming, duchess! Good-bye, Lady Alys, Miss
Susanna, Master Hamnet. Good-bye, dear little Judith Shakespeare. I
hope that we may meet again before I sail. In any case you shall hear
from me.”

He was gone. Beth gasped, Natalie and Alys began to chatter excitedly,
but she was mute. A prince! First a countess, then a prince! Surely
this was a Wonder-Winter, a fairy tale, not merely illustrated, but
lived!

Below on the floor moved the resplendent dances of olden times.
At the upper end of the room, right among the spectators, just as
Shakespeare’s own company of players acted, without scenery of setting,
sometimes in the courtyard of an inn, a short play was enacted while
the dancing still went on. It was a kaleidoscope of color and movement
and beauty unspeakable. The other three young people forgot the prince
in their interest in it, but Beth saw it all only vaguely. Her eyes
followed an athletic young figure in white and crimson, and she kept
saying over to herself:

“The king’s son! The son of a king, and I know him!”

At midnight a beautiful series of groups was formed all down the room.
Queen Elizabeth stood before her throne; there rang through the room
the single voice of a silver trumpet, blown by a picturesque herald
in silver and blue at the queen’s side. At its summons all the masks
were dropped; the guests stood revealed. Natalie and Alys grew wildly
excited identifying those they knew. Beth found the duchess. She was
relieved to find that she did not in the least resemble the duchess
in “Alice,” whose thick ugliness she unconsciously had in mind. This
Duchess of Ravenspur was rather young and decidedly handsome, and Beth
was grateful to her for being so.

Then Miss Deland appeared and laid a hand on Natalie’s shoulder, saying:

“Your mother asked me to tell you, dears, that at midnight all
Cinderellas leave a ball and that it is now midnight. She wishes you
to return to your ashes in the fireplace; in other words to go to
bed! Supper is served the guests now; after that there will be modern
dancing until the ball is over. You have seen the best of it.”

“We have seen more than that, Miss Deland,” said Beth solemnly and
impressively. “We have seen and know a prince, _the_ prince! Do you
think he ever will be king?”

“It isn’t likely,” smiled Miss Deland. “There are three brothers older
than he, but of course there’s no saying!”

“Well, he’s the king’s son anyway,” declared Beth. “He’s a real king’s
son, and he talked about making believe and things just like--anybody!”

“There you are! He is like anybody!” cried republican and unromantic
Dirk. “He’s a trump, something like Bob Leonard; not a bit nifty; he’s
all right.”




CHAPTER XVII

THE RIDE DOWN THE QUIET ROAD


“How do you keep Easter at home, Beth? I mean how _did_ you keep Easter
in your old home, Beth? We intend this to be home to you now and
henceforth, you know.” Mrs. Cortlandt smiled at Beth over a book which
she held, but which, plainly, did not engage her attention.

“Keep Easter?” echoed Beth searching her memory for the right answer.
“Why, I don’t know. We----Sometimes the daffodils are out, sometimes
they’re not. Janie and I color eggs; just a few. Aunt Rebecca never
likes me to use many. She thinks the colors and pictures hurt the eggs
for eating, but they really don’t. When Easter comes in April hens
are apt to be setting, so eggs are rather scarce. But coloring them
doesn’t do a bit of harm, if only Aunt Rebecca thought so. She says
it takes away her appetite to see red rabbits, and rabbits in coats,
and blue stripes, and pink flowers, on her breakfast egg. I asked her
to scramble it, or poach it, so she wouldn’t see the decorations. She
thought I was saucy, but I didn’t once think of being. You can get
lovely designs and colors in a package, eight colors and a hundred
pictures for five cents, and you can make shaded colors and change
around a lot with the eight sheets. I’d like to fix eggs for everybody,
but it’s no use!” Beth shook her head over the unreasonableness of
Aunt Rebecca. “Janie and I do them for each other, though, and we fix
up a strawberry basket nest with tissue papers and leave it on each
other’s back porch. A German girl showed us about it; the Easter rabbit
lays the eggs there, you see! It’s quite nice. We don’t do anything
else special, unless it is to wear our straw hat for the first time,
and open our collection boxes in Sunday-school. Oh, yes! We all get a
growing geranium slip, or some plant in Sunday-school that day.”

“Well, that doesn’t sound exciting!” laughed Alys.

“What a talker you are, Bethikins, when once you are set going!” Aunt
Alida laughed too. “We should have gone into the country for Easter; we
usually do, but your Uncle Jim thought that you would like this Easter
in town. We shall not be likely to spend the next one here. You will
probably be in Virginia with us next Easter, at Old Point Comfort, or
at the North Carolina mountains, or the Jersey coast; not in New York,
anyway. So your uncle wants you to see the bright New York Easter this
year. I hope you realize what a personage you are, small Beth, changing
all our habits in this way!”

“I--I think I feel sorry about it,” said Beth in a small voice.

“You needn’t, dear; I shall enjoy it greatly,” said Mrs. Cortlandt
hastily. “It doesn’t seem possible that the Shrove night ball is
already five weeks past!”

“The prince hasn’t gone home, has he?” asked Beth.

“No, but he sails this week,” said Aunt Alida. “We dined with him at
Mrs. Huntley’s last night. He asked most kindly after my four young
people and said that he meant to see you again before he sailed. But
he is scarcely allowed to rest from being entertained and seeing the
country, so I’m not sure you will see him. He came here purposely to
look into some aspects of our industrial conditions and his final
visits to institutions of reform are crowding upon him thick and fast.”

“He’s very nice, very,” said Beth with pensive emphasis. “It’s rather
sad to think that we can’t see him again after he gets to England. Even
if you went there, Aunt Alida, you couldn’t see him as if he weren’t
’way off in some palace, could you? And I’m pretty sure he would like
Trump. He looks and acts like a person who would love a pony like
Trump. I wish he could come here and go to see him before he goes back
and sits in the shadow of the throne.”

Natalie fairly shrieked at this speech. “The shadow of the throne!
Beth, for pity’s sake, what makes you say such queer, fearfully funny
things?” she gasped. “And who is going to sit in it, the prince or
Trump?”

Beth laughed. “Maybe it might be Trump, if the prince saw him and fell
in love with him. I suppose you couldn’t refuse a prince your pony and
be polite. It’s called being in the shadow of the throne in books,” she
added.

“You will see the prince when you go to England; ‘the shadow of the
throne’ will lift long enough for that. We shall go over when Natalie
is twenty; she will be presented at court then. But we’re likely to go
before. The prince and his brothers and sisters rode ponies at your
age; they are on the retired list, enjoying pasturage and comfort now,
for the sake of past service. The prince is a famous rider; you were
right in thinking he would be interested in Trump. Just a moment,
children; I am called.”

Aunt Alida shut her handkerchief into her book and went over to the
telephone that stood on the small teakwood table near her couch; they
were gathered in Aunt Alida’s sitting-room.

“Yes. Mrs. Cortlandt, yes. Oh! No, I didn’t know when you spoke. We
were that instant speaking of you, prince,” she said and the girls
looked at one another and Beth leaned forward with sudden interest in
her eyes.

“How exceedingly kind you are!” exclaimed Mrs. Cortlandt, after she
had silently listened, with eyes and lips smiling, to the voice at the
other end of the wire, which the children could not hear. “Yes, they
all ride. Certainly they may. Without any chaperon, no grown person?
Not even me? I think you will be a more than sufficient chaperon! May
I send a groom, in case of trouble of any sort? Thank you. At eleven?
They shall be ready. I will have their mounts here. Indeed I am
grateful, prince, and I can assure you of a blissful quartette of young
things when they are told of your invitation. Good-bye, prince. Once
more my sincerest thanks.”

Aunt Alida rang off and turned to the three girls, her face alight with
her great tidings.

“Wasn’t that a coincidence, dear lassies? Could you guess who
telephoned, with what message?” she demanded breathlessly.

“The prince wants us to ride with him!” cried Natalie, Alys and Beth,
as if it were a carefully rehearsed trio.

“Precisely that!” Aunt Alida clapped her hands, laughing as though
the guess were a brilliant triumph. “At eleven to-morrow! Not a grown
person with you, but the prince! He says he wants it to be a youthful
frolic, just as he rode with his sisters and brothers. So you are
going. You must take him out on our Quiet Road, as we call it. I
believe I will have a lunch put up, to be hung in a pannier over some
one’s saddle! I’m certain the prince would enjoy its flavor, eaten
out-of-doors, informally. You will show him Trump, Bethie!”

“Aunt Alida, I can make fudge rather splendidly. Do you think I might
make some to take with us?” Beth asked anxiously.

“I’m not sure the cook would allow it, dear; I certainly would, but he
is--formidable is a mild, safe word!” Aunt Alida said.

“Mrs. Hodgman has a gas stove in her rooms; I saw it,” cried Beth.
“If you would let me make it, Aunt Alida, it would be fine to eat out
under a tree, and when I went home, and made fudge for the girls, I’d
say I was Fudge Maker to the Royal Family--like the labels on English
gelatines and needles and things!”

“Oh, Beth, you are a scream!” cried Alys. “How you mix up! I wouldn’t
care to be like a label myself.”

“Beth’s meaning is clear,” laughed her aunt. “Bless your heart,
Bethikins, if you can win Mrs. Hodgman over, I’ve no objections to your
making anything you like.”

“Mrs. Hodgman never has to be won over; she is always ’way over when
you ask her a favor,” said Beth, as she ran off to ask the housekeeper
this favor.

She ran into Dirk in the doorway. “You’ve got Hodgie’s measure, all
right,” he remarked, hearing what Beth had just said. “I was around
seeing Ken Appleton’s new printing-press,” he added, replying to the
inquiry in his mother’s eyes. “Anything up?”

Beth wheeled in the doorway, where she had lingered to hear what Dirk
would say to the plan for the morrow, and she joined the other two
girls in telling him about it.

“Well, that is nifty!” Dirk said. “We’ll have a great time; not better
than when we ride with father that way, though! The prince is a nice
chap. He’s a little like Bob Leonard. Wish he could go, too!”

Alys laughed, but Natalie colored and said spiritedly: “I think Mr.
Leonard is something like the prince, too. They’re both so real, not
thinking of themselves at all. I believe Mr. Leonard’s more like a
prince than the prince is.”

“So are you--like a real sort, I mean,” approved Dirk warmly.

“Well, if I’m going to make fudge----” Beth suggested and departed on
her own implication that it was time she was off.

Mrs. Hodgman was not merely willing to have Beth at work in her rooms:
she welcomed her coming. Beth instinctively felt that the housekeeper
had a sorrowful life-story lying behind her present. Kind as Aunt Alida
was, the little girl suspected that Mrs. Hodgman was often lonely in
a position that made her one with neither servants nor employer. To
suspect a heartache and to try to relieve it were one with sweet Beth.
Mrs. Hodgman had grown to love her dearly for the sunshine Beth did not
forget to bring to her by frequent visits as she sat alone.

Beth triumphantly made her fudge, beating it so long that she risked
being late to dinner, but, as she explained to Mrs. Hodgman, “princely
fudge must be the best ever.” It was. Aunt Alida gave her a captivating
box for it and Beth went to bed early, to be ready and fresh for the
Event.

Natalie, Alys and Beth were waiting in their riding habits before
half-past ten, trying not to fume and fuss that it was but half-past
ten. The horses were waiting in the courtyard fifteen minutes ahead of
time, Tim in charge. He was to ride with the party.

Beth slipped down and tied a bow of wide satin ribbon on Trump’s
bridle, on the head strap. It stood up between his ears precisely like
a wide bow on the top of a small girl’s head; the effect intoxicated
Beth. She kissed her pony frantically.

“I put it there in honor of the prince--red, for the English flag, you
know,” she explained to Tim. “But isn’t it just wildly becoming to him?”

“Sure, a green bow would be the right one, Miss Beth,” said Tim, with
his twinkle. “Trump’s for Home Rule and the lovely green isle, an’ it’s
none of the English red he’d be wearin’, give him his choice in the
matter: St. Patrick’s day just past, more by token.”

“Oh, well, I suppose what he really likes is the red, white and blue,
but I know he is glad to honor the prince’s flag to-day,” retorted
Beth, tearing herself away from the pony, who cocked his eye after her
under his bang and big red bow in a manner that made going difficult.

The prince was punctual to the minute. He was riding a noble English
hunting horse, lent him by one of his American friends, and he sat him
with the strength and grace that is the perfection of horsemanship.

At the last moment Alys and Beth felt embarrassed to go down to greet
their royal escort and hung back. But Natalie and Dirk led the way with
quiet confidence, Dirk because he felt no shyness, taking the prince
for granted, as he took Mr. Leonard; Natalie, because she was endowed
with so much of her mother’s instinctive tact that her one thought was
to set the prince at ease with them, the young Americans, to whom he
had undertaken to be kind.

The prince sprang from his horse and stood bareheaded, waiting, when
the door opened and Mrs. Cortlandt came out, followed by her four young
people.

“Quite ready? That’s right,” cried the prince, after he had greeted
Mrs. Cortlandt. “We must be off immediately, then. Ah, what noble
horses!” he added. “That Kentucky type cannot be surpassed under
saddle. And the little beggar from the Shetland isles! Now, could that
belong to Judith Shakespeare?”

His merry smile set Beth at ease completely. She shook her head hard.

“That’s Trump; he belongs to Beth Bristead,” she said.

“Let Beth Bristead mount him, then, and off we go! Let me give you a
hand, Miss Natalie, Miss Alys and Beth Bristead.”

The prince held his hand for Natalie’s foot and swung her into the
saddle, then Alys. But Beth gave her hands to Tim and was jumped into
the saddle and sat laughing on Trump when the prince was ready to do
her like service.

“This red bow is for the English flag,” Beth explained, touching the
end of Trump’s flaring decoration, with much of its color leaping into
her cheeks.

“My word!” The prince laughed, swinging into his own saddle. “Indeed
I’m flattered! I wish I had thought to tie red, white and blue on this
chap of mine, but I’m stupid. Will your brother Dick--Dirk--precede, to
guide us? Let us take a country road, if it does not need too long to
get on one from your narrow city, which seems to be spreading out over
the country, northward, like jam on a long stick of Italian bread.”

“Oh, isn’t that just what it does!” cried Natalie appreciatively. She
and Beth rode with the prince, Alys and Dirk preceded them, Tim in the
rear.

“We were going to take you on what we call the Quiet Road. There is a
piece of good woods still standing about seven miles out; we love it,
sir--prince----” Natalie stammered at the end of her sentence, not
knowing what was the proper form of address for a young girl like her
to use toward a royal personage.

“The Quiet Road sounds like the very thing,” approved the prince. “And
we are all comrades of the road to-day. Formality must be laid aside. I
shall call you all by your first names: I’ve got them right? Natalie,
Alys, Beth and Dirk? I thought so. I have quite a lot of names, six
Christian names, besides a few family ones. It isn’t just the thing, I
suppose, for young people to call an old gentleman, twenty-seven years
old, by an unset first name, so to speak. So, as I am one of the United
States’ English cousins, perhaps you would better call me Cousin Hal.
My mother called me Hal, when I was a small chap. Henry is one of my
names, you know. Do you agree?”

“If--if you say it is respectful,” said Natalie, looking so lovely as
she blushed that the prince’s eyes reflected it.

“Couldn’t we make believe that you are Prince Hal--you are, of
course--I mean the old one, and that we are riding back after the
battle of Agincourt?” asked Beth.

“Such a child for history and for playing at it!” exclaimed “Cousin
Hal.” “Surely, if you like. Just you wait till I get home and crush
my nieces and nephews, telling them of the little American who knows
English history so well and never loses a chance to bring it to life!
I’ll shame them, the scamps!”

“Would you tell us about them--Cousin Hal?” Natalie’s voice trembled,
but she bravely brought out the alarming name.

“Bravo, pretty Natalie!” cried “Cousin Hal.” “What a jolly morning
we’re having! There’s nothing like a young party like this, on
horseback! I’ll tell you all I can about the children at home; they’re
nice children.”

Whereupon the prince began to tell them of “the children at home.” As
he talked he showed them a portrait of a merry, sensible, well-trained
group of youngsters, brave, dutiful, but full of human nature. His
listeners almost forgot, after a while, that the boy so like Dirk in
his traits was the heir to the throne. Alys and Dirk fell back to hear
the story. It was plain to be seen that this prince was a fond uncle
and that he liked nothing better than frolics with the king’s children,
his nieces and nephews.

It was a beautiful morning, late in March. The air was full of the
damp warmth of open ground; the odors of earth and flowing sap were
upon its gentle movement. As the horsemen rode out “the Quiet Road”
bluebirds, robins, song sparrows, peewees, the chorusing blackbirds
uttered delicious notes from low growths along the stone rows.

“We turn in here, Cousin Hal,” said Natalie, indicating with her stock
a road that looked like a lane, leading nowhere. “Perhaps it isn’t
too damp to sit on a log for a little while. Mama had a tiny luncheon
put up, mostly for the fun of eating it out-of-doors. Tim has it in a
hamper on the front of his saddle.”

“Now I call that downright good news and most kind of Mrs. Cortlandt!
She must be as good as she is beautiful, as the story-books say,
and that is a strong statement in her case, for she is wonderfully
handsome. I, for one, am a bit keen set; how about you, Dirk?” cried
the prince, slapping his riding boot boyishly.

“I’m always hungry, pretty much. It’s this way: When you’re riding you
could eat a bite every time the horse puts a hoof down, but you can
just as well let it go till you’re back, because nothing fills you up,
anyway,” said Dirk, so seriously that they all laughed.

It was a pretty little glade to which the children conducted their
older comrade. Here they tethered the horses and found for themselves
two or three logs of various lengths upon which it seemed prudent to
sit; they were sun-dried and time-cured and much of their bark had
peeled away.

“Now, Tim, my man, where’s that hamper we’ve heard about?” asked the
prince.

“Here it is, sir,” said Tim, bringing it forward.

It was a small hamper, necessarily, to be carried on a horse, but
it was carefully packed, with great judgment, and its contents were
exactly right and exactly enough to take the edge comfortably off a
riding appetite and yet not spoil the meal that would be served on the
riders’ return. Beth’s fudge was the dessert.

“How delicious!” cried “Cousin Hal”--he seemed like Cousin Hal
now!--taking a big bite out of the middle of a sandwich of thin roast
beef and crisp lettuce. “Isn’t it fine to get off like this and be
allowed to eat without plates or forks, just as they ate in Eden?”

“Do you feel that way, too?” cried Beth, delighted to share an
experience. “I think if they would put people out in the woods and let
them eat pieces of pie and things in their fingers, they’d never have
to get tonics in bottles, nor doctors.”

“Beth, there spake wisdom!” “Cousin Hal” accepted a large triangle of
fudge as he spoke and rolled up his eyes at the first bite in a way
that sent Dirk heels over head in a somersault. “Though truth compels
me to state that meals under almost any circumstances do not come amiss
with me.” He arose, brushing crumbs out of the folds of his trousers
where they were tucked into his boots. “I’m going to put that scamp of
a Trump through a trick or so and teach him a new one. I’ve sugar in my
pocket to reward him, if he gets the idea. My word, but that fine fudge
makes one thirsty!”

“Oh, there’s a fine spring here. To think we forgot it!” cried Beth.
“Dirk and Tim will fetch water.”

“Not they, not without me!” cried “Cousin Hal.” “Isn’t this a free
day in which I’m not to be shown deference? Take me with you, Dirk,
Tim. I shall drink from the spring with this cup!” He held up his palms
together, made hollow.

When the spring had quenched the thirst of them all the prince put
Trump through his brief repertory of accomplishments. Then he taught
him to “waltz.” It was not a precise waltz, to be sure, but as the
prince danced in spiral curves, softly whistling a waltz, the pony,
after a few failures, followed him remarkably. Beth was in ecstasy.

“I never, never saw anything so wonderful!” she cried. “Isn’t he
clever? And how can you make him?”

“I have a sort of understanding with all horse-flesh,” said the
prince, rewarding Trump with sugar and rubbing his ears as the pony
affectionately nuzzled him. “In the regiment, my regiment, they get me
to reason with a horse that is troublesome and he nearly always harkens
to me.”

“Are you in the army?” asked Dirk with intense interest.

“Yes, Dirk. You see, in a way, I was rather born to it. They made
me an officer when I was a small lad. I had no choice but to do
what was cut out for me--not that I don’t like it,” said the prince
quietly. “That brings me to what I wanted to say. This has been such
a delightful morning, don’t you think, that I for one would like
something lasting to come of it. I was turning over in my mind the
night after the ball what I could do to prove to you how much I enjoyed
meeting you up in the gallery and what friends we were. I thought of
asking you to ride with me as the best thing I could devise, for it
would cement our friendship by making us really well acquainted. Then,
that wasn’t enough; I wanted something more, to remember the riding
by. It would go on like an endless chain, at that rate, now wouldn’t
it?” he paused to laugh. “But here it stops: not our friendship,
but souvenirs of it--for a time, I mean. I really did not know what
to suggest to myself to get, or to do, in memory of to-day. Then it
flashed upon me. Like Archimedes, don’t you know, I sat up and cried
Eureka! What do you think I invented?”

“I don’t see how any one could possibly guess what you would think of,
you think of everything wonderful and different,” cried Beth fervently,
as the prince looked at her.

She was burning with admiring affection for this friend who turned the
every-day world into a tale of absorbing interest and who could also
teach Trump to waltz.

“Well, let me tell you!” cried the prince, one hand patting Beth’s
shoulder in acknowledgment of her enthusiasm. “I decided to found an
order! Don’t you know? Like the Order of the Golden Fleece, or our own
Order of the Garter, with an insignia, a badge, don’t you know, and an
object. What do you say to it?”

“Sure; it’ll be fine! Of course we don’t know anything about it yet,
but it’ll be fine,” cried Dirk with the most flattering confidence.

“It would be fine to have an army like you, Dirk; ready to follow
wherever one leads!” laughed the prince. “My idea is something in the
way of such a loyal army. You see lots of people never ask what they
ought to do, but only what they want to do in this world. It leads to
no end of mischief. Sometimes two people want to do exactly opposite
things, two people, I mean, who stand in such relation to each other
that whatever one does makes the other happy or wretched, blessed or
ruined, according to which course the first one takes. No one is free
in this world; we’re all tied and bound together by all sorts of fine
lines and there is no greater nonsense talked than to say that any of
us is free to go on as he pleases, regardless of others, or of the
obligations of his position in society and toward his country. It’s
my idea that happiness can come to each of us and to the world only
when people stop to think, if there’s a question to decide, not what
is pleasant, but what is right; not what they _want_, but what they
_ought_ to do. So I should like to found a little order over here
in the United States of five members, Natalie, Alys, Dirk, Beth and
myself, to be called the Order of the Strong Hearted. The members
pledge themselves to aim to do their duty every time, regardless of
whether it is hard or easy, and not to talk about it, nor make a fuss,
but to do it, as becomes the strong of heart. And here is our insignia,
if you approve it.”

[Illustration: THE PRINCE SLIPPED A RING UPON EACH HAND.]

The prince, looking flushed by his own earnestness and embarrassed in
setting forth what, after all, was a high ideal, told in simple words,
produced from his pocket four small boxes. Opening them he displayed
four rings, curiously wrought, of a beautiful design, each one set with
a dark oriental sapphire, cut oblong.

“Oh!” gasped the four children, too delighted and impressed to say more.

“I had the rings made,” explained the prince. “The sapphire represents
the true blue of loyalty and love. The carving--see the design? Links,
twisted and intertwisted to signify that no one stands alone. The rings
are suited now to your fourth fingers, I’m sure, so, as your hands
grow, they will come to be right for the smallest finger, where they
will really look best. Will you let me confer upon you the Order of the
Strong Hearted and invest you with its insignia?”

“Yes,” said Natalie and Beth together.

One by one they came in turn to the prince and he slipped a ring upon
each hand, saying: “I invest you with the Order of the Strong Hearted.
When the hour comes for choice, you are to choose the right, your life
long, doing your duty bravely, as becomes the Strong of Heart.”

It was almost a solemn little ceremony. It was a royal right to found
an order and to invest its members with its insignia. Beth felt
uplifted, awed, but profoundly happy. This was not making believe, yet
it held all the charm of the best making believe, combined with reality.

“Now, shall we ride back again?” suggested the prince. “It is the
worst of pleasant things that they must end, but, on the other hand, it
is the best of unpleasant things, and so we come to an average good.”

They rode back rapidly. Once more the prince, who, as he told them of
his new Order, seemed every inch a prince, was once more “Cousin Hal,”
the merry, boyish comrade of the day.

They reached home in good time, but the prince bade them farewell at
the door.

“I can’t possibly come in, thank you, Mrs. Cortlandt. I assure you it
would be a great pleasure to me, but I fear I am already late to an
engagement to lunch. Good-bye, my dear little cousins. Some day you
will visit me in England. It is not good-bye for always, you know!”

He stood bareheaded under the porte-cochère and took both hands of each
of the Cortlandts and Beth in a hearty farewell clasp. He held Beth’s
hands for a moment longer than the others. Then he stooped and kissed
her cool cheek.

“Good-bye, dear little Beth,” he said. “You are a sweet, old-fashioned
little girl and I hope you will be a happy woman, as I know you will be
a good and charming one.”

Then he sprang upon his beautiful horse and was gone. Beth walked into
the house in a dazed way, turning the ring upon her finger.

“He was a king’s son,” she said. “If it weren’t for this ring I could
not believe it had all happened! He is the best, the splendidest, and
he is gone! Oh, why do people have to come, like falling stars, right
out of nothing and then go away into it?” Tears stood in her eyes. Aunt
Alida kissed them away.

“It was a beautiful little adventure, dearest,” she said. “Natalie
has told me of the Order of the Strong Hearted. The prince has done
a really lovely thing in establishing it. You cannot know now how
far-reaching it may be in its consequences on your life and character.
I am profoundly grateful to him, and I think he is, in the highest
sense, a nobleman.”

Three days later the paper announced that the prince had sailed.
But he had left behind him rings upon four growing hands and a deep
impression, a noble ideal, in four impressionable, unfolding hearts.




CHAPTER XVIII

“FLORIDA PASQUA”


Eastertide brought with it weather that might have been called
unseasonable warmth but that almost any sort of weather is seasonable
in the spring of the Eastern states.

Suddenly New York seemed to bloom. Not only were the parks and squares
gorgeous with flaunting tulips, but the shop windows were equally gay
with flowers, living and artificial, and with hats and gowns that vied
with them. These last were repeated in the streets, worn by springlike
maidens and bright-faced women. For that matter the blossoming plants
were offered for sale on the curbstones in places, or went nodding
along, enjoying their drive in vendors’ carts, through the narrow
streets of which Beth caught glimpses in her own drives with her uncle,
northward, into Westchester County, whither the car took them often
since it had grown so warm, and where she rode Trump on rarer occasions.

“Isn’t it happy!” cried Beth. “All of it, the whole of New York!
You wouldn’t think a big city could get so much spring into it. It’s
so bright and flowery! The country isn’t so bright now; fields look
scrubby in March, but here--well, it’s just like Easter, all risen up
after winter!”

“Your wonder-winter is over, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary, who had
knocked at Beth’s door with a message from Mrs. Cortlandt while Frieda
was finishing Beth’s toilet for a drive.

“A wonder-spring is even better!” cried Beth, nodding at Anna Mary in
the glass. “The reddest geranium would look like black crêpe to me, if
I weren’t going to stay right on. But the summer will be better than
the winter, so I’m enjoying spring. Aunt Alida isn’t going herself,
Anna Mary?”

“No, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary. “She’s sending me.”

Beth ran down-stairs. The hall was filled with plants of small sizes
which Mrs. Cortlandt was sending to the families whence Beth and Anna
Mary had drawn the guests for the Christmas tree; that tree seemed to
have been long ago.

At one side stood a small forest of bloom. Great azaleas in all
their shades of soft reds, pinks and whites; orchids, roses,
lilies-of-the-valley, violets so large and sweet that they dominated
the other fragrances, Easter lilies, spireas, ferns, all dressed in
plaited tissue paper skirts, like unearthly ballet dancers, and tied
with broad sashes of beautiful ribbons, each with a card pendant from
its side.

Cut flowers covered the hall table, chairs and the seat of the long
carved Italian bench. They were partly revealing their loveliness
through paraffine paper, like veiled Turkish brides, or they were
thrusting long stems through the end of white boxes of incredible
length, to hint that on the other end of those stems was a rose of
perfection.

“Dear me, Anna Mary, it seems as though I must be dead. You wouldn’t
think there were such flowers, except in heaven, nor half so many! Are
we to take all these to the poor?”

“What a queer thing to say, Miss Beth!” cried Anna Mary. “No, indeed,
then! These on this side we take. Those over there are sent to your
aunt; don’t you see they have cards on them? Mrs. Cortlandt has sent as
many and more herself. They’re ordered at a big florist’s and left on
Holy Saturday where they’re to go. ’Tis a nice way to wish your friends
a good Easter, but thousands of dollars it costs--though it does seem
wrong to be considerin’ cost along with Easter lilies and the like!”

“I should think you’d have to think what it costs just as much as you’d
have to smell them; it seems to come right up at you, just as strong,”
said Beth, inhaling a lily as she spoke.

She and Anna Mary got into the car and Léon, with the help of three
maids, set the flower pots into the tonneau and piled the boxes of cut
flowers on the seats which were unoccupied and around Léon’s feet.

They drove slowly through the streets for fear of disturbing the
potted plants. Other cars which they passed were similarly laden,
though none to their degree. Mrs. Cortlandt liked to make sure that her
gifts were properly delivered, so did not risk their going astray in
the tenements.

Once more Beth was moved to profound pity by the crowded poverty she
saw. Sharp as had been the contrast at Christmas between it and the
holly-trimmed Christmas gaiety from which she had come, still sharper
was the contrast now between the evil-smelling, congested tenements and
the spacious hall in her uncle’s house, fragrant and lovely with the
crowning successes of the master florists.

“Do you think the flowers will help any?” she asked Anna Mary
wistfully. “It seems as though they couldn’t know Christ had risen and
what alleluia meant, in such places.”

“Sometimes they know better than in great houses, bless your dear
heart, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary. “There do be people in such places
that know so well that Christ lived on earth and left hope to them when
He left it, that they’re almost glad to be poor, because He was. Sure,
there’s no place so mean, or so crowded that there isn’t space enough
to let in God Almighty! And that’s a comfort to think of when we’re
needin’ it. And any decent person craves comfortin’ thoughts when they
see what misery there do be, and that at Eastertide.”

Beth came home thoughtful from her beautiful errand. She had begged to
be allowed to go with Anna Mary and her aunt had willingly consented.
Neither of her girls could have been induced to go. Aunt Alida thought
that perhaps in little Beth there might develop the one who would
best use the Cortlandt wealth, in the ways which she herself believed
wealth must be used. She hoped that Beth’s unconscious goodness, her
instinctive choice of the best, might, as time went on, bend Natalie
and Alys into the unworldly women of the world which was Aunt Alida’s
ideal of a woman of their class. She looked upon Beth as hers, as
permanently and almost as really as were her own children. She was
daily thankful for the little girl who fitted so perfectly into the
household life and needs, in spite of her differences from it.

Sunday morning--Easter Sunday--dawned the brightest day of all that
week of summer brightness.

“Get dressed early, Bethie,” Uncle Jim advised Beth at breakfast. “We
must be well ahead of the service hour to get comfortably to our pew
to-day. And here is your Easter card for the contribution box.” He
handed Beth a crisp five dollar bill, of which he had provided four for
the children.

Beth took it with a smile of thanks. “I suppose some day I should get
used to it,” she said, without explaining to what she referred. “At
home the children usually have a nickel, children who are properly
brought up. Aunt Rebecca scorns pennies. She says it’s a queer thing
that Christians call religion the greatest thing in the world and hunt
out the smallest coin there is to support it.”

Frieda had been to church early that morning, so had Anna Mary. Frieda
told Beth about the pretty German Easter customs which her mother had
described to her, following up her description with two or three lovely
German Easter legends, so that not only the hour of dressing seemed
short, but Beth was attuned to Easter anthems when the limousine was
driven to the door and she took her place in it with her back to the
driver.

Aunt Alida in her silvery green with dark green plumes on her white hat
and Killarney roses in the lace on her breast, Natalie in the dull blue
that brunettes may wear, Alys in her pale golden brown, how lovely they
looked, Beth thought admiringly watching them as they drove along.

“’Cute, n’est ce pas?” whispered Alys as, in turn, they watched Beth.

“Perfectly darling face, so pretty and so dear!” returned Natalie
warmly.

Beth was totally unconscious of their approval as she happily watched
the stream of carriages and cars slowly flowing up and down the avenue,
and the crowds, gathering in density as they neared one of the great
churches.

Beth’s Easter gown was white; the simplest of straight coats in a rough
silk and wool, with just enough black velvet to set off its fine lines
and texture. Her hat was soft and drooping white chip, with a scarf
of white and gold and a single black plume. The costume brought out
the childish pink and white of Beth’s skin, the blueness of her happy
eyes, the pure gold of her hair, with the darkening of its future tint
beginning to creep into it.

“We must walk home to-day, Alida. It is necessary to show Beth the
Easter parade,” said Uncle Jim.

Aunt Alida laughed. “Are you sure that isn’t an excuse, like the
grandfather who takes the small boy to the circus? I suspect you will
like to see it yourself; it is long since we were on the avenue as part
of its display,” she said.

“If it proves entertaining, that won’t be a misfortune. Come, Bethie,
here we are, and you are the first one out, because you are so badly in
the way!” said Uncle Jim, passing Beth when the car stopped before the
door of the great stone church to which the Cortlandts came each Sunday
morning.

The sidewalk and approach to the church were massed with people, even
on the side street upon which Léon had drawn up the car. On the Fifth
Avenue side the crowds extended even into the road; policemen were
detailed there to prevent accidents. The side entrance was kept for
pewholders; through it the Cortlandt party slowly made its way, for
here, too, progress was slow.

Beth caught her breath as she entered the church. The air was heavy
with the scent of flowers; the beauty of the scene transported her.
The light streamed dimly from the windows of many-colored glass; its
rays sought and were lost in the wilderness of flowers that turned the
now-familiar building into a region of heavenly enchantment for Beth.
Ferns and lance-like pandanus were massed against pillars, roses above
them in swaying grace. Lilies formed a second rail within the altar
railing; everywhere roses and still more roses, and lilies and lilies!
Beth’s eyes dilated and swam with dewy joy.

“Don’t you suppose, Natalie,” she asked, under cover of the slow
progress to the pew, “that when God spoke to Moses in the burning bush
it was a rose-bush, burning with its own red roses?”

The service was wonderful to poetical Beth. From the time she arose
to her feet at the distant sound of the choir singing and the white
vested choristers wound in among the flowers, singing their alleluias,
till the last faint echo of their final amen came from afar, as sweet
and distinct, yet illusive, as the odor of one of the roses, Beth was
unconscious of all the world; she knew only the world of unearthly
beauty and ideals.

They came out of church to the glorious strains of the Hallelujah
chorus sung by the choir of the church, supplemented by men and women
and a glorious orchestra. Beth lingered so slowly along that the others
far outstripped her, impeded though they all were by the throngs which
had filled every available space in the church. Uncle Jim turned back
to find her. He found her forgetful of all around her, slipped into a
vacant pew, drinking in the volume of glorious sound pouring over her
as, from side to side, the voices tossed and repeated the Hallelujahs
of Handel’s grand chorus.

Uncle Jim tucked Beth’s hand into his arm and waited with her till it
was sung.

“I don’t blame you, Bethie, for clinging to the last note of the
Hallelujah chorus. Some day you must hear the whole oratorio from which
it is taken--the oratorio of the Messiah. Now we must go, dear. It is
all over,” he said.

Uncle Jim brought Beth out into the flooding light of noon on an early
spring day in the broad thoroughfare of bright New York.

The little girl blinked; she was returning, not merely to the strong
sunshine, out of the dim church, but into the actual world from vague
visions of angels and celestial glories. Yet the world around her was
beautiful and wonderful, too, for the avenue was dense with people
going slowly in two distinct streams up and down, north and south, on
the outer and inner sides of the sidewalk.

Uncle Jim skilfully steered his family into the descending line on the
inner side, and Beth found herself part of “the Easter parade.”

Occasionally the Cortlandts passed some one whom they knew, but
rarely. The crowd was made up of people from another world within
the great city. There were sharp-faced, pert girls in the extreme of
grotesque fashions; many foreign faces; families headed by women who
looked like overgrown heads of cabbage decked out in flower petals, so
blowsy were they, yet so gay in what they considered spring finery.
Many of the faces bore the stamp of privation and a hard tussle to
live; they showed that there must have been self-denial in necessities
to get together the money to buy the luxuries of Easter garments.
The girls wore the highest heeled pumps, the thinnest of stockings,
the narrowest of skirts, the closest of hats, with stiffest feathers
extending out at the rear, as was the fashion of that spring. It was
a caricature of style; these girls who worked hard for their living
were bound to prove that they knew “the latest thing from Paris” as
well as their more fortunate sisters. But every one, however tawdry
her finery, wore a bunch of flowers on her jacket. Sometimes they were
artificial flowers, but usually they were fragrant violets and roses,
or long-stemmed carnations. Even the young men from the East Side had
a blossom in their buttonholes and swaggered along, to prove they were
at ease in this famous avenue of wealth, with a bit of spring fragrance
abloom upon them.

“Now I know why they called it flowering Easter!” said Beth, after
she had walked in silence for two blocks, submitting to her uncle’s
guidance and watching the strange and famous parade of all sorts of
people with eyes that half recognized its significance.

“Who called what flowering Easter, Bethie?” asked Uncle Jim.

“Florida. Don’t you know? Ponce de Léon named it that because he
discovered it on Easter. And his name for Easter--the Spanish called
it, I mean--‘flowering Easter,’ Pasqua Florida. I guess that’s the way
you pronounce it. I never knew why they called it that till to-day.
I didn’t know there could be so many flowers all over everything and
everybody. It seems as though New York was a greenhouse! I feel like
a humming-bird; as if I’d had my beak in flowers till I could hardly
breathe!” explained Beth.

“You’re a bird all right!” cried Dirk, who had stepped back to ask his
father the time and so had heard Beth’s speech.

“Easter Monday is a holiday from study. Miss Deland has gone for
a three days’ visit in the country, as you know,” announced Mrs.
Cortlandt when she bade Beth good-night. “There is to be an egg hunt
through the house to-morrow morning, and in the afternoon I may take
you three girls shopping. It is time to get summer clothing under
way. We go to Cortmeer about May tenth and the days between Easter
and then seem to melt away each year so fast that there’s a scurry of
preparations at the last, in spite of my resolutions every year to get
ready early.”

“Aunt Alida, do you think I’m a little dreadful to be so glad I’m going
with you to Cortmeer this summer, instead of going home?” asked Beth.

“I think you would be quite dreadful and ungrateful if you weren’t,”
said Aunt Alida decidedly. “When we want you so much and it will be
such a happy summer. It’s my opinion that you will never be ‘at home,’
as you call it, long again, Bethie. We’ve no intention of letting you
go.”

“It’s Aunt Rebecca that makes me feel wicked,” said Beth. “She wouldn’t
say she missed me, but she had me a long time and there’s no one else.
Even a little girl around is better than no one.”

“It seems to me, Beth, that since your great-aunt has consented to
your staying and it is settled, the only thing to do is to consider it
settled and be happy in the decision,” said Mrs. Cortlandt, kissing
her good-night. “Go to sleep and dream of the flowery Easter; don’t
meditate on your wickedness!”

Beth laughed and ran away, ready to act upon this advice.

The family breakfasted together Easter Monday morning. Aunt Alida said
that the spring made itself felt most of all in a willingness to cut
short the morning nap. Colored eggs and eggs that held small trinkets,
as well as candy eggs, had been hidden from one end of the great house
to the other. The four young people were going on an egg hunt when
breakfast was over.

Riggs brought in a heavy mail that morning, doubled by Easter
greetings, arriving a little late.

Mrs. Cortlandt received the bulk of it, but Beth had two letters for
her share when they were distributed. She held up a card with flowers,
a cross and a chicken skilfully combined in its design. “From Janie,”
she explained.

“That’s a card that is sure to sell, Beth,” said Uncle Jim gravely.
“It hits everybody on one or another side. There are flowers for the
sentimental; a chicken for the humorous; a cross for the religious view
of Easter. Perhaps your friend Janie is not sure what tastes you have
developed this winter.”

“Here’s a letter from Miss Tappan,” said Beth, wondering, and not
paying attention to her uncle’s teasing. “She never writes me.”

She opened her letter, for her aunt had set the example of looking
over the mail at breakfast by opening her own.

Beth read hers with the color coming and going in her face and with a
variety of expressions chasing one another, though everybody else was
so interested in what had come in the mail that no one noticed Beth.

Finally Natalie looked up from a note which she held, crying:

“Oh, Alys, listen to this! Genevieve Haddon is going to have charades
for the Poor Babies’ Fund----Beth, what’s the matter?”

“Oh, it’s Aunt Rebecca! I knew she wouldn’t tell!” cried Beth in a
distressed voice.

“Tell what? She isn’t dead?” exclaimed Natalie.

“How could she tell that?” said Alys. “Is she sick, Beth?”

“Bad news, dear?” asked Aunt Alida, putting down the letter which she
was reading. Uncle Jim, too, folded a large sheet of figures which he
was examining and thrust it into his pocket. All eyes turned upon Beth,
waiting her explanation.

“If I read it that will be the quickest; it isn’t long,” said Beth
tremulously.

 “‘My dear Beth,’” Beth read. “‘I have been thinking of writing you
 for some time. It is not that I want to, but that I ought to. I
 do not wish to take other people’s business on my shoulders, but
 silence gives consent and if I am silent I shall give consent to
 a wrong. We are told in the Acts that Saul stood by and held the
 garments of those who stoned Stephen to death and so shared their
 guilt. Of course I feel that this lesson is for me, because I am a
 dressmaker, so have to do with garments. Besides, I opened to that
 chapter when I opened my Bible the other day to get guidance whether
 to write you or not. So I am writing.

 “‘Your Aunt Rebecca is not at all well. She is not sick, but it is
 my opinion that she is pining, and pining is unhealthy, if carried
 too far. She is lonely, but she would die before saying so. You know
 it would be exactly like her to die without saying anything about
 anything which she felt strongly. As long as you prefer the houses
 of the rich and great to your early home she will bear it as best
 she can. But she is not a young woman and hot weather is coming. If
 I were you, Elizabeth, I should feel it my duty to come back and
 cheer her up. As I said, pining is unhealthy, and it may be a very
 hot summer, which wears at best.

 “‘Do as you think best about returning, though you are too young
 to realize how a person can miss any one, or to decide important
 questions. Whatever you do, never let on to your great-aunt that I
 wrote; she would kill me and never forgive me.

 “‘Hoping that you will see all that I could not make you see, I
 remain,
              “‘Your true friend,
                    “‘LYDIA TAPPAN.

 “‘P. S.--Your cat, Tabby, is well. She has a yellow kitten. You
 asked to have it saved, if there was one, so your aunt kept it,
 though you don’t mean to come home.’”

There was silence as Beth folded up her letter with hands that would
tremble. She looked around the table, at the faces which she had
learned to love so well, with trouble, but no tears in her gentle eyes.

“Oh, well,” said Uncle Jim, shaking off the impression which the letter
had made, in spite of its funny phrases and confused thought. “After
all your true friend, Lydia Tappan, says your great-aunt is not ill. We
knew that she must miss you. You can write this person, who has to do
with garments, that it is all settled that you are to stay with us.”

Beth shook her head. “I don’t see how I could, Uncle Jim,” she said.

“Oh, Bethie dear, I’m not sure that it is your duty to return, really,
and not wholly selfishly!” cried Aunt Alida. “This may be a friendly
exaggeration of your Aunt Rebecca’s natural loneliness. As your uncle
says, Miss Tappan states plainly that she is not ill.”

“Say, you don’t mean that you think of going!” cried Dirk, too
disgusted to say more.

“You are _not_ going and that settles it,” declared Alys.

“You’re ours for keeps, Bethikins, so what’s the use?” added Natalie,
disposing of the question once for all.

Beth looked at them imploringly. “I’ve got to go,” she said, and
instantly Aunt Alida recognized the immovable decision that lay behind
the words and in Beth’s childish face.

“Well, of all----” began Natalie.

“You can’t go, Beth,” said Mr. Cortlandt at the same moment.

Beth held up the hand that wore the prince’s ring, the insignia of the
Order of the Strong Hearted.

“Don’t you remember what we are to do always?” she asked. “We have to
choose what we ought to do, not what we want to do. He said that was
the meaning of the Order; we promised that when we joined it. I’m the
first one who has had to choose anything much since the prince founded
the Order. Wouldn’t it be awful if I failed? And wouldn’t you go home,
if any one had taken care of you for years and years, all your life,
and was pining? Even if you didn’t belong to an Order? It’s dreadful to
pine. A girl at home pined so when her mother died that she went into
quick consumption and died too. Of course I must go home. I’ll write
Miss Tappan not to tell Aunt Rebecca I’m coming; then I’ll surprise
her. Probably that’ll do her more good. When can I go, Uncle Jim? You
wouldn’t have to send Anna Mary to take me back, would you?”

“Beth, Beth, do you want to go back? You seem impatient to start!”
cried Natalie.

Her mother gave her a quick glance, and Beth’s eyes filled with tears.

“Oh, Natalie, don’t you know how beautiful I knew Cortmeer would be and
the sea? And--don’t I love you?” Beth cried.

She did not say, loyal little soul that she was, that life in her
old home was utterly different from the life of luxury and beauty
surrounding her here. Beth would not have been a human child to have
felt no pang in giving up her room, the perfect service, the drives in
carriages and cars, all the delights which her uncle’s wealth poured
upon her. Going back meant leaving fairy-land, in which Beth had dwelt
blissfully all winter, for the real life of simplest realities which
had been hers. And, as she said, she loved these new-found relatives
with all her loving heart.

Aunt Alida came to her rescue. “Do you know, Jim,” she said to her
husband, who sat regarding Beth thoughtfully, without speaking, “do
you know that I think Beth is entirely right to go? I want her very
much; she knows that, but I think she is right, in the highest kind of
right, to choose to sacrifice herself for the one who has taken care
of her all her life. And I know quite well that it is a hard sacrifice
to make. But Beth would not be happy if she went to Cortmeer after
this. We will help her to make the sacrifice; not make it harder by our
protests. We will pack her off in the Pullman car, and Trump in the
express for small ponies, and send her on her way, if not precisely
rejoicing, yet happy in the knowledge that she has done a hard thing
and a dear, sweet sort of right thing, and that she is going to make
an old lady very, very glad by choosing her instead of us. For a time,
though, Bethie! Remember you are coming back to us, and another time we
shall try to arrange for no more partings!”

Aunt Alida smiled at the little girl, with a warm light in her glorious
dark eyes, and Beth smiled back at her bravely, in spite of the tears
on her flushed cheeks. These two understood each other. Beth wondered
how she should ever bear not seeing that beautiful face, how she should
ever be able to wait to hear again that gracious voice, which had come
to represent to her the sweetest music in the world, the expression of
truest womanhood.

“We’ll do better than you propose, Alida,” said Uncle Jim, while the
Cortlandt children sat silent, aghast at this unexpected and adverse
settlement of the discussion. “We will ship Trump, as you say, but we
will take Beth back ourselves, in our big touring car, and leave her on
Miss Bristead’s door-steps--like a foundling!”

“Oh, Uncle Jim!” cried Beth as usual.

And so, swiftly, suddenly, it was settled. Beth was going back. Her
Wonder-Winter was over and no Wonder-Summer was to follow it, this
year, at least.

It was hard, cruelly hard, yet, just as Aunt Alida had prophesied,
already a song was singing in Beth’s heart that she had not failed of
her obligations as one of the Order of the Strong of Heart. She had
chosen, not what she wanted, but what was right. And poor old lonely,
repressed Aunt Rebecca would be glad.




CHAPTER XIX

THE WONDER-WINTER MELTS IN SPRING


How changed the house looked to Beth, now that it was settled that
she was to leave it! Only a short half year ago it looked unfamiliar,
its grandeurs frightened her. Now it seemed to her like home and the
more than simple house of her former life came before her memory like
something utterly strange and barren.

She went up the broad stairway between Natalie and Alys silently,
slowly; all three girls were trying not to cry.

“I suppose her mortal life seemed queer to a changeling, too, when she
first went back from fairy-land,” Beth said aloud, speaking out of her
thoughts.

“We’ll see you after a while,” said Alys, as the three paused at Beth’s
door. Her voice drooped downward through the short sentence and ended
in melancholy.

“You wouldn’t have thought that Alys would have minded much,” said Beth
to herself, as she closed the door of her room behind her.

The fire burned low on the hearth, just a stick or two, charred in
the middle, but still in form on the ends, left of Frieda’s early fire
which had brightened the room in the early morning. Even when her first
glimpse of this perfect chamber had struck her mute with admiration on
her arrival, it had never looked to Beth so utterly delightful as it
did that moment when she saw it with farewell to it in her heart.

She crossed over and dropped down in her favorite low white willow
rocker beside the hearth. She twisted around, laid her arms over its
back, her face down on them and cried as hard, yet as relievingly as
she could. A good thorough cry had to be gone through with, so it was
well to get it over and done on the spot.

Frieda came in and found Beth thus. She stood terror-stricken, waiting
an explanation when Beth could give it.

“Miss Beth, Miss Beth dear? Miss Beth, darling little Miss Beth?” she
said questioningly.

“I’m going home, Frieda,” sobbed Beth, straightening herself and
futilely rolling a perfectly wet ball of handkerchief around in first
one, then the other eye. “I’ve had a letter from--from a neighbor at
home, and she tells me my Aunt Rebecca is pining. She never would tell
me herself, so I’m sure it’s true. Besides, Miss Tappan knows. Of
course it would be dreadful to stay here--I mean at Cortmeer--having
the loveliest time in the world, while poor Aunt Rebecca pined. Aunt
Alida says so, too. So I’ve got to go--soon. I might have known a
wonder-summer couldn’t come right after a wonder-winter.”

Frieda fetched a dry handkerchief from Beth’s drawer, practically
expressing the sympathy no words could convey, nor was it an accident
that she offered Beth now her favorite handkerchief.

“Miss Beth, dearest, it’s awful; that’s what it is. It’s awful for me,
and Liebchen will be wild when she hears it. You’ve just crept right
into everybody’s heart here, Miss Beth, and there won’t be a dry eye,
from Tim in the stable to the smallest maid below stairs, when you
start. But you’ll be back in the fall. They’ll never let you stay away.
So try not to feel too bad. If you please, let me tell you that it’s
fine and just like you to go because you think some one needs you.”
Frieda smiled affectionately at Beth, with tears in her own eyes.

Beth arose slowly, feeling better. “That isn’t one bit finer than it is
not to take some one’s silver spoons, Frieda,” she said. “It would be
taking what didn’t belong to me if I took Cortmeer this summer and left
Aunt Rebecca to pine--at her age, after bringing me up!”

Anna Mary, in the doorway, exchanged smiles with Frieda at this speech.

“So it would, Miss Beth; it’s right you are, but it’s something to be
right!” she said. “I just stopped in one minyute, hearin’ the news and
bein’ downright sorry to hear it. But I’m thinkin’ it may be better for
you than you think, spendin’ this summer back where I fetched you from;
a mixture won’t hurt you, little dear though you are! Your cousins are
cryin’ in their room. Sure, you must all cheer up; summer does be swift
passin’. Mrs. Cortlandt bade me say to you she would like you to be
ready to go shoppin’ in half an hour. She is goin’ to get your summer
wardrobe, Miss Beth, and there’s no better thing to dry female tears,
be they from young or old eyes, than a pretty frock or two. It beats
all the wisdom of the ancients and the consolation of friends.”

Beth laughed. Her sense of humor could not be dampened down long by
crying.

“I don’t need a summer wardrobe at home, Anna Mary,” she said. “Some
chambrays and a dimity for afternoons, and a real simple, fine white
frock for best--that’s all you need there.”

“Well, Miss Beth,” said Anna Mary, “Mrs. Cortlandt is that sorry about
losin’ you, and the disappointment and all, that I’m thinkin’ she’ll
have to buy a good deal more than that for you to console herself.”

In the car, on the way to the shops, which were even more bewildering
in their spring glories than when Beth had first seen them, Beth
repeated to Aunt Alida her statement of the simplicity of her
requirements in clothing for a summer in her old home.

Aunt Alida smiled at her. “I won’t be extravagant, Bethie; I’ll
promise it! You must let me get you a third of what you would have had
at Cortmeer and that third is longer than your list,” she said. “What
about your little friend, Janie? Is she the sort of child--rather are
her people the sort of people who would be displeased if you brought
her a few pretty summer concoctions to wear, so that you and she would
be dressed in the same way this summer?”

“Do you mean my little friend Janie, or my friend, Janie Little, Aunt
Alida?” asked Beth with her merry twinkle returning. “The Littles
are nice, Aunt Alida; they are not rich, but they are nice people,
looked-up to, you know--about like us. Nobody is rich at home, but the
Littles are among the nice people. They---- I don’t know. Nobody ever
tried to give us dresses. Maybe Janie could have one--or two. I suppose
jewelry is safer, but I’m sure I don’t know why.”

When this shopping expedition was over Aunt Alida had chosen two
delicate white frocks of the finest material and designs for Beth to
give Janie. For Beth herself there were half a dozen white frocks, ten
chambrays, some delicate mulls and organdies in colors, a hat for best,
a shade hat that Beth thought still prettier, low shoes in russets,
browns and black; stockings, gloves, a parasol that awoke in Beth
enthusiasm only just short of adoration, seeing which Aunt Alida added
one like it, in another color, for Janie.

“Aunt Alida, you don’t know, you really don’t begin to know what Aunt
Rebecca will say when she sees all these things for no one but just me!
It won’t be what she says in words; it will be what she’ll say with her
eyes and especially with her back; turning it, you know!” cried Beth.
“And only think what there is in the house already that you’ve bought
for me! Why, I’ll never dare take back all the trunks these things will
need!”

“I do not intend you to, Bethie,” said Aunt Alida. “Your winter
clothing will be put away in your wardrobes till you get back. That
will be six months from now; in October, surely.”

Beth began to feel cheered. Anna Mary’s wisdom was profound; shopping,
pretty clothes do work wonders in drying feminine tears!

It was impossible not to look forward to the long drive in the big
touring car which Beth had never seen; it was resting for the winter.
It was also impossible not to feel some interest in the yellow kitten
which she had so long wanted and which Miss Tappan said was waiting
for her. And, though she regretted Natalie, Alys and Dirk, still more
the dear uncle who had given her her first actual knowledge of what a
father would have been like, and the beautiful and adorable Aunt Alida,
who was a combination of mother and goddess to the little girl, still
Janie was dear, and of course she loved Aunt Rebecca, and it would be
nice to see the dull little shops, the quiet streets of home once more.
So, like a healthy, natural little girl, Beth began to see streaks of
sunshine through her clouds; to enjoy amid her regret.

“I’m having the car made ready, Beth,” said Uncle Jim one night at
dinner, ten days later. “I’ve been inquiring and I learn that the roads
are pretty well settled on the route we shall travel, returning you.
I have a directors’ meeting, which I can’t cut, on April twentieth. I
must be back for that. What about the date for the trip, Alida? When
shall we start for Massachusetts?”

“That’s for you to decide, Jim,” replied Aunt Alida. “I’ve not made
any positive engagements, thinking you might go soon. The first of the
week?”

“I had Tuesday in mind,” said Uncle Jim.

“Tuesday be it,” said Aunt Alida promptly. “We are all ready--at least
we are all ready to get ready!”

“Now I know you’re really going!” cried Dirk, his reddened cheeks
betraying how ill he liked the knowledge. “As long as there wasn’t a
date, it didn’t seem true, but now--it does!”

“What shall we do to give you a good time before you go?” asked
Natalie. “This is Friday--do you want the Tanagers and Bluebirds and a
little spread on Monday, or a dance that night, or--what would you like
to do, Beth?”

“I wouldn’t like to do one single thing with any one outside this
house, except Miss Deland and Mr. Leonard,” said Beth. “I’d like to
keep right close together, all of us, no one else, my last day.” Beth
choked over these two final melancholy words.

“Let’s have a house party!” cried Alys inspired. “That means a party of
the house, or it does this time. Let’s have ice-cream and cake in the
music room, or the gym or somewhere and have a nice little send off of
our own to-morrow afternoon. Shall we?”

“Have Beth’s Liebchen and Annunciata here, though; they’re so
especially Beth’s, and let Tim come and have all the servants in, make
it like the English story-books, when all the retainers drink the young
heir’s health!” cried Natalie.

“Is that a go, mumsy?” asked Dirk.

“Isn’t it a sort of introduction to a go? To Beth’s going?” suggested
Mrs. Cortlandt. “Surely I agree to the house party, if Beth likes it.”

“It will be very nice, if I don’t cry at it,” said Beth.

“Nobody cries when they’re going somewhere just for the summer, Beth,
and that’s all the leave of absence from here we’ll give you,” said
Uncle Jim.

It was a queer party which gathered in the music room to bid Beth a
formal farewell. Tim, Liebchen, Annunciata were the only guests from
outside the house, unless Miss Deland and Mr. Leonard were counted
outsiders, but, as Dirk said, “they were inside so much it was about
the same thing.”

For the rest, all Aunt Alida’s servants were asked to “drink Beth’s
health in ice-cream juice, if it melts,” Alys said.

Tim arose and made a speech. “Miss Beth, you dear child,” he began,
and the audience shouted: “Hear, hear!” endorsing this estimate of
Beth before he could get farther. “It’s sorry we are to be seein’ the
last of you, as the man said to the thrain he’d run himself purple to
catch whin he saw it turnin’ the corner, beyant the station. Trump is
startin’ this day week to go afther you an’ it’s envyin’ Trump we’ll
all be whin he gets there, more by token that you’ll likely throw your
two arrums around him an’ kiss him plenty, which is what no Shetland
pony can appreciate fully. Take it all in all, Miss Beth, high an’ low
in your uncle’s house, an’ more, maybe, in your uncle’s stable, have
come to love the sweet face of you this winter, an’ it’s just walkin’
rolls of crêpe we’d be didn’t we know you’d be here again next season.
So we wish you good luck, Miss Beth, darlin’, an’ I’m thinkin’ there’s
no better way to end a farewell speech than to say Godspeed, which is
all wan with God bless you!”

This speech, which Tim ended with a bow that would have done credit to
a dancing master, was applauded to the echo.

“You have to reply, Bethie,” whispered Uncle Jim, pulling Beth to her
feet with a whirl. She laughed, but looked frightened, although all
the faces before her were familiar ones, which smiled at her with
affectionate looks.

They saw a round-faced little girl, crimson with embarrassment, dark
blue eyes dilated and excited, smiling, tremulous lips, fair hair
flowing around her shoulders, snowy white floating frock making her
look especially innocent and childish. It came to one or two present,
notably to Aunt Alida and Anna Mary, that this child had come into
her uncle’s household for more than her own sake and to spend a
“wonder-winter” in the enjoyment of all that great wealth can give.

She was a simple little girl, wholly unconscious and modest, but there
was in her a quality, a nobility of mind and heart, which made those
who loved Beth feel that it held the promise, the assurance of a future
of important achievement.

“I can’t make a speech; Tim’s speech was lovely,” said Beth in a
little voice and they all applauded, choosing to consider this the
opening of a speech. So Beth found herself launched, which was Uncle
Jim’s intention when he led the applause.

“I’ve had the nicest winter ever was,” Beth went on. “It’s been just
like a fairy story. It’s gone right on from glory to glory. I’ve had a
wonder-winter, in Wonderland. I’m fearfully, fearfully sorry I’ve got
to go, but Aunt Alida and Uncle Jim are going to ask me again, they
say, so maybe I’ll come back--if my great-aunt Rebecca can get along.
Everybody has been so good to me, everybody! I’m--I’m just as obliged
as I can be. I hope everybody will keep well this summer and be here,
if I do come back. And--and--I’m really ever so much obliged.”

Beth broke down a little at the end of this first attempt at public
speaking. The applause, as newspapers say, reporting political
meetings, “was tremendous.”

Then every one in the room came up to Beth and made her a little gift;
every one, even to the cook, a forbidding man whom Beth did not know
and the woman who helped him, whom she had never seen before. Stories
of Beth’s sweetness, her friendliness, her desire to make every one
around her happy had stolen to the unknown parts of the house and to
those who presided there, and all were sorry that the dear little girl
was going away.

Riggs was the greatest surprise of all. His solemnity seemed like a
case, through which nothing could penetrate. It was a pleasant shock to
discover that Beth had broken through this armor of respectability and
won affection from the butler. Riggs came with his farewell offering to
Beth and presented it with a smile and real feeling.

“Hit’s a bit of ’awthorn from Stratford-on-Avon, miss,” Riggs said.
“Hi thought you’d like something from Shakespeare’s ’ome. Hi’ve ’eard
you talkin’ hinterested hand hinterestingly hon readin’. Hi made bold
to send hover to a member hof my hown family, ’oo keeps an hinn near
Stratford-on-Avon, for this bit of ’awthorn. Haccept hit, Miss Beth,
hif you please, hin token hof my hadmiration hand respect.”

Mr. Leonard gave Beth a tiny packet. “We’re like minded, Riggs and I;
thought you’d like something with venerable associations, Beth! That’s
a piece of the British man-of-war, _Somerset_. The ship Paul Revere
rowed under ‘with muffled oar’ when he was making for the Charlestown
shore to arouse the Lexington men. The _Somerset_ went to pieces on the
Cape Cod shore a few years later and was uncovered long afterward. This
little piece of black English oak was part of her. I thought you’d like
it.”

Beth lightly touched the dried hawthorn leaves, the square of oak,
blackened by time. Her imagination was fired by the contact of her
pink-tipped, twentieth century fingers with these objects which had
been near such great deeds, such reverend associations. She could
hardly bring herself back to thank Mr. Leonard and Riggs.

“We’ll meet again, little Beth,” said Mr. Leonard. “If I did not know
that I should not know how to say good-bye.”

“You saved Dirk’s life,” said Beth. “But I was fond of you before.”

Which was a satisfactory good-bye, as Mr. Leonard’s eyes betrayed.

Annunciata’s offering to Beth, made with tempestuous sobs, for
Annunciata never felt anything by halves, was a pretty and gay striped
apron, such as Italian peasants wear.

“It’s for curiousa-tee,” explained Annunciata, between gasps. “And for
to remember your poor Nunciata, who will died, die, dead without to see
you, loveliest!”

“Now, Beth, this is the most serious case of all!” whispered Natalie.
“It’s dreadful to kill the child in so many ways.”

Liebchen was quiet; she did not even cry, but she looked tragic as she
bade Beth good-bye and presented her with wristlets of her own knitting.

“I’ll walk where you go, if you don’t come back,” she said. “You got me
cured to walk, and I’ll walk there, but I’ll see you again.”

Beth found this touching. She promised Liebchen faithfully that she
would return. She then made “her international relations peaceful,”
as Uncle Jim said, by putting on the gay contadina’s apron and the
wristlets, in spite of the delicacy of her white frock. Beth served her
guests with cream and cake, Natalie played and so did Aunt Alida, and
everybody sang.

When Mr. Cortlandt insisted upon it, Tim danced his Irish breakdown
with the greatest humor and flexibility, ending with a toss in the air
of an imaginary cap and a shout of “Erin go bragh” that sent Dirk into
ecstasy.

That night Aunt Alida and Uncle Jim had no engagement, for the
household was to rise at the unusual hour of half-past six, for the
travelers to be off before nine.

Frieda dressed Beth for the last time, at least for a good while. It
was a sober and dewy face that looked back at Beth from the glass, as
she sat before it, having her hair braided tight for the drive, and
behind her chair Frieda bent over her, braiding and dropping tears on
the fair hair.

Beth did not speak, neither did Frieda. Both understood that the little
lady and her maid were too saddened by parting to speak of it.

When her toilet was made, hair tucked away under the dearest little
automobile bonnet that could be devised for such a face as Beth’s, a
close little affair of white straw with a flat blue bow on its top and
small pink rosebuds all around the inside of the edge, Frieda put on
Beth a long coat of blue, gauntlet gloves, a white veil that was sure
to flow out gracefully into everybody else’s face.

Then Beth stood in the middle of her beloved room and let her eyes
travel from one object to another in it, taking detailed farewell of
its perfections. Such a beautiful room, so homelike, yet so elegant!
And she was giving it up! Beth choked, but remembered that Aunt
Rebecca was pining. She turned to Frieda and threw her arms around her
vehemently.

“Good-bye, good-bye, you dear, nice Frieda! I’m sorry if I ever
bothered you. You’ve been so nice I’ve even liked having a maid, though
I’d never have believed I could have borne it. Good-bye!”

“Good-bye, my darling little Miss Beth,” sobbed Frieda. “You’ve never
been anything like a bother to me; just a pleasure to wait on you, it
is. Come back, and don’t let any one else be your maid when you come.”

“Oh, mercy me, no!” cried Beth, hurrying away before she should feel
that she could not go from her room and Frieda.

At the door stood the great touring car which Beth had never seen
before. It was painted a dark mulberry color, to correspond with the
Cortlandt livery. Léon Charette was in his place, ready to start.
Beside him sat the footman who accompanied the coachmen when the horses
were used, both in their mulberry coats, looking exceedingly correct.
Anna Mary was still stowing away luggage and luncheon hampers in their
places in the car. Alys made Beth get into it with her to be shown the
thermos bottles, the mirror, the toilet case, all the appointments of
this truly magnificent car.

“I thought all the stunning me was done,” said Beth. “But this car is
just as wonderful as the house.”

She jumped out and ran back, for there was Miss Deland, smiling,
with a book in her hand. “I ordered this for you, but it had not come
yesterday, little Beth,” she said.

Beth looked at it; it was a beautiful copy of old Mallory’s “Morte
d’Arthur.”

“Because you are such a little bundle of olden time romance,” smiled
Miss Deland. “Good-bye, little pupil, and don’t forget to love the
teacher that never had a chance to teach you much; you’ve been such a
butterfly in New York this winter!”

Aunt Alida wore brown; her long coat, close bonnet and veil and gloves
were almost one in color with her dark eyes and hair.

Natalie wore invisible green, Alys a lighter shade, Dirk looked almost
professional in Norfolk tweeds and goggles, a small but close imitation
of his handsome father. Anna Mary was to be taken; she looked just as
she had when she had come for Beth, a long, severe shiny figure in
black.

Mrs. Cortlandt and the three girls were to sit in the back; Mr.
Cortlandt, Dirk and Anna Mary were occupants of the middle seats.

Léon started the car; it obeyed readily, and slowly rolled away.
Beth looked back. There were dear Mrs. Hodgman, who had cried when
she kissed Beth good-bye and said: “Good-bye, little sunshine!” And
there were Frieda, Miss Deland--and the house. Beth waved to them all,
equally, and was gone!

It was a long drive to the small town where Aunt Rebecca lived, but
Mr. Cortlandt was to take it easily. Beth found it thrilling to say:
“Now we are in New York State.” “Now we have crossed the Connecticut
line.” It seemed a great thing to her to be an interstate traveler!

The party stopped for the night at a good hotel and Beth keenly enjoyed
the novelty. Never before had she been a guest in a hotel; she had a
sense of rapidly becoming a citizen of the great world.

In the morning they took their places in the car again and rolled on,
through country so beautiful that Beth could not contain herself.

“New England is lovely, isn’t it, Uncle Jim?” she said proudly. “‘Land
of the Pilgrims’ pride,’ you know. I’m proud of it, too. I can’t help
being glad I was born here.”

“I’m truly thankful that you were born somewhere, Bethikins,” returned
Uncle Jim. “It’s a fine old state, your Bay State. But ‘breathes there
a man with soul so dead,’ you know, Bethie! You don’t?” he added, as
Beth shook her head. “‘Who never to himself hath said: This is my own,
my native land,’ is the rest of the quotation--Scott. And that applies
to a little girl. There’s a flavor in the air we first breathed that we
‘may search through the wide world is ne’er met with elsewhere.’ I seem
to be dropping into poetry like Silas Wegg! I’d better stop talking.”

Beth chattered all the way, until they drew near to their destination.
Then she became quiet and, as the approach to her town began to take
on familiar aspects, to grow pale and tremulous. Her hand sought Aunt
Alida’s, who held it fast. It surprised herself to find how much she
wished to hold it fast, permanently: never to let little Beth slip away
from her.

It was a perfect April afternoon, warm, with openings in the warmth of
spring coolness; curious little draughts of cool air, followed by warm
ones as they skirted woodlands. The sun lay on the earth with a warmth
that was a summons to all the flowers. Beth knew that in a day or two
she and Janie would gather violets in the south field, back of Janie’s
house.

The car rolled into the town, more properly a village, with its easy
motion that had been so steady and restful all through the journey. It
attracted attention; it was a more magnificent car than usually came
that way and it was one of the first to come that season. Beth sat
up straight, leaning forward; by this time her left hand had sought
Natalie’s, as her right had sought her aunt’s, and she was holding fast
to them both, with a nervous clutch that betrayed her excitement.

They passed people whom Beth knew, but they did not recognize her.
Miss Tappan had kept the secret of her coming, so no one looked to
see little Beth Bristead in the great tonneau, behind the impressive
mulberry backs of the chauffeur and footman. Beth felt unreasonably
disappointed. It seemed dreadful to have Mrs. Damon, who sold them
butter, and Mr. Ranney, who might be called Aunt Rebecca’s lifelong
grocer, go by without a smile for the child who had so often been sent
to them on errands.

At last, guided by Beth, the car turned into a shady street, with
houses on either side somewhat withdrawn from it. It stopped at a brown
house with a low gateway. The footman jumped down and opened the door
of the tonneau.

“I think you’d better go in alone, dear,” said Aunt Alida. “Your
great-aunt will be so surprised it is better for her to see you before
we meet her.”

But precaution was too late. Aunt Rebecca came out on the piazza,
seeing the car at her gate. Beth sprang out of the tonneau at the sight
of her, forgetting everything but that this was coming home again and
that was Aunt Rebecca, Aunt Rebecca, looking pale and considerably
older, just as Miss Tappan had said.

“Aunt Rebecca, I’m here!” cried Beth, running up the walk.

Aunt Rebecca’s hand went to her side. Then she descended a step and
caught Beth to her in an embrace such as Beth had never before in all
her life received from her.

“Beth, Beth, little Beth,” she said; nothing more. But instantly Beth’s
regrets at returning vanished completely. Aunt Rebecca surely loved her
and wanted her; she must have been “pining” to speak, to clutch Beth
like this.

Miss Bristead was not the sort of person to allow emotion to master
her. In an instant she had regained her self-control and went down to
her gate to meet Mrs. Cortlandt and her husband and to urge them to
come in.

“We are going on to-night, Miss Bristead, thank you,” said Aunt Alida.
“Mr. Cortlandt has an important engagement that will force us to hasten
back. We have returned Beth to you. It is with unspeakable reluctance.
We want her dreadfully this summer, Miss Bristead! I think it right to
tell you that we have begged Beth to stay with us, but all in vain.
She has been resolutely determined to go to you. We are sorry enough,
but--here she is!”

Miss Bristead smiled. “I think I need her more than you do, with these
three fine children,” she said.

Beth recognized in Aunt Rebecca a changed manner, a softening. Once she
would not have complimented the young Cortlandts.

“Aren’t you going to come in, Aunt Alida?” cried Beth aghast.

“No, dear. It is better that we go immediately,” said Aunt Alida. She
was wise enough to know that parting would thus be easier to Beth.

“Get in again, chicken, and kiss me as hard as you can, to make up
for all the days that must pass before you kiss me again,” her uncle
ordered her.

Beth got in. For a few moments she was hugged breathless by first
one then another of her Cortlandt relatives, and then they began all
over again. Even Anna Mary kissed her over and over, and blessed her
fervently.

Then Uncle Jim got out and lifted Beth bodily from the car. He looked
at Miss Bristead and smiled, then put Beth’s hands in hers, in token of
his renunciation of her for a while. Then the great car moved, turned,
slowly started away, amid shouts of farewell and a sob or two from
Natalie and Alys. It went down the quiet street, increasing its speed
and, turning the corner, was lost to sight.

Beth turned to the house, knowing that she must do something to keep
from crying. She did not wish to let Aunt Rebecca feel that she
regretted being at home again.

“You made a sacrifice for me, child; they are much more charming,
high-bred people than I expected to see. They are very nice indeed, for
New Yorkers. They could have given you a great deal we lack here, Beth.
I appreciate your coming, but--I needed you!”

“I’m truly glad I came, Aunt Rebecca,” said Beth with perfect truth.

Together they went into the house. It looked bare, queer. The china
ornaments on the mantelpiece, the clock with Time and his scythe,
once so familiar, had become not only strange to Beth, but grotesque.
Nothing seemed real; neither the life she had been living, nor this old
life she had lived before.

Ella Lowndes, who had been watching the arrival behind a drawn curtain,
came to meet and hug Beth. Tabby came, too, her tail erect, her whole
air revealing pride in the yellow kitten that gamboled behind her,
trying to reach her proud tail.

In a little while Janie came running, breathless, wild with joy. News
travels fast in places like Aunt Rebecca’s village. Janie had heard
that Beth Bristead was back. The little girls hugged each other in a
transport of joy in meeting. However dear and beautiful Natalie was,
Janie was Beth’s lifelong chum; there really could be but one Janie!
Beth was so glad to see her that it made her forget the red table-cloth
which had been distressing her in a vague way. Later Beth and Janie sat
on the upper step in the April sunset, their arms around each other,
their heads leaned lovingly close.

“Tell me all about everything,” Janie ordered Beth.

“Not to-night; I can’t. It seems so queer to be here, yet it doesn’t
seem as if New York was true, one bit. I feel as though I had been
dreaming,” Beth said.

“Beth, I don’t see how you ever, ever came back!” whispered Janie.
“Lydia Tappan told mama to-day that she had written you; that was after
we heard you had come, though.”

“I had to come. You see this ring? That shows I’m not dreaming. A
prince gave me that.” She nodded hard, in response to Janie’s amazed
stare.

“Truly; a real prince! It’s for an Order. Natalie, Alys, Dirk and I
belong. It’s the Order of the Strong Hearted. When we have to choose
something, we’re vowed to choose what’s right, not what we want--unless
we happen to want the right. I had to choose to come back. But, oh,
Janie, I’m awfully, dreadfully glad to see you!”

“Well, I guess I am!” echoed Janie. They hugged each other all over
again.

“Sitting here like Java sparrows?” said Aunt Rebecca coming out.
“Put this shawl around you. I guess it’ll cover you both, sitting so
close! I declare, it doesn’t seem as though it could be you, Beth! Your
wonder-winter is over, as you called it. But I guess I could quote
Shakespeare if I had a mind to: ‘Now is the winter of our discontent
made glorious summer by the son of York.’ Only it’s a little daughter!
Are you really home again, Beth?”

“Yes, Aunt Rebecca, I’m home again! I’m so glad you’re glad I came! You
_are_ glad, aren’t you, Aunt Rebecca?” asked Beth.

“Yes, Beth, I’m glad,” said Aunt Rebecca. “I like to have you
around.”




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Transcriber’s Note:

Punctuation has been standardised. Dialect in direct speech has been
retained. Changes to the original publication have been made as follows:

  Page 132
  lot of valuble strength _changed to_
  lot of valuable strength

  Page 268
  patés also lace-trimmed _changed to_
  pâtés also lace-trimmed

  Page 319
  Ponce de Leon named it that _changed to_
  Ponce de Léon named it that

  Page 323
  Your true friend, _changed to_
  “‘Your true friend,





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