Part 55 (2/2)

The kitchen door opened, and Anne came in with her mother, who wore a gingham ap.r.o.n as the badge of her position in the household. Anne advanced with her mother and presented her, with much dignity, as she conceived it, to Edith and Star.

”This is my mother, Edith and Star,” said Anne, as the two young ladies arose and advanced to the middle of the room.

Edith presented her small white hand and took the coa.r.s.e hand of Mrs.

Winthrope. ”I am so glad to know you, Mrs. Winthrope,” said Edith, as she kissed the aging woman, whose age was more from toil than years.

Star having performed the same act of greeting, including the osculatory part thereof, Mrs. Winthrope held up her hands in an astonished att.i.tude, and said: ”Well, well; I declare; and you two are John's friends, are you? I hope you are well.”

”We are well; thank you,” they both repeated.

”Just make yourselves at home, ladies, with what we have here to entertain you, while I finish the dinner. Be seated by the window where it is cool, for I know you must be warm after the long drive in the sun.”

”Thank you, Mrs. Winthrope,” they answered; and were seated.

Then the mother and daughter disappeared again; and Anne returned, after a little, with her father, who was in the clothes of a ploughman. Mr.

Winthrope was a tall man, a little stooped, with chin whiskers, and gray blue eyes; and, while rough looking, was not boorish. Anne escorted him to the young ladies, who arose at his approach. He greeted them so warmly and effusively that, for some time thereafter, they felt the grip of his vise-like hand on theirs.

”Just make yourselves at home, as you like,” he said. ”We are farmers, you know, and if you find any pleasure here it is yours. We will be through our work by noon, then mother and me will find time to talk, if you care to be bothered with us at all.” Then he left them.

”Are they not very good people,” said Edith to Star, after the father had gone out with Anne.

”I like them very much,” opined Star; ”they are so pleasant.”

John came in shortly, and sat down on a split-bottom chair in the middle of the room.

”I hope you ladies are enjoying yourselves,” he said, toying with his hat he held in his hands.

”I could not enjoy myself any more if it were my own home,” answered Edith. ”Why, you have such a delightful home, Mr. Winthrope, and such nice parents, and such a sweet little sister, with whom I have already fallen in love. I am regretting that I have not known them longer.”

”That's a beautiful encomium, Miss Jarney, on my native heath; but you know that you and your father and mother have been saying so many nice things about me that I am uncertain whether you mean it or not.” John said this while glancing at the floor, picturing intangible things in the woof and warp of the old rag carpet.

”I mean every word of it. Mr. Winthrope,” replied Edith, also picturing similar intangible things in the old rag carpet as easily as if she had pictured them out of the delicate flowers in the velvet rug in her boudoir.

Star sat gazing out the window, looking at some intangible shapes that made up the green hills beyond. Their conversation thereafter was not of the progressive kind, nor was it brilliant. Both became secretively reserved, and time was hanging monstrously on their hands. John was dreaming. Edith was dreaming. Both were uncertain as to what to say or how to act, so discomposed were they. But James came in soon to break the spell. He was such a strapping fine fellow, fine in texture, and as good as he was fine.

”I knew very well who you were the day we met you on the road,” said Edith, shaking his hand.

”Had I known all this then. I should have bundled you into my wagon and brought you right home,” he replied, with considerable liveliness in his speech. ”But not knowing you, of course, I could do nothing else but drive on. However, the pleasure of meeting you now, here, is certainly beyond my mean ability to express.”

”We might have come,” said Edith, with a ringing laugh. ”Would it not have been odd, and so romantic, just to have come right along with you?”

”I am sure I would have enjoyed it,” he said; ”and by this time I would have had you converted into farm hands.”

”And wearing calico dresses,” said Edith.

”And brogan shoes,” said Star, remembering how she used to wear such articles of clothing.

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