Part 4 (1/2)

The young stranger smiled, and his engaging face was quickened with the flash of white teeth. A dark lock of hair fell over his forehead and his firm chin was deeply cleft.

”I have the honour of bearing a letter from your brother, Sir,” he said, ”and one from General Was.h.i.+ngton himself.”

Peter Doane looked on, and when he saw Dorothy's eyes encounter those of the stranger and her lashes droop and her cheeks flush pink, he turned on his heel and with the stiffness of an affronted Indian strode silently away.

”This letter from General Was.h.i.+ngton,” said Caleb Parish, looking up from his reading, ”informs me that you have already served creditably with our troops in the east and that you are now desirous to cast your lot with us here. I welcome you, Sir.”

Kenneth Thornton was swift to learn and when he went abroad with hunting parties or to swing the axe in the clearings, his stern and exacting task-masters found no fault with his strength or spirit.

Their ardent and humourless democracy detected in him no taint of the patronizing or supercilious, and if he was new to the backwoods, he paid his arrears of knowledge with the ready coin of eagerness.

So Kenneth Thornton was speedily accepted into full brotherhood and became a favourite. The cheery peal of his laugh and his even cordiality opened an easy road to popularity and confidence.

Thornton had been schooled in England until the war clouds lowered, and as he talked of his boyish days there, and of the sights and festivities of London town, he found in Caleb Parish and his daughter receptive listeners, but in young Doane a stiff-necked monument of wordless resentment.

One summer night when the skies had spilt day-long torrents of rain and the sun had set red with the woods still sobbing and chill, a great fire roared on Caleb Parish's hearth. Before it sat the householder with his daughter and Kenneth Thornton; as usual, too, silent and morose yet stubbornly present, was Peter Doane.

Oddly enough they were talking of the minuet, and Kenneth rose to ill.u.s.trate a step and bow that he had seen used in England.

Suddenly the girl came to her feet and faced him with a curtsey.

Kenneth Thornton bent low from the waist, and, with a stately gesture, carried her fingers to his lips.

”Now, my lord,” she commanded, ”show the newest steps that they dance at court.”

”Your humble servant, Mistress Dorothy,” he replied, gravely.

Then they both laughed, and Caleb Parish was divided between smile and tears--but Peter Doane glowered and sat rigid, thinking of freshly reared barriers that democracy should have levelled.

CHAPTER IV

A week later Dorothy led Kenneth Thornton and Peter Doane to a place where beside a huge boulder a ”spring-branch” gushed into a natural basin of stone. The ferns grew thick there, and the moss lay deep and green, but over the spot, with branches spreading n.o.bly and its head high-reared, stood an ancient walnut and in the narrow circle of open ground at its base grew a young tree perhaps three feet tall.

”I want to move that baby tree,” said Dorothy, and now her voice became vibrant, ”to a place where, when it has grown tall, it can stand as a monument over my mother's grave.”

She paused, and the two young men offered no comment. Each was watching the glow in her eyes and feeling that, to her, this ceremony meant something more than the mere setting out of a random seedling.

”It will stand guard over our home,” she went on, and her eyes took on an almost dreamy far-awayness. ”It will be shade in summer and a reminder of coming spring in winter. It will look down on people as they live and die--and are born. At last,” she concluded, ”when I come to die myself, I want to be buried under it, too.”

When the young walnut had been lifted clear and its roots packed with some of its own native earth Kenneth Thornton started away carrying it in advance while Dorothy and Peter followed.

But before they came to the open s.p.a.ce young Doane stopped on the path and barred the girl's way. ”Dorothy,” he began, awkwardly, and with painful embarra.s.sment, ”I've got something thet must needs be said--an'

I don't rightly know how to say it.”

She looked up into his set face and smiled.

”Can I help you say it?” she inquired, and he burst out pa.s.sionately, ”Until _he_ come, you seemed to like me. Now you don't think of n.o.body else but jest him ... and I hates him.”

”If it's hatred you want to talk about,” she said, reproachfully, ”I don't think I can help you after all.”