ЭЛЕКТРОННАЯ БИБЛИОТЕКА КОАПП
Сборники Художественной, Технической, Справочной, Английской, Нормативной, Исторической, и др. литературы.



THE HARVESTER BY GENE STRATTON-PORTER AUTHOR OF A GIRL OF THE LIMBERLOST, FRECKLES, ETC.


             THIS PORTION
    OF THE LIFE OF A MAN OF TO-DAY
IS OFFERED IN THE HOPE THAT IN CLEANLINESS,
  POETIC TEMPERMENT, AND MENTAL FORCE,
         A LIKENESS WILL BE SEEN
                 TO
          HENRY DAVID THOREAU




CHAPTER
I.     Belshazzar's Decision
II.    The Effect of a Dream
III.   Harvesting the Forest
IV.    A Commission for the South Wind
V.     When the Harvester Made Good
VI.    To Labour and to Wait
VII.   The Quest of the Dream Girl
VIII.  Belshazzar's Record Point
IX.    The Harvester Goes Courting
X.     The Chime of the Blue Bells
XI.    Demonstrated Courtship
XII.   ``The Way of a Man with a Maid''
XIII.  When the Dream Came True
XIV.   Snowy Wings
XV.    The Harvester Interprets Life
XVI.   Granny Moreland's Visit
XVII.  Love Invades Science
XVIII. The Better Man
XIX.   A Vertical Spine
XX.    The Man in the Background
XXI.   The Coming of the Bluebird


CHARACTERS

DAVID LANGSTON, A Harvester of the Woods.
RUTH JAMESON, A Girl of the City.
GRANNY MORELAND, An Interested Neighbour.
DR. CAREY, Chief Surgeon of the Onabasha Hospital.
MRS. CAREY, Wife of the Doctor.
DR. HARMON, Who Concludes to Leave the City.
MOLLY BARNET, A Hospital Nurse with a Heart.
HENRY JAMESON, A Trader Without a Heart.
ALEXANDER HERRON, Who Made a Concession.
MRS. HERRON, A Gentle Woman.
THE KENNEDYS, Philadelphia Lawyers.



The Harvester

CHAPTER I

BELSHAZZAR'S DECISION

``Bel, come here!''
The Harvester sat in the hollow worn in the
hewed log stoop by the feet of his father and
mother and his own sturdier tread, and rested his head
against the casing of the cabin door when he gave the
command.  The tip of the dog's nose touched the gravel
between his paws as he crouched flat on earth, with
beautiful eyes steadily watching the master, but he did
not move a muscle.

``Bel, come here!''

Twinkles flashed in the eyes of the man when he
repeated the order, while his voice grew more imperative as
he stretched a lean, wiry hand toward the dog.  The
animal's eyes gleamed and his sensitive nose quivered, yet
he lay quietly.

``Belshazzar, kommen Sie hier!''

The body of the dog arose on straightened legs and his
muzzle dropped in the outstretched palm.  A wind
slightly perfumed with the odour of melting snow and
unsheathing buds swept the lake beside them, and lifted
a waving tangle of light hair on the brow of the man, while
a level ray of the setting sun flashed across the water and
illumined the graven, sensitive face, now alive with keen
interest in the game being played.

``Bel, dost remember the day?'' inquired the Harvester.

The eager attitude and anxious eyes of the dog betrayed
that he did not, but was waiting with every sense alert
for a familiar word that would tell him what was
expected.

``Surely you heard the killdeers crying in the night,''
prompted the man.  ``I called your attention when the
ecstasy of the first bluebird waked the dawn.  All day
you have seen the gold-yellow and blood-red osiers, the
sap-wet maples and spring tracing announcements of her
arrival on the sunny side of the levee.''

The dog found no clew, but he recognized tones he
loved in the suave, easy voice, and his tail beat his sides
in vigorous approval.  The man nodded gravely.

``Ah, so!  Then you realize this day to be the most
important of all the coming year to me; this hour a solemn
one that influences my whole after life.  It is time for
your annual decision on my fate for a twelve-month.
Are you sure you are fully alive to the gravity of the
situation, Bel?''

The dog felt himself safe in answering a rising inflection
ending in his name uttered in that tone, and wagged
eager assent.

``Well then,'' said the man, ``which shall it be?  Do I
leave home for the noise and grime of the city, open an
office and enter the money-making scramble?''

Every word was strange to the dog, almost breathlessly
waiting for a familiar syllable.  The man gazed
steadily into the animal's eyes.  After a long pause he
continued:

``Or do I remain at home to harvest the golden seal,
mullein, and ginseng, not to mention an occasional hour
with the black bass or tramps for partridge and cotton-
tails?''

The dog recognized each word of that.  Before the
voice ceased, his sleek sides were quivering, his nostrils
twitching, his tail lashing, and at the pause he leaped up
and thrust his nose against the face of the man.  The
Harvester leaned back laughing in deep, full-chested
tones; then he patted the dog's head with one hand and
renewed his grip with the other.

``Good old Bel!'' he cried exultantly.  ``Six years you
have decided for me, and right----every time!  We are of
the woods, Bel, born and reared here as our fathers before
us.  What would we of the camp fire, the long trail, the
earthy search, we harvesters of herbs the famous chemists
require, what would we do in a city?  And when the sap
is rising, the bass splashing, and the wild geese honking
in the night!  We never could endure it, Bel.

``When we delivered that hemlock at the hospital
to-day, did you hear that young doctor talking about his
`lid'?  Well up there is ours, old fellow!  Just sky and clouds
overhead for us, forest wind in our faces, wild perfume in
our nostrils, muck on our feet, that's the life for us.  Our
blood was tainted to begin with, and we've lived here so
long it is now a passion in our hearts.  If ever you sentence
us to life in the city, you'll finish both of us, that's
what you'll do!  But you won't, will you?  You realize
what God made us for and what He made for us, don't
you, Bel?''

As he lovingly patted the dog's head the man talked and
the animal trembled with delight.  Then the voice of the
Harvester changed and dropped to tones of gravest
import.

``Now how about that other matter, Bel?  You always
decide that too.  The time has come again.  Steady now!
This is far more important than the other.  Just to be
wiped out, Bel, pouf!  That isn't anything and it concerns
no one save ourselves.  But to bring misery into
our lives and live with it daily, that would be a
condition to rend the soul.  So careful, Bel!  Cautious
now!''

The voice of the man dropped to a whisper as he asked
the question.

``What about the girl business?''

Trembling with eagerness to do the thing that would
bring more caressing, bewildered by unfamiliar words
and tones, the dog hesitated.

``Do I go on as I have ever since mother left me,
rustling for grub, living in untrammelled freedom?  Do
I go on as before, Bel?''

The Harvester paused and waited the answer, with
anxiety in his eyes as he searched the beast face.  He
had talked to that dog, as most men commune with their
souls, for so long and played the game in such intense
earnest that he felt the results final with him.  The
animal was immovable now, lost again, his anxious eyes
watching the face of the master, his eager ears waiting
for words he recognized.  After a long time the man
continued slowly and hesitantly, as if fearing the outcome.
He did not realize that there was sufficient anxiety in his
voice to change its tones.

``Or do I go courting this year?  Do I rig up in
uncomfortable store-clothes, and parade before the country and
city girls and try to persuade the one I can get,
probably----not the one I would want----to marry me, and
come here and spoil all our good times?  Do we want
a woman around scolding if we are away from home,
whining because she is lonesome, fretting for luxuries
we cannot afford to give her?  Are you going to let us in
for a scrape like that, Bel?''

The bewildered dog could bear the unusual scene no
longer.  Taking the rising inflection, that sounded more
familiar, for a cue, and his name for a certainty, he
sprang forward, his tail waving as his nose touched the
face of the Harvester.  Then he shot across the driveway
and lay in the spice thicket, half the ribs of one
side aching, as he howled from the lowest depths of
dog misery.

``You ungrateful cur!'' cried the Harvester.  ``What
has come over you?  Six years I have trusted you, and
the answer has been right, every time!  Confound your
picture!  Sentence me to tackle the girl proposition!  I
see myself!  Do you know what it would mean?  For
the first thing you'd be chained, while I pranced over the
country like a half-broken colt, trying to attract some
girl.  I'd have to waste time I need for my work and
spend money that draws good interest while we sleep, to
tempt her with presents.  I'd have to rebuild the cabin
and there's not a chance in ten she would not fret the life
out of me whining to go to the city to live, arrange for her
here the best I could.  Of all the fool, unreliable dogs that
ever trod a man's tracks, you are the limit!  And you
never before failed me!  You blame, degenerate pup,
you!''

The Harvester paused for breath and the dog subsided
to a pitiful whimper.  He was eager to return to the
man who had struck him the first blow his pampered
body ever had received; but he could not understand a
kick and harsh words for him, so he lay quivering with
anxiety and fear.

``You howling, whimpering idiot!'' exclaimed the
Harvester.  ``Choose a day like this to spoil!  Air to
intoxicate a mummy!  Roots swelling!  Buds bursting!  Harvest
close and you'd call me off and put me at work
like that, would you?  If I ever had supposed
lost all your senses, I never would have asked you.
Six years you have decided my fate, when the first
bluebird came, and you've been true blue every time.
If I ever trust you again!   But the mischief is done
now.

``Have you forgotten that your name means `to protect?'
Don't you remember it is because of that, it is
your name?  Protect!  I'd have trusted you with my
life, Bell!  You gave it to me the time you pointed that
rattler within six inches of my fingers in the blood-root
bed.  You saw the falling limb in time to warn me.  You
always know where the quicksands lie.  But you are
protecting me now, like sin, ain't you?  Bring a girl
here to spoil both our lives!  Not if I know myself!
Protect!''

The man arose and going inside the cabin closed the
door.  After that the dog lay in abject misery so deep
that two big tears squeezed from his eyes and rolled down
his face.  To be shut out was worse than the blow.  He
did not take the trouble to arise from the wet leaves
covering the cold earth, but closing his eyes went to sleep.

The man leaned against the door and ran his fingers
through his hair as he anathematized the dog.  Slowly his
eyes travelled around the room.  He saw his tumbled bed
by the open window facing the lake, the small table with
his writing material, the crude rack on the wall loaded
with medical works, botanies, drug encyclopaedias, the
books of the few authors who interested him, and the bare,
muck-tracked floor.  He went to the kitchen, where he
built a fire in the cook stove, and to the smoke-house, from
which he returned with a slice of ham and some eggs.  He
set some potatoes boiling and took bread, butter and milk
from the pantry.  Then he laid a small note-book on the
table before him and studied the transactions of the
day.

10 lbs.  wild cherry bark      6 cents       $ .60
5   ``   wahoo root bark      25 ``           1.25
20  ``   witch hazel bark      5 ``           1.00
5   ``   blue flag root       12 ``            .60
10  ``   snake root           18 ``           1.80
10  ``   blood root           12 ``           1.20
15  ``   hoarhound            10 ``           1.50
                                            -----
                                            $7.95


``Not so bad,'' he muttered, bending over the figures.
``I wonder if any of my neighbours who harvest the
fields average as well at this season.  I'll wager they don't.
That's pretty fair!  Some days I don't make it, and then
when a consignment of seeds go or ginseng is wanted the
cash comes in right properly.  I could waste half of it on
a girl and yet save money.  But where is the woman who
would be content with half?  She'd want all and fret
because there wasn't more.  Blame that dog!''

He put the book in his pocket, prepared and ate his
supper, heaped a plate generously, placed it on the floor
beneath the table, and set away the food that remained.

``Not that you deserve it,'' he said to space.  ``You get
this in honour of your distinguished name and the faithfulness
with which you formerly have lived up to its import.
If you hadn't been a dog with more sense than some
men, I wouldn't take your going back on me now so
hard.  One would think an animal of your intelligence
might realize that you would get as much of a dose as I.
Would she permit you to eat from a plate on the kitchen
floor?  Not on your life, Belshazzar!  Frozen scraps
around the door for you!  Would she allow you to sleep
across the foot of the bed?  Ho, ho, ho!  Would she have
you tracking on her floor?  It would be the barn, and
growling you didn't do at that.  If I'd serve you right, I'd
give you a dose and allow you to see how you like it.  But
it's cutting off my nose to spite my face, as the old adage
goes, for whatever she did to a dog, she'd probably do
worse to a man.  I think not!''

He entered the front room and stood before a long shelf
on which were arranged an array of partially completed
candlesticks carved from wood.  There were black and
white walnut, red, white, and golden oak, cherry and
curly maple, all in original designs.  Some of them were
oddities, others were failures, but most of them were
unusually successful.  He selected one of black walnut,
carved until the outline of his pattern was barely
distinguishable.  He was imitating the trunk of a tree with
the bark on, the spreading, fern-covered roots widening
for the base, from which a vine sprang.  Near the top was
the crude outline of a big night moth climbing toward
the light.  He stood turning this stick with loving hands
and holding it from him for inspection.

``I am going to master you!'' he exulted.  ``Your
lines are right.  The design balances and it's graceful.  If
I have any trouble it will be with the moth, and I think
I can manage.  I've got to decide whether to use cecropia
or polyphemus before long.  Really, on a walnut, and in
the woods, it should be a luna, according to the eternal
fitness of things----but I'm afraid of the trailers.  They
turn over and half curl and I believe I had better not
tackle them for a start.  I'll use the easiest to begin on,
and if I succeed I'll duplicate the pattern and try a luna
then.  The beauties!''

The Harvester selected a knife from the box and began
carving the stick slowly and carefully.  His brain was
busy, for presently he glanced at the floor.

``She'd object to that!'' he said emphatically.  ``A
man could no more sit and work where he pleased than
he could fly.  At least I know mother never would have
it, and she was no nagger, either.  What a mother she
was!  If one only could stop the lonely feeling that will
creep in, and the aching hunger born with the body, for
a mate; if a fellow only could stop it with a woman like
mother!  How she revelled in sunshine and beauty!
How she loved earth and air!  How she went straight to
the marrow of the finest line in the best book I could
bring from the library!  How clean and true she was and
how unyielding!  I can hear her now, holding me with
her last breath to my promise.  If I could marry a girl
like mother----great Caesar!  You'd see me buying an
automobile to make the run to the county clerk.  Wouldn't
that be great!  Think of coming in from a long, difficult
day, to find a hot supper, and a girl such as she must have
been, waiting for me!  Bel, if I thought there was a woman
similar to her in all the world, and I had even the ghost of
a chance to win her, I'd call you in and forgive you.  But
I know the girls of to-day.  I pass them on the roads, on
the streets, see them in the cafe's, stores, and at the library.
Why even the nurses at the hospital, for all the gravity
of their positions, are a giggling, silly lot; and they never
know that the only time they look and act presentably to
me is when they stop their chatter, put on their uniforms,
and go to work.  Some of them are pretty, then.
There's a little blue-eyed one, but all she needs is feathers
to make her a `ha! ha! bird.'  Drat that dog!''

The Harvester took the candlestick and the box of
knives, opened the door, and returned to the stoop.  Belshazzar
arose, pleading in his eyes, and cautiously advanced
a few steps.  The man bent over his work and
paid not the slightest heed, so the discouraged dog sank to
earth and fixedly watched the unresponsive master.  The
carving of the candlestick went on steadily.  Occasionally
the Harvester lifted his head and repeatedly sucked his
lungs full of air.  Sometimes for an instant he scanned
the surface of the lake for signs of breaking fish or splash
of migrant water bird.  Again his gaze wandered up the
steep hill, crowned with giant trees, whose swelling buds
he could see and smell.  Straight before him lay a low
marsh, through which the little creek that gurgled and
tumbled down hill curved, crossed the drive some distance
below, and entered the lake of Lost Loons.

While the trees were bare, and when the air was clear as
now, he could see the spires of Onabasha, five miles away,
intervening cultivated fields, stretches of wood, the long
black line of the railway, and the swampy bottom lands
gradually rising to the culmination of the tree-crowned
summit above him.  His cocks were crowing warlike
challenges to rivals on neighbouring farms.  His hens
were carolling their spring egg-song.  In the barn yard
ganders were screaming stridently.  Over the lake and the
cabin, with clapping snowy wings, his white doves circled
in a last joy-flight before seeking their cotes in the
stable loft.  As the light grew fainter, the Harvester
worked slower.  Often he leaned against the casing, and
closed his eyes to rest them.  Sometimes he whistled
snatches of old songs to which his mother had cradled
him, and again bits of opera and popular music he had
heard on the streets of Onabasha.  As he worked, the
sun went down and a half moon appeared above the wood
across the lake.  Once it seemed as if it were a silver bowl
set on the branch of a giant oak; higher, it rested a tilted
crescent on the rim of a cloud.

The dog waited until he could endure it no longer, and
straightening from his crouching position, he took a few
velvet steps forward, making faint, whining sounds in his
throat.  When the man neither turned his head nor gave
him a glance, Belshazzar sank to earth again, satisfied
for the moment with being a little closer.  Across Loon
Lake came the wavering voice of a night love song.
The Harvester remembered that as a boy he had shrunk
from those notes until his mother explained that they
were made by a little brown owl asking for a mate to
come and live in his hollow tree.  Now he rather liked
the sound.  It was eloquent of earnest pleading.  With
the lonely bird on one side, and the reproachful dog eyes
on the other, the man grinned rather foolishly.

Between two fires, he thought.  If that dog ever
catches my eye he will come tearing as a cyclone, and I
would not kick him again for a hundred dollars.  First
time I ever struck him, and didn't intend to then.  So
blame mad and disappointed my foot just shot out before
I knew it.  There he lies half dead to make up, but I'm
blest if I forgive him in a hurry.  And there is that
insane little owl screeching for a mate.  If I'd start out
making sounds like that, all the girls would line up and
compete for possession of my happy home.

The Harvester laughed and at the sound Belshazzar
took courage and advanced five steps before he sank belly
to earth again.  The owl continued its song.  The Harvester
imitated the cry and at once it responded.  He
called again and leaned back waiting.  The notes came
closer.  The Harvester cried once more and peered across
the lake, watching for the shadow of silent wings.  The
moon was high above the trees now, the knife dropped in
the box, the long fingers closed around the stick, the head
rested against the casing, and the man intoned the cry
with all his skill, and then watched and waited.  He had
been straining his eyes over the carving until they were
tired, and when he watched for the bird the moonlight
tried them; for it touched the lightly rippling waves of
the lake in a line of yellow light that stretched straight
across the water from the opposite bank, directly to the
gravel bed below, where lay the bathing pool.  It made
a path of gold that wavered and shimmered as the water
moved gently, but it appeared sufficiently material to
resemble a bridge spanning the lake.

``Seems as if I could walk it,'' muttered the Harvester.

The owl cried again and the man intently watched the
opposite bank.  He could not see the bird, but in the
deep wood where he thought it might be he began to
discern a misty, moving shimmer of white.  Marvelling,
he watched closer.  So slowly he could not detect motion
it advanced, rising in height and taking shape.

``Do I end this day by seeing a ghost?'' he queried.

He gazed intently and saw that a white figure really
moved in the woods of the opposite bank.

``Must be some boys playing fool pranks!'' exclaimed
the Harvester.

He watched fixedly with interested face, and then
amazement wiped out all other expression and he sat
motionless, breathless, looking, intently looking.  For
the white object came straight toward the water and at
the very edge unhesitatingly stepped upon the bridge of
gold and lightly, easily advanced in his direction.  The man
waited.  On came the figure and as it drew closer he could
see that it was a very tall, extremely slender woman,
wrapped in soft robes of white.  She stepped along
the slender line of the gold bridge with grace unequalled.

From the water arose a shining mist, and behind the
advancing figure a wall of light outlined and rimmed her
in a setting of gold.  As she neared the shore the
Harvester's blood began to race in his veins and his lips parted
in wonder.  First she was like a slender birch trunk, then
she resembled a wild lily, and soon she was close enough
to prove that she was young and very lovely.  Heavy
braids of dark hair rested on her head as a coronet.  Her
forehead was low and white.  Her eyes were wide-open
wells of darkness, her rounded cheeks faintly pink, and
her red lips smiling invitation.  Her throat was long,
very white, and the hands that caught up the fleecy robe
around her were rose-coloured and slender.  In a panic
the Harvester saw that the trailing robe swept the undulant
gold water, but was not wet; the feet that alternately
showed as she advanced were not purple with cold, but
warm with a pink glow.

She was coming straight toward him, wonderful,
alluring, lovely beyond any woman the Harvester ever
had seen.  Straightway the fountains of twenty-six years'
repression overflowed in the breast of the man and all
his being ran toward her in a wave of desire.  On she
came, and now her tender feet were on the white gravel.
When he could see clearly she was even more beautiful
than she had appeared at a distance.  He opened his lips,
but no sound came.  He struggled to rise, but his legs
would not bear his weight.  Helpless, he sank against
the casing.  The girl walked to his feet, bent, placed a
hand on each of his shoulders, and smiled into his eyes.
He could scent the flower-like odour of her body and
wrapping, even her hair.  He struggled frantically to
speak to her as she leaned closer, yet closer, and softly
but firmly laid lips of pulsing sweetness on his in a
deliberate kiss.

The Harvester was on his feet now.  Belshazzar shrank
into the shadows.

``Come back!'' cried the man.  ``Come back!  For
the love of mercy, where are you?''

He ran stumblingly toward the lake.  The bridge of
gold was there, the little owl cried lonesomely; and did
he see or did he only dream he saw a mist of white vanishing
in the opposite wood?

His breath came between dry lips, and he circled the
cabin searching eagerly, but he could find nothing, hear
nothing, save the dog at his heels.  He hurried to the
stoop and stood gazing at the molten path of moonlight.
One minute he was half frozen, the next a rosy glow
enfolded him.  Slowly he lifted a hand and touched his
lips.  Then he raised his eyes from the water and swept
the sky in a penetrant gaze.

``My gracious Heavenly Father,'' said the Harvester
reverently.  ``Would it be like that?''



CHAPTER II

THE EFFECT OF A DREAM

Fully convinced at last that he had been dreaming,
the Harvester picked up his knives and
candlestick and entered the cabin.  He placed
them on a shelf and turned away, but after a second's
hesitation he closed the box and arranged the sticks
neatly.  Then he set the room in order and carefully
swept the floor.  As he replaced the broom he thought
for an instant, then opened the door and whistled softly.
Belshazzar came at a rush.  The Harvester pushed the
plate of food toward the hungry dog and he ate greedily.
The man returned to the front room and closed the door.

He stood a long time before his shelf of books, at last
selected a volume of ``Medicinal Plants'' and settled
to study.  His supper finished, Belshazzar came scratching
and whining at the door.  Several times the man
lifted his head and glanced in that direction, but he only
returned to his book and read again.  Tired and sleepy,
at last, he placed the volume on the shelf, went to a
closet for a pair of bath towels, and hung them across a
chair.  Then he undressed, opened the door, and ran
for the lake.  He plunged with a splash and swam vigorously
for a few minutes, his white body growing pink
under the sting of the chilled water.  Over and over he
scanned the golden bridge to the moon, and stood an
instant dripping on the gravel of the landing to make sure
that no dream woman was crossing the wavering floor!
He rubbed to a glow and turned back the covers of his
bed.  The door and window stood wide.  Before he lay
down, the Harvester paused in arrested motion a second,
then stepped to the kitchen door and lifted the latch.

As the man drew the covers over him, the dog's nose
began making an opening, and a little later he quietly
walked into the room.  The Harvester rested, facing
the lake.  The dog sniffed at his shoulder, but the man
was rigid.  Then the click of nails could be heard on the
floor as Belshazzar went to the opposite side.  At his
accustomed place he paused and set one foot on the bed.
There was not a sound, so he lifted the other.  Then
one at a time he drew up his hind feet and crouched as
he had on the gravel.  The man lay watching the bright
bridge.  The moonlight entered the window and flooded
the room.  The strong lines on the weather-beaten face
of the Harvester were mellowed in the light, and he
appeared young and good to see.  His lithe figure stretched
the length of the bed, his hair appeared almost white,
and his face, touched by the glorifying light of the moon,
was a study.

One instant his countenance was swept with ultimate
scorn; then gradually that would fade and the lines soften,
until his lips curved in child-like appeal and his eyes
were filled with pleading.  Several times he lifted a
hand and gently touched his lips, as if a kiss were a material
thing and would leave tangible evidence of having
been given.  After a long time his eyes closed and he
scarcely was unconscious before Belshazzar's cold nose
touched the outstretched hand and the Harvester lifted
and laid it on the dog's head.

``Forgive me, Bel,'' he muttered.  ``I never did that.
I wouldn't have hurt you for anything.  It happened
before I had time to think.''

They both fell asleep.  The clear-cut lines of manly
strength on the face of the Harvester were touched to
tender beauty.  He lay smiling softly.  Far in the night
he realized the frost-chill and divided the coverlet with
the happy Belshazzar.

The golden dream never came again.  There was no
need.  It had done its perfect work.  The Harvester
awoke the next morning a different man.  His face was
youthful and alive with alert anticipation.  He began
his work with eager impetuosity, whistling and singing
the while, and he found time to play with and talk to
Belshazzar, until that glad beast almost wagged off his
tail in delight.  They breakfasted together and arranged
the rooms with unusual care.

``You see,'' explained the Harvester to the dog, ``we
must walk neatly after this.  Maybe there is such a
thing as fate.  Possibly your answer was right.  There
might be a girl in the world for me.  I don't expect it,
but there is a possibility that she may find us before we
locate her.  Anyway, we should work and be ready.
All the old stock in the store-house goes out as soon as
we can cart it.  A new cabin shall rise as fast as we
can build it.  There must be a basement and furnace,
too.  Dream women don't have cold feet, but if there is
a girl living like that, and she is coming to us or waiting
for us to come to her, we must have a comfortable home
to offer.  There should be a bathroom, too.  She couldn't
dip in the lake as we do.  And until we build the new
house we must keep the old one clean, just on the chance
of her happening on us.  She might be visiting some
of the neighbours or come from town with some one
or I might see her on the street or at the library or
hospital or in some of the stores.  For the love of mercy,
help me watch for her, Bel!  The half of my kingdom
if you will point her for me!''

The Harvester worked as he talked.  He set the rooms
in order, put away the remains of breakfast, and started
to the stable.  He turned back and stood for a long time,
scanning the face in the kitchen mirror.  Once he went
to the door, then he hesitated, and finally took out his
shaving set and used it carefully and washed vigorously.
He pulled his shirt together at the throat, and hunting
among his clothing, found an old red tie that he knotted
around his neck.  This so changed his every-day appearance
that he felt wonderfully dressed and whistled gaily
on his way to the barn.  There he confided in the old
gray mare as he curried and harnessed her to the spring
wagon.

``Hardly know me, do you, Betsy?'' he inquired.
``Well, I'll explain.  Our friend Bel, here, has doomed me
to go courting this year.  Wouldn't that durnfound you?
I was mad as hornets at first, but since I've slept on the
idea, I rather like it.  Maybe we are too lonely and dull.
Perhaps the right woman would make life a very different
matter.  Last night I saw her, Betsy, and between
us, I can't tell even you.  She was the loveliest, sweetest
girl on earth, and that is all I can say.  We are going to
watch for her to-day, and every trip we make, until
we find her, if it requires a hundred years.  Then some
glad time we are going to locate her, and when we do, well,
you just keep your eye on us, Betsy, and you'll see how
courting straight from the heart is done, even if we lack
experience.''

Intoxicated with new and delightful sensations his
tongue worked faster than his hands.

``I don't mind telling you, old faithful, that I am in
love this morning,'' he said.  ``In love heels over, Betsy,
for the first time in all my life.  If any man ever was a
bigger fool than I am to-day, it would comfort me to
know about it.  I am acting like an idiot, Betsy.  I know
that, but I wish you could understand how I feel.  Power!
I am the head-waters of Niagara!  I could pluck down
the stars and set them in different places!  I could twist
the tail from the comet!  I could twirl the globe on my
palm and topple mountains and wipe lakes from
the surface!  I am a live man, Betsy.  Existence is over.
So don't you go at any tricks or I might pull off your
head.  Betsy, if you see the tallest girl you ever saw,
and she wears a dark diadem, and has big black eyes and
a face so lovely it blinds you, why you have seen Her, and
you balk, right on the spot, and stand like the rock of
Gibraltar, until you make me see her, too.  As if I wouldn't
know she was coming a mile away!  There's more I
could tell you, but that is my secret, and it's too precious
to talk about, even to my best friends.  Bel, bring Betsy
to the store-room.''

The Harvester tossed the hitching strap to the dog and
walked down the driveway to a low structure built on
the embankment beside the lake.  One end of it was a
dry-house of his own construction.  Here, by an arrangement
of hot water pipes, he evaporated many of the barks,
roots, seeds, and leaves he grew to supply large concerns
engaged in the manufacture of drugs.  By his process
crude stock was thoroughly cured, yet did not lose in
weight and colour as when dried in the sun or outdoor
shade.

So the Harvester was enabled to send his customers
big packages of brightly coloured raw material, and the
few cents per pound he asked in advance of the catalogued
prices were paid eagerly.  He lived alone, and never
talked of his work; so none of the harvesters of the fields
adjoining dreamed of the extent of his reaping.  The
idea had been his own.  He had been born in the cabin
in which he now lived.  His father and grandfather
were old-time hunters of skins and game.  They had
added to their earnings by gathering in spring and fall
the few medicinal seeds, leaves, and barks they knew.
His mother had been of different type.  She had
loved and married the picturesque young hunter, and
gone to live with him on the section of land taken
by his father.  She found life, real life, vastly different
from her girlhood dreams, but she was one of those
changeless, unyielding women who suffer silently, but
never rue a bargain, no matter how badly they are
cheated.  Her only joy in life had been her son.  For
him she had worked and saved unceasingly, and when
he was old enough she sent him to the city to school
and kept pace with him in the lessons he brought home
at night.

Using what she knew of her husband's work as a guide,
and profiting by pamphlets published by the government,
every hour of the time outside school and in
summer vacations she worked in the woods with the boy,
gathering herbs and roots to pay for his education and
clothing.  So the son passed the full high-school course,
and then, selecting such branches as interested him,
continued his studies alone.

From books and drug pamphlets he had learned every
medicinal plant, shrub, and tree of his vicinity, and for
years roamed far afield and through the woods collecting.
After his father's death expenses grew heavier and the
boy saw that he must earn more money.  His mother
frantically opposed his going to the city, so he thought out
the plan of transplanting the stuff he gathered, to the
land they owned and cultivating it there.  This work
was well developed when he was twenty, but that year
he lost his mother.

From that time he went on steadily enlarging his
species, transplanting trees, shrubs, vines, and medicinal
herbs from such locations as he found them to similar
conditions on his land.  Six years he had worked
cultivating these beds, and hunting through the woods on
the river banks, government land, the great Limberlost
Swamp, and neglected corners of earth for barks and
roots.  He occasionally made long trips across the
country for rapidly diminishing plants he found in the
woodland of men who did not care to bother with a few
specimens, and many big beds of profitable herbs,
extinct for miles around, now flourished on the banks of
Loon Lake, in the marsh, and through the forest rising
above.  To what extent and value his venture had grown,
no one save the Harvester knew.  When his neighbours
twitted him with being too lazy to plow and sow, of
``mooning'' over books, and derisively sneered when they
spoke of him as the Harvester of the Woods or the
Medicine Man, David Langston smiled and went his way.

How lonely he had been since the death of his mother
he never realized until that morning when a new idea
really had taken possession of him.  From the store-
house he heaped packages of seeds, dried leaves, barks,
and roots into the wagon.  But he kept a generous supply
of each, for he prided himself on being able to fill all
orders that reached him.  Yet the load he took to
the city was much larger than usual.  As he drove
down the hill and passed the cabin he studied the
location.

``The drainage is perfect,'' he said to Belshazzar beside
him on the seat.  ``So is the situation.  We get the cool
breezes from the lake in summer and the hillside warmth
in winter.  View down the valley can't be surpassed.  We
will grub out that thicket in front, move over the driveway,
and build a couple of two-story rooms, with basement
for cellar and furnace, and a bathroom in front of
the cabin and use it with some fixing over for a dining-
room and kitchen.  Then we will deepen and widen
Singing Water, stick a bushel of bulbs and roots and
sow a peck of flower seeds in the marsh, plant a hedge
along the drive, and straighten the lake shore a little.  I
can make a beautiful wild-flower garden and arrange
so that with one season's work this will appear very
well.  We will express this stuff and then select and fell
some trees to-night.  Soon as the frost is out of the
ground we will dig our basement and lay the foundations.
The neighbours will help me raise the logs; after that I
can finish the inside work.  I've got some dried maple,
cherry, and walnut logs that would work into beautiful
furniture.  I haven't forgotten the prices McLean offered
me.  I can use it as well as he.  Plain way the best
things are built now, I believe I could make tables
and couches myself.  I can see plans in the magazines
at the library.  I'll take a look when I get this off.  I
feel strong enough to do all of it in a few days and I am
crazy to commence.  But I scarcely know where to begin.
There are about fifty things I'd like to do.  But to fell
and dry the trees and get the walls up come first, I believe.
What do you think, old unreliable?''

Belshazzar thought the world was a place of beauty
that morning.  He sniffed the icy, odorous air and with
tilted head watched the birds.  A wearied band of ducks
had settled on Loon Lake to feed and rest, for there was
nothing to disturb them.  Signs were numerous everywhere
prohibiting hunters from firing over the Harvester's
land.  Beside the lake, down the valley, crossing
the railroad, and in the farther lowlands, the dog was a
nervous quiver, as he constantly scented game or saw
birds he wanted to point.  But when they neared the
city, he sat silently watching everything with alert
eyes.  As they reached the outer fringe of residences
the Harvester spoke to him.

``Now remember, Bel,'' he said.  ``Point me the
tallest girl you ever saw, with a big braid of dark hair,
shining black eyes, and red velvet lips, sweeter than wild
crab apple blossoms.  Make a dead set!  Don't allow
her to pass us.  Heaven is going to begin in Medicine
Woods when we find her and prove to her that there
lies her happy home.

``When we find her,'' repeated the Harvester softly
and exultantly.  ``When we find her!''

He said it again and again, pronouncing the words with
tender modulations.  Because he was chanting it in
his soul, in his heart, in his brain, with his lips, he had a
hasty glance for every woman he passed.  Light hair,
blue eyes, and short figures got only casual inspection:
but any tall girl with dark hair and eyes endured rather
close scrutiny that morning.  He drove to the express
office and delivered his packages and then to the hospital.
In the hall the blue-eyed nurse met him and cried gaily,
``Good morning, Medicine Man!''

``Ugh!  I scalp pale-faces!'' threatened the Harvester,
but the girl was not afraid and stood before him laughing.
She might have gone her way quite as well.  She could
not have differed more from the girl of the newly begun
quest.  The man merely touched his wide-brimmed hat
as he walked around her and entered the office of the
chief surgeon.

A slender, gray-eyed man with white hair turned from
his desk, smiled warmly, pushed a chair, and reached a
welcoming hand.

``Ah good-morning, David,'' he cried.  ``You bring
the very breath of spring with you.  Are you at the
maples yet?''

``Begin to-morrow,'' was the answer.  ``I want to get
all my old stock off hands.  Sugar water comes next,
and then the giddy sassafras and spring roots rush me,
and after that, harvest begins full force, and all my land
is teeming.  This is going to be a big year.  Everything
is sufficiently advanced to be worth while.  I have
decided to enlarge the buildings.''

``Store-room too small?''

``Everything!'' said the Harvester comprehensively.
``I am crowded everywhere.''

The keen gray eyes bent on him searchingly.

``Ho, ho!'' laughed the doctor.  `` `Crowded everywhere.'
I had not heard of cramped living quarters
before.  When did you meet her?''

``Last night,'' replied the Harvester.  ``Her home is
already in construction.  I chose seven trees as I drove
here that are going to fall before night.''

So casual was the tone the doctor was disarmed.

``I am trying your nerve remedy,'' he said.

Instantly the Harvester tingled with interest.

``How does it work?'' he inquired.

``Finely!  Had a case that presented just the symptoms
you mentioned.  High-school girl broken down
from trying to lead her classes, lead her fraternity, lead
her parents, lead society----the Lord only knows what
else.  Gone all to pieces!  Pretty a case of nervous
prostration as you ever saw in a person of fifty.  I began
on fractional doses with it, and at last got her where she
can rest.  It did precisely what you claimed it would,
David.''

``Good!'' cried the Harvester.  ``Good!  I hoped it
would be effective.  Thank you for the test.  It will
give me confidence when I go before the chemists with it.
I've got a couple more compounds I wish you would
try when you have safe cases where you can do no harm.''

``You are cautious for a young man, son!''

``The woods do that.  You not only discover miracles
and marvels in them, you not only trace evolution and the
origin of species, but you get the greatest lessons taught
in all the world ground into you early and alone----
courage, caution, and patience.''

``Those are the rocks on which men are stranded as a
rule.  You think you can breast them, David?''

The Harvester laughed.

``Aside from breaking a certain promise mother rooted
in the blood and bones of me, if I am afraid of anything,
I don't know it.  You don't often see me going head-
long, do you?  As to patience!  Ten years ago I began
removing every tree, bush, vine, and plant of medicinal
value from the woods around to my land; I set and sowed
acres in ginseng, knowing I must nurse, tend, and cultivate
seven years.  If my neighbours had understood
what I was attempting, what do you think they would
have said?  Cranky and lazy would have become adjectives
too mild.  Lunatic would have expressed it better.
That's close the general opinion, anyway.  Because I
will not fell my trees, and the woods hide the work I do,
it is generally conceded that I spend my time in the sun
reading a book.  I do, as often as I have an opportunity.
But the point is that this fall, when I harvest that ginseng
bed, I will clear more money than my stiffest detractor
ever saw at one time.  I'll wager my bank account won't
compare so unfavourably with the best of them now.
I did well this morning.  Yes, I'll admit this much:
I am reasonably cautious, I'm a pattern for patience,
and my courage never has failed me yet, anyway.  But
I must rap on wood; for that boast is a sign that I probably
will meet my Jonah soon.''

``David, you are a man after my own heart,'' said the
doctor.  ``I love you more than any other friend I have
I wouldn't see a hair of your head changed for the world.
Now I've got to hurry to my operation.  Remain as
long as you please if there is anything that interests you;
but don't let the giggling little nurse that always haunts
the hall when you come make any impression.  She is
not up to your standard.''

``Don't!'' said the Harvester.  ``I've learned one of
the big lessons of life since last I saw you, Doc.  I have
no standard.  There is just one woman in all the world
for me, and when I find her I will know her, and I will
be happy for even a glance; as for that talk of standards,
I will be only too glad to take her as she is.''

``David!  I supposed what you said about enlarged
buildings was nonsense or applied to store-rooms.''

``Go to your operation!''

``David, if you send me in suspense, I may operate
on the wrong man.  What has happened?''

``Nothing!'' said the Harvester.  ``Nothing!''

``David, it is not like you to evade.  What happened?''

``Nothing!  On my word!  I merely saw a vision and
dreamed a dream.''

``You!  A rank materialist!  Saw a vision and
dreamed a dream!  And you call it nothing.  Worst
thing that could happen!  Whenever a man of common-
sense goes to seeing things that don't exist, and dreaming
dreams, why look out!  What did you see?  What did
you dream?''

``You woman!'' laughed the Harvester.  ``Talk about
curiosity!  I'd have to be a poet to describe my vision,
and the dream was strictly private.  I couldn't tell it,
not for any price you could mention.  Go to your operation.''

The doctor paused on the threshold.

``You can't fool me,'' he said.  ``I can diagnose you
all right.  You are poet enough, but the vision was
sacred; and when a man won't tell, it's always and forever
a woman.  I know all now I ever will, because I know
you, David.  A man with a loose mouth and a low mind
drags the women of his acquaintance through whatever
mire he sinks in; but you couldn't tell, David, not even
about a dream woman.  Come again soon!  You are
my elixir of life, lad!  I revel in the atmosphere you bring.
Wish me success now, I am going to a difficult, delicate
operation.''

``I do!'' cried the Harvester heartily.  ``I do!  But
you can't fail.  You never have and that proves you
cannot!  Good-bye!''

Down the street went the Harvester, passing over city
pave with his free, swinging stride, his head high, his
face flushed with vivid outdoor tints, going somewhere
to do something worth while, the impression always left
behind him.  Men envied his robust appearance and
women looked twice, always twice, and sometimes
oftener if there was any opportunity; but twice at least
was the rule.  He left a little roll of bills at the bank and
started toward the library.  When he entered the reading
room an attendant with an eager smile hastily came toward him.

``What will you have this morning, Mr. Langston?'' she
asked in the voice of one who would render willing service.

``Not the big books to-day,'' laughed the Harvester.
``I've only a short time.  I'll glance through the magazines.''

He selected several from a table and going to a corner
settled with them and for two hours was deeply engrossed.
He took an envelope from his pocket, traced lines, and
read intently.  He studied the placing of rooms, the
construction of furniture, and all attractive ideas were
noted.  When at last he arose the attendant went to
replace the magazines on the table.  They had been
opened widely, and as she turned the leaves they
naturally fell apart at the plans for houses or articles
of furniture.

The Harvester slowly went down the street.  Before
every furniture store he paused and studied the designs
displayed in the windows.  Then he untied Betsy and
drove to a lumber mill on the outskirts of the city and
made arrangements to have some freshly felled logs of
black walnut and curly maple sawed into different sizes
and put through a course in drying.

He drove back to Medicine Woods whistling, singing,
and talking to Belshazzar beside him.  He ate a hasty
lunch and at three o'clock was in the forest, blazing and
felling slender, straight-trunked oak and ash of the
desired proportions.



CHAPTER III

HARVESTING THE FOREST


The forest is never so wonderful as when spring
wrestles with winter for supremacy.  While
the earth is yet ice bound, while snows occasionally
fly, spring breathes her warmer breath of
approach, and all nature responds.  Sunny knolls,
embankments, and cleared spaces become bare, while shadow
spots and sheltered nooks remain white.  This perfumes
the icy air with a warmer breath of melting snow.  The
sap rises in the trees and bushes, sets buds swelling, and
they distil a faint, intangible odour.  Deep layers of
dead leaves cover the frozen earth, and the sun shining
on them raises a steamy vapour unlike anything else in
nature.  A different scent rises from earth where the
sun strikes it.  Lichen faces take on the brightest colours
they ever wear, and rough, coarse mosses emerge in rank
growth from their cover of snow and add another perfume
to mellowing air.  This combination has breathed a
strange intoxication into the breast of mankind in all
ages, and bird and animal life prove by their actions that
it makes the same appeal to them.

Crows caw supremacy from tall trees; flickers, drunk
on the wine of nature, flash their yellow-lined wings
and red crowns among trees in a search for suitable
building places; nut-hatches run head foremost down
rough trunks, spying out larvae and early emerging insects;
titmice chatter; the bold, clear whistle of the cardinal
sounds never so gaily; and song sparrows pipe from every
wayside shrub and fence post.  Coons and opossums
stir in their dens, musk-rat and ground-hog inspect the
weather, while squirrels race along branches and bound
from tree to tree like winged folk.

All of them could have outlined the holdings of the
Harvester almost as well as any surveyor.  They understood
where the bang of guns and the snap of traps
menaced life.  Best of all, they knew where cracked
nuts, handfuls of wheat, oats, and crumbs were scattered
on the ground, and where suet bones dangled from bushes.
Here, too, the last sheaf from the small wheat field at the
foot of the hill was stoutly fixed on a high pole, so that
the grain was free to all feathered visitors.

When the Harvester hitched Betsy, loaded his spiles
and sap buckets into the wagon, and started to the
woods to gather the offering the wet maples were pouring
down their swelling sides, almost his entire family came
to see him.  They knew who fed and passed every day
among them, and so were unafraid.

After the familiarity of a long, cold winter, when it had
been easier to pick up scattered food than to search for
it, they became so friendly with the man, the dog, and
the gray horse that they hastily snatched the food offered
at the barn and then followed through the woods.  The
Harvester always was particular to wear large pockets,
for it was good company to have living creatures flocking
after him, trusting to his bounty.  Ajax, a shimmering
wonder of gorgeous feathers, sunned on the ridge pole
of the old log stable, preened, spread his train, and uttered
the peacock cry of defiance, to exercise his voice or to
express his emotions at all times.  But at feeding hour
he descended to the park and snatched bites from the
biggest turkey cocks and ganders and reigned in power
absolute over ducks, guineas, and chickens.  Then he
followed to the barn and tried to frighten crows and
jays, and the gentle white doves under the eaves.

The Harvester walked through deep leaves and snow
covering the road that only a forester could have
distinguished.  Over his shoulder he carried a mattock,
and in the wagon were his clippers and an ax.  Behind
him came Betsy drawing the sap buckets and big evaporating
kettles.  Through the wood ranged Belshazzar,
the craziest dog in all creation.  He always went wild
at sap time.  Here was none of the monotony of trapping
for skins around the lake.  This marked the first full
day in the woods for the season.  He ranged as he pleased
and came for a pat or a look of confidence when he grew
lonely, while the Harvester worked.

At camp the man unhitched Betsy and tied her to the
wagon and for several hours distributed buckets.  Then
he hung the kettles and gathered wood for the fire.  At
noon he returned to the cabin for lunch and brought back
a load of empty syrup cans, and barrels in which to
collect the sap.  While the buckets filled at the dripping
trees, he dug roots in the sassafras thicket to fill orders
and supply the demand of Onabasha for tea.  Several
times he stopped to cut an especially fine tree.

``You know I hate to kill you,'' he apologized to the
first one he felled.  ``But it certainly must be legitimate
for a man to take enough of his trees to build a
home.  And no other house is possible for a creature of
the woods but a cabin, is there?  The birds use of the
material they find here; surely I have the right to do the
same.  Seems as if nothing else would serve, at least for
me.  I was born and reared here, I've always loved
you; of course, I can't use anything else for my home.''

He swung the ax and the chips flew as he worked on
a straight half-grown oak.  After a time he paused an
instant and rested, and as he did so he looked speculatively
at his work.

``I wonder where she is to-day,'' he said.  ``I wonder
what she is going to think of a log cabin in the woods.
Maybe she has been reared in the city and is afraid of a
forest.  She may not like houses made of logs.  Possibly
she won't want to marry a Medicine Man.  She may
dislike the man, not to mention his occupation.  She may
think it coarse and common to work out of doors with
your hands, although I'd have to argue there is a little
brain in the combination.  I must figure out all these
things.  But there is one on the lady:  She should have
settled these points before she became quite so familiar.
I have that for a foundation anyway, so I'll go on cutting
wood, and the remainder will be up to her when I find
her.  When I find her,'' repeated the Harvester slowly.
``But I am not going to locate her very soon monkeying
around in these woods.  I should be out where people
are, looking for her right now.''

He chopped steadily until the tree crashed over, and
then, noticing a rapidly filling bucket, he struck the ax
in the wood and began gathering sap.  When he had
made the round, he drove to the camp, filled the kettles,
and lighted the fire.  While it started he cut and scraped
sassafras roots, and made clippings of tag alder, spice
brush and white willow into big bundles that were ready
to have the bark removed during the night watch, and
then cured in the dry-house.

He went home at evening to feed the poultry and
replenish the ever-burning fire of the engine and to
keep the cabin warm enough that food would not freeze.
With an oilcloth and blankets he returned to camp and
throughout the night tended the buckets and boiling
sap, and worked or dozed by the fire between times.
Toward the end of boiling, when the sap was becoming
thick, it had to be watched with especial care so it would
not scorch.  But when the kettles were freshly filled
the Harvester sat beside them and carefully split tender
twigs of willow and slipped off the bark ready to be
spread on the trays.

``You are a good tonic,'' he mused as he worked,
``and you go into some of the medicine for rheumatism.
If she ever has it we will give her some of you, and
then she will be all right again.  Strange that I should
be preparing medicinal bark by the sugar camp fire,
but I have to make this hay, not while the sun shines,
but when the bark is loose, while the sap is rising.  Wonder
who will use this.  Depends largely on where I sell it.
Anyway, I hope it will take the pain out of some poor
body.  Prices so low now, not worth gathering unless
I can kill time on it while waiting for something else.
Never got over seven cents a pound for the best I ever
sold, and it takes a heap of these little quills to make a
pound when they are dry.  That's all of you----about
twenty-five cents' worth.  But even that is better than
doing nothing while I wait, and some one has to keep the
doctors supplied with salicin and tannin, so, if I do,
other folks needn't bother.''

He arose and poured more sap into the kettles as it
boiled away and replenished the fire.  He nibbled a twig
when he began on the spice brush.  As he sat on the
piled wood, and bent over his work he was an attractive
figure.  His face shone with health and was bright with
anticipation.  While he split the tender bark and slipped
out the wood he spoke his thoughts slowly:

``The five cents a pound I'll get for you is even less,
but I love the fragrance and taste.  You don't peel so
easy as the willow, but I like to prepare you better,
because you will make some miserable little sick child well
or you may cool some one's fevered blood.  If ever she
has a fever, I hope she will take medicine made from my
bark, because it will be strong and pure.  I've half a
notion to set some one else gathering the stuff and tending
the plants and spend my time in the little laboratory
compounding different combinations.  I don't see what
bigger thing a man can do than to combine pure, clean,
unadulterated roots and barks into medicines that will
cool fevers, stop chills, and purify bad blood.  The
doctors may be all right, but what are they going to do
if we men behind the prescription cases don't supply them
with unadulterated drugs.  Answer me that, Mr. Sapsucker.
Doc says I've done mighty well so far as I
have gone.  I can't think of a thing on earth I'd rather
do, and there's money no end in it.  I could get too rich
for comfort in short order.  I wouldn't be too wealthy
to live just the way I do for any consideration.  I don't
know about her, though.  She is lovely, and handsome
women usually want beautiful clothing, and a quantity
of things that cost no end of money.  I may need all I
can get, for her.  One never can tell.''

He arose to stir the sap and pour more from the barrels
to the kettles before he began on the tag alder he had
gathered.

``If it is all the same to you, I'll just keep on chewing
spice brush while I work,'' he muttered.  ``You are
entirely too much of an astringent to suit my taste and
you bring a cent less a pound.  But you are thicker and
dry heavier, and you grow in any quantity around the
lake and on the marshy places, so I'll make the size of
the bundle atone for the price.  If I peel you while I wait
on the sap I'm that much ahead.  I can spread you on
drying trays in a few seconds and there you are.  Howl
your head off, Bel, I don't care what you have found.  I
wouldn't shoot anything to-day, unless the cupboard was
bare and I was starvation hungry.  In that case I think
a man comes first, and I'd kill a squirrel or quail in season,
but blest if I'd butcher a lot or do it often.  Vegetables
and bread are better anyway.  You peel easier even than
the willow.  What jolly whistles father used to make!

``There was about twenty cents' worth of spice, and
I'll easy raise it to a dollar on this.  I'll get a hundred
gallons of syrup in the coming two weeks and it will
bring one fifty if I boil and strain it carefully and can
guarantee it contains no hickory bark and brown sugar.
And it won't!  Straight for me or not at all.  Pure is
the word at Medicine Woods; syrup or drugs it's the same
thing.  Between times I can fell every tree I'll need for
the new cabin, and average a dollar a day besides on spice,
alder, and willow, and twice that for sassafras for the
Onabasha markets; not to mention the quantities I
can dry this year.  Aside from spring tea, they seem
to use it for everything.  I never yet have had enough.
It goes into half the tonics, anodyne, and stimulants;
also soap and candy.  I see where I grow rich in spite of
myself, and also where my harvest is going to spoil
before I can garner it, if I don't step lively and double
even more than I am now.  Where the cabin is to come
in----well it must come if everything else goes.

``The roots can wait and I'll dig them next year and
get more and larger pieces.  I won't really lose anything,
and if she should come before I am ready to start to find
her, why then I'll have her home prepared.  How long
before you begin your house, old fire-fly?'' he inquired
of a flaming cardinal tilting on a twig.

He arose to make the round of the sap buckets again,
then resumed his work peeling bark, and so the time
passed.  In the following ten days he collected and
boiled enough sap to make more syrup than he had
expected.  His earliest spring store of medicinal twigs,
that were peeled to dry in quills, were all collected and
on the trays; he had digged several wagon loads of sassafras
and felled all the logs of stout, slender oak he would
require for his walls.  Choice timber he had been curing
for candlestick material he hauled to the saw-mills to
have cut properly, for the thought of trying his hand
at tables and chairs had taken possession of him.  He
was sure he could make furniture that would appear
quite as well as the mission pieces he admired on display
in the store windows of the city.  To him, chairs and
tables made from trees that grew on land that had
belonged for three generations to his ancestors, trees among
which he had grown, played, and worked, trees that
were so much his friends that he carefully explained
the situation to them before using an ax or saw, trees
that he had cut, cured, and fashioned into designs of his
own, would make vastly more valuable furnishings in his
home than anything that could be purchased in the city.

As he drove back and forth he watched constantly
for her.  He was working so desperately, planning far
ahead, doubling and trebling tasks, trying to do everything
his profession demanded in season, and to prepare
timber and make plans for the new cabin, as well as to
start a pair of candlesticks of marvellous design for her,
that night was one long, unbroken sleep of the thoroughly
tired man, but day had become a delightful dream.

He fed the chickens to produce eggs for her.  He
gathered barks and sluiced roots on the raft in the lake,
for her.  He grubbed the spice thicket before the door
and moved it into the woods to make space for a lawn,
for her.  His eyes were wide open for every woven case
and dangling cocoon of the big night moths that propagated
around him, for her.  Every night when he left
the woods from one to a dozen cocoons, that he had
detected with remarkable ease while the trees were bare,
were stuck in his hat band.  As he arranged them in a
cool, dry place he talked to them.

``Of course I know you are valuable and there are
collectors who would pay well for you, but I think not.
You are the prettiest thing God made that I ever saw,
and those of you that home with me have no price on
your wings.  You are much safer here than among the
crows and jays of the woods.  I am gathering you to
protect you, and to show to her.  If I don't find her by
June, you may go scot free.  All I want is the best pattern
I can get from some of you for candlestick designs.
Of everything in the whole world a candlestick should
be made of wood.  It should be carved by hand, and
of all ornamentations on earth the moth that flies to
the night light is the most appropriate.  Owls are not
so bad.  They are of the night, and they fly to light,
too, but they are so old.  Nobody I ever have known
used a moth.  They missed the best when they neglected
them.  I'll make her sticks over an original pattern;
I'll twine nightshade vines, with flowers and berries
around them, and put a trailed luna on one, and what
is the next prettiest for the other?  I'll think well before
if decide.  Maybe she'll come by the time I get to carving
and tell me what she likes.  That would beat my taste
or guessing a mile.''

He carefully arranged the twigs bearing cocoons in a
big, wire-covered box to protect them from the depredations
of nibbling mice and the bolder attacks of the
saucy ground squirrels that stored nuts in his loft and
took possession of the attic until their scampering
sometimes awoke him in the night.

Every trip he made to the city he stopped at the
library to examine plans of buildings and furniture and
to make notes.  The oak he had hauled was being hewed
into shape by a neighbour who knew how, and every
wagon that carried a log to the city to be dressed at
the mill brought back timber for side walls, joists, and
rafters.  Night after night he sat late poring over his
plans for the new rooms, above all for her chamber.
With poised pencil he wavered over where to put the
closet and entrance to her bath.  He figured on how wide
to make her bed and where it should stand.  He remembered
her dressing table in placing windows and a space
for a chest of drawers.  In fact there was nothing the
active mind of the Harvester did not busy itself with
in those days that might make a woman a comfortable
home.  Every thought emanated from impulses evolved
in his life in the woods, and each was executed with
mighty tenderness.

A killdeer sweeping the lake close two o'clock one
morning awakened him.  He had planned to close the
sugar camp for the season that day, but when he heard
the notes of the loved bird he wondered if that would
not be a good time to stake out the foundations and
begin digging.  There was yet ice in the ground, but the
hillside was rapidly thawing, and although the work
would be easier later, so eager was the Harvester to have
walls up and a roof over that he decided to commence.

But when morning came and he and Belshazzar
breakfasted and fed Betsy and the stock, he concluded to
return to his first plan and close the camp.  All the sap
collected that day went into the vinegar barrel.  He
loaded the kettles, buckets, and spiles and stopped at
the spice thicket to cut a bale of twigs as he passed.  He
carried one load to the wagon and returned for another.
Down wind on swift wing came a bird and entered the
bushes.  Motionless the Harvester peered at it.  A
mourning dove had returned to him through snow,
skifting over cold earth.  It settled on a limb and began
dressing its plumage.  At that instant a wavering, ``Coo
coo a'gh coo,'' broke in sobbing notes from the deep
wood.  Without paying the slightest heed, the dove
finished a wing, ruffled and settled her feathers, and
opened her bill in a human-like yawn.  The Harvester
smiled.  The notes swelled closer in renewed pleading.
The cry was beyond doubt a courting male and this
an indifferent female.  Her beady eyes snapped, her
head turned coquettishly, a picture of self-possession,
she hid among the dense twigs of the spice thicket.
Around the outside circled the pleading male.

With shining eyes the Harvester watched.  These
were of the things that made life in the woods most worth
while.  More insistent grew the wavering notes of the
lover.  More indifferent became the beloved.  She was
superb in her poise as she amused herself in hiding.  A
perfect burst of confused, sobbing notes broke on the
air.  Then away in the deep wood a softly-wavering,
half-questioning ``Coo-ah!'' answered them.  Amazement
flashed into the eyes of the Harvester, but his face
was not nearly so expressive as that of the bird.  She
lifted a bewildered head and grew rigid in an attitude of
tense listening.  There was a pause.  In quicker measure
and crowding notes the male called again.  Instantly
the soft ``Coo!'' wavered in answer.  The surprised
little hen bird of the thicket hopped straight up and
settled on her perch again, her dark eyes indignant as
she uttered a short ``Coo!''  The muscles of the
Harvester's chest were beginning to twitch and quiver.
More intense grew the notes of the pleading male.  Softly
seductive came the reply.  The clapping of his wings
could be heard as he flew in search of the charmer.  ``A'gh
coo!'' cried the deserted female as she tilted off the branch
and tore through the thicket in pursuit, with wings hastened
by fright at the ringing laugh of the Harvester.

``Not so indifferent after all, Bel,'' he said to the dog
standing in stiff point beside him.  ``That was all `pretend!'
But she waited just a trifle too long.  Now she
will have to fight it out with a rival.  Good thing if
some of the flirtatious women could have seen that.
Help them to learn their own minds sooner.''

He laughed as he heaped the twigs on top of the wagon
and started down the hill chuckling.  Belshazzar followed,
leading Betsy straight in the middle of the road by the
hitching strap.  A few yards ahead the man stopped
suddenly with lifted hand.  The dog and horse stood
motionless.  A dove flashed across the road and settled
in sight on a limb.  Almost simultaneously another
perched beside it, and they locked bills in a long caress,
utterly heedless of a plaintive ``Coo'' in the deep wood.

``Settled!'' said the Harvester.  ``Jupiter!  I wish my
troubles were that nearly finished!  Wish I knew where
she is and how to find my way to her lips!  Wonder if
she will come when I call her.  What if I should find her,
and she would have everything on earth, other lovers,
and indifference worse than Madam Dove's for me.
Talk about bitterness!  Well I'd have the dream left
anyway.  And there are always two sides.  There is
just a possibility that she may be poor and overworked,
sick and tired, and wondering why I don't come.  Possibly
she had a dream, too, and she wishes I would hurry.
Dear Lord!''

The Harvester began to perspire as he strode down
the hill.  He scarcely waited to hang the harness properly.
He did not stop to unload the wagon until night,
but went after an ax and a board that he split into pegs.
Then he took a ball of twine, a measuring line, and
began laying out his foundation, when the hard earth
would scarcely hold the stakes he drove into it.  When
he found he only would waste time in digging he put
away the neatly washed kettles, peeled the spice brush,
spread it to dry, and prepared his dinner.  After that
he began hauling stone and cement for his basement
floor and foundation walls.  Occasionally he helped at
hewing logs when the old man paused to rest.  That afternoon
the first robin of the season hailed him in passing.

``Hello!'' cried the Harvester.  ``You don't mean
to tell me that you have beaten the larks!  You really
have!  Well since I see it, I must believe, but you are
early.  Come around to the back door if crumbs or wheat
will do or if you can make out on suet and meat bones!
We are good and ready for you.  Where is your mate?
For any sake, don't tell me you don't know.  One case
of that kind at Medicine Woods is enough.  Say you
came ahead to see if it is too cold or to select a home and
get ready for her.  Say anything on earth except that
you love her, and want her until your body is one quivering
ache, and you don't know where she is.''



CHAPTER IV

A COMMISSION FOR THE SOUTH WIND

The next morning the larks trailed ecstasy all
over the valley, the following day cuckoos were
calling in the thickets, a warm wind swept
from the south and set swollen buds bursting, while
the sun shone, causing the Harvester to rejoice.  Betsy's
white coat was splashed with the mud of the valley road;
the feet of Belshazzar left tracks over lumber piles;
and the Harvester removed his muck-covered shoes at
the door and wore slippers inside.  The skunk cabbage
appeared around the edge of the forest, rank mullein and
thistles lay over the fields in big circles of green, and
even plants of delicate growth were thrusting their
heads through mellowing earth and dead leaves, to reach
light and air.

Then the Harvester took his mattock and began to
dig.  His level best fell so far short of what he felt capable
of doing and desired to accomplish that the following day
he put two more men on the job.  Then the earth did
fly, and so soon as the required space was excavated the
walls were lined with stone and a smooth basement
floor was made of cement.  The night the new home stood,
a skeleton of joists and rafters, gleaming whitely on the
banks of Loon Lake, the Harvester went to the bridge
crossing Singing Water and slowly came up the driveway
to see how the work appeared.  He caught his breath
as he advanced.  He had intended to stake out generous
rooms, but this, compared with the cabin, seemed like
a big hotel.

``I hope I haven't made it so large it will be a burden,''
he soliloquized.  ``It's huge!  But while I am at it I
want to build big enough, and I think I have.''

He stood on the driveway, his arms folded, and looked
at the structure as he occasionally voiced his thoughts.

``The next thing is to lay up the side walls and get
the roof over.  Got to have plenty of help, for those
logs are hewed to fourteen inches square and some of
them are forty feet long.  That's timber!  Grew with
me, too.  Personally acquainted with almost every
tree of it.  We will bed them in cement, use care with
the roof, and if that doesn't make a cool house in the
summer, and a warm one in winter, I'll be disappointed.
It sets among the trees, and on the hillside just right.
We must have a wide porch, plenty of flowers, vines,
ferns, and mosses, and when I get everything finished
and she sees it----perhaps it will please her.''

A great horned owl swept down the hill, crossed
the lake, and hooted from the forest of the opposite
bank.  The Harvester thought of his dream and turned.

``Any women walking the water to-night?  Come if
you like,'' he bantered, ``I don't mind in the least.  In
fact, I'd rather enjoy it.  I'd be so happy if you would
come now and tell me how this appears to you, for it's
all yours.  I'd have enlarged the store-room, dry-houses
and laboratory for myself, but this cabin, never!  The
old one suited me as it was; but for you----I should have
a better home.''

The Harvester glanced from the shining skeleton to
the bridge of gold and back again.

``Where are you to-night?'' he questioned.  ``What
are you doing?  Can't you give me a hint of where to
search for you when this is ready?  I don't know but I
am beginning wrong.  My little brothers of the wood
do differently.  They announce their intentions the
first thing, flaunt their attractions, and display their
strength.  They say aloud, for all the listening world to
hear, what is in their hearts.  They chip, chirp, and sing,
warble, whistle, thrill, scream, and hoot it.  They are
strong on self-expression, and appreciative of their
appearance.  They meet, court, mate, and THEN build their
home together after a mutual plan.  It's a good way,
too!  Lots surer of getting things satisfactory.''

The Harvester sat on a lumber pile and gazed questioningly
at the framework.

``I wish I knew if I am going at things right,'' he said.
``There are two sides to consider.  If she is in a good
home, and lovingly cared for, it would be proper to court
her and get her promise, if I could----no I'm blest if I'll
be so modest----get her promise, as I said, and let her
wait while I build the cabin.  But if she should be poor,
tired, and neglected, then I ought to have this ready when
I find her, so I could pick her up and bring her to it,
with no more ceremony than the birds.''

The Harvester's clear skin flushed crimson.

``Of course, I don't mean no wedding ceremony,''
he amended.  ``I was thinking of a long time wasted in
preliminaries when in my soul I know I am going to marry
my Dream Girl before I ever have seen her in reality.
What would be the use in spending much time in courting?
She is my wife now, by every law of God.  Let
me get a glimpse of her, and I'll prove it.  But I've got
to make tracks, for if she were here, where would I put
her?  I must hurry!''

He went to the work room and began polishing a table
top.  He had bought a chest of tools and was spending
every spare minute on tables, chair seats, and legs.
He had decided to make these first and carve candlesticks
later when he had more time.  Two hours he
worked at the furniture, and then went to bed.  The
following morning he put eggs under several hens that
wanted to set, trimmed his grape-vines, examined the
precious ginseng beds, attended his stock, got breakfast
for Belshazzar and himself, and was ready for work when
the first carpenter arrived.  Laying hewed logs went
speedily, and before the Harvester believed it possible
the big shingles he had ordered were being nailed on the
roof.  Then came the plumber and arranged for the
bathroom, and the furnace man placed the heating pipes.
The Harvester had intended the cabin to be mostly the
work of his own hands, but when he saw how rapidly
skilled carpenters worked, he changed his mind and
had them finish the living-room, his room, and the
upstairs, and make over the dining-room and kitchen.

Her room he worked on alone, with a little help if
he did not know how to join the different parts.  Every
thing was plain and simple, after plans of his own, but
the Harvester laid floors and made window casings,
seats, and doors of wood that the big factories of Grand
Rapids used in veneering their finest furniture.  When
one of his carpenters pointed out this to him, and
suggested that he sell his lumber to McLean and use
pine flooring from the mills the Harvester laughed
at him.

``I don't say that I could afford to buy burl maple,
walnut, and cherry for wood-work,'' said the Harvester.
``I could not, but since I have it, you can stake your life
I won't sell it and build my home of cheap, rapidly
decaying wood.  The best I have goes into this cabin
and what remains will do to sell.  I have an idea that when
this is done it is going to appear first rate.  Anyway, it
will be solid enough to last a thousand years, and with
every day of use natural wood grows more beautiful.
When we get some tables, couches, and chairs made
from the same timber as the casings and the floors, I
think it will be fine.  I want money, but I don't want it
bad enough to part with the BEST of anything I have for
it.  Go carefully and neatly there; it will have to be
changed if you don't.''

So the work progressed rapidly.  When the carpenters
had finished the last stroke on the big veranda
they remained a day more and made flower boxes, and a
swinging couch, and then the greedy Harvester kept
the best man with him a week longer to help on the
furniture.

``Ain't you going to say a word about her, Langston?''
asked this man as they put a mirror-like surface on a
curly maple dressing table top.

``Her!'' ejaculated the Harvester.  ``What do you
mean?''

``I haven't seen you bathe anywhere except in the
lake since I have been here,'' said the carpenter.  ``Do
you want me to think that a porcelain tub, this big
closet, and chest of drawers are for you?''

A wave of crimson swept over the Harvester.

``No, they are not for me,'' he said simply.  ``I don't
want to be any more different from other men than I
can help, although I know that life in the woods, the
rigid training of my mother, and the reading of only
the books that would aid in my work have made me
individual in many of my thoughts and ways.  I suppose
most men, just now, would tell you anything you want
to know.  There is only one thing I can say:  The
best of my soul and brain, the best of my woods and
store-house, the best I can buy with money is not good
enough for her.  That's all.  For myself, I am getting
ready to marry, of course.  I think all normal men do
and that it is a matter of plain common-sense that they
should.  Life with the right woman must be infinitely
broader and better than alone.  Are you married?''

``Yes.  Got a wife and four children.''

``Are you sorry?''

``Sorry!'' the carpenter shrilled the word.  ``Sorry!
Well that's the best I ever heard!  Am I sorry I married
Nell and got the kids?  Do I look sorry?''

``I am not expecting to be, either,'' said the Harvester
calmly.  ``I think I have done fairly well to stick to my
work and live alone until I am twenty-six.  I have
thought the thing all over and made up my mind.  As
soon as I get this house far enough along that I feel I can
proceed alone I am going to rush the marrying business
just as fast as I can, and let her finish the remainder to
her liking.''

``Well this ought to please her.''

``That's because you find your own work good,''
laughed the Harvester.

``Not altogether!''  The carpenter polished the board
and stood it on end to examine the surface as he talked.
``Not altogether!  Nothing but good work would suit
you.  I was thinking of the little creek splashing down
the hill to the lake; and that old log hewer said that in
a few more days things here would be a blaze of colour
until fall.''

``Almost all the drug plants and bushes leaf beautifully
and flower brilliantly,'' explained the Harvester.
``I studied the location suitable to each variety before I
set the beds and planned how to grow plants for continuity
of bloom, and as much harmony of colour as possible.
Of course a landscape gardener would tear up some of
it, but seen as a whole it isn't so bad.  Did you ever
notice that in the open, with God's blue overhead and
His green for a background, He can place purple and
yellow, pink, magenta, red, and blue in masses or any
combination you can mention and the brighter the colour
the more you like it?  You don't seem to see or feel that
any grouping clashes; you revel in each wonderful
growth, and luxuriate in the brilliancy of the whole.
Anyway, this suits me.''

``I guess it will please her, too,'' said the carpenter.
``After all the pains you've taken, she is a good one if
it doesn't.''

``I'll always have the consolation of having done my
best,'' replied the Harvester.  ``One can't do more!
Whether she likes it or not depends greatly on the way
she has been reared.''

``You talk as if you didn't know,'' commented the
carpenter.

``You go on with this now,'' said the Harvester hastily.
``I've got to uncover some beds and dig my year's supply
of skunk cabbage, else folk with asthma and dropsy who
depend on me will be short on relief.  I ought to take
my sweet flag, too, but I'm so hurried now I think I'll
leave it until fall; I do when I can, because the bloom
is so pretty around the lake and the bees simply go wild
over the pollen.  Sometimes I almost think I can detect
it in their honey.  Do you know I've wondered often
if the honey my bees make has medicinal properties
and should be kept separate in different seasons.  In
early spring when the plants and bushes that furnish
the roots and barks of most of the tonics are in bloom,
and the bees gather the pollen, that honey should partake
in a degree of the same properties and be good medicine.
In the summer it should aid digestion, and in the fall
cure rheumatism and blood disorders.''

``Say you try it!'' urged the carpenter.  ``I want a
lot of the fall kind.  I'm always full of rheumatism by
October.  Exposure, no doubt.''

``Over eating of too much rich food, you mean,''
laughed the Harvester.  ``I'd like to see any man expose
his body to more differing extremes of weather than I do,
and I'm never sick.  It's because I am my own cook
and so I live mostly on fruits, vegetables, bread, milk,
and eggs, a few fish from the lake, a little game once in
a great while or a chicken, and no hot drinks; plenty of
fresh water, air, and continuous work out of doors.  That's
the prescription!  I'd be ashamed to have rheumatism
at your age.  There's food in the cupboard if you grow
hungry.  I am going past one of the neighbours on my
way to see about some work I want her to do.''

The Harvester stopped for lunch, carried food to
Belshazzar, and started straight across country, his
mattock, with a bag rolled around the handle, on his
shoulder.  His feet sank in the damp earth at the foot
of the hill, and he laughed as he leaped across Singing
Water.

``You noisy chatterbox!'' cried the man.  ``The
impetus of coming down the curves of the hill keeps you
talking all the way across this muck bed to the lake.
With small work I can make you a thing of beauty.
A few bushes grubbed, a little deepening where you
spread too much, and some more mallows along the
banks will do the trick.  I must attend to you soon.''

``Now what does the boy want?'' laughed a white-
haired old woman, as the Harvester entered the door.
``Mebby you think I don't know what you're up to!
I even can hear the hammering and the voices of the men
when the wind is in the south.  I've been wondering
how soon you'd need me.  Out with it!''

``I want you to get a woman and come over and spend
a day with me.  I'll come after you and bring you back.
I want you to go over mother's bedding and have what
needs it washed.  All I want you to do is to superintend,
and tell me now what I will want from town for your
work.''

``I put away all your mother's bedding that you were
not using, clean as a ribbon.''

``But it has been packed in moth preventives ever
since and out only four times a year to air, as you told
me.  It must smell musty and be yellow.  I want
it fresh and clean.''

``So what I been hearing is true, David?''

``Quite true!'' said the Harvester.

``Whose girl is she, and when are you going to jine
hands?''

The Harvester lifted his clear eyes and hesitated.

``Doc Carey laid you in my arms when you was born,
David.  I tended you 'fore ever your ma did.  All
your life you've been my boy, and I love you same as my
own blood; it won't go no farther if you say so.  I'll
never tell a living soul.  But I'm old and 'til better
weather comes, house bound; and I get mighty lonely.
I'd like to think about you and her, and plan for you,
and love her as I always did you folks.  Who is she,
David?  Do I know the family?''

``No.  She is a stranger to these parts,'' said the
unhappy Harvester.

``David, is she a nice girl 'at your ma would have
liked?''

``She's the only girl in the world that I'd marry,'' said
the Harvester promptly, glad of a question he could
answer heartily.  ``Yes.  She is gentle, very tender
and----and affectionate,'' he went on so rapidly that
Granny Moreland could not say a word, ``and as soon
as I bring her home you shall come to spend a day and
get acquainted.  I know you will love her!  I'll come
in the morning, then.  I must hurry now.  I am working
double this spring and I'm off for the skunk cabbage
bed to-day.''

``You are working fit to kill, the neighbours say.
Slavin' like a horse all day, and half the night I see your
lights burning.''

``Do I appear killed?'' laughingly inquired the Harvester.

``You look peart as a struttin' turkey gobbler,'' said
the old woman.  ``Go on with your work!  Work don't
hurt a-body.  Eat a-plenty, sleep all you ort, and you
CAN'T work enough to hurt you.''

``So the neighbours say I'm working now?  New
story, isn't it?  Usually I'm too lazy to make a living,
if I remember.''

``Only to those who don't sense your purceedings,
David.  I always knowed how you grubbed and slaved
an' set over them fearful books o' yours.''

``More interesting than the wildest fiction,'' said the
man.  ``I'm making some medicine for your rheumatism,
Granny.  It is not fully tested yet, but you get ready
for it by cutting out all the salt you can.  I haven't
time to explain this morning, but you remember what I
say, leave out the salt, and when Doc thinks it's safe
I'll bring you something that will make a new woman
of you.''

He went swinging down the road, and Granny Moreland
looked after him.

``While he was talkin','' she muttered, ``I felt full of
information as a flock o' almanacs, but now since he's
gone, 'pears to me I don't know a thing more 'an I did
to start on.''

``Close call,'' the Harvester was thinking.  ``Why
the nation did I admit anything to her?  People may
talk as they please, so long as I don't sanction it, but I
have two or three times.  That's a fool trick.  Suppose
I can't find her?  Maybe she won't look at me if I can.
Then I'd have started something I couldn't finish.
And if anybody thinks I'll end this by taking any girl I
can get, if I can't find Her, why they think wrongly.
Just the girl of my golden dream or no woman at all
for me.  I've lived alone long enough to know how to do
it in comfort.  If I can't find and win her I have no
intention of starting a boarding house.''

The Harvester began to laugh.  `` `I'd rather keep
bachelor's hall in Hell than go to board in Heaven!' ''
he quoted gaily.  ``That's my sentiment too.  If you
can't have what you want, don't have anything.  But
there is no use to become discouraged before I start.
I haven't begun to hunt her yet.  Until I do, I might as
well believe that she will walk across the bridge and take
possession just as soon as I get the last chair leg polished.
She might!  She came in the dream, and to come actually
couldn't be any more real.  I'll make a stiff hunt of
it before I give up, if I ever do.  I never yet have made a
complete failure of anything.  But just now I am hunting
skunk cabbage.  It's precisely the time to take it.''

Across the lake, in the swampy woods, close where the
screech owl sang and the girl of the golden dream walked
in the moonlight the Harvester began operations.  He
unrolled the sack, went to one end of the bed and
systematically started a swath across it, lifting every other
plant by the roots.  Flowering time was almost past,
but the bees knew where pollen ripened, and hummed
incessantly over and inside the queer cone-shaped growths
with their hooked beaks.  It almost appeared as if the
sound made inside might be to give outsiders warning
not to poach on occupied territory, for the Harvester
noticed that no bee entered a pre-empted plant.

With skilful hand each stroke brought up a root and
he tossed it to one side.  The plants were vastly peculiar
things.  First they seemed to be a curled leaf with no
flower.  In colour they shaded from yellow to almost
black mahogany, and appeared as if they were a flower
with no leaf.  Closer examination proved there was a
stout leaf with a heavy outside mid-rib, the tip of which
curled over in a beak effect, that wrapped around a
peculiar flower of very disagreeable odour.  The handling
of these plants by the hundred so intensified this
smell the Harvester shook his head.

``I presume you are mostly mine,'' he said to the busy
little workers around him.  ``If there is anything in my
theory of honey having varying medicinal properties
at different seasons, right now mine should be good for
Granny's rheumatism and for nervous and dropsical
people.  I shouldn't think honey flavoured with skunk
cabbage would be fit to eat.  But, of course, it isn't all
this.  There is catkin pollen on the wind, hazel and sassafras
are both in bloom now, and so are several of the
earliest little flowers of the woods.  You can gather
enough of them combined to temper the disagreeable
odour into a racy sweetness, and all the shrub blooms are
good tonics, too, and some of the earthy ones.  I'm
going to try giving some of you empty cases next spring
and analyzing the honey to learn if it isn't good medicine.''

The Harvester straightened and leaned on the mattock
to fill his lungs with fresh air and as he delightedly sniffed
it he commented, ``Nothing else has much of a chance
since I've stirred up the cabbage bed.  I can scent the
catkins plainly, being so close, and as I came here I
could detect the hazel and sassafras all right.''

Above him a peculiar, raucous chattering for an instant
hushed other wood voices.  The Harvester looked
up, laughing gaily.

``So you've decided to announce it to your tribe at
last, have you?'' he inquired.  ``You are waking the
sleepers in their dens to-day?  Well, there's nothing like
waiting until you have a sure thing.  The bluebirds
broke the trail for the feathered folk the twenty-fourth
of February.  The sap oozed from the maples about
the same time for the trees.  The very first skunk cabbage
was up quite a month ago to signal other plants to
come on, and now you are rousing the furred folk.  I'll
write this down in my records----`When the earliest bluebird
sings, when the sap wets the maples, when the
skunk cabbage flowers, and the first striped squirrel
barks, why then, it is spring!' ''

He bent to his task and as he worked closer the water
he noticed sweet-flag leaves waving two inches tall beneath
the surface.

``Great day!'' he cried.  ``There you are making signs,
too!  And right!  Of course!  Nature is always right.
Just two inches high and it's harvest for you.  I can
use a rake, and dried in the evaporator you bring me ten
cents a pound; to the folks needing a tonic you are worth
a small fortune.  No doubt you cost that by the time
you reach them; but I fear I can't gather you just now.
My head is a little preoccupied these days.  What
with the cabbage, and now you, and many of the bushes
and trees making signs, with a new cabin to build and
furnish, with a girl to find and win, I'm what you might
call busy.  I've covered my book shelf.  I positively
don't dare look Emerson or Maeterlinck in the face.
One consolation!  I've got the best of Thoreau in my
head, and if I read Stickeen a few times more I'll be able
to recite that.  There's a man for you, not to mention
the dog!  Bel, where are you?  Would you stick to me
like that?  I think you would.  But you are a big,
strong fellow.  Stickeen was only such a mite of a dog.
But what a man he followed!  I feel as if I should put
on high-heeled slippers and carry a fan and a lace
handkerchief when I think of him.  And yet, most men
wouldn't consider my job so easy!''

The Harvester rapidly pitched the evil-smelling plants
into big heaps and as he worked he imitated the sounds
around him as closely as he could.  The song sparrow
laughed at him and flew away in disgust when he tried
its notes.  The jay took time to consider, but was not
fooled.  The nut-hatch ran head first down trees, larvae
hunting, and was never a mite deceived.  But the killdeer
on invisible legs, circling the lake shore, replied
instantly; so did the lark soaring above, and the dove
of the elm thicket close beside.  The glittering black
birds flashing over every tree top answered the ``T'check,
t'chee!'' of the Harvester quite as readily as their mates.

The last time he paused to rest he had studied scents.
When he straightened again he was occupied with every
voice of earth and air around and above him, and the
notes of singing hens, exultant cocks, the scream of
geese, the quack of ducks, the rasping crescendo of
guineas running wild in the woods, the imperial note of
Ajax sunning on the ridge pole and echoes from all of
them on adjoining and distant farms.

`` `Now I see the full meaning and beauty of that
word sound!' '' quoted the Harvester.  `` `I thank God
for sound.  It always mounts and makes me mount!' ''

He breathed deeply and stood listening, a superb
figure of a man, his lean face glowing with emotion.

``If she could see and hear this, she would come,''
he said softly.  ``She would come and she would love
it as I do.  Any one who understands, and knows how to
translate, cares for this above all else earth has to offer.
They who do not, fail to read as they run!''

He shifted feet mired in swamp muck, and stood as
if loath to bend again to his task.  He lifted a weighted
mattock and scraped the earth from it, sniffing it delightedly
the while.  A soft south wind freighted with aromatic
odours swept his warm face.  The Harvester
removed his hat and shook his head that the breeze
might thread his thick hair.

``I've a commission for you, South Wind,'' he said
whimsically.  ``Go find my Dream Girl.  Go carry
her this message from me.  Freight your breath with
spicy pollen, sun warmth, and flower nectar.  Fill all
her senses with delight, and then, close to her ear,
whisper it softly, `Your lover is coming!'  Tell her that, O
South Wind!  Carry Araby to her nostrils, Heaven to
her ears, and then whisper and whisper it over and over
until you arouse the passion of earth in her blood.  Tell
her what is rioting in my heart, and brain, and soul this
morning.  Repeat it until she must awake to its meaning,
`Your lover is coming.' ''



CHAPTER V


WHEN THE HARVESTER MADE GOOD

The sassafras and skunk cabbage were harvested.
The last workman was gone.  There was not a
sound at Medicine Woods save the babel of bird
and animal notes and the never-ending accompaniment
of Singing Water.  The geese had gone over, some flocks
pausing to rest and feed on Loon Lake, and ducks that
homed there were busy among the reeds and rushes.  In
the deep woods the struggle to maintain and reproduce
life was at its height, and the courting songs of gaily
coloured birds were drowned by hawk screams and crow
calls of defiance.

Every night before he plunged into the lake and went
to sleep the Harvester made out a list of the most pressing
work that he would undertake on the coming day.  By
systematizing and planning ahead he was able to accomplish
an unbelievable amount.  The earliest rush of
spring drug gathering was over.  He could be more
deliberate in collecting the barks he wanted.  Flowers
that were to be gathered at bloom time and leaves were
not yet ready.  The heavy leaf coverings he had helped
the winds to heap on his beds of lily of the valley,
bloodroot, and sarsaparilla were removed carefully.

Inside the cabin the Harvester cleaned the glass, swept
the floors with a soft cloth pinned over the broom, and
hung pale yellow blinds at the windows.  Every spare minute
he worked on making furniture, and with each piece
he grew in experience and ventured on more difficult
undertakings.  He had progressed so far that he now
allowed himself an hour each day on the candlesticks
for her.  Every evening he opened her door and with soft
cloths polished the furniture he had made.  When her
room was completed and the dining-room partially finished,
the Harvester took time to stain the cabin and
porch roofs the shade of the willow leaves, and on the logs
and pillars he used oil that served to intensify the light
yellow of the natural wood.  With that much accomplished
he felt better.  If she came now, in a few hours
he would be able to offer a comfortable room, enough
conveniences to live until more could be provided, and
of food there was always plenty.

His daily programme was to feed and water his animals
and poultry, prepare breakfast for himself and Belshazzar,
and go to the woods, dry-house or store-room
to do the work most needful in his harvesting.  In the
afternoon he laboured over furniture and put finishing
touches on the new cabin, and after supper he carved and
found time to read again, as before his dream.

He was so happy he whistled and sang at his work much
of the time at first, but later there came days when doubts
crept in and all his will power was required to proceed
steadily.  As the cabin grew in better shape for occupancy
each day, more pressing became the thought of how he
was going to find and meet the girl of his dream. Sometimes
it seemed to him that the proper way was to remain
at home and go on with his work, trusting her to come to
him.  At such times he was happy and gaily whistled
and sang:

    ``Stay in your chimney corner,
         Don't roam the world about,
      Stay in your chimney corner,
         And your own true love will find you out.''


But there were other days while grubbing in the forest,
battling with roots in the muck and mire of the lake
bank, staggering under a load for two men, scarcely taking
time to eat and sleep enough to keep his condition
perfect, when that plan seemed too hopeless and senseless
to contemplate.  Then he would think of locking
the cabin, leaving the drugs to grow undisturbed by
collecting, hiring a neighbour to care for his living
creatures, and starting a search over the world to find her.
There came times when the impulse to go was so strong
that only the desire to take a day more to decide where,
kept him.  Every time his mind was made up to start
the following day came the counter thought, what if I
should go and she should come in my absence?  In the
dream she came.  That alone held him, even in the face
of the fact that if he left home some one might know of
and rifle the precious ginseng bed, carefully tended these
seven years for the culmination the coming fall would
bring.  That ginseng was worth many thousands and he
had laboured over it, fighting worms and parasites, covering
and uncovering it with the changing seasons, a
siege of loving labour.

Sometimes a few hours of misgiving tortured him, but
as a rule he was cheerful and happy in his preparations.
Without intending to do it he was gradually furnishing
the cabin.  Every few days saw a new piece finished in
the workshop.  Each trip to Onabasha ended in the
purchase of some article he could see would harmonize
with his colour plans for one of the rooms.  He had filled
the flower boxes for the veranda with delicate plants
that were growing luxuriantly.

Then he designed and began setting a wild-flower
garden outside her door and started climbing vines over
the logs and porches, but whatever he planted he found
in the woods or took from beds he cultivated.  Many of
the medicinal vines had leaves, flowers, twining tendrils,
and berries or fruits of wonderful beauty.  Every trip
to the forest he brought back a half dozen vines, plants,
or bushes to set for her.  All of them either bore lovely
flowers, berries, quaint seed pods, or nuts, and beside
the drive and before the cabin he used especial care
to plant a hedge of bittersweet vines, burning bush,
and trees of mountain ash, so that the glory of their colour
would enliven the winter when days might be gloomy.

He planted wild yam under her windows that its queer
rattles might amuse her, and hop trees where their castanets
would play gay music with every passing wind of
fall.  He started a thicket along the opposite bank of
Singing Water where it bubbled past her window, and in
it he placed in graduated rows every shrub and small tree
bearing bright flower, berry, or fruit.  Those remaining
he used as a border for the driveway from the lake, so that
from earliest spring her eyes would fall on a procession of
colour beginning with catkins and papaw lilies, and running
through alders, haws, wild crabs, dogwood, plums,
and cherry intermingled with forest saplings and vines
bearing scarlet berries in fall and winter.  In the damp soil
of the same character from which they were removed, in
the shade and under the skilful hand of the Harvester, few
of these knew they had been transplanted, and when May
brought the catbirds and orioles much of this growth was
flowering quite as luxuriantly as the same species in the
woods.

The Harvester was in the store-house packing boxes
for shipment.  His room was so small and orders so
numerous that he could not keep large quantities on hand.
All crude stuff that he sent straight from the drying-house
was fresh and brightly coloured.  His stock always was
marked prime A-No. 1.  There was a step behind him and
the Harvester turned.  A boy held out a telegram.  The
man opened it to find an order for some stuff to be shipped
that day to a large laboratory in Toledo.

His hands deftly tied packages and he hastily packed
bottles and nailed boxes.  Then he ran to harness Betsy

and load.  As he drove down the hill to the bridge he
looked at his watch and shook his head.

``What are you good for at a pinch, Betsy?'' he asked
as he flecked the surprised mare's flank with a switch.
Belshazzar cocked his ears and gazed at the Harvester
in astonishment.

``That wasn't enough to hurt her,'' explained the man.
``She must speed up.  This is important business.  The
amount involved is not so much, but I do love to make
good.  It's a part of my religion, Bel.  And my religion
has so precious few parts that if I fail in the observance
of any of them it makes a big hole in my performances.
Now we don't want to end a life full of holes, so we must
get there with this stuff, not because it's worth the exertion
in dollars and cents, but because these men patronize
us steadily and expect us to fill orders, even by telegraph.
Hustle, Betsy!''

The whip fell again and Belshazzar entered indignant
protest.

``It isn't going to hurt her,'' said the Harvester
impatiently.  ``She may walk all the way back.  She can rest
while I get these boxes billed and loaded if she can be
persuaded to get them to the express office on time.  The
trouble with Betsy is that she wants to meander along the
road with a loaded wagon as her mother and grandmother
before her wandered through the woods wearing a bell to
attract the deer.  Father used to say that her mother
was the smartest bell mare that ever entered the forest.
She'd not only find the deer, but she'd make friends with
them and lead them straight as a bee-line to where he was
hiding.  Betsy, you must travel!''

The Harvester drew the lines taut, and the whip fell
smartly.  The astonished Betsy snorted and pranced down
the valley as fast as she could, but every step indicated
that she felt outraged and abused.  This was the loveliest
day of the season.  The sun was shining, the air was
heavy with the perfume of flowering shrubs and trees, the
orchards of the valley were white with bloom.  Farmers
were hurrying back and forth across fields, leaving up
turned lines of black, swampy mould behind them, and
one progressive individual rode a wheeled plow, drove
three horses and enjoyed the shelter of a canopy.

``Saints preserve us, Belshazzar!'' cried the Harvester.
``Do you see that?  He is one of the men who makes a
business of calling me shiftless.  Now he thinks he is
working.  Working!  For a full-grown man, did you ever
see the equal?  If I were going that far I'd wear a tucked
shirt, panama hat, have a pianola attachment, and an
automatic fan.''

The Harvester laughed as he again touched Betsy and
hurried to Onabasha.  He scarcely saw the delights
offered on either hand, and where his eyes customarily
took in every sight, and his ears were tuned for the faintest
note of earth or tree top, to day he saw only Betsy and
listened for a whistle he dreaded to hear at the water tank.
He climbed the embankment of the railway at a slower
pace, but made up time going down hill to the city.

``I am not getting a blame thing out of this,'' he
complained to Belshazzar.  ``There are riches to stagger
any scientist wasting to-day, and all I've got to show is one
oriole.  I did hear his first note and see his flash, and so
unless we can take time to make up for this on the home
road we will have to christen it oriole day.  It's a perfumed
golden day, too; I can get that in passing, but how
I loathe hurrying.  I don't mind planning things and
working steadily, but it's not consistent with the dignity
of a sane man to go rushing across country with as much
appreciation of the delights offered right now as a chicken
with its head off would have.  We will loaf going back to
pay for this!  And won't we invite our souls?  We will
stop and gather a big bouquet of crab apple blossoms to
fill the green pitcher for her.  Maybe some of their
wonderful perfume will linger in her room.  When the
petals fall we will scatter them in the drawers of her
dresser, and they may distil a faint flower odour there.  We
could do that to all her furniture, but perhaps she doesn't
like perfume.  She'll be compelled to after she reaches
Medicine Woods.  Betsy, you must travel faster!''

The whip fell again and the Harvester stopped at the
depot with a few minutes to spare.  He threw the hitching
strap to Belshazzar, and ran into the express office with
an arm load of boxes.

``Bill them!'' he cried.  ``It's a rush order.  I want it
to go on the next express.  Almost due I think.  I'll help
you and we can book them afterward.''

The expressman ran for a truck and they hastily
weighed and piled on boxes.  When the last one was
loaded from the wagon, a heap more lying in the office
were added, pitched on indiscriminately as the train pulled
under the sheds of the Union Station.

``I'll push,'' cried the Harvester, ``and help you get
them on.''

Hurrying as fast as he could the expressman drew the
heavy truck through the iron gates and started toward
the train slowing to a stop, and the Harvester pushed.
As they came down the platform they passed the dining
and sleeping cars of the long train and were several times
delayed by descending passengers.  Just opposite the
day coach the expressman narrowly missed running into
several women leading small children and stopped
abruptly.  A toppling box threatened the head of the
Harvester.  He peered around the truck and saw they
must wait a few seconds.  He put in the time watching
the people.  A gray-haired old man, travelling in a silk
hat, wavered on the top step and went his way.  A fat
woman loaded with bundles puffed as she clung trembling
a second in fear she would miss the step she could not see.
A tall, slender girl with a face coldly white came next, and
from the broken shoe she advanced, the bewildered fright
of big, dark eyes glancing helplessly, the Harvester saw
that she was poor, alone, ill, and in trouble.  Pityingly
he turned to watch her, and as he gauged her height,
saw her figure, and a dark coronet of hair came into view,
a ghastly pallor swept his face.

``Merciful God!'' he breathed, ``that's my Dream
Girl!''

The truck started with a jerk.  The toppling box fell,
struck a passing boy, and knocked him down.  The
mother screamed and the Harvester sprang to pick up the
child and see that he was not dangerously hurt.  Then
he ran after the truck, pitched on the box, and whirling,
sped beside the train toward the gates of exit.  There was
the usual crush, but he could see the tall figure passing up
the steps to the depot.  He tried to force his way and was
called a brute by a crowded woman.  He ran down the
platform to the gates he had entered with the truck.
They were automatic and had locked.  Then he became a
primal creature being cheated of a lawful mate and
climbed the high iron fence and ran for the waiting room.

He swept it at a glance, not forgetting the women's
apartment and the side entrance.  Then he hurried to the
front exit.  Up the street leading from the city there were
few people and he could see no sign of the slight, white-
faced girl.  He crossed the sidewalk and ran down the
gutter for a block and breathlessly waited the passing
crowd on the corner.  She was not among it.  He tried
one more square.  Still he could not see her.  Then he
ran back to the depot.  He thought surely he must have
missed her.  He again searched the woman's and general
waiting room and then he thought of the conductor.
From him it could be learned where she entered the car.
He ran for the station, bolted the gate while the official
called to him, and reached the track in time to see the
train pull out within a few yards of him.

``You blooming idiot!'' cried the angry expressman as
the Harvester ran against him, ``where did you go?
Why didn't you help me?  You are white as a sheet!
Have you lost your senses?''

``Worse!'' groaned the Harvester.  ``Worse!  I've lost
what I prize most on earth.  How could I reach the
conductor of that train?''

``Telegraph him at the next station.  You can have an
answer in a half hour.''

The Harvester ran to the office, and with shaking hand
wrote this message:

``Where did a tall girl with big black eyes and wearing a
gray dress take your train?  Important.''

Then he went out and minutely searched the depot and
streets.  He hired an automobile to drive him over the
business part of Onabasha for three quarters of an hour.
Up one street and down another he went slowly where
there were crowds, faster as he could, but never a sight
of her.  Then he returned to the depot and found his
message.  It read, ``Transferred to me at Fort Wayne
from Chicago.''

``Chicago baggage!'' he cried, and hurried to the
check room.  He had lost almost an hour.  When he
reached the room he found the officials busy and unwilling
to be interrupted.  Finally he learned there had been a
half dozen trunks from Chicago.  All were taken save
two, and one glance at them told the Harvester that they
did not belong to the girl in gray.  The others had been
claimed by men having checks for them.  If she had been
there, the officials had not noticed a tall girl having a white
face and dark eyes.  When he could think of no further
effort to make he drove to the hospital.

Doctor Carey was not in his office, and the Harvester
sat in the revolving chair before the desk and gripped his
head between his hands as he tried to think.  He could
not remember anything more he could have done, but
since what he had done only ended in failure, he was
reproaching himself wildly that he had taken his eyes
from the Girl an instant after recognizing her.  Yet it
was in his blood to be decent and he could not have run
away and left a frightened woman and a hurt child.
Trusting to his fleet feet and strength he had taken time
to replace the box also, and then had met the crowd and
delay.  Just for the instant it appeared to him as if he
had done all a man could, and he had not found her.  If
he allowed her to return to Chicago, probably he never
would.  He leaned his head on his hands and groaned in
discouragement.

Doctor Carey whirled the chair so that it faced him
before the Harvester realized that he was not alone.

``What's the trouble, David?'' he asked tersely.

The Harvester lifted a strained face.

``I came for help,'' he said.

``Well you will get it!  All you have to do is to state
what you want.''

That seemed simplicity itself to the doctor.  But when
it came to putting his case into words, it was not easy for
the Harvester.

``Go on!'' said the doctor.

``You'll think me a fool.''

The doctor laughed heartily.

``No doubt!'' he said soothingly.  ``No doubt, David!
Probably you are; so why shouldn't I think so.  But
remember this, when we make the biggest fools of ourselves
that is precisely the time when we need friends,
and when they stick to us the tightest, if they are worth
while.  I've been waiting since latter February for you
to tell me.  We can fix it, of course; there's always a way.
Go on!''

``Well I wasn't fooling about the dream and the vision
I told you of then, Doc.  I did have a dream--and it
was a dream of love.  I did see a vision--and it was a
beautiful woman.''

``I hope you are not nursing that experience as
something exclusive and peculiar to you,'' said the doctor.
``There is not a normal, sane man living who has not
dreamed of love and the most exquisite woman who came
from the clouds or anywhere and was gracious to him.
That's a part of a man's experience in this world, and it
happens to most of us, not once, but repeatedly.  It's a
case where the wish fathers the dream.''

``Well it hasn't happened to me `on repeated
occasions,' but it did one night, and by dawn I was converted.
How CAN a dream be so real, Doc?  How could I see as
clearly as I ever saw in the daytime in my most alert
moment, hear every step and garment rustle, scent the
perfume of hair, and feel warm breath strike my face?  I
don't understand it!''

``Neither does any one else!  All you need say is that
your dream was real as life.  Go on!''

``I built a new cabin and pretty well overturned the
place and I've been making furniture I thought a woman
would like, and carrying things from town ever since.''

``Gee!  It was reality to you, lad!''

``Nothing ever more so,'' said the Harvester.

``And of course, you have been looking for her?''

``And this morning I saw her!''

``David!''

``Not the ghost of a chance for a mistake.  Her height,
her eyes, her hair, her walk, her face; only something
terrible has happened since she came to me.  It was the
same girl, but she is ill and in trouble now.''

``Where is she?''

``Do you suppose I'd be here if I knew?''

``David, are you dreaming in daytime?''

``She got off the Chicago train this morning while I was
helping Daniels load a big truck of express matter.
Some of it was mine, and it was important.  Just at the
wrong instant a box fell and knocked down a child and
I got in a jam----''

``And as it was you, of course you stopped to pick up
the child and do everything decent for other folks, before
you thought of yourself, and so you lost her.  You needn't
tell me anything more.  David, if I find her, and prove
to you that she has been married ten years and has an
interesting family, will you thank me?''

``Can't be done!'' said the Harvester calmly.  ``She
has been married only since she gave herself to me in
February, and she is not a mother.  You needn't bank
on that.''

``You are mighty sure!''

``Why not?  I told you the dream was real, and now
that I have seen her, and she is in this very town, why
shouldn't I be sure?''

``What have you done?''

The Harvester told him.

``What are you going to do next?''

``Talk it over with you and decide.''

The doctor laughed.

``Well here are a few things that occur to me without
time for thought.  Talk to the ticket agents, and leave
her description with them.  Make it worth their while to
be on the lookout, and if she goes anywhere to find out
all they can.  They could make an excuse of putting her
address on her ticket envelope, and get it that way.
See the baggagemen.  Post the day police on Main
Street.  There is no chance for her to escape you.  A
full-grown woman doesn't vanish.  How did she act when
she got off the car?  Did she appear familiar?''

``No.  She was a stranger.  For an instant she looked
around as if she expected some one, then she followed the
crowd.  There must have been an automobile waiting
or she took a street car.  Something whirled her out of
sight in a few seconds.''

``Well we will get her in range again.  Now for the
most minute description you can give.''

The Harvester hesitated.  He did not care to describe
the Dream Girl to any one, much less the living, suffering
face and poorly clad form of the reality.

``Cut out your scruples,'' laughed the doctor.  ``You
have asked me to help you; how can I if I don't know what
kind of a woman to look for?''

``Very tall and slender,'' said the Harvester.  ``Almost
as tall as I am.''

``Unusually tall you think?''

``I know!''

``That's a good point for identification.  How about
her complexion, hair, and eyes?''

``Very large, dark eyes, and a great mass of black hair.''

The doctor roared.

``The eyes may help,'' he said.  ``All women have
masses of hair these days.  I hope----''

``Her hair is fast to her head,'' said the Harvester
indignantly.  ``I saw it at close range, and I know.  It
went around like a crown.''

The doctor choked down a laugh.  He wanted to say
that every woman's hair was like a crown at present, but
there were things no man ventured with David Langston;
those who knew him best, least of any.  So he suggested,
``And her colouring?''

``She was white and rosy, a lovely thing in the dream,''
said the Harvester, ``but something dreadful has
happened.  That's all wiped out now.  She was very pale
when she left the car.''

``Car sick, maybe.''

``Soul sick!'' was the grim reply.

Then Doctor Carey appeared so disturbed the Harvester
noticed it.

``You needn't think I'd be here prating about her if I
wasn't FORCED.  If she had been rosy and well as she was
in the dream, I'd have made my hunt alone and found
her, too.  But when I saw she was sick and in trouble, it
took all the courage out of me, and I broke for help.  She
must be found at once, and when she is you are probably
the first man I'll want.  I am going to put up a pretty
stiff search myself, and if I find her I'll send or get her to
you if I can.  Put her in the best ward you have and
anything money will do----''

The face of the doctor was growing troubled.

``Day coach or Pullman?'' he asked.

``Day.''

``How was she dressed?''

``Small black hat, very plain.  Gray jacket and skirt,
neat as a flower.''

``What you'd call expensively dressed?''

The Harvester hesitated.

``What I'd call carefully dressed, but----but poverty
poor, if you will have it, Doc.''

Doctor Carey's lips closed and then opened in sudden
resolution.

``David, I don't like it,'' he said tersely.

The Harvester met his eye and purposely misunderstood him.

``Neither do I!'' he exclaimed.  ``I hate it!  There is

something wrong with the whole world when a woman
having a face full of purity, intellect, and refinement of
extreme type glances around her like a hunted thing;
when her appearance seems to indicate that she has
starved her body to clothe it.  I know what is in your
mind, Doc, but if I were you I wouldn't put it into words,
and I wouldn't even THINK it.  Has it been your experience
in this world that women not fit to know skimp their
bodies to cover them?  Does a girl of light character and
little brain have the hardihood to advance a foot covered
with a broken shoe?  If I could tell you that she rode in a
Pullman, and wore exquisite clothing, you would be doing
something.  The other side of the picture shuts you up
like a clam, and makes you appear shocked.  Let me tell
you this:  No other woman I ever saw anywhere on God's
footstool had a face of more delicate refinement, eyes of
purer intelligence.  I am of the woods, and while they
don't teach me how to shine in society, they do instil
always and forever the fineness of nature and her ways.
I have her lessons so well learned they help me more than
anything else to discern the qualities of human nature.
If you are my friend, and have any faith at all in my
common sense, get up and do something!''

The doctor arose promptly.

``David, I'm an ass,'' he said.  ``Unusually lop-eared,
and blind in the bargain.  But before I ask you to forgive
me, I want you to remember two things:  First, she
did not visit me in my dreams; and, second, I did not see
her in reality.  I had nothing to judge from except what
you said: you seemed reluctant to tell me, and what you
did say was----was----disturbing to a friend of yours.
I have not the slightest doubt if I had seen her I would
agree with you.  We seldom disagree, David.  Now, will
you forgive me?''

The Harvester suddenly faced a window.  When at
last he turned, ``The offence lies with me,'' he said.  ``l
was hasty.  Are you going to help me?''

``With all my heart!  Go home and work until your
head clears, then come back in the morning.  She did not
come from Chicago for a day.  You've done all I know
to do at present.''

``Thank you,'' said the Harvester.

He went to Betsy and Belshazzar, and slowly drove up
and down the streets until Betsy protested and calmly
turned homeward.  The Harvester smiled ruefully as he
allowed her to proceed.

``Go slow and take it easy,'' he said as they reached the
country.  ``I want to think.''

Betsy stopped at the barn, the white doves took wing,
and Ajax screamed shrilly before the Harvester aroused
in the slightest to anything around him.  Then he looked
at Belshazzar and said emphatically:  ``Now, partner,
don't ever again interfere when I am complying with
the observances of my religion.  Just look what I'd have
missed if I hadn't made good with that order!''



CHAPTER VI

TO LABOUR AND TO WAIT

We have reached the `beginning of the end,'
Ajax!'' said the Harvester, as the peacock
ceased screaming and came to seek food from
his hand.  ``We have seen the Girl.  Now we must
locate her and convince her that Medicine Woods is her
happy home.  I feel quite equal to the latter proposition,
Ajax, but how the nation to find her sticks me.
I can't make a search so open that she will know and
resent it.  She must have all the consideration ever
paid the most refined woman, but she also has got to
be found, and that speedily.  When I remember that
look on her face, as if horrors were snatching at her
skirts, it takes all the grit out of me.  I feel weak as a
sapling.  And she needs all my strength.  I've simply
got to brace up.  I'll work a while and then perhaps
I can think.''

So the Harvester began the evening routine.  He
thought he did not want anything to eat, but when he
opened the cupboard and smelled the food he learned
that he was a hungry man and he cooked and ate a
good supper.  He put away everything carefully, for
even the kitchen was dainty and fresh and he wanted to
keep it so for her.  When he finished he went into the
living-room, stood before the fireplace, and studied the
collection of half-finished candlesticks grouped upon it.
He picked up several and examined them closely, but
realized that he could not bind himself to the exactions
of carving that evening.  He took a key from his pocket
and unlocked her door.  Every day he had been going
there to improve upon his work for her, and he loved the
room, the outlook from its windows; he was very proud
of the furniture he had made.  There was no paper-
thin covering on her chairs, bed, and dressing table.
The tops, seats, and posts were solid wood, worth hundreds
of dollars for veneer.

To-night he folded his arms and stood on the sill
hesitating.  While she was a dream, he had loved to
linger in her room.  Now that she was reality, he paused.
In one golden May day the place had become sacred.
Since he had seen the Girl that room was so hers that
he was hesitating about entering because of this fact.
It was as if the tall, slender form stood before the chest
of drawers or sat at the dressing table and he did not
dare enter unless he were welcome.  Softly he closed
the door and went away.  He wandered to the dry-
house and turned the bark and roots on the trays, but
the air stifled him and he hurried out.  He tried to work
in the packing room, but walls smothered him and again
he sought the open.

He espied a bundle of osier-bound, moss-covered ferns
that he had found in the woods, and brought the shovel
to transplant them; but the work worried him, and he
hurried through with it.  Then he looked for something
else to do and saw an ax.  He caught it up and with
lusty strokes began swinging it.  When he had chopped
wood until he was very tired he went to bed.  Sleep
came to the strong, young frame and he awoke in the
morning refreshed and hopeful.

He wondered why he had bothered Doctor Carey.
The Harvester felt able that morning to find his Dream
Girl without assistance before the day was over.  It
was merely a matter of going to the city and locating
a woman.  Yesterday, it had been a question of whether
she really existed.  To-day, he knew.  Yesterday, it
had meant a search possibly as wide as earth to find her.
To-day, it was narrowed to only one location so small,
compared with Chicago, that the Harvester felt he could
sift its population with his fingers, and pick her from
others at his first attempt.  If she were visiting there
probably she would rest during the night, and be on the
streets to-day.

When he remembered her face he doubted it.  He
decided to spend part of the time on the business streets
and the remainder in the residence portions of the city.
Because it was uncertain when he would return, everything
was fed a double portion, and Betsy was left
at a livery stable with instructions to care for her until
he came.  He did not know where the search would
lead him.  For several hours he slowly walked the
business district and then ranged farther, but not a
sight of her.  He never had known that Onabasha was
so large.  On its crowded streets he did not feel that he
could sift the population through his fingers, nor could
he open doors and search houses without an excuse.

Some small boys passed him eating bananas, and the
Harvester looked at his watch and was amazed to find
that the day had advanced until two o'clock in the
afternoon.  He was tired and hungry.  He went into
a restaurant and ordered lunch; as he waited a girl
serving tables smiled at him.  Any other time the
Harvester would have returned at least a pleasant
look, and gone his way.  To-day he scowled at her, and
ate in hurried discomfort.  On the streets again, he had
no idea where to go and so he went to the hospital.

``I expected you early this morning,'' was the greeting
of Doctor Carey.  ``Where have you been and what
have you done?''

``Nothing,'' said the Harvester.  ``I was so sure she
would be on the streets I just watched, but I didn't
see her.''

``We will go to the depot,'' said the doctor.  ``The
first thing is to keep her from leaving town.''

They arranged with the ticket agents, expressmen,
telegraphers, and, as they left, the Harvester stopped
and tipped the train caller, offering further reward worth
while if he would find the Girl.

``Now we will go to the police station,'' said the doctor.

``I'll see the chief and have him issue a general order to
his men to watch for her, but if I were you I'd select
a half dozen in the down town district, and give them a
little tip with a big promise!''

``Good Lord!  How I hate this,'' groaned the Harvester.

``Want to find her by yourself?'' questioned his friend.

``Yes,'' said the Harvester, ``I do!  And I would, if
it hadn't been for her ghastly face.  That drives me to
resort to any measures.  The probabilities are that she
is lying sick somewhere, and if her comfort depends on
the purse that dressed her, she will suffer.  Doc, do you
know how awful this is?''

``I know that you've got a great imagination.  If the
woods make all men as sensitive as you are, those who
have business to transact should stay out of them.
Take a common-sense view.  Look at this as I do.  If
she was strong enough to travel in a day coach from
Chicago; she can't be so very ill to-day.  Leaving life
by the inch isn't that easy.  She will be alive this time
next year, whether you find her or not.  The chances
are that her stress was mental anyway, and trouble
almost never overcomes any one.''

``You, a doctor and say that!''

``Oh, I mean instantaneously----in a day!  Of course
if it grinds away for years!  But youth doesn't allow it
to do that.  It throws it off, and grows hopeful and happy
again.  She won't die; put that out of your mind.  If
I were you I would go home now and go straight on with
my work, trusting to.  the machinery you have set in
motion.  I know most of the men with whom we have
talked.  They will locate her in a week or less.  It's
their business.  It isn't yours.  It's your job to be ready
for her, and have enough ahead to support her when
they find her.  Try to realize that there are now a dozen
men on hunt for her, and trust them.  Go back to your
work, and I will come full speed in the motor when the
first man sights her.  That ought to satisfy you.  I've
told all of them to call me at the hospital, and I will tell
my assistant what to do in case a call comes while I
am away.  Straighten your face!  Go back to Medicine
Woods and harvest your crops, and before you know it
she will be located.  Then you can put on your Sunday
clothes and show yourself, and see if you can make her
take notice.''

``Idiot!'' exclaimed the Harvester, but he started home.
When he arrived he attended to his work and then sat
down to think.

``Doc is right,'' was his ultimate conclusion.  ``She
can't leave the city, she can't move around in it, she
can't go anywhere, without being seen.  There's one
more point:  I must tell Carey to post all the doctors
to report if they have such a call.  That's all I can
think of.  I'll go to-night, and then I'll look over the
ginseng for parasites, and to-morrow I'll dive into the
late spring growth and work until I haven't time to think.
I've let cranesbill get a week past me now, and it can't
be dispensed with.''

So the following morning, when the Harvester had
completed his work at the cabin and barn and breakfasted,
he took a mattock and a big hempen bag, and followed
the path to the top of the hill.  As it ran along the lake
bank he descended on the other side to several acres of
cleared land, where he raised corn for his stock, potatoes,
and coarser garden truck, for which there was not
space in the smaller enclosure close the cabin.  Around
the edges of these fields, and where one of them sloped
toward the lake, he began grubbing a variety of grass
having tall stems already over a foot in height at half
growth.  From each stem waved four or five leaves of
six or eight inches length and the top showed forming
clusters of tiny spikelets.

``I am none too early for you,'' he muttered to himself
as he ran the mattock through the rich earth, lifting
the long, tough, jointed root stalks of pale yellow, from
every section of which broke sprays of fine rootlets.
``None too early for you, and as you are worth only
seven cents a pound, you couldn't be considered a `get-
rich-quick' expedient, so I'll only stop long enough with
you to gather what I think my customers will order,
and amass a fortune a little later picking mullein flowers
at seventy-five cents a pound.  What a crop I've got
coming!''

The Harvester glanced ahead, where in the cleared soil
of the bank grew large plants with leaves like yellow-green
felt and tall bloom stems rising.  Close them flourished
other species requiring dry sandy soil, that gradually
changed as it approached the water until it became
covered with rank abundance of short, wiry grass, half
the blades of which appeared red.  Numerous everywhere
he could see the grayish-white leaves of Parnassus
grass.  As the season advanced it would lift heart-
shaped velvet higher, and before fall the stretch of emerald
would be starred with white-faced, green-striped flowers.

``Not a prettier sight on earth,'' commented the
Harvester, ``than just swale wire grass in September
making a fine, thick background to set off those delicate
starry flowers on their slender stems.  I must remember
to bring her to see that.''

His eyes followed the growth to the water.  As the
grass drew closer moisture it changed to the rank, sweet,
swamp variety, then came bulrushes, cat-tails, water
smartweed, docks, and in the water blue flag lifted
folded buds; at its feet arose yellow lily leaves and farther
out spread the white.  As the light struck the surface
the Harvester imagined he could see the little green
buds several inches below.  Above all arose wild rice
he had planted for the birds.  The red wings swayed on
the willows and tilted on every stem that would bear
their weight, singing their melodious half-chanted notes,
``O-ka-lee!''

Beneath them the ducks gobbled, splashed, and chattered;
grebe and coot voices could be distinguished;
king rails at times flashed into sight and out again;
marsh wrens scolded and chattered; occasionally a kingfisher
darted around the lake shore, rolling his rattling
cry and flashing his azure coat and gleaming white
collar.  On a hollow tree in the woods a yellow
hammer proved why he was named, because he carpentered
industriously to enlarge the entrance to the home he
was excavating in a dead tree; and sailing over the
lake and above the woods in grace scarcely surpassed
by any, a lonesome turkey buzzard awaited his mate's
decision as to which hollow log was most suitable for
their home.

The Harvester stuffed the grass roots in the bag until
it would hold no more and stood erect to wipe his face,
for the sun was growing warm.  As he drew his handkerchief
across his brow, the south wind struck him with
enough intensity to attract attention.  Instantly the
Harvester removed his hat, rolled it up, and put it into
his pocket.  He stood an instant delighting in the wind
and then spoke.

``Allow me to express my most fervent thanks for
your kindness,'' he said.  ``I thought probably you
would take that message, since it couldn't mean much
to you, and it meant all the world to me.  I thought
you would carry it, but, I confess, I scarcely expected
the answer so soon.  The only thing that could make me
more grateful to you would be to know exactly where
she is: but you must understand that it's like a peep
into Heaven to have her existence narrowed to one
place.  I'm bound to be able to say inside a few days,
she lives at number----I don't know yet, on street----
I'll find out soon, in the closest city, Onabasha.  And
I know why you brought her, South Wind.  If ever a
girl's cheeks need fanning with your breezes, and painting
with sun kisses, I wouldn't mind, since this is strictly
private, adding a few of mine; if ever any one needed
flowers, birds, fresh air, water, and rest!  Good Lord,
South Wind, did you ever reach her before you carried
that message?  I think not!  But Onabasha isn't so
large.  You and the sun should get your innings there.
I do hope she is not trying to work!  I can attend to
that; and so there will be more time when she is found,
I'd better hustle now.''

He picked up the bag and returned to the dry-house,
where he carefully washed the roots and spread them
on the trays.  Then he took the same bag and mattock
and going through the woods in the opposite direction
he came to a heavy growth in a cleared space of high
ground.  The bloom heads were forming and the plant
was half matured.  The Harvester dug a cylindrical,
tapering root, wrinkling lengthwise, wiped it clean,
broke and tasted it.  He made a wry face.  He stood
examining the white wood with its brown-red bark and,
deciding that it was in prime condition, be began digging
the plants.  It was common wayside ``Bouncing Bet,''
but the Harvester called it ``soapwort.''  He took every
other plant in his way across the bed, and when he
digged a heavy load he carried it home, stripped the
leaves, and spread them on trays, while the roots he
topped, washed, and put to dry also.  Then he whistled
for Belshazzar and went to lunch.

As he passed down the road to the cabin his face was
a study of conflicting emotions, and his eyes had a far
away appearance of deep thought.  Every tree of his
stretch of forest was rustling fresh leaves to shelter him;
dogwood, wild crab, and hawthorn offered their flowers;
earth held up her tribute in painted trillium faces, spring
beauties, and violets, blue, white, and yellow.  Mosses,
ferns, and lichen decorated the path; all the birds
greeted him in friendship, and sang their purest melodies.
The sky was blue, the sun bright, the air perfumed
for him; Belshazzar, always true to his name, protected
every footstep; Ajax, the shimmering green and gold
wonder, came up the hill to meet him; the white doves
circled above his head.  Stumbling half blindly, the
Harvester passed unheeding among them, and went
into the cabin.  When he came out he stood a long
time in deep study, but at last he returned to the
woods.

``Perhaps they will have found her before night,'' he
said.  ``I'll harvest the cranesbill yet, because it's growing
late for it, and then I'll see how they are coming on.
Maybe they'd know her if they met her, and maybe
they wouldn't.  She may wear different clothing, and
freshen up after her trip.  She might have been car sick,
as Doc suggested, and appear very different when she
feels better.''

He skirted the woods around the northeast end and
stopped at a big bed of exquisite growth.  Tall, wiry
stems sprang upward almost two feet in height; leaves
six inches across were cut in ragged lobes almost to the
base, and here and there, enough to colour the entire
bed a delicate rose or sometimes a violet purple, the
first flowers were unfolding.  The Harvester lifted a
root and tasted it.

``No doubt about you being astringent,'' he muttered.
``You have enough tannin in you to pucker a mushroom.
By the way, those big, corn-cobby fellows should spring
up with the next warm rain, and the hotels and restaurants
always pay high prices.  I must gather a few
bushels.''

He looked over the bed of beautiful wild alum and
hesitated.

``I vow I hate to touch you,'' he said.  ``You are a
picture right now, and in a week you will be a miracle.
It seems a shame to tear up a plant for its roots, just at
flowering time, and I can't avoid breaking down half I
don't take, getting the ones I do.  I wish you were not
so pretty!  You are one of the colours I love most.
You remind me of red-bud, blazing star, and all those
exquisite magenta shades that poets, painters, and the
Almighty who made them love so much they hesitate
about using them lavishly.  You are so delicate and
graceful and so modest.  I wish she could see you!
I got to stop this or I won't be able to lift a root.  I
never would if the ten cents a pound I'll get out of it
were the only consideration.''

The Harvester gripped the mattock and advanced
to the bed.  ``What I must be thinking is that you are
indispensable to the sick folks.  The steady demand for
you proves your value, and of course, humanity comes
first, after all.  If I remain in the woods alone much
longer I'll get to the place where I'm not so sure that
it does.  Seems as if animals, birds, flowers, trees, and
insects as well, have their right to life also.  But it's
for me to remember the sick folks!  If I thought the
Girl would get some of it now, I could overturn the bed
with a stout heart.  If any one ever needed a tonic, I
think she does.  Maybe some of this will reach her.  If
it does, I hope it will make her cheeks just the lovely
pink of the bloom.  Oh Lord!  If only she hadn't
appeared so sick and frightened!  What is there in all
this world of sunshine to make a girl glance around her
like that?  I wish I knew!  Maybe they will have
found her by night.''

The Harvester began work on the bed, but he knelt
and among the damp leaves from the spongy black
earth he lifted the roots with his fingers and carefully
straightened and pressed down the plants he did not
take.  This required more time than usual, but his
heart was so sore he could not be rough with anything,
most of all a flower.  So he harvested the wild alum
by hand, and heaped large stacks of roots around the
edges of the bed.  Often he paused as he worked and
on his knees stared through the forest as if he hoped
perhaps she would realize his longing for her, and come
to him in the wood as she had across the water.
Over and over he repeated, ``Perhaps they will find
her by night!'' and that so intensified the meaning
that once he said it aloud.  His face clouded and grew
dark.

``Dealish nice business!'' he said.  ``I am here in the
woods digging flower roots, and a gang of men in the
city are searching for the girl I love.  If ever a job seemed
peculiarly a man's own, it appears this would be.  What
business has any other man spying after my woman?
Why am I not down there doing my own work, as I
always have done it?  Who's more likely to find her
than I am?  It seems as if there would be an instinct
that would lead me straight to her, if I'd go.  And you
can wager I'll go fast enough.''

The Harvester appeared as if he would start that
instant, but with lips closely shut he finally forced
himself to go on with his work.  When he had rifled the bed,
and uprooted all he cared to take during one season,
he carried the roots to the lake shore below the curing
house, and spread them on a platform he had built.
He stepped into his boat and began dashing pails of water
over them and using a brush.  As he worked he washed
away the woody scars of last year's growth, and the tiny
buds appearing for the coming season.

Belshazzar sat on the opposite bank and watched
the operation; and Ajax came down and, flying to a
dead stump, erected and slowly waved his train to attract
the sober-faced man who paid no heed.  He left the
roots to drain while he prepared supper, then placed
them on the trays, now filled to overflowing, and was
glad he had finished.  He could not cure anything else
at present if he wanted to.  He was as far advanced as
he had been at the same time the previous year.  Then
he dressed neatly and locking the Girl's room, and leaving
Belshazzar to protect it, he went to Onabasha.

``Bravo!'' cried Doctor Carey as the Harvester
entered his office.  ``You are heroic to wait all day for
news.  How much stuff have you gathered?''

``Three crops.  How many missing women have you
located?''

The doctor laughed.  There was no sign of a smile
on the face of the Harvester.

``You didn't really expect her to come to light the
first day?  That would be too easy!  We can't find her
in a minute.''

``It will be no surprise to me if you can't find her at
all.  I am not expecting another man to do what I don't
myself.''

``You are not hunting her.  You are harvesting the
woods.  The men you employ are to find her.''

``Maybe I am, and maybe I am not,'' said the Harvester
slowly.  ``To me it appears to be a poor stick of a man
who coolly proceeds with money making, and trusts to
men who haven't even seen her to search for the girl
he loves.  I think a few hours of this is about all my
patience will endure.''

``What are you going to do?''

``I don't know,'' said the Harvester.  ``But you can
bank on one thing sure----I'm going to do something!
I've had my fill of this.  Thank you for all you've done,
and all you are going to do.  My head is not clear enough
yet to decide anything with any sense, but maybe I'll
hit on something soon.  I'm for the streets for a while.''

``Better go home and go to bed.  You seem very
tired.''

``I am,'' said the Harvester.  ``The only way to
endure this is to work myself down.  I'm all right, and
I'll be careful, but I rather think I'll find her myself.''

``Better go on with your work as we planned.''

``I'll think about it,'' said the Harvester as he went
out.

Until he was too tired to walk farther he slowly paced
the streets of the city, and then followed the home road
through the valley and up the hill to Medicine Woods.
When he came to Singing Water, Belshazzar heard his
steps on the bridge, and came bounding to meet him.  The
Harvester stretched himself on a seat and turned his
face to the sky.  It was a deep, dark-blue bowl, closely
set with stars, and a bright moon shed a soft May radiance
on the young earth.  The lake was flooded with light,
and the big trees of the forest crowning the hill were
silver coroneted.  The unfolding leaves had hidden the
new cabin from the bridge, but the driveway shone white,
and already the upspringing bushes hedged it in.  Insects
were humming lazily in the perfumed night air,
and across the lake a courting whip-poor-will was
explaining to his sweetheart just how much and why he
loved her.  A few bats were wavering in air hunting
insects, and occasionally an owl or a nighthawk crossed
the lake.  Killdeer were glorying in the moonlight and
night flight, and cried in pure, clear notes as they sailed
over the water.  The Harvester was tired and filled
with unrest as he stretched on the bridge, but the longer
he lay the more the enfolding voices comforted him.
All of them were waiting and working out their lives
to the legitimate end; there was nothing else for him to
do.  He need not follow instinct or profit by chance.
He was a man; he could plan and reason.

The air grew balmy and some big, soft clouds swept
across the moon.  The Harvester felt the dampness
of rising dew, and went to the cabin.  He looked at
it long in the moonlight and told himself that he could
see how much the plants, vines, and ferns had grown
since the previous night.  Without making a light, he
threw himself on the bed in the outdoor room, and lay
looking through the screening at the lake and sky.  He
was working his brain to think of some manner in which
to start a search for the Dream Girl that would have
some probability of success to recommend it, but he
could settle on no feasible plan.  At last he fell asleep,
and in the night soft rain wet his face.  He pulled an
oilcloth sheet over the bed, and lay breathing deeply of
the damp, perfumed air as he again slept.  In the morning
brilliant sunshine awoke him and he arose to find the
earth steaming.

``If ever there was a perfect mushroom day!'' he said
to Belshazzar.  ``We must hurry and feed the stock and
ourselves and gather some.  They mean real money.''



CHAPTER VII

THE QUEST OF THE DREAM GIRL

The Harvester breakfasted, fed the stock, hitched
Betsy to the spring wagon, and went into the
dripping, steamy woods.  If anyone had asked
him that morning concerning his idea of Heaven, he
never would have dreamed of describing a place of gold-
paved streets, crystal pillars, jewelled gates, and thrones
of ivory.  These things were beyond the man's comprehension
and he would not have admired or felt at home
in such magnificence if it had been materialized for him.
He would have told you that a floor of last year's brown
leaves, studded with myriad flower faces, big, bark-
encased pillars of a thousand years, jewels on every
bush, shrub, and tree, and tilting thrones on which
gaudy birds almost burst themselves to voice the joy
of life, while their bright-eyed little mates peered
questioningly at him over nest rims----he would have told you
that Medicine Woods on a damp, sunny May morning
was Heaven.  And he would have added that only
one angel, tall and slender, with the pink of health
on her cheeks and the dew of happiness in her dark
eyes, was necessary to enter and establish glory.
Everything spoke to him that morning, but the Harvester
was silent.  It had been his habit to talk constantly
to Belshazzar, Ajax, his work, even the winds and perfumes;
it had been his method of dissipating solitude,
but to-day he had no words, even for these dear friends.
He only opened his soul to beauty, and steadily climbed
the hill to the crest, and then down the other side to the
rich, half-shaded, half-open spaces, where big, rough
mushrooms sprang in a night similar to the one just
passed.

He could see them awaiting him from afar.  He began
work with rapid fingers, being careful to break off the
heads, but not to pull up the roots.  When four heaping
baskets were filled he cut heavily leaved branches to
spread over them, and started to Onabasha.  As usual,
Belshazzar rode beside him and questioned the Harvester
when he politely suggested to Betsy that she
make a little haste.

``Have you forgotten that mushrooms are perishable?''
he asked.  ``If we don't get these to the city all woodsy
and fresh we can't sell them.  Wonder where we can
do the best?  The hotels pay well.  Really, the biggest
prices could be had by----''

Then the Harvester threw back his head and began
to laugh, and he laughed, and he laughed.  A crow on
the fence Joined him, and a kingfisher, heading for Loon
Lake, and then Belshazzar caught the infection.

``Begorry!  The very idea!'' cried the Harvester.
`` `Heaven helps them that help themselves.'  Now you
just watch us manoeuvre for assistance, Belshazzar, old
boy!  Here we go!''

Then the laugh began again.  It continued all the
way to Onabasha and even into the city.  The Harvester
drove through the most prosperous street until he reached
the residence district.  At the first home he stopped,
gave the lines to Belshazzar, and, taking a basket of
mushrooms, went up the walk and rang the bell.

``All groceries should be delivered at the back door,''
snapped a pert maid, before he had time to say a word.

The Harvester lifted his hat.

``Will you kindly tell the lady of the house that I
wish to speak with her?''

``What name, please?''

``I want to show her some fine mushrooms, freshly
gathered,'' he answered.

How she did it the Harvester never knew.  The
first thing he realized was that the door had closed
before his face, and the basket had been picked deftly
from his fingers and was on the other side.  After a
short time the maid returned.

``What do you want for them, please?''

The last thing on earth the Harvester wanted to do
was to part with those mushrooms, so he took one long,
speculative look down the hall and named a price he
thought would be prohibitive.

``One dollar a dozen.''

``How many are there?''

``I count them as I sell them.  I do not know.''

The door closed again.  Presently it opened and the
maid knelt on the floor before him and counted the
mushrooms one by one into a dish pan and in a few minutes
brought back seven dollars and fifty cents.  The
chagrined Harvester, feeling like a thief, put the money
in his pocket, and turned away.

``I was to tell you,'' said she, ``that you are to bring
all you have to sell here, and the next time please go
to the kitchen door.''

``Must be fond of mushrooms,'' said the disgruntled
Harvester.

``They are a great delicacy, and there are visitors.''
The Harvester ached to set the girl to one side and
walk through the house, but he did not dare; so he
returned to the street, whistled to Betsy to come, and went
to the next gate.  Here he hesitated.  Should he risk
further snubbing at the front door or go back at once.
If he did, he only would see a maid.  As he stood an
instant debating, the door of the house he just had
left opened and the girl ran after him.  ``If you have
more, we will take them,'' she called.

The Harvester gasped for breath.

``They have to be used at once,'' he suggested.

``She knows that.  She wants to treat her friends.''

``Well she has got enough for a banquet,'' he said.
``I--I don't usually sell more than a dozen or two in
one place.''

``I don't see why you can't let her have them if you
have more.''

``Perhaps I have orders to fill for regular customers,''
suggested the Harvester.

``And perhaps you haven't,'' said the maid.  ``You
ought to be ashamed not to let people who are willing
to pay your outrageous prices have them.  It's regular
highway robbery.''

``Possibly that's the reason I decline to hold up one
party twice,'' said the Harvester as he entered the gate
and went up the walk to the front door.

``You should be taught your place,'' called the maid
after him.

The Harvester again rang the bell.  Another maid
opened the door, and once more he asked to speak with
the lady of the house.  As the girl turned, a handsome
old woman in cap and morning gown came down the
stairs.

``What have you there?'' she asked.

The Harvester lifted the leaves and exposed the
musky, crimpled, big mushrooms.

``Oh!'' she cried in delight.  ``Indeed, yes!  We are
very fond of them.  I will take the basket, and divide
with my sons.  You are sure you have no poisonous
ones among them?''

``Quite sure,'' said the Harvester faintly.

``How much do you want for the basket?''

``They are a dollar a dozen; I haven't counted them.''

``Dear me!  Isn't that rather expensive?''

``It is.  Very!'' said the Harvester.  ``So expensive
that most people don't think of taking over a dozen.
They are large and very rich, so they go a long
way.''

``I suppose you have to spend a great deal of time
hunting them?  It does seem expensive, but they are
fresh, and the boys are so fond of them.  I'm not often
extravagant, I'll just take the lot.  Sarah, bring a pan.''

Again the Harvester stood and watched an entire
basket counted over and carried away, and he felt the
robber he had been called as he took the money.

At the next house he had learned a lesson.  He carpeted
a basket with leaves and counted out a dozen and a
half into it, leaving the remainder in the wagon.  Three
blocks on one side of the street exhausted his store and
he was showered with orders.  He had not seen any
one that even resembled a dark-eyed girl.  As he came
from the last house a big, red motor shot past and then
suddenly slowed and backed beside his wagon.

``What in the name of sense are you doing?'' demanded
Doctor Carey.

``Invading the residence district of Onabasha,'' said
the Harvester.  ``Madam, would you like some nice,
fresh, country mushrooms?  I guarantee that there are
no poisonous ones among them, and they were gathered
this morning.  Considering their rarity and the difficult
work of collecting, they are exceedingly low at my price.
I am offering these for five dollars a dozen, madam,
and for mercy sake don't take them or I'll have no excuse
to go to the next house.''

The doctor stared, then understood, and began to
laugh.  When at last he could speak he said, ``David,
I'll bet you started with three bushels and began at the
head of this street, and they are all gone.''

``Put up a good one!'' said the Harvester.  ``You
win.  The first house I tried they ordered me to the
back door, took a market basket full away from me
by force, tried to buy the load, and I didn't see any
one save a maid.''

The doctor lay on the steering gear and faintly groaned.

The Harvester regarded him sympathetically.  ``Isn't
it a crime?'' he questioned.  ``Mushrooms are no go.
I can see that!----or rather they are entirely too much
of a go.  I never saw anything in such demand.  I
must seek a less popular article for my purpose.  To-
morrow look out for me.  I shall begin where I left off
to-day, but I will have changed my product.''

``David, for pity sake,'' peeped the doctor.

``What do I care how I do it, so I locate her?''
superbly inquired the Harvester.

``But you won't find her!'' gasped the doctor.

``I've come as close it as you so far, anyway,'' said
the Harvester.  ``Your mushrooms are on the desk in
your office.''

He drove slowly up and down the streets until Betsy
wabbled on her legs.  Then he left her to rest and walked
until he wabbled; and by that time it was dark, so he
went home.

At the first hint of dawn he was at work the following
morning.  With loaded baskets closely covered, he

started to Onabasha, and began where he had quit the
day before.  This time he carried a small, crudely
fashioned bark basket, leaf-covered, and he rang at the
front door with confidence.

Every one seemed to have a maid in that part of the
city, for a freshly capped and aproned girl opened the
door.

``Are there any young women living here?'' blandly
inquired the Harvester.

``What's that of your business?'' demanded the
maid.

The Harvester flushed, but continued, ``I am offering
something especially intended for young women.  If
there are none, I will not trouble you.''

``There are several.''

``Will you please ask them if they would care for
bouquets of violets, fresh from the woods?''

``How much are they, and how large are the bunches?''

``Prices differ, and they are the right size to appear
well.  They had better see for themselves.''

The maid reached for the basket, but the Harvester
drew back.

``I keep them in my possession,'' he said.  ``You may
take a sample.''

He lifted the leaves and drew forth a medium-sized
bunch of long-stemmed blue violets with their leaves.
The flowers were fresh, crisp, and strong odours of the
woods arose from them.

``Oh!'' cried the maid.  ``Oh, how lovely!''

She hurried away with them and returned carrying
a purse.

``I want two more bunches,'' she said.  ``How much
are they?''

``Are the girls who want them dark or fair?''

``What difference does that make?''

``I have blue violets for blondes, yellow for brunettes,
and white for the others.''

``Well I never!  One is fair, and two have brown hair
and blue eyes.''

``One blue and two whites,'' said the Harvester calmly,
as if matching women's hair and eyes with flowers were
an inherited vocation.  ``They are twenty cents a
bunch.''

``Aha!'' he chortled to himself as he whistled to Betsy.
``At last we have it.  There are no dark-eyed girls here.
Now we are making headway.''

Down the street he went, with varying fortune, but
with patience and persistence at every house he at last
managed to learn whether there was a dark-eyed girl.
There did not seem to be many.  Long before his store
of yellow violets was gone the last blue and white had
disappeared.  But he calmly went on asking for dark-
eyed girls, and explaining that all the blue and white
were taken, because fair women were most numerous.

At one house the owner, who reminded the Harvester
of his mother, came to the door.  He uncovered and in
his suavest tones inquired if a brunette young woman lived
there and if she would like a nosegay of yellow violets.

``Well bless my soul!'' cried she.  ``What is this
world coming to?  Do you mean to tell me that there
are now able-bodied men offering at our doors, flowers
to match our girls' complexions?''

``Yes madam?'' said the Harvester gravely, ``and
also selling them as fast as he can show them, at prices
that make a profit very well worth while.  I had an
equal number of blue and white, but I see the dark
girls are very much in the minority.  The others were
gone long ago, and I now have flowers to offer brunettes
only.''

``Well forever more!  And you don't call that fiddlin'
business for a big, healthy, young man?''

The Harvester's gay laugh was infectious.

``I do not,'' he said.  ``I have to start as soon as I
can see, tramp long distances in wet woods and gather
the violets on my knees, make them into bunches, and
bring them here in water to keep them fresh.  I have
another occupation.  I only kill time on these, but I would
be ashamed to tell you what I have gotten for them this
morning.''

``Humph!  I'm glad to hear it!'' said the woman.
``Shame in some form is a sign of grace.  I have no use
for a human being without a generous supply of it.
There is a very beautiful dark-eyed girl in the house,
and I will take two bunches for her.  How much are
they?''

``I have only three remaining,'' said the Harvester.
``Would you like to allow her to make her own selection?''

``When I'm giving things I usually take my choice.  I
want that, and that one.''

``As my stock is so nearly out, I'll make the two for
twenty,'' said the Harvester.  ``Won't you accept the
last one from me, because you remind me just a little
of my mother?''

``I will indeed,'' said she.  ``Thank you very much!
I shall love to have them as dearly as any of the girls.
I used to gather them when I was a child, but I almost
never see the blue ones any more, and I don't know as
I ever expected to see a yellow violet again as long as I
live.  Where did you get them?''

``In my woods,'' said the Harvester.  ``You see I
grow several members of the viola pedata family, bird's
foot, snake, and wood violet, and three of the odorata,
English, marsh, and sweet, for our big drug houses.
They use the flowers in making delicate tests for acids
and alkalies.  The entire plant, flower, seed, leaf, and
root, goes into different remedies.  The beds seed
themselves and spread, so I have more than I need for the
chemists, and I sell a few.  I don't use the white and
yellow in my business; I just grow them for their beauty.
I also sell my surplus lilies of the valley.  Would you
like to order some of them for your house or more
violets for to-morrow?''

``Well bless my soul!  Do you mean to tell me that
lilies of the valley are medicine?''

The Harvester laughed.

``I grow immense beds of them in the woods on the
banks of Loon Lake,'' he said.  ``They are the convallaris
majallis of the drug houses and I scarcely know what
the weak-hearted people would do without them.  I
use large quantities in trade, and this season I am selling
a few because people so love them.''

``Lilies in medicine; well dear me!  Are roses good
for our innards too?''

Then the Harvester did laugh.

``I imagine the roses you know go into perfumes
mostly,'' he answered.  ``They do make medicine of
Canadian rock rose and rose bay, laurel, and willow.
I grow the bushes, but they are not what you would
consider roses.''

``I wonder now,'' said the woman studying the
Harvester closely, ``if you are not that queer genius I've
heard of, who spends his time hunting and growing
stuff in the woods and people call him the Medicine
Man.''

``I strongly suspect madam, I am that man,'' said
the Harvester.

``Well bless me!'' cried she.  ``I've always wanted to
see you and here when I do, you look just like anybody
else.  I thought you'd have long hair, and be wild-
eyed and ferocious.  And your talk sounds like out of
a book.  Well that beats me!''

``Me too!'' said the Harvester, lifting his hat.  ``You
don't want any lilies to-morrow, then?''

``Yes I do.  Medicine or no medicine, I've always
liked 'em, and I'm going to keep on liking them.  If
you can bring me a good-sized bunch after the weak-
kneed----''

``Weak-hearted,'' corrected the Harvester.

``Well `weak-hearted,' then; it's all the same thing.
If you've got any left, as I was saying, you can fetch
them to me for the smell.''

The Harvester laughed all the way down town.  There
he went to Doctor Carey's office, examined a directory,
and got the names of all the numbers where be had sold
yellow violets.  A few questions when the doctor came
in settled all of them, but the flower scheme was
better.  Because the yellow were not so plentiful as the
white and blue, next day he added buttercups and cowslips
to his store for the dark girls.  When he had rifled
his beds for the last time, after three weeks of almost
daily trips to town, and had paid high prices to small
boys he set searching the adjoining woods until no more
flowers could be found, he drove from the outskirts of
the city one day toward the hospital, and as he stopped,
down the street came Doctor Carey frantically waving
to him.  As the big car slackened, ``Come on David,
quick!  I've seen her!'' cried the doctor.

The Harvester jumped from the wagon, threw the
lines to Belshazzar, and landed in the panting car.

``For Heaven's sake where?  Are you sure?''

The car went speeding down the street.  A policeman
beckoned and cried after it.

``It won't do any good to get arrested, Doc,'' cautioned
the Harvester.

``Now right along here,'' panted Doctor Carey.  ``Watch
both sides sharply.  If I stop you jump out, and tell the
blame policemen to get at their job.  The party they
are hired to find is right under their noses.''

The Harvester began to perspire.  ``Doc, don't you
think you should tell me?  Maybe she is in some store.
Maybe I could do better on foot.''

``Shut up!'' growled the doctor.  ``I am doing the
best I know.''

He hurried up the street for blocks and back again,
and at last stopped before a large store and went in.
When he returned he drove to the hospital and together
they entered the office.  There he turned to the
Harvester.

``It isn't so hard to understand you now, my boy,''
he said.  ``Shades of Diana, but she'll be a beauty when
she gets a little more flesh and colour.  She came out
of Whitlaw's and walked right to the crossing.  I almost
could have touched her, but I didn't notice.  Two girls
passed before me, and in hurrying, a tall, dark one knocked
off one of your bunches of yellow violets.  She glanced
at it and laughed, but let it lay.  Then your girl hesitated
stooped and picked it up.  The crazy policeman yelled
at me to clear the crossing and it didn't hit me for a
half block how tall and white she was and how dark
her eyes were.  I was just thinking about her picking
up the flowers, and that it was queer for her to do it,
when like a brick it hit me, THAT'S DAVID'S GIRL!  I tried
to turn around, but you know what Main Street is in
the middle of the day.  And those idiots of policemen!
They ordered me on, and I couldn't turn for a street car
coming, so I called to one of them that the girl we wanted
was down the street, and he looked at me like an addle-
pate and said, `What girl?  Move on or you'll get
in a jam here.'  You can use me for a football if I
don't go back and smash him.  Paid him five dollars
myself less than two weeks ago to keep his eyes open.
`TO KEEP HIS EYES OPEN!' '' panted the doctor, shaking
his fist at David.  ``Yes sir!  `To keep his eyes open!'
And he motioned for things to come along, and so I
lost her too.''

``I think we had better go back to the street,'' said
the Harvester.

``Oh, I'd been back and forth along that street for
nearly an hour before I gave up and came here to see
if I could find you, and we've hunted it an hour more!
What's the use?  She's gone for this time, but by gum,
I saw her!  And she was worth seeing!''

``Did she appear ill to you?''

The doctor dropped on a chair and threw out his hands
hopelessly.

``This was awful sudden, David,'' he said.  ``I was
going along as I told you, and I noticed her stop and
thought she had a good head to wait a second instead
of running in before me, and there came those two girls
right under the car from the other side.  I only had
a glimpse of her as she stooped for the flowers.  I saw
a big braid of hair, but I was half a block away before
I got it all connected, and then came the crush in the
street, and I was blocked.''

The doctor broke down and wiped his face and
expressed his feelings unrestrainedly.

``Don't!'' said the Harvester patiently.  ``It's no use
to feel so badly, Doc.  I know what you would give to
have found her for me.  I know you did all you could.
I let her escape me.  We will find her yet.  It's glorious
news that she's in the city.  It gives me heart to hear
that.  Can't you just remember if she seemed ill?''

The doctor meditated.

``She wasn't the tallest girl I ever saw,'' he said slowly,
``but she was the tallest girl to be pretty.  She had on a
white waist and a gray skirt and black hat.  Her eyes
and hair were like you said, and she was plain, white
faced, with a hue that might possibly be natural, and
it might be confinement in bad light and air and poor
food.  She didn't seem sick, but she isn't well.  There
is something the matter with her, but it's not immediate
or dangerous.  She appeared like a flower that had got
a little moisture and sprouted in a cellar.''

``You saw her all right!'' said the Harvester, ``and
I think your diagnosis is correct too.  That's the way
she seemed to me.  I've thought she needed sun and air.
I told the South Wind so the other day.''

``Why you blame fool!'' cried the doctor.  ``Is this
thing going to your head?  Say, I forgot!  There is
something else.  I traced her in the store.  She was at
the embroidery counter and she bought some silk.  If
she ever comes again the clerk is going to hold her and
telephone me or get her address if she has to steal it.  Oh,
we are getting there!  We will have her pretty soon now.
You ought to feel better just to know that she is in town
and that I've seen her.''

``I do!'' said the Harvester.  ``Indeed I do!''

``It can't be much longer,'' said the doctor.  ``She's
got to be located soon.  But those policemen!  I wouldn't
give a nickel for the lot!  I'll bet she's walked over
them for two weeks.  If I were you I'd discharge the
bunch.  They'd be peacefully asleep if she passed them.
If they'd let me alone, I'd have had her.  I could have
turned around easily.  I've been in dozens of closer
places.''

``Don't worry!  This can't last much longer.  She's
of and in the city or she wouldn't have picked up the
flowers.  Doc, are you sure they were mine?''

``Yes.  Half the girls have been tricked out in yours
the past two weeks.  I can spot them as far as I can
see.''

``Dear Lord, that's getting close!'' said the Harvester
intensely.  ``Seems as if the violets would tell her.''

``Now cut out flowers talking and the South Wind!''
ordered the doctor.  ``This is business.  The violets
prove something all right, though.  If she was in the
country, she could gather plenty herself.  She is working
at sewing in some room in town, either over a store
or in a house.  If she hadn't been starved for flowers
she never would have stopped for them on the street.
I could see just a flash of hesitation, but she wanted them
too much.  David, one bouquet will go in water and be
cared for a week.  Man, it's getting close!  This does
seem like a link.''

``Since you say it, possibly I dare agree with you,''
said the Harvester.

``How near are you through with that canvass of
yours?''

``About three fourths.''

``Well I'd go on with it.  After all we have got to
find her ourselves.  Those senile policemen!''

``I am going on with it; you needn't worry about
that.  But I've got to change to other flowers.  I've
stripped the violet beds.  There's quite a crop of berries
coming, but they are not ripe yet, and a tragedy to
pick.  The pond lilies are just beginning to open by
the thousand.  The lake border is blue with sweet-flag
that is lovely and the marsh pale gold with cowslips.
The ferns are prime and the woods solid sheets of every
colour of bloom.  I believe I'll go ahead with the wild
flowers.''

`` I would too!  David, you do feel better, don't you?''

``I certainly do, Doctor.  Surely it won't be long
now!''

The Harvester was so hopeful that he whistled and
sang on the return to Medicine Woods, and that night
for the first time in many days he sat long over a candlestick,
and took a farewell peep into her room before he
went to bed.

The next day he worked with all his might harvesting
the last remnants of early spring herbs, in the dry-room
and store-house, and on furniture and candlesticks.

Then he went back to flower gathering and every day
offered bunches of exquisite wood and field flowers and
white and gold water lilies from door to door.

Three weeks later the Harvester, perceptibly thin,
pale, and worried entered the office.  He sank into a
chair and groaned wearily.

``Isn't this the bitterest luck!'' he cried.  ``I've
finished the town.  I've almost walked off my legs.  I've
sold flowers by the million, but I've not had a sight of
her.''

``It's been almost a tragedy with me,'' said the doctor
gloomily.  ``I've killed two dogs and grazed a baby,
because I was watching the sidewalks instead of the
street.  What are you going to do now?''

``I am going home and bring up the work to the July
mark.  I am going to take it easy and rest a few days
so I can think more clearly.  I don't know what I'll
try next.  I've punched up the depot and the policemen
again.  When I get something new thought out I'll let
you know.''

Then he began emptying his pockets of money and
heaping it on the table, small coins, bills, big and little.

``What on earth is that?''

``That,'' said the Harvester, giving the heap a shove
of contempt, ``that is the price of my pride and humiliation.
That is what it cost people who allowed me to
cheek my way into their homes and rob them, as one
maid said, for my own purposes.  Doc, where on earth
does all the money come from?  In almost every house
I entered, women had it to waste, in many cases to throw
away.  I never saw so much paid for nothing in all my
life.  That whole heap is from mushrooms and flowers.''

``What are you piling it there for?''

``For your free ward.  I don't want a penny of it.  I
wouldn't keep it, not if I was starving.''

``Why David!  You couldn't compel any one to buy.
You offered something they wanted, and they paid you
what you asked.''

``Yes, and to keep them from buying, and to make
the stuff go farther, I named prices to shame a shark.
When I think of that mushroom deal I can feel my
face burn.  I've made the search I wanted to, and I
am satisfied that I can't find her that way.  I have
kept up my work at home between times.  I am not
out anything but my time, and it isn't fair to plunder
the city to pay that.  Take that cussed money and put
it where I'll never see or hear of it.  Do anything you
please, except to ask me ever to profit by a cent.  When
I wash my hands after touching it for the last time
maybe I'll feel better.''

``You are a fanatic!''

``If getting rid of that is being a fanatic, I am proud of
the title.  You can't imagine what I've been through!''

``Can't I though?'' laughed the doctor.  ``In work
of that kind you get into every variety of place; and
some of it is new to you.  Never mind!  No one can
contaminate you.  It is the law that only a man can
degrade himself.  Knowing things will not harm you.
Doing them is a different matter.  What you know
will be a protection.  What you do ruins----if it is
wrong.  You are not harmed, you are only disgusted.
Think it over, and in a few days come back and get
your money.  It is strictly honest.  You earned every
cent of it.''

``If you ever speak of it again or force it on me I'll
take it home and throw it into the lake.''

He went after Betsy and slowly drove to Medicine
Woods.  Belshazzar, on the seat beside him, recognized
a silent, disappointed master and whimpered as he rubbed
the Harvester's shoulder to attract his attention.

``This is tough luck, old boy,'' said the Harvester.
``I had such hopes and I worked so hard.  I suffered
in the flesh for every hour of it, and I failed.  Oh but
I hate the word!  If I knew where she is right now, Bel,
I'd give anything I've got.  But there's no use to wail
and get sorry for myself.  That's against the law of
common decency.  I'll take a swim, sleep it off, straighten
up the herbs a little, and go at it again, old fellow; that's
a man's way.  She's somewhere, and she's got to be
found, no matter what it costs.''




CHAPTER VIII

BELSHAZZAR'S RECORD POINT

The Harvester set the neglected cabin in order;
then he carefully and deftly packed all his dried
herbs, barks, and roots.  Next came carrying
the couch grass, wild alum, and soapwort into the store-
room.  Then followed July herbs.  He first went to his
beds of foxglove, because the tender leaves of the second
year should be stripped from them at flowering time, and
that usually began two weeks earlier; but his bed lay in
a shaded, damp location and the tall bloom stalks were
only in half flower, their pale lavender making an exquisite
picture.  It paid to collect those leaves, so the Harvester
hastily stripped the amount he wanted.

Yarrow was beginning to bloom and he gathered as
much as he required, taking the whole plant.  That only
brought a few cents a pound, but it was used entire, so
the weight made it worth while.

Catnip tops and leaves were also ready.  As it grew
in the open in dry soil and the beds had been weeded that
spring, he could gather great arm loads of it with a sickle,
but he had to watch the swarming bees.  He left the
male fern and mullein until the last for different reasons.

On the damp, cool, rocky hillside, beneath deep shade
of big forest trees, grew the ferns, their long, graceful
fronds waving softly.  Tree toads sang on the cool rocks
beneath them, chewinks nested under gnarled roots
among them, rose-breasted grosbeaks sang in grape-vines
clambering over the thickets, and Singing Water ran
close beside.  So the Harvester left digging these roots
until nearly the last, because he so disliked to disturb
the bed.  He could not have done it if he had not been
forced.  All of the demand for his fern never could be
supplied.  Of his products none was more important to
the Harvester because this formed the basis of one of the
oldest and most reliable remedies for little children.  The
fern had to be gathered with especial care, deteriorated
quickly, and no staple was more subject to adulteration.

So he kept his bed intact, lifted the roots at the proper
time, carefully cleaned without washing, rapidly dried
in currents of hot air, and shipped them in bottles to
the trade.  He charged and received fifteen cents a pound,
where careless and indifferent workers got ten.

On the banks of Singing Water, at the head of the fern
bed, the Harvester stood under a gray beech tree and
looked down the swaying length of delicate green.  He
was lean and rapidly bronzing, for he seldom remembered
a head covering because he loved the sweep of the wind
in his hair.

``I hate to touch you,'' he said.  ``How I wish she
could see you before I begin.  If she did, probably she
would say it was a sin, and then I never could muster
courage to do it at all.  I'd give a small farm to know
if those violets revived for her.  I was crazy to ask
Doc if they were wilted, but I hated to.  If they were
from the ones I gathered that morning they should have
been all right.''

A tree toad dared him to come on; a chipmunk grew
saucy as the Harvester bent to an unloved task.  If he
stripped the bed as closely as he dared and not injure
it, he could not fill half his orders; so, deftly and with
swift, skilful fingers and an earnest face, he worked.
Belshazzar came down the hill on a rush, nose to earth and
began hunting among the plants.  He never could
understand why his loved master was so careless as to go
to work before he had pronounced it safe.  When the
fern bed was finished, the Harvester took time to make
a trip to town, but there was no word waiting him; so
he went to the mullein.  It lay on a sunny hillside beyond
the couch grass and joined a few small fields, the only
cleared land of the six hundred acres of Medicine Woods.
Over rocks and little hills and hollows spread the pale,
grayish-yellow of the green leaves, and from five to seven
feet arose the flower stems, while the entire earth between
was covered with rosettes of young plants.  Belshazzar
went before to give warning if any big rattlers curled
in the sun on the hillside, and after him followed the
Harvester cutting leaves in heaps.  That was warm
work and he covered his head with a floppy old straw hat,
with wet grass in the crown, and stopped occasionally
to rest.

He loved that yellow-faced hillside.  Because so much
of his reaping lay in the shade and commonly his feet
sank in dead leaves and damp earth, the change was
a rest.  He cheerfully stubbed his toes on rocks, and
endured the heat without complaint.  It appeared to
him as if a member of every species of butterfly he knew
wavered down the hillside.  There were golden-brown
danais, with their black-striped wings, jetty troilus with
an attempt at trailers, big asterias, velvety black with
longer trails and wide bands of yellow dots.  Coenia
were most numerous of all and to the Harvester wonderfully
attractive in rich, subdued colours with a wealth of
markings and eye spots.  Many small moths, with transparent
wings and noses red as blood, flashed past him
hunting pollen.  Goldfinches, intent on thistle bloom,
wavered through the air trailing mellow, happy notes
behind them, and often a humming-bird visited the
mullein.  On the lake wild life splashed and chattered
incessantly, and sometimes the Harvester paused and stood
with arms heaped with leaves, to interpret some unusually
appealing note of pain or anger or some very attractive
melody.  The red-wings were swarming, the killdeers
busy, and he thought of the Dream Girl and smiled.

``I wonder if she would like this,'' he mused.

When the mullein leaves were deep on the trays of the
dry-house he began on the bloom and that was a task
he loved.  Just to lay off the beds in swaths and follow
them, deftly picking the stamens and yellow petals from
the blooms.  These he would dry speedily in hot air,
bottle, and send at once to big laboratories.  The listed
price was seventy-five cents a pound, but the beautiful
golden bottles of the Harvester always brought more.
The work was worth while, and he liked the location and
gathering of this particular crop: for these reasons he
always left it until the last, and then revelled in the gold
of sunshine, bird, butterfly, and flower.  Several days
were required to harvest the mullein and during the
time the man worked with nimble fingers, while his brain
was intensely occupied with the question of what to do
next in his search for the Girl.

When the work was finished, he went to the deep wood
to take a peep at acres of thrifty ginseng, and he was
satisfied as he surveyed the big bed.  Long years he
had laboured diligently; soon came the reward.  He
had not realized it before, but as he studied the situation
he saw that he either must begin this harvest at once or
employ help.  If he waited until September he could not
gather one third of the crop alone.

``But the roots will weigh less if I take them now,'' he
argued, ``and I can work at nothing in comfort until
I have located her.  I will go on with my search and
allow the ginseng to grow that much heavier.  What
a picture!  It is folly to disturb this now, for I will lose
the seed of every plant I dig, and that is worth almost as
much as the root.  It is a question whether I want to
furnish the market with seed, and so raise competition
for my bed.  I think, be jabbers, that I'll wait for this
harvest until the seed is ripe, and then bury part of a
head where I dig a root, as the Indians did.  That's
the idea!  The more I grow, the more money; and I
may need considerable for her.  One thing I'd like to
know:  Are these plants cultivated?  All the books quote
the wild at highest rates and all I've ever sold was wild.
The start grew here naturally.  What I added from the
surrounding country was wild, but through and among
it I've sown seed I bought, and I've tended it with every
care.  But this is deep wood and wild conditions.  I
think I have a perfect right to so label it.  I'll ask Doc.
And another thing I'll go through the woods west
of Onabasha where I used to find ginseng, and see if I
can get a little and then take the same amount of plants
grown here, and make a test.  That way I can discover
any difference before I go to market.  This is my gold
mine, and that point is mighty important to me, so I'll
go this very day.  I used to find it in the woods northeast
of town and on the land Jameson bought, west.  Wonder
if he lives there yet.  He should have died of pure meanness
long ago.  I'll drive to the river and hunt along
the bank.''

Early the following morning the Harvester went to
Onabasha and stopped at the hospital for news.  Finding
none, he went through town and several miles into the
country on the other side, to a piece of lowland lying
along the river bank, where he once had found and
carried home to reset a big bed of ginseng.  If he could
get only a half pound of roots from there now, they would
serve his purpose.  He went down the bank, Belshazzar
at his heels, and at last found the place.  Many trees
had been cut, but there remained enough for shade;
the fields bore the ragged, unattractive appearance of
old.  The Harvester smiled grimly as he remembered
that the man who lived there once had charged him for
damage he might do to trees in driving across his woods,
and boasted to his neighbours that a young fool was paying
for the privilege of doing his grubbing.  If Jameson
had known what the roots he was so anxious to dispose
of brought a pound on the market at that time, he would
have been insane with anger.  So the Harvester's eyes
were dancing with fun and a wry grin twisted his lips as
he clambered over the banks of the recently dredged
river, and looked at its pitiful condition and straight,
muddy flow.

``Appears to match the remainder of the Jameson
property,'' he said.  ``I don't know who he is or where he
came from, but he's no farmer.  Perhaps he uses this
land to corral the stock he buys until he can sell it again.''

He went down the embankment and began to search
for the location where he formerly had found the ginseng.
When he came to the place he stood amazed, for from
seed, roots, and plants he had missed, the growth had
sprung up and spread, so that at a rapid estimate the
Harvester thought it contained at least five pounds,
allowing for what it would shrink on account of being
gathered early.  He hesitated an instant, and thought
of coming later; but the drive was long and the loss
would not amount to enough to pay for a second trip.
About taking it, he never thought at all.  He once had
permission from the owner to dig all the shrubs, bushes,
and weeds he desired from that stretch of woods, and had
paid for possible damages that might occur.  As he bent
to the task there did come a fleeting thought that the
patch was weedless and in unusual shape for wild stuff.
Then, with swift strokes of his light mattock, he lifted
the roots, crammed them into his sack, whistled to
Belshazzar, and going back to the wagon, drove away.
Reaching home he washed the ginseng, and spread it on
a tray to dry.  The first time he wanted the mattock
he realized that he had left it lying where he had worked.
It was an implement that he had directed a blacksmith
to fashion to meet his requirements.  No store contained
anything half so useful to him.  He had worked with it
for years and it just suited him, so there was nothing to
do but go back.  Betsy was too tired to return that
day, so he planned to dig his ginseng with something
else, finish his work the following morning, and get the
mattock in the afternoon.

``It's like a knife you've carried for years, or a gun,''
muttered the Harvester.  ``I actually don't know how
to get along without it.  What made me so careless I
can't imagine.  I never before in my life did a trick like
that.  I wonder if I hurried a little.  I certainly was
free to take it.  He always wanted the stuff dug up.  Of
all the stupid tricks, Belshazzar, that was the worst.
Now Betsy and a half day of wasted time must pay for
my carelessness.  Since I have to go, I'll look a little
farther.  Maybe there is more.  Those woods used to
be full of it.''

According to this programme, the next afternoon the
Harvester again walked down the embankment of the
mourning river and through the ragged woods to the
place where the ginseng had been.  He went forward,
stepping lightly, as men of his race had walked the forest
for ages, swerving to avoid boughs, and looking straight
ahead.  Contrary to his usual custom of coming to heel
in a strange wood, Belshazzar suddenly darted around the
man and took the path they had followed the previous
day.  The animal was performing his office in life; he
had heard or scented something unusual.  The Harvester
knew what that meant.  He looked inquiringly at the
dog, glanced around, and then at the earth.  Belshazzar
proceeded noiselessly at a rapid pace over the leaves:
Suddenly the master saw the dog stop in a stiff point.
Lifting his feet lightly and straining his eyes before
him, the Harvester passed a spice thicket and came in
line.

For one second he stood as rigid as Belshazzar.  The
next his right arm shot upward full length, and began
describing circles, his open palm heavenward, and into
his face leapt a glorified expression of exultation.  Face
down in the rifled ginseng bed lay a sobbing girl.  Her
frame was long and slender, a thick coil of dark hair;
bound her head.  A second more and the Harvester bent
and softly patted Belshazzar's head.  The beast broke
point and looked up.  The man caught the dog's chin
in a caressing grip, again touched his head, moved soundless
lips, and waved toward the prostrate figure.  The
dog hesitated.  The Harvester made the same motions.
Belshazzar softly stepped over the leaves, passed around
the feet of the girl, and paused beside her, nose to earth,
softly sniffing.

In one moment she came swiftly to a sitting posture.

``Oh!'' she cried in a spasm of fright.

Belshazzar reached an investigating nose and wagged
an eager tail.

``Why you are a nice friendly dog!'' said the trembling
voice.

He immediately verified the assertion by offering his
nose for a kiss.  The girl timidly laid a hand on his head.

``Heaven knows I'm lonely enough to kiss a dog,''
she said, ``but suppose you belong to the man who stole
my ginseng, and then ran away so fast he forgot his----
his piece he digged with.''

Belshazzar pressed closer.

``I am just killed, and I don't care whose dog you are,''
sobbed the girl.

She threw her arms around Belshazzar's neck and laid
her white face against his satiny shoulder.  The Harvester
could endure no more.  He took a step forward, his face
convulsed with pain.

``Please don't!'' he begged.  ``I took your ginseng.
I'll bring it back to-morrow.  There wasn't more than
twenty-five or thirty dollars' worth.  It doesn't amount
to one tear.''

The girl arose so quickly, the Harvester could not see
how she did it.  With a startled fright on her face, and the
dark eyes swimming, she turned to him in one long look.
Words rolled from the lips of the man in a jumble.  Behind
the tears there was a dull, expressionless blue in the
girl's eyes and her face was so white that it appeared
blank.  He began talking before she could speak, in an
effort to secure forgiveness without condemnation.

``You see, I grow it for a living on land I own, and I've
always gathered all there was in the country and no one
cared.  There never was enough in one place to pay, and
no other man wanted to spend the time, and so I've always
felt free to take it.  Every one knew I did, and no
one ever objected before.  Once I paid Henry Jameson
for the privilege of cleaning it from these woods.  That
was six or seven years ago, and it didn't occur to me that
I wasn't at liberty to dig what has grown since.  I'll
bring it back at once, and pay you for the shrinkage from
gathering it too early.  There won't be much over six
pounds when it's dry.  Please, please don't feel badly.
Won't you trust me to return it, and make good the
damage I've done?''

The face of the Harvester was eager and his tones
appealing, as he leaned forward trying to make her
understand.

``Certainly!'' said the Girl as she bent to pat the dog,
while she dried her eyes under cover of the movement.
``Certainly!  It can make no difference!''

But as the Harvester drew a deep breath of relief, she
suddenly straightened to full height and looked straight
at him.

``Oh what is the use to tell a pitiful lie!'' she cried.
``It does make a difference!  It makes all the difference
in the world!  I need that money!  I need it unspeakably.
I owe a debt I must pay.  What----what did I
understand you to say ginseng is worth?''

``If you will take a few steps,'' said the Harvester, ``and
make yourself comfortable on this log in the shade, I will
tell you all I know about it.''

The girl walked swiftly to the log indicated, seated
herself, and waited.  The Harvester followed to a
respectful distance.

``I can't tell to an ounce what wet roots would weigh,''
he said as easily as he could command his voice to speak
with the heart in him beating wildly, ``and of course
they lose greatly in drying; but I've handled enough that
I know the weight I carried home will come to six pounds
at the very least.  Then you must figure on some loss,
because I dug this before it really was ready.  It does
not reach full growth until September, and if it is taken
too soon there is a decrease in weight.  I will make that
up to you when I return it.''

The troubled eyes were gazing on his face intently,
and the Harvester studied them as he talked.

``You would think, then, there would be all of six
pounds?

``Yes,'' said the Harvester, ``closer eight.  When I
replace the shrinkage there is bound to be over seven.''

``And how much did I understand you to say it brought
a pound?''

``That all depends,'' answered he.  ``If you cure it
yourself, and dry it too much, you lose in weight.  If
you carry it in a small lot to the druggists of Onabasha,
probably you will not get over five dollars for it.''

``Five?''

It was a startled cry.

``How much did you expect?'' asked the Harvester
gently.

``Uncle Henry said he thought he could get fifty cents
a pound for all I could find.''

``If your Uncle Henry has learned at last that ginseng
is a salable article he should know something about the
price also.  Will you tell me what he said, and how you
came to think of gathering roots for the market?''

``There were men talking beneath the trees one Sunday
afternoon about old times and hunting deer, and
they spoke of people who made money long ago gathering
roots and barks, and they mentioned one man who lived
by it yet.''

``Was his name Langston?''

``Yes, I remember because I liked the name.  I was
so eager to earn something, and I can't leave here just
now because Aunt Molly is very ill, so the thought came
that possibly I could gather stuff worth money, after
my work was finished.  I went out and asked questions.
They said nothing brought enough to make it pay any
one, except this ginseng plant, and the Langston man
almost had stripped the country.  Then uncle said he
used to get stuff here, and he might have got some of
that.  I asked what it was like, so they told me and I
hunted until I found that, and it seemed a quantity to
me.  Of course I didn't know it had to be dried.  Uncle
took a root I dug to a store, and they told him that it
wasn't much used any more, but they would give him
fifty cents a pound for it.  What MAKES you think you
can get five dollars?''

``With your permission,'' said the Harvester.

He seated himself on the log, drew from his pocket
an old pamphlet, and spreading it before her, ran a pencil
along the line of a list of schedule prices for common
drug roots and herbs.  Because he understood, his eyes
were very bright, and his voice a trifle crisp.  A latent
anger springing in his breast was a good curb for his
emotions.  He was closely acquainted with all of the
druggists of Onabasha, and he knew that not one of them
had offered less than standard prices for ginseng.

``The reason I think so,'' he said gently, ``is because
growing it is the largest part of my occupation, and it was
a staple with my father before me.  I am David Langston,
of whom you heard those men speak.  Since I was a
very small boy I have lived by collecting herbs and roots,
and I get more for ginseng than anything else.  Very
early I tired of hunting other people's woods for herbs,
so I began transplanting them to my own.  I moved
that bed out there seven years ago.  What you found has
grown since from roots I overlooked and seeds that fell
at that time.  Now do you think I am enough of an
authority to trust my word on the subject?''

There was not a change of expression on her white
face.

``You surely should know,'' she said wearily, ``and
you could have no possible object in deceiving me.  Please
go on.''

``Any country boy or girl can find ginseng, gather,
wash, and dry it, and get five dollars a pound.  I can
return yours to-morrow and you can cure and take it
to a druggist I will name you, and sell for that.  But if
you will allow me to make a suggestion, you can get
more.  Your roots are now on the trays of an evaporating
house.  They will dry to the proper degree desired by
the trade, so that they will not lose an extra ounce in
weight, and if I send them with my stuff to big wholesale
houses I deal with, they will be graded with the
finest wild ginseng.  It is worth more than the cultivated
and you will get closer eight dollars a pound for
it than five.  There is some speculation in it, and the
market fluctuates: but, as a rule, I sell for the highest
price the drug brings, and, at times when the season is
very dry, I set my own prices.  Shall I return yours or
may I cure and sell it, and bring you the money?''

``How much trouble would that make you?''

``None.  The work of digging and washing is already
finished.  All that remains is to weigh it and make a
memorandum of the amount when I sell.  I should very
much like to do it.  It would be a comfort to see the
money go into your hands.  If you are afraid to trust
me, I will give you the names of several people you can
ask concerning me the next time you go to the city.''

She looked at him steadily.

``Never mind that,'' she said.  ``But why do you offer
to do it for a stranger?  It must be some trouble, no
matter how small you represent it to be.''

``Perhaps I am going to pay you eight and sell for
ten.''

``I don't think you can.  Five sounds fabulous to me.
I can't believe that.  If you wanted to make money you
needn't have told me you took it.  I never would have
known.  That isn't your reason!''

``Possibly I would like to atone for those tears I
caused,'' said the Harvester.

``Don't think of that!  They are of no consequence
to any one.  You needn't do anything for me on that
account.''

``Don't search for a reason,'' said the Harvester, in
his gentlest tones.  ``Forget that feature of the case.
Say I'm peculiar, and allow me to do it because it would
be a pleasure.  In close two weeks I will bring you the
money.  Is it a bargain?''

``Yes, if you care to make it.''

``I care very much.  We will call that settled.''

``I wish I could tell you what it will mean to me,'' said
the Girl.

``If you only would,'' plead the Harvester.

`` I must not burden a stranger with my troubles.''

``But if it would make the stranger so happy!''

``That isn't possible.  I must face life and bear what
it brings me alone.''

``Not unless you choose,'' said the Harvester.  ``That
is, if you will pardon me, a narrow view of life.  It cuts
other people out of the joy of service.  If you can't tell
me, would you trust a very lovely and gentle woman I
could bring to you?''

``No more than you.  It is my affair; I must work it
out myself.''

``I am mighty sorry,'' said the Harvester.  ``I believe
you err in that decision.  Think it over a day or so, and
see if two heads are not better than one.  You will
realize when this ginseng matter is settled that you profited
by trusting me.  The same will hold good along
other lines, if you only can bring yourself to think so.
At any rate, try.  Telling a trouble makes it lighter.
Sympathy should help, if nothing can be done.  And
as for money, I can show you how to earn sums at least
worth your time, if you have nothing else you want
to do.''

The Girl bent toward him.

``Oh please do tell me!'' she cried eagerly.  ``I've tried
and tried to find some way ever since I have been here,
but every one else I have met says I can't, and nothing
seems to be worth anything.  If you only would tell me
something I could do!''

``If you will excuse my saying so,'' said the Harvester,
``it appeals to me that ease, not work, is the
thing you require.  You appear extremely worn.  Won't
you let me help you find a way to a long rest first?''

``Impossible!'' cried the Girl.  ``I know I am white
and appear ill, but truly I never have been sick in all
my life.  I have been having trouble and working too
much, but I'll be better soon.  Believe me, there is no
rest for me now.  I must earn the money I owe first.''

``There is a way, if you care to take it,'' said the
Harvester.  ``In my work I have become very well
acquainted with the chief surgeon of the city hospital.
Through him I happen to know that he has a free bed in
a beautiful room, where you could rest until you are
perfectly strong again, and that room is empty just now.
When you are well, I will tell you about the work.''

As she arose the Harvester stood, and tall and straight
she faced him.

``Impossible!'' she said.  ``It would be brutal to leave my
aunt.  I cannot pay to rest in a hospital ward, and I will
not accept charity.  If you can put me in the way of earning,
even a few cents a day, at anything I could do outside
the work necessary to earn my board here, it would bring
me closer to happiness than anything else on earth.''

``What I suggest is not impossible,'' said the Harvester
softly.  ``If you will go, inside an hour a sweet and gentle
lady will come for you and take you to ease and perfect
rest until you are strong again.  I will see that your aunt
is cared for scrupulously.  I can't help urging you.  It
is a crime to talk of work to a woman so manifestly worn
as you are.''

``Then we will not speak of it,'' said the Girl wearily.
``It is time for me to go, anyway.  I see you mean to
be very kind, and while I don't in the least understand
it, I do hope you feel I am grateful.  If half you say about
the ginseng comes true, I can make a payment worth
while before I had hoped to.  I have no words to tell you
what that will mean to me.''

``If this debt you speak of were paid, could you rest
then?''

``I could lie down and give up in peace, and I think
I would.''

``I think you wouldn't,'' said the Harvester, ``because
you wouldn't be allowed.  There are people in these days
who make a business of securing rest for the tired and
over weary, and they would come and prevent that if
you tried it.  Please let me make another suggestion.
If you owe money to some one you feel needs it and the
debt is preying on you, let's pay it.''

He drew a small check-book from his pocket and slipped
a pen from a band.

``If you will name the amount and give me the address,
you shall be free to go to the rest I ask for you inside
an hour.''

Then slowly from head to foot she looked at him.

``Why?''

``Because your face and attitude clearly indicate that
you are over tired.  Believe me, you do yourself wrong
if you refuse.''

``In what way would changing creditors rest me?''

``I thought perhaps you were owing some one who
needed the money.  I am not a rich man, but I have no
one save myself to provide for and I have funds lying
idle that I would be glad to use for you.  If you make a
point of it, when you are rested, you can repay me.''

``My creditor needs the money, but I should prefer
owing him rather than a perfect stranger.  What you
suggest would help me not at all.  I must go now.''

``Very well,'' said the Harvester.  ``If you will tell me
whom to ask for and where you live, I will come to see
you to-morrow and bring you some pamphlets.  With
these and with a little help you soon can earn any amount
a girl is likely to owe.  It will require but a little while.
Where can I find you?''

The Girl hesitated and for the first time a hint of colour
flushed her cheek.  But courage appeared to be her
strong point.

``Do you live in this part of the country?'' she asked.

``I live ten miles from here, east of Onabasha,'' he
answered.

``Do you know Henry Jameson?''

``By sight and by reputation.''

``Did you ever know anything kind or humane of him?''

``I never did.''

``My name is Ruth Jameson.  At present I am
indebted to him for the only shelter I have.  His wife
is ill through overwork and worry, and I am paying for
my bed and what I don't eat, principally, by attempting
her work.  It scarcely would be fair to Uncle Henry to
say that I do it.  I stagger around as long as I can stand,
then I sit through his abuse.  He is a pleasant man.
Please don't think I am telling you this to harrow your
sympathy further.  The reason I explain is because I
am driven.  If I do not, you will misjudge me when I
say that I only can see you here.  I understood what
you meant when you said Uncle Henry should have
known the price of ginseng if he knew it was for sale.
He did.  He knew what he could get for it, and what
he meant to pay me.  That is one of his original methods
with a woman.  If he thought I could earn anything
worth while, he would allow me, if I killed myself doing
it; and then he would take the money by force if necessary.
So I can meet you here only.  I can earn just
what I may in secret.  He buys cattle and horses and
is away from home much of the day, and when Aunt
Molly is comfortable I can have a few hours.''

``I understand,'' said the Harvester.  ``But this is an
added hardship.  Why do you remain?  Why subject
yourself to force and work too heavy for you?''

``Because his is the only roof on earth where I feel I
can pay for all I get.  I don't care to discuss it, I only
want you to say you understand, if I ask you to bring the
pamphlets here and tell me how I can earn money.''

``I do,'' said the Harvester earnestly, although his
heart was hot in protest.  ``You may be very sure that
I will not misjudge you.  Shall I come at two o'clock
to-morrow, Miss Jameson?''

``If you will be so kind.''

The Harvester stepped aside and she passed him and
crossing the rifled ginseng patch went toward a low
brown farmhouse lying in an unkept garden, beside a
ragged highway.  The man sat on the log she had vacated,
held his head between his hands and tried to think,
but he could not for big waves of joy that swept over
him when he realized that at last he had found her, had
spoken with her, and had arranged a meeting for the
morrow.

``Belshazzar,'' he said softly, ``I wish I could leave you
to protect her.  Every day you prove to me that I need
you, but Heaven knows her necessity is greater.  Bel,
she makes my heart ache until it feels like jelly.  There
seems to be just one thing to do.  Get that fool debt
paid like lightning, and lift her out of here quicker than
that.  Now, we will go and see Doc, and call off the
watch-dogs of the law.  Ahead of them, aren't we,
Belshazzar?  There is a better day coming; we feel it in our
bones, don't we, old partner?''

The Harvester started through the woods on a rush,
and as the exercise warmed his heart, he grew wonderfully
glad.  At last he had found her.  Uncertainty was
over.  If ever a girl needed a home and care he thought
she did.  He was so jubilant that he felt like crying
aloud, shouting for joy, but by and by the years of sober
repression made their weight felt, so he climbed into
the wagon and politely requested Betsy to make her
best time to Onabasha.  Betsy had been asked to make
haste so frequently of late that she at first almost doubted
the sanity of her master, the law of whose life, until
recently, had been to take his time.  Now he appeared
to be in haste every day.  She had become so accustomed
to being urged to hurry that she almost had developed
a gait; so at the Harvester's suggestion she did her level
best to Onabasha and the hospital, where she loved to
nose Belshazzar and rest near the watering tap under
a big tree.

The Harvester went down the hall and into the office
on the run, and his face appeared like a materialized
embodiment of living joy.  Doctor Carey turned at his
approach and then bounded half way across the room,
his hands outstretched.

``You've found her, David!''

The Harvester grabbed the hand of his friend and
stood pumping it up and down while he gulped at the
lump in his throat, and big tears squeezed from his eyes,
but he could only nod his proud head.

``Found her!'' exulted Doctor Carey.  ``Really found
her!  Well that's great!  Sit down and tell me, boy!
Is she sick, as we feared?  Did you only see her or did
you get to talk with her?''

``Well sir,'' said the Harvester, choking back his
emotions, ``you remember that ginseng I told you about
getting on the old Jameson place last night.  To-day,
I learned I'd lost that hand-made mattock I use most,
and I went back for it, and there she was.''

``In the country?''

``Yes sir!''

``Well why didn't we think of it before?''

``I suppose first we would have had to satisfy
ourselves that she wasn't in town, anyway.''

``Sure!  That would be the logical way to go at it!
And so you found her?''

``Yes sir, I found her!  Just Belshazzar and I!  I was
going along on my way to the place, and he ran past
me and made a stiff point, and when I came up, there she
was!''

``There she was?''

``Yes sir; there she was!''

They shook hands again.

``Then of course you spoke to her.''

``Yes I spoke to her.''

`` Were you pleased?''

``With her speech and manner?----yes.  But, Doc, if
ever a woman needed everything on earth!''

``Well did you get any kind of a start made?''

``I couldn't do so very much.  I had to go a little slow
for fear of frightening her, but I tried to get her to come
here and she won't until a debt she owes is paid, and she's
in no condition to work.''

``Got any idea how much it is?''

``No, but it can't be any large sum.  I tried to offer
to pay it, but she had no hesitation in telling me she
preferred owing a man she knew to a stranger.''

``Well if she is so particular, how did she come to tell
you first thing that she was in debt?''

The Harvester explained.

``Oh I see!'' said the doctor.  ``Well you'll have to
baby her along with the idea that she is earning money
and pay her double until you get that off her mind, and
while you are at it, put in your best licks, my boy; perk
right up and court her like a house afire.  Women like it.
All of them do.  They glory in feeling that a man is
crazy about them.''

``Well I'm insane enough over her,'' said the Harvester,
``but I'd hate like the nation for her to know it.
Seems as if a woman couldn't respect such an addle-pate
as I am lately.''

``Don't you worry about that,'' advised the doctor.
``Just you make love to her.  Go at it in the good old-
fashioned way.''

``But maybe the `good old-fashioned way' isn't my
way.''

``What's the difference whose way it is, if it wins?''

``But Kipling says:  `Each man makes love his own
way!' ''

``I seem to have heard you mention that name be
fore,'' said the doctor.  ``Do you regard him as an
authority?''

``I do!'' said the Harvester.  ``Especially when he
advises me after my own heart and reason.  Miss Jameson
is not a silly girl.  She's a woman, and twenty-four
at least.  I don't want her to care for a trick or a
pretence.  I do want her to love me.  Not that I am worth
her attention, but because she needs some strong man
fearfully, and I am ready and more `willing' than the
original Barkis.  But, like him, I have to let her know
it in my way, and court her according to the promptings
of my heart.''

``You deceive yourself!'' said the doctor flatly.  ``That's
all bosh!  Your tongue says it for the satisfaction of
your ears, and it does sound well.  You will court her
according to your ideas of the conventions, as you understand
them, and strictly in accordance with what you
consider the respect due her.  If you had followed the
thing you call the `promptings of your heart,' you would
have picked her up by main force and brought her to
my best ward, instead of merely suggesting it and giving
up when she said no.  If you had followed your heart,
you would have choked the name and amount out of her
and paid that devilish debt.  You walk away in a case
like that, and then have the nerve to come here and
prate to me about following your heart.  I'll wager my
last dollar your heart is sore because you were not allowed
to help her; but on the proposition that you followed
its promptings I wouldn't stake a penny.  That's all
tommy-rot!''

``It is,'' agreed the Harvester.  ``Utter!  But what can
a man do?''

``I don't know what you can do!  I'd have paid that
debt and brought her to the hospital.''

``I'll go and ask Mrs. Carey about your courtship.  I
want her help on this, anyway.  I can pick up Miss
Jameson and bring her here if any man can, but she is
nursing a sick woman who depends solely on her for care.
She is above average size, and she has a very decided
mind of her own.  I don't think you would use force
and do what you think best for her, if you were in my
place.  You would wait until you understood the situation
better, and knew that what you did was for the
best, ultimately.''

``I don't know whether I would or not.  One thing is
sure:  I'm mighty glad you have found her.  May I
tell my wife?''

``Please do!  And ask her if I may depend on her if
I need a woman's help.  Now I'll call off the valiant
police and go home and take a good, sound sleep.  Haven't
had many since I first saw her.''

So Betsy trotted down the valley, up the embankment,
crossed the railroad, over the levee across Singing Water,
and up the hill to the cabin.  As they passed it, the
Harvester jumped from the wagon, tossed the hitching
strap to Belshazzar, and entered.  He walked straight
to her door, unlocked it, and uncovering, went inside.
Softly he passed from piece to piece of the furniture he
had made for her, and then surveyed the walls and floor.

``It isn't half good enough,'' he said, ``but it will have
to answer until I can do better.  Surely she will know
I tried and care for that, anyway.  I wonder how long
it will take me to get her here.  Oh, if I only could know
she was comfortable and happy!  Happy!  She doesn't
appear as if she ever had heard that word.  Well this
will be a good place to teach her.  I've always enjoyed
myself here.  I'm going to have faith that I can win
her and make her happy also.  When I go to the stable
to do my work for the night if I could know she was in
this cabin and glad of it, and if I could hear her down
here singing like a happy care-free girl, I'd scarcely be
able to endure the joy of it.''



CHAPTER IX

THE HARVESTER GOES COURTING

``She is on Henry Jameson's farm, four miles west of
Onabasha,'' said the Harvester, as he opened his
eyes next morning, and laid a caressing hand on
Belshazzar's head.  ``At two o'clock we are going to see
her, and we are going to prolong the visit to the ultimate
limit, so we should make things count here before we
start.''

He worked in a manner that accomplished much.  There
seemed no end to his energy that morning.  Despatching
the usual routine, he gathered the herbs that were ready,
spread them on the shelves of the dry-house, found
time to do several things in the cabin, and polish a piece
of furniture before he ate his lunch and hitched Betsy
to the wagon.  He also had recovered his voice, and
talked almost incessantly as he worked.  When it neared
time to start he dressed carefully.  He stood before
his bookcase and selected several pamphlets published
by the Department of Agriculture.  He went to his
beds and gathered a large arm load of plants.  Then he
was ready to make his first trip to see the Dream Girl,
but it never occurred to him that he was going courting.

He had decided fully that there would be no use to try
to make love to a girl manifestly so ill and in trouble.
The first thing, it appeared to him, was to dispel the
depression, improve the health, and then do the love
making.  So, in the most business-like manner possible
and without a shade of embarrassment, the Harvester
took his herbs and books and started for the Jameson
woods.  At times as he drove along he espied something
that he used growing beside the road and stopped to
secure a specimen.

He came down the river bank and reached the ginseng
bed at half-past one.  He was purposely early.  He laid
down his books and plants, and rolled the log on which she
sat the day before to a more shaded location, where a big
tree would serve for a back rest.  He pulled away brush
and windfalls, heaped dry brown leaves, and tramped
them down for her feet.  Then he laid the books on the
log, the arm load of plants beside them, and went to the
river to wash his soiled hands.

Belshazzar's short bark told him the Girl was coming,
and between the trees he saw the dog race to meet her
and she bent to stroke his head.  She wore the same
dress and appeared even paler and thinner.  The Harvester
hurried up the bank, wiping his hands on his
handkerchief.

``Glad to see you!'' he greeted her casually.  ``I've
fixed you a seat with a back rest to-day.  Don't be
frightened at the stack of herbs.  You needn't gather
all of those.  They are only suggestions.  They are just
common roadside plants that have some medicinal value
and are worth collecting.  Please try my davenport.''

``Thank you!'' she said as she dropped on the log and
leaned her head against the tree.  It appeared as if her
eyes closed a few seconds in spite of her, and while they
were shut the Harvester looked steadily and intently on
a face of exquisite beauty, but so marred by pallor and
lines of care that search was required to recognize just
how handsome she was, and if he had not seen her in
perfection in the dream the Harvester might have missed
glorious possibilities.  To bring back that vision would
be a task worth while was his thought.  With the first
faint quiver of an eyelash the Harvester took a few
steps and bent over a plant, and as he did so the Girl's
eyes followed him.

He appeared so tall and strong, so bronzed by summer
sun and wind, his face so keen and intense, that swift
fear caught her heart.  Why was he there?  Why should
he take so much trouble for her?  With difficulty she
restrained herself from springing up and running away.
Turning with the plant in his hand the Harvester saw the
panic in her eyes, and it troubled his heart.  For an
instant he was bewildered, then he understood.

``I don't want you to work when you are not able,'' he
said in his most matter-of-fact voice, ``but if you still
think that you are, I'll be very glad.  I need help just
now, more than I can tell you, and there seem to be so
few people who can be trusted.  Gathering stuff for drugs
is really very serious business.  You see, I've a reputation
to sustain with some of the biggest laboratories in the
country, not to mention the fact that I sometimes try
compounding a new remedy for some common complaint
myself.  I rather take pride in the fact that my stuff goes
in so fresh and clean that I always get anywhere from
three to ten cents a pound above the listed prices for it.  I
want that money, but I want an unbroken record for doing
a job right and being square and careful, much more.''

He thought the appearance of fright was fading, and a
tinge of interest taking its place.  She was looking
straight at him, and as he talked he could see her summoning
her tired forces to understand and follow him, so
he continued:

``One would think that as medicines are required in
cases of life and death, collectors would use extreme caution,
but some of them are criminally careless.  It's a
common thing to gather almost any fern for male fern; to
throw in anything that will increase weight, to wash
imperfectly, and commit many other sins that lie with the
collector; beyond that I don't like to think.  I suppose
there are men who deliberately adulterate pure stuff to
make it go farther, but when it comes to drugs, I scarcely
can speak of it calmly.  I like to do a thing right.  I
raise most of my plants, bushes, and herbs.  I gather
exactly in season, wash carefully if water dare be used,
clean them otherwise if not, and dry them by a hot air
system in an evaporator I built purposely.  Each package
I put up is pure stuff, clean, properly dried, and fresh.  If
I caught any man in the act of adulterating any of it I'm
afraid he would get hurt badly--and usually I am a
peaceable man.  I am explaining this to show how
very careful you must be to keep things separate and
collect the right plants if you are going to sell stuff to
me.  I am extremely particular.''

The Girl was leaning toward him, watching his face,
and hers was slowly changing.  She was deeply interested,
much impressed, and more at ease.  When the Harvester
saw he had talked her into confidence he crossed
the leaves, and sitting on the log beside her, picked up
the books and opened one.

``Oh I will be careful,'' said the Girl.  ``If you will
trust me to collect for you, I will undertake only what
I am sure I know, and I'll do exactly as you tell me.''

``There are a dozen things that bring a price ranging
from three to fifteen cents a pound, that are in season
just now.  I suppose you would like to begin on
some common, easy things, that will bring the most
money.''

Without a breath of hesitation she answered, ``I will
commence on whatever you are short of and need most
to have.''

The heart of the Harvester gave a leap that almost
choked him, for he was vividly conscious of a broken
shoe she was hiding beneath her skirts.  He wanted to
say ``thank you,'' but he was afraid to, so he turned the
leaves of the book.

``I am working just now on mullein,'' he said.

``Oh I know mullein,'' she cried, with almost a
hint of animation in her voice.  ``The tall, yellow
flower stem rising from a circle of green felt leaves!''

``Good!'' said the Harvester.  ``What a pretty way
to describe it!  Do you know any more plants?''

``Only a few!  I had a high-school course in botany,
but it was all about flower and leaf formation, nothing
at all of what anything was good for.  I also learned
a few, drawing them for leather and embroidery designs.''

``Look here!'' cried the Harvester.  ``I came with an
arm load of herbs and expected to tell you all about
foxglove, mullein, yarrow, jimson, purple thorn apple,
blessed thistle, hemlock, hoarhound, lobelia, and everything
in season now; but if you already have a profession,
why do you attempt a new one?  Why don't you go
on drawing?  I never saw anything so stupid as most
of the designs from nature for book covers and
decorations, leather work and pottery.  They are the same
old subjects worked over and over.  If you can draw
enough to make original copies, I can furnish you with
flowers, vines, birds, and insects, new, unused, and
of exquisite beauty, for every month in the year.  I've
looked into the matter a little, because I am rather handy
with a knife, and I carve candlesticks from suitable
pieces of wood.  I always have trouble getting my
designs copied; securing something new and unusual,
never!  If you can draw just well enough to reproduce
what you see, gathering drugs is too slow and tiresome.
What you want to do is to reproduce the subjects I
will bring, and I'll buy what I want in my work, and
sell the remainder at the arts and crafts stores for you.
Or I can find out what they pay for such designs at
potteries and ceramic factories.  You have no time to
spend on herbs, when you are in the woods, if you can
draw.''

``I am surely in the woods,'' said the Girl, ``and I
know I can copy correctly.  I often made designs for
embroidery and leather for the shop mother and I worked
for in Chicago.''

``Won't they buy them of you now?''

``Undoubtedly.''

``Do they pay anything worth while?''

``I don't know how their prices compare with others.
One place was all I worked for.  I think they pay what
is fair.''

``We will find out,'' said the Harvester promptly.

``I----I don't think you need waste the time,'' faltered
the Girl.  ``I had better gather the plants for a
while at least.''

``Collecting crude drug material is not easy,'' said
the Harvester.  ``Drawing may not be either, but at
least you could sit while you work, and it should bring
you more money.  Besides, I very much want a moth
copied for a candlestick I am carving.  Won't you
draw that for me?  I have some pupae cases and the
moths will be out any day now.  If I'd bring you one,
wouldn't you just make a copy?''

The Girl gripped her hands together and stared
straight ahead of her for a second, then she turned to
him.

``I'd like to,'' she said, ``but I have nothing to work
with.  In Chicago they furnished my material at the
shop and I drew the design and was paid for the pattern.
I didn't know there would be a chance for anything like
that here.  I haven't even proper pencils.''

``Then the way for you to do this is to strip the first
mullein plants you see of the petals.  I will pay you
seventy-five cents a pound for them.  By the time you
get a few pounds I can have material you need for drawing
here and you can go to work on whatever flowers,
vines, and things you can find in the woods, with no
thanks to any one.''

``I can't see that,'' said the Girl.  ``It would appear
to me that I would be under more obligations than I
could repay, and to a stranger.''

``I figure it this way,'' said the Harvester, watching
from the corner of his eye.  ``I can sell at good prices
all the mullein flowers I can secure.  You collect for
me, I buy them.  You can use drawing tools; I get
them for you, and you pay me with the mullein or out
of the ginseng money I owe you.  You already have
that coming, and it's just as much yours as it will be ten
days from now.  You needn't hesitate a second about
drawing on it, because I am in a hurry for the moth
pattern.  I find time to carve only at night, you see.
As for being under obligations to a stranger, in the first
place all the debt would be on my side.  I'd get the drugs
and the pattern I want; and, in the second place, I
positively and emphatically refuse to be a stranger.
It would be so much better to be mutual helpers and
friends of the kind worth having; and the sooner we
begin, the sooner we can work together to good advantage.
Get that stranger idea out of your head right now,
and replace it with thoughts of a new friend, who is
willing''--the Harvester detected panic in her eyes and
ended casually--``to enter a partnership that will be of
benefit to both of us.  Partners can't be strangers, you
know,'' he finished.

``I don't know what to think,'' said the Girl.

``Never bother your head with thinking,'' advised
the Harvester with an air of large wisdom.  ``It is
unprofitable and very tiring.  Any one can see that you are
too weary now.  Don't dream of such a foolish thing as
thinking.  Don't worry over motives and obligations.
Say to yourself, `I'll enter this partnership and if it brings
me anything good, I'm that much ahead.  If it fails, I
have lost nothing.'  That's the way to look at it.''

Then before she could answer he continued:  ``Now
I want all the mullein bloom I can get.  You'll see the
yellow heads everywhere.  Strip the petals and bring
them here, and I'll come for them every day.  They
must go on the trays as fresh as possible.  On your part,
we will make out the order now.''

He took a pencil and notebook from his pocket.

``You want drawing pencils and brushes; how many,
what make and size?''

The Girl hesitated for a moment as if struggling to
decide what to do; then she named the articles.

``And paper?''

He wrote that down, and asked if there was more.

``I think,'' he said, ``that I can get this order filled
in Onabasha.  The art stores should keep these things.
And shouldn't you have water-colour paper and some
paint?''

Then there was a flash across the white face.

``Oh if I only could!'' she cried.  ``All my life I have
been crazy for a box of colour, but I never could afford
it, and of course, I can't now.  But if this splendid
plan works, and I can earn what I owe, then maybe
I can.''

``Well this `splendid plan' is going to `work,' don't
you bother about that,'' said the Harvester.  ``It has
begun working right now.  Don't worry a minute.
After things have gone wrong for a certain length of
time, they always veer and go right a while as
compensation.  Don't think of anything save that you are
at the turning.  Since it is all settled that we are to be
partners, would you name me the figures of the debt
that is worrying you?  Don't, if you mind.  I just
thought perhaps we could get along better if I knew.
Is it----say five hundred dollars?''

``Oh dear no!'' cried the Girl in a panic.  ``I never
could face that!  It is not quite one hundred, and that
seems big as a mountain to me.''

``Forget it!'' he cried.  ``The ginseng will pay more
than half; that I know.  I can bring you the cash in a
little over a week.''

She started to speak, hesitated, and at last turned to him.

``Would you mind,'' she said, ``if I asked you to keep
it until I can find a way to go to town?  It's too far to
walk and I don't know how to send it.  Would I dare
put it in a letter?''

``Never!'' said the Harvester.  ``You want a draft.
That money will be too precious to run any risks.  I'll
bring it to you and you can write a note and explain
to whom you want it paid, and I'll take it to the bank
for you and get your draft.  Then you can write a
letter, and half your worry will be over safely.''

``It must be done in a sure way,'' said the Girl.  ``If
I knew I had the money to pay that much on what I
owe, and then lost it, I simply could not endure it.  I
would lie down and give up as Aunt Molly has.''

``Forget that too!'' said the Harvester.  ``Wipe
out all the past that has pain in it.  The future is going
to be beautifully bright.  That little bird on the bush
there just told me so, and you are always safe when you
trust the feathered folk.  If you are going to live in the
country any length of time, you must know them, and
they will become a great comfort.  Are you planning
to be here long?''

``I have no plans.  After what I saw Chicago do to my
mother I would rather finish life in the open than return
to the city.  It is horrible here, but at least I'm not
hungry, and not afraid----all the time.''

``Gracious Heaven!'' cried the Harvester.  ``Do you
mean to say that you are afraid any part of the time?
Would you kindly tell me of whom, and why?''

``You should know without being told that when a
woman born and reared in a city, and all her life confined
there, steps into the woods for the first time, she's bound
to be afraid.  The last few weeks constitute my entire
experience with the country, and I'm in mortal fear
that snakes will drop from trees and bushes or spring
from the ground.  Some places I think I'm sinking,
and whenever a bush catches my skirts it seems as if
something dreadful is reaching up for me; there is a
possibility of horror lurking behind every tree and----''

``Stop!'' cried the Harvester.  ``I can't endure it!  Do
you mean to tell me that you are afraid here and now?''

She met his eyes squarely.

``Yes,'' she said.  ``It almost makes me ill to sit on
this log without taking a stick and poking all around
it first.  Every minute I think something is going to
strike me in the back or drop on my head.''

The Harvester grew very white beneath the tan,
and that developed a nice, sickly green complexion for
him.

``Am I part of your tortures?'' he asked tersely.

``Why shouldn't you be?'' she answered.  ``What do
I know of you or your motives or why you are here?''

``I have had no experience with the atmosphere that
breeds such an attitude in a girl.''

``That is a thing for which to thank Heaven.  Undoubtedly
it is gracious to you.  My life has been different.''

``Yet in mortal terror of the woods, and probably
equal fear of me, you are here and asking for work that
will keep you here.''

``I would go through fire and flood for the money I
owe.  After that debt is paid----''

She threw out her hands in a hopeless gesture.  The
Harvester drew forth a roll of bills and tossed them
into her lap.

``For the love of mercy take what you need and pay
it,'' he said.  ``Then get a floor under your feet, and try,
I beg of you, try to force yourself to have confidence
in me, until I do something that gives you the least
reason for distrusting me.''

She picked up the money and gave it a contemptuous
whirl that landed it at his feet.

``What greater cause of distrust could I have by any
possibility than just that?'' she asked.

The Harvester arose hastily, and taking several steps,
he stood with folded arms, his back turned.  The Girl
sat watching him with wide eyes, the dull blue plain
in their dusky depths.  When he did not speak, she
grew restless.  At last she slowly arose and circling
him looked into his face.  It was convulsed with a
struggle in which love and patience fought for supremacy
over honest anger.  As he saw her so close, his
lips drew apart, and his breath came deeply, but he did
not speak.  He merely stood and looked at her, and
looked; and she gazed at him as if fascinated, but
uncomprehending.

``Ruth!''

The call came roaring up the hill.  The Girl shivered
and became paler.

``Is that your uncle?'' asked the Harvester.

She nodded.

``Will you come to-morrow for your drawing materials?''

``Yes.''

``Will you try to believe that there is absolutely
nothing, either underfoot or overhead, that will harm
you?''

``Yes.''

``Will you try to think that I am not a menace to
public safety, and that I would do much to help you,
merely because I would be glad to be of service?''

``Yes.''

``Will you try to cultivate the idea that there is nothing
in all this world that would hurt you purposely?''

``Ruth!'' came a splitting scream in gruff man-tones,
keyed in deep anger.

``That SOUNDS like it!'' said the Girl, and catching up
her skirts she ran through the woods, taking a different
route toward the house.

The Harvester sat on the log and tried to think; but
there are times when the numbed brain refuses to work,
so he really sat and suffered.  Belshazzar whimpered
and licked his hands, and at last the man arose and
went with the dog to the wagon.  As they came through
Onabasha, Betsy turned at the hospital corner, but the
Harvester pulled her around and drove toward the
country.  Not until they crossed the railroad did he
lift his head and then he drew a deep breath as if starved
for pure air and spoke.  ``Not to-day Betsy!  I can't
face my friends just now.  Someway I am making an
awful fist of things.  Everything I do is wrong.  She
no more trusts me than you would a rattlesnake,
Belshazzar; and from all appearance she takes me to be
almost as deadly.  What must have been her experiences
in life to ingrain fear and distrust in her soul at that
rate?  I always knew I was not handsome, but I never
before regarded my appearance as alarming.  And I
`fixed up,' too!''

The Harvester grinned a queer little twist of a grin
that pulled and distorted his strained face.  ``Might
as well have gone with a week's beard, a soiled shirt,
and a leer!  And I've always been as decent as I knew!
What's the reward for clean living anyway, if the girl
you love strikes you like that?''

Belshazzar reached across and kissed him.  The
Harvester put his arm around the dog.  In the man's
disappointment and heart hunger he leaned his head
against the beast and said, ``I've always got you to love
and protect me, anyway, Belshazzar.  Maybe the man
who said a dog was a man's best friend was right.  You
always trusted me, didn't you Bel?  And you never
regretted it but once, and that wasn't my fault.  I
never did it!  If I did, I'm getting good and well paid
for it.  I'd rather be kicked until all the ribs of one side
are broken, Bel, than to swallow the dose she just handed
me.  I tell you it was bitter, lad!  What am I going to
do?  Can't you help me, Bel?''

Belshazzar quivered in anxiety to offer the comfort
he could not speak.

``Of course you are right!  You always are, Bel!''
said the Harvester.  ``I know what you are trying to
tell me.  Sure enough, she didn't have any dream.
I am afraid she had the bitterest reality.  She hasn't
been loving a vision of me, working and searching for
me, and I don't mean to her what she does to me.  Of
course I see that I must be patient and bide my time.
If there is anything in `like begetting like' she is bound
to care for me some day, for I love her past all expression,
and for all she feels I might as well save my breath.
But she has got to awake some day, Bel.  She can make
up her mind to that.  She can't see `why.'  Over and
over!  I wonder what she would think if I'd up and tell
her `why' with no frills.  She will drive me to it some
day, then probably the shock will finish her.  I wonder
if Doc was only fooling or if he really would do what
he said.  It might wake her up, anyway, but I'm dubious
as to the result.  How Uncle Henry can roar!  He
sounded like a fog horn.  I'd love to try my muscle
on a man like that.  No wonder she is afraid of him,
if she is of me.  Afraid!  Well of all things I ever did
expect, Belshazzar, that is the limit.''



CHAPTER X

THE CHIME OF THE BLUE BELLS

The Harvester finished his evening work and went
to examine the cocoons.  Many of the moths
had emerged and flown, but the luna cases remained
in the bottom of the box.  As he stood looking
at them one moved and he smiled.

``I'd give something if you would come out and be
ready to work on by to-morrow afternoon,'' he said.
``Possibly you would so interest her that she would
forget her fear of me.  I'd like mighty well to take
you along, because she might care for you, and I do need
the pattern for my candlestick.  Believe I'll lay you in
a warmer place.''

The first thing the next morning the Harvester looked
and found the open cocoon and the wet moth clinging
by its feet to a twig he had placed for it.

``Luck is with me!'' he exulted.  ``I'll carry you to
her and be mighty careful what I say, and maybe she will
forget about the fear.''

All the forenoon he cut and spread boneset, saffron,
and hemlock on the trays to dry.  At noon he put on a
fresh outfit, ate a hasty lunch, and drove to Onabasha.
He carried the moth in a box, and as he started he picked
up a rake.  He went to an art store and bought the
pencils and paper she had ordered.  He wanted to purchase
everything he saw for her, but he was fast learning
a lesson of deep caution.  If he took more than she
ordered, she would worry over paying, and if he refused
to accept money, she would put that everlasting ``why''
at him again.  The water-colour paper and paint he could
not forego.  He could make a desire to have the moth
coloured explain those, he thought.

Then he went to a furniture store and bought several
articles, and forgetting his law against haste, he drove
Betsy full speed to the river.  He was rather heavily
ladened as he went up the bank, and it was only one
o'clock.  There was an hour.  He rolled away the log,
raked together and removed the leaves to the ground.
He tramped the earth level and spread a large cheap porch
rug.  On this he opened and placed a little folding table
and chair.  On the table he spread the pencils, paper,
colour box and brushes, and went to the river to fill
the water cup.  Then he sat on the log he had rolled
to one side and waited.  After two hours he arose and
crept as close the house as he could through the woods,
but he could not secure a glimpse of the Girl.  He
went back and waited an hour more, and then undid
his work and removed it.  When he came to the moth
his face was very grim as he lifted the twig and helped
the beautiful creature to climb on a limb.  ``You'll
be ready to fly in a few hours,'' he said.  ``If I keep you
in a box you will ruin your wings and be no suitable
subject, and put you in a cyanide jar I will not.  I am
hurt too badly myself.  I wonder if what Doc said was
the right way!  It's certainly a temptation.''

Then he went home; and again Betsy veered at the
hospital, and once more the Harvester explained to her
that he did not want to see the doctor.  That evening
and the following forenoon were difficult, but the Harvester
lived through them, and in the afternoon went back
to the woods, spread his rug, and set up the table.  Only
one streak of luck brightened the gloom in his heart.
A yellow emperor had emerged in the night, and now
occupied the place of yesterday's luna.  She never need
know it was not the one he wanted, and it would make
an excuse for the colour box.

He was watching intently and saw her coming a long
way off.  He noticed that she looked neither right nor
left, but came straight as if walking a bridge.  As she
reached the place she glanced hastily around and then
at him.  The Harvester forgave her everything as he
saw the look of relief with which she stepped upon the
carpet.  Then she turned to him.

``I won't have to ask `why' this time,'' she said.  ``I
know that you did it because I was baby enough to tell
what a coward I am.  I'm sure you can't afford it, and
I know you shouldn't have done it, but oh, what a
comfort!  If you will promise never to do any such
expensive, foolish, kind thing again, I'll say thank you
this time.  I couldn't come yesterday, because Aunt Molly
was worse and Uncle Henry was at home all day.''

``I supposed it was something like that,'' said the
Harvester.

She advanced and handed him the roll of bills.

``I had a feeling you would be reckless,'' she said.  ``I
saw it in your face, so I came back as soon as I could
steal away, and sure enough, there lay your money and
the books and everything.  I hid them in the thicket,
so they will be all right.  I've almost prayed it wouldn't
rain.  I didn't dare carry them to the house.  Please
take the money.  I haven't time to argue about it or
strength, but of course I can't possibly use it unless
I earn it.  I'm so anxious to see the pencils and
paper.''

The Harvester thrust the money into his pocket.  The
Girl went to the table, opened and spread the paper,
and took out the pencils.

``Is my subject in here?'' she touched the colour box.

``No, the other.''

``Is it alive?  May I open it?''

``We will be very careful at first,'' said the Harvester.
``It only left its case in the night and may fly.  When
the weather is so warm the wings develop rapidly.  Perhaps
if I remove the lid----''

He took off the cover, exposing a big moth, its lovely,
pale yellow wings, flecked with heliotrope, outspread as
it clung to a twig in the box.  The Girl leaned forward.

``What is it?'' she asked.

``One of the big night moths that emerge and fly a
few hours in June.''

``Is this what you want for your candlestick?''

``If I can't do better.  There is one other I prefer,
but it may not come at a time that you can get it right.''

``What do you mean by `right'?''

``So that you can copy it before it wants to fly.''

``Why don't you chloroform and pin it until I am
ready?''

``I am not in the business of killing and impaling
exquisite creatures like that.''

``Do you mean that if I can't draw it when it is just
right you will let it go?''

``I do.''

``Why?''

``I told you why.''

``I know you said you were not in the business, but why
wouldn't you take only one you really wanted to use?''

``I would be afraid,'' replied the Harvester.

``Afraid?  You!''

``I must have a mighty good reason before I kill,''
said the man.  ``I cannot give life; I have no right to
take it away.  I will let my statement stand.  I am
afraid.''

``Of what please?''

``An indefinable something that follows me and makes
me suffer if I am wantonly cruel.''

``Is there any particular pose in which you want this
bird placed?''

``Allow me to present you to the yellow emperor,
known in the books as eacles imperialis,'' he said.  ``I
want him as he clings naturally and life size.''

She took up a pencil.

``If you don't mind,'' said the Harvester, ``would you
draw on this other paper?  I very much want the colour,
also, and you can use it on this.  I brought a box along,
and I'll get you water.  I had it all ready yesterday.''

``Did you have this same moth?''

``No, I had another.''

``Did you have the one you wanted most?''

``Yes----but it's no difference.''

``And you let it go because I was not here?''

``No.  It went on account of exquisite beauty.  If
kept in confinement it would struggle and break its
wings.  You see, that one was a delicate green, where
this is yellow, plain pale blue green, with a lavender
rib here, and long curled trailers edged with pale yellow,
and eye spots rimmed with red and black.''

As the Harvester talked he indicated the points of
difference with a pencil he had picked up; now he laid it
down and retreated beyond the limits of the rug.

``I see,'' said the Girl.  ``And this is colour?''

She touched the box.

``A few colours, rather,'' said the Harvester.  ``I
selected enough to fill the box, with the help of the clerk
who sold them to me.  If they are not right, I have
permission to return and exchange them for anything you
want.''

With eager fingers she opened the box, and bent over
it a face filled with interest.

``Oh how I've always wanted this!  I scarcely can
wait to try it.  I do hope I can have it for my very own.
Was it quite expensive?''

``No.  Very cheap!'' said the Harvester.  ``The paper
isn't worth mentioning.  The little, empty tin box was
only a few cents, and the paints differ according to
colour.  Some appear to be more than others.  I was
surprised that the outfit was so inexpensive.''

A skeptical little smile wavered on the Girl's face as
she drew her slender fingers across the trays of bright
colour.

``If one dared accept your word, you really would be
a comfort,'' she said, as she resolutely closed the box,
pushed it away, and picked up a pencil.

``If you will take the trouble to inquire at the banks,
post office, express office, hospital or of any druggist
in Onabasha, you will find that my word is exactly as
good as my money, and taken quite as readily.''

``I didn't say I doubted you.  I have no right to
do that until I feel you deceive me.  What I said was
`dared accept,' which means I must not, because I have
no right.  But you make one wonder what you would
do if you were coaxed and asked for things and led by
insinuations.''

``I can tell you that,'' said the Harvester.  ``It would
depend altogether on who wanted anything of me and
what they asked.  If you would undertake to coax and
insinuate, you never would get it done, because I'd see
what you needed and have it at hand before you had
time.''

The Girl looked at him wonderingly.

``Now don't spring your recurrent `why' on me,''
said the Harvester.  ``I'll tell you `why' some of these
days.  Just now answer me this question:  Do you want
me to remain here or leave until you finish?  Which
way would you be least afraid?''

``I am not at all afraid on the rug and with my work,''
she said.  ``If you want to hunt ginseng go by all
means.''

``I don't want to hunt anything,'' said the Harvester.
``But if you are more comfortable with me away, I'll
be glad to go.  I'll leave the dog with you.''

He gave a short whistle and Belshazzar came bounding
to him.  The Harvester stepped to the Girl's side,
and dropping on one knee, he drew his hand across the
rug close to her skirts.

``Right here, Belshazzar,'' he said.  ``Watch!  You
are on guard, Bel.''

``Well of all names for a dog!'' exclaimed the Girl.
``Why did you select that?''

``My mother named my first dog Belshazzar, and
taught me why; so each of the three I've owned since have
been christened the same.  It means `to protect' and
that is the office all of them perform; this one especially
has filled it admirably.  Once I failed him, but
he never has gone back on me.  You see he is not a
particle afraid of me.  Every step I take, he is at my
heels.''

``So was Bill Sikes' dog, if I remember.''

The Harvester laughed.

``Bel,'' he said, ``if you could speak you'd say that was
an ugly one, wouldn't you?''

The dog sprang up and kissed the face of the man
and rubbed a loving head against his breast.

``Thank you!'' said the Harvester.  ``Now lie down
and protect this woman as carefully as you ever watched
in your life.  And incidentally, Bel, tell her that she
can't exterminate me more than once a day, and the
performance is accomplished for the present.  I refuse
to be a willing sacrifice.  `So was Bill Sikes' dog!'  What
do you think of that, Bel?''

The Harvester arose and turned to go.

``What if this thing attempts to fly?'' she asked.

``Your pardon,'' said the Harvester.  ``If the emperor
moves, slide the lid over the box a few seconds, until he
settles and clings quietly again, and then slowly draw it
away.  If you are careful not to jar the table heavily
he will not go for hours yet.''

Again he turned.

``If there is no danger, why do you leave the dog?''

``For company,'' said the Harvester.  ``I thought
you would prefer an animal you are not afraid of to a
man you are.  But let me tell you there is no necessity
for either.  I know a woman who goes alone and unafraid
through every foot of woods in this part of the
country.  She has climbed, crept, and waded, and she
tells me she never saw but two venomous snakes this
side of Michigan.  Nothing ever dropped on her or
sprang at her.  She feels as secure in the woods as she
does at home.''

``Isn't she afraid of snakes?''

``She dislikes snakes, but she is not afraid or she would
not risk encountering them daily.''

``Do you ever find any?''

``Harmless little ones, often.  That is, Bel does.  He
is always nosing for them, because he understands that
I work in the earth.  I think I have encountered three
dangerous ones in my life.  I will guarantee you will
not find one in these woods.  They are too open and
too much cleared.''

``Then why leave the dog?''

``I thought,'' said the Harvester patiently, ``that your
uncle might have turned in some of his cattle, or if pigs
came here the dog could chase them away.''

She looked at him with utter panic in her face.

``I am far more afraid of a cow than a snake!'' she
cried.  ``It is so much bigger!''

``How did you ever come into these woods alone far
enough to find the ginseng?'' asked the Harvester.
``Answer me that!''

``I wore Uncle Henry's top boots and carried a rake,
and I suffered tortures,'' she replied.

``But you hunted until you found what you wanted,
and came again to keep watch on it?''

``I was driven--simply forced.  There's no use to
discuss it!''

``Well thank the Lord for one thing,'' said the
Harvester.  ``You didn't appear half so terrified at the sight
of me as you did at the mere mention of a cow.  I have
risen inestimably in my own self-respect.  Belshazzar,
you may pursue the elusive chipmunk.  I am going to
guard this woman myself, and please, kind fates, send
a ferocious cow this way, in order that I may prove my
valour.''

The Girl's face flushed slightly, and she could not
restrain a laugh.  That was all the Harvester hoped for
and more.  He went beyond the edge of the rug and
sat on the leaves under a tree.  She bent over her work
and only bird and insect notes and occasionally Belshazzar's
excited bark broke the silence.  The Harvester
stretched on the ground, his eyes feasting on the Girl.
Intensely he watched every movement.  If a squirrel
barked she gave a nervous start, so precipitate it seemed
as if it must hurt.  If a windfall came rattling down
she appeared ready to fly in headlong terror in any
direction.  At last she dropped her pencil and looked
at him helplessly.

``What is it?'' he asked.

``The silence and these awful crashes when one doesn't
know what is coming,'' she said.

``Will it bother you if I talk?  Perhaps the sound
of my voice will help?''

``I am accustomed to working when people talk, and it
will be a comfort.  I may be able to follow you, and that
will prevent me from thinking.  There are dreadful things
in my mind when they are not driven out.  Please talk!
Tell me about the herbs you gathered this morning.''

The Harvester gave the Girl one long look as she bent
over her work.  He was vividly conscious of the graceful
curves of her little figure, the coil of dark, silky hair,
softly waving around her temples and neck, and when her
eyes turned in his direction he knew that it was only the
white, drawn face that restrained him.  He was almost
forced to tell her how he loved and longed for her; about
the home he had prepared; of a thousand personal
interests.  Instead, he took a firm grip and said casually,
``Foxglove harvest is over.  This plant has to be taken
when the leaves are in second year growth and at bloom
time.  I have stripped my mullein beds of both leaves
and flowers.  I finished a week ago.  Beyond lies a
stretch of Parnassus grass that made me think of you,
it was so white and delicate.  I want you to see it.  It
will be lovely in a few weeks more.''

``You never had seen me a week ago.''

``Oh hadn't I?'' said the Harvester.  ``Well maybe
I dreamed about you then.  I am a great dreamer.
Once I had a dream that may interest you some day,
after you've overcome your fear of me.  Now this bed
of which I was speaking is a picture in September.  You
must arrange to drive home with me and see it then.''

``For what do you sell foxglove and mullein?''

``Foxglove for heart trouble, and mullein for catarrh.
I get ten cents a pound for foxglove leaves and five for
mullein and from seventy-five to a dollar for flowers
of the latter, depending on how well I preserve the colour
in drying them.  They must be sealed in bottles and
handled with extreme care.''

``Then if I wasn't too childish to be out picking them,
I could be earning seventy-five cents a pound for mullein
blooms?''

``Yes,'' said the Harvester, ``but until you learned the
trick of stripping them rapidly you scarcely could gather
what would weigh two pounds a day, when dried.  Not
to mention the fact that you would have to stand and
work mostly in hot sunshine, because mullein likes open
roads and fields and sunny hills.  Now you can sit securely
in the shade, and in two hours you can make me a
pattern of that moth, for which I would pay a designer
of the arts and crafts shop five dollars, so of course you
shall have the same.''

``Oh no!'' she cried in swift panic.  ``You were charged
too much!  It isn't worth a dollar, even!''

``On the contrary the candlestick on which I shall
use it will be invaluable when I finish it, and five is
very little for the cream of my design.  I paid just
right.  You can earn the same for all you can do.  If
you can embroider linen, they pay good prices for that,
too and wood carving, metal work, or leather things.
May I see how you are coming on?''

``Please do,'' she said.

The Harvester sprang up and looked over the Girl's
shoulder.  He could not suppress an exclamation of
delight.

``Perfect!'' he cried.  ``You can surpass their best
drafting at the shop!  Your fortune is made.  Any time
you want to go to Onabasha you can make enough to
pay your board, dress you well, and save something every
week.  You must leave here as soon as you can manage
it.  When can you go?''

``I don't know,'' she said wearily.  ``I'd hate to tell
you how full of aches I am.  I could not work much just
now, if I had the best opportunities in the world.  I
must grow stronger.''

``You should not work at anything until you are well,''
he said.  ``It is a crime against nature to drive yourself.
Why will you not allow----''

``Do you really think, with a little practice, I can
draw designs that will sell?''

The Harvester picked up the sheet.  The work was
delicate and exact.  He could see no way to improve it.

``You know it will sell,'' he said gently, ``because you
already have sold such work.''

``But not for the prices you offer.''

``The prices I name are going to be for NEW, ORIGINAL
DESIGNS.  I've got a thousand in my head, that old
Mother Nature shows me in the woods and on the water
every day.''

``But those are yours; I can't take them.''

``You must,'' said the Harvester.  ``I only see and
recognize studies; I can't materialize them, and until
they are drawn, no one can profit by them.  In this
partnership we revolutionize decorative art.  There
are actually birds besides fat robins and nondescript
swallows.  The crane and heron do not monopolize the water.
Wild rose and golden-rod are not the only flowers.  The
other day I was gathering lobelia.  The seeds are used
in tonic preparations.  It has an upright stem with
flowers scattered along it.  In itself it is not much, but
close beside it always grows its cousin, tall bell-flower.
As the name indicates, the flowers are bell shape and
I can't begin to describe their grace, beauty, and delicate
blue colour.  They ring my strongest call to worship.
My work keeps me in the woods so much I remain
there for my religion also.  Whenever I find these
flowers I always pause for a little service of my own
that begins by reciting these lines:

    `` 'Neath cloistered boughs, each floral bell that swingeth
         And tolls its perfume on the passing air,
    Makes Sabbath in the fields, and ever ringeth
         A call to prayer.''


``Beautiful!'' said the Girl.

``It's mighty convenient,'' explained the Harvester.
``By my method, you see, you don't have to wait for
your day and hour of worship.  Anywhere the blue bell
rings its call it is Sunday in the woods and in your heart.
After I recite that, I pray my prayer.''

``Go on!'' said the Girl.  ``This is no place to stop.''

``It is always one and the same prayer, and there are
only two lines of it,'' said the Harvester.  ``It runs this
way----  Let me take your pencil and I will write it
for you.''

He bent over her shoulder, and traced these lines on
a scrap of the wrapping paper:

              ``Almighty Evolver of the Universe:
         Help me to keep my soul and body clean,
    And at all times to do unto others as I would be done by.
                        Amen.''


The Girl took the slip and sat studying it; then she
raised her eyes to his face curiously, but with a tinge of
awe in them.

``I can see you standing over a blue, bell-shaped
flower reciting those exquisite lines and praying this
wonderful prayer,'' she said.  ``Yesterday you allowed
the moth you were willing to pay five dollars for a drawing
of, to go, because you wouldn't risk breaking its wings.
Why you are more like a woman!''

A red stream crimsoned the Harvester's face.

``Well heretofore I have been considered strictly
masculine,'' he said.  ``To appreciate beauty or to try to
be just commonly decent is not exclusively feminine.
You must remember there are painters, poets, musicians,
workers in art along almost any line you could
mention, and no one calls them feminine, but there is
one good thing if I am.  You need no longer fear me.
If you should see me, muck covered, grubbing in the
earth or on a raft washing roots in the lake, you would
not consider me like a woman.''

``Would it be any discredit if I did?  I think not.
I merely meant that most men would not see or hear
the blue bell at all----and as for the poem and prayer!
If the woods make a man with such fibre in his soul,
I must learn them if they half kill me.''

``You harp on death.  Try to forget the word.''

``I have faced it for months, and seen it do its grinding
worst very recently to the only thing on earth I loved or
that loved me.  I have no desire to forget!  Tell me
more about the plants.''

``Forgive me,'' said the Harvester gently.  ``Just
now I am collecting catnip for the infant and nervous
people, hoarhound for colds and dyspepsia, boneset heads
and flowers for the same purpose.  There is a heavy head
of white bloom with wonderful lacy leaves, called yarrow.
I take the entire plant for a tonic and blessed thistle
leaves and flowers for the same purpose.''

``That must be what I need,'' interrupted the Girl.
``Half the time I believe I have a little fever, but I
couldn't have dyspepsia, because I never want anything
to eat; perhaps the tonic would make me hungry.''

``Promise me you will tell that to the doctor who
comes to see your aunt, and take what he gives you.''

``No doctor comes to see my aunt.  She is merely
playing lazy to get out of work.  There is nothing the
matter with her.''

``Then why----''

``My uncle says that.  Really, she could not stand and
walk across a room alone.  She is simply worn out.''

``I shall report the case,'' said the Harvester instantly.

``You better not!'' said the Girl.  ``There must be a
mistake about you knowing my uncle.  Tell me more
of the flowers.''

The Harvester drew a deep breath and continued:

``These I just have named I take at bloom time;
next month come purple thorn apple, jimson weed, and
hemlock.''

``Isn't that poison?''

``Half the stuff I handle is.''

``Aren't you afraid?''

``Terribly,'' said the Harvester in laughing voice.
``But I want the money, the sick folk need the medicine,
and I drink water.''

The Girl laughed also.

``Look here!'' said the Harvester.  ``Why not tell
me just as closely as you can about your aunt, and
let me fix something for her; or if you are afraid to
trust me, let me have my friend of whom I spoke yesterday.''

``Perhaps I am not so much afraid as I was,'' said
the Girl.  ``I wish I could!  How could I explain where
I got it and I wonder if she would take it.''

``Give it to her without any explanation,'' said the
Harvester.  ``Tell her it will make her stronger and she
must use it.  Tell me exactly how she is, and I will fix
up some harmless remedies that may help, and can do
no harm.''

``She simply has been neglected, overworked, and
abused until she has lain down, turned her face to the
wall, and given up hope.  I think it is too late.  I
think the end will come soon.  But I wish you would
try.  I'll gladly pay----''

``Don't!'' said the Harvester.  ``Not for things that
grow in the woods and that I prepare.  Don't think of
money every minute.''

``I must,'' she said with forced restraint.  ``It is the
price of life.  Without it one suffers----horribly----
as I know.  What other plants do you gather?''

``Saffron,'' answered the Harvester.  ``A beautiful
thing!  You must see it.  Tall, round stems, lacy, delicate
leaves, big heads of bright yellow bloom, touched
with colour so dark it appears black--one of the loveliest
plants that grows.  You should see my big bed of it in
a week or two more.  It makes a picture.''

The words recalled him to the Girl.  He turned to
study her.  He forgot his commission and chafed at
conventions that prevented his doing what he saw was
required so urgently.  Fearing she would notice, he
gazed away through the forest and tried to think, to
plan.

``You are not making noise enough,'' she said.

So absorbed was the Harvester he scarcely heard her.
In an attempt to obey he began to whistle softly.  A
tiny goldfinch in a nest of thistle down and plant fibre
in the branching of a bush ten feet above him stuck her
head over the brim and inquired, ``P'tseet?''  ``Pt'see!''
answer the Harvester.  That began the duet.  Before
the question had been asked and answered a half dozen
times a catbird intruded its voice and hearing a reply
came through the bushes to investigate.  A wren followed
and became very saucy.  From----one could not see
where, came a vireo, and almost at the same time a
chewink had something to say.

Instantly the Harvester answered.  Then a blue jay
came chattering to ascertain what all the fuss was about,
and the Harvester carried on a conversation that called
up the remainder of the feathered tribe.  A brilliant
cardinal came tearing through the thicket, his beady
black eyes snapping, and demanded to know if
any one were harming his mate, brooding under a
wild grape leaf in a scrub elm on the river embankment.
A brown thrush silently slipped like a snake between
shrubs and trees, and catching the universal excitement,
began to flirt his tail and utter a weird, whistling
cry.

With one eye on the bird, and the other on the Girl
sitting in amazed silence, the Harvester began working
for effect.  He lay quietly, but in turn he answered a
dozen birds so accurately they thought their mates were
calling, and closer and closer they came.  An oriole in
orange and black heard his challenge, and flew up the
river bank, answering at steady intervals for quite a
time before it was visible, and in resorting to the last
notes he could think of a quail whistled ``Bob White''
and a shitepoke, skulking along the river bank, stopped
and cried, ``Cowk, cowk!''

At his limit of calls the Harvester changed his notes
and whistled and cried bits of bird talk in tone with
every mellow accent and inflection he could manage.
Gradually the excitement subsided, the birds flew and
tilted closer, turned their sleek heads, peered with bright
eyes, and ventured on and on until the very bravest,
the wren and the jay, were almost in touch.  Then,
tired of hunting, Belshazzar came racing and the little
feathered people scattered in precipitate flight.

``How do you like that kind of a noise?'' inquired the
Harvester.

The Girl drew a deep breath.

``Of course you know that was the most exquisite
sight I ever saw,'' she said.  ``I never shall forget it.
I did not think there were that many different birds in
the whole world.  Of all the gaudy colours!  And they
came so close you could have reached out and touched
them.''

``Yes,'' said the Harvester calmly.  ``Birds are never
afraid of me.  At Medicine Woods, when I call them
like that, many, most of them, in fact, eat from my
hand.  If you ever have looked at me enough to notice
bulgy pockets, they are full of wheat.  These birds
are strangers, but I'll wager you that in a week I can
make them take food from me.  Of course, my own
birds know me, because they are around every day.
It is much easier to tame them in winter, when the
snow has fallen and food is scarce, but it only takes
a little while to win a bird's confidence at any
season.''

``Birds don't know what there is to be afraid of,''
she said.

``Your pardon,'' said the Harvester, ``but I am familiar
with them, and that is not correct.  They have more
to fear than human beings.  No one is going to kill you
merely to see if he can shoot straight enough to hit.
Your life is not in danger because you have magnificent
hair that some woman would like for an ornament.
You will not be stricken out in a flash because there are
a few bits of meat on your frame some one wants to eat.
No one will set a seductive trap for you, and, if you are
tempted to enter it, shut you from freedom and natural
diet, in a cage so small you can't turn around without
touching bars.  You are in a secure and free position
compared with the birds.  I also have observed that
they know guns, many forms of traps, and all of them
decide by the mere manner of a man's passing
through the woods whether he is a friend or an
enemy.  Birds know more than many people realize.
They do not always correctly estimate gun range, they
are foolishly venturesome at times when they want
food, but they know many more things than most
people give them credit for understanding.  The greatest
trouble with the birds is they are too willing
to trust us and be friendly, so they are often
deceived.''

``That sounds as if you were right,'' said the Girl.

``I am of the woods, so I know I am,'' answered the
Harvester.

``Will you look at this now?''

He examined the drawing closely.

``Where did you learn?'' he inquired.

``My mother.  She was educated to her finger tips.
She drew, painted, played beautifully, sang well, and she
had read almost all the best books.  Besides what I learned
at high school she taught me all I know.  Her embroidery
always brought higher prices than mine, try as I
might.  I never saw any one else make such a dainty,
accurate little stitch as she could.''

``If this is not perfect, I don't know how to criticise
it.  I can and will use it in my work.  But I have one
luna cocoon remaining and I would give ten dollars for
such a drawing of the moth before it flies.  It may open
to-night or not for several days.  If your aunt should
be worse and you cannot come to-morrow and the moth
emerges, is there any way in which I could send it to
you?''

``What could I do with it?''

``I thought perhaps you could take a piece of paper
and the pencils with you, and secure an outline
in your room.  It need not be worked up with
all the detail in this.  Merely a skeleton sketch would
do.  Could I leave it at the house or send it with
some one?''

``No!  Oh no!'' she cried.  ``Leave it here.  Put it
in a box in the bushes where I hid the books.
What are you going to do with these things?''

``Hide them in the thicket and scatter leaves over
them.''

``What if it rains?''

``I have thought of that.  I brought a few yards of
oilcloth to-day and they will be safe and dry if it pours.''

``Good!'' she said.  ``Then if the moth comes out
you bring it, and if I am not here, put it under the cloth
and I will run up some time in the afternoon.  But
if I were you, I would not spread the rug until you
know if I can remain.  I have to steal every minute I
am away, and any day uncle takes a notion to stay at
home I dare not come.''

``Try to come to-morrow.  I am going to bring some
medicine for your aunt.''

``Put it under the cloth if I am not here; but I will
come if I can.  I must go now; I have been away far
too long.''

The Harvester picked up one of the drug pamphlets,
laid the drawing inside it, and placed it with his other
books.  Then he drew out his pocket book and laid a
five-dollar bill on the table and began folding up the
chair and putting away the things.  The Girl looked at
the money with eager eyes.

``Is that honestly what you would pay at the arts
and crafts place?''

``It is the customary price for my patterns.''

``And are you sure this is as good?''

``I can bring you some I have paid that for, and let
you see for yourself that it is better.''

``I wish you would!'' she cried eagerly.  ``I need that
money, and I would like to have it dearly, if I really have
earned it, but I can't touch it if I have not.''

``Won't you accept my word?''

``No.  I will see the other drawings first, and if I
think mine are as good, I will be glad to take the money
to-morrow.''

``What if you can't come?''

``Put them under the oilcloth.  I watch all the time
and I think Uncle Henry has trained even the boys so
they don't play in the river on his land.  I never see a
soul here; the woods, house, and everything is desolate
until he comes home and then it is like----'' she paused.

``I'll say it for you,'' said the Harvester promptly.
``Then it is like hell.''

``At its worst,'' supplemented the Girl.  Taking pencils
and a sheet of paper she went swiftly through the woods.
Before she left the shelter of the trees, the Harvester
saw her busy her hands with the front of her dress, and
he knew that she was concealing the drawing material.
The colour box was left, and he said things as he put
it with the chair and table, covered them with the rug
and oilcloth, and heaped on a layer of leaves.

Then he drove to the city and Betsy turned at the
hospital corner with no interference.  He could face his
friend that day.  Despite all discouragements he felt
reassured.  He was progressing.  Means of communication
had been established.  If she did not come,
he could leave a note and tell her if the moth had not
emerged and how sorry he was to have missed seeing
her.

``Hello, lover!'' cried Doctor Carey as the Harvester
entered the office.  ``Are you married yet?''

``No.  But I'm going to be,'' said the Harvester with
confidence.

``Have you asked her?''

``No.  We are getting acquainted.  She is too close to
trouble, too ill, and too worried over a sick relative for
me to intrude myself; it would be brutal, but it's a
temptation.  Doc, is there any way to compel a man to provide
medical care for his wife?''

``Can he afford it?''

``Amply.  Anything!  Worth thousands in land and
nobody knows what in money.  It's Henry Jameson.''

``The meanest man I ever knew.  If he has a wife it's
a marvel she has survived this long.  Won't he provide
for her?''

``I suppose he thinks he has when she has a bed to lie
on and a roof to cover her.  He won't supply food she
can eat and medicine.  He says she is lazy.''

``What do you think?''

``I quote Miss Jameson.  She says her aunt is slowly
dying from overwork and neglect.''

``David, doesn't it seem pretty good, when you say
`Miss Jameson'?''

``Loveliest sound on earth, except the remainder of it.''

``What's that?''

``Ruth!''

``Jove! That is a beautiful name.  Ruth Langston.
It will go well, won't it?''

``Music that the birds, insects, Singing Water, the
trees, and the breeze can't ever equal.  I'm holding on
with all my might, but it's tough, Doc.  She's in such a
dreadful place and position, and she needs so much.
She is sick.  Can't you give me a prescription for each
of them?''

``You just bet I can,'' said the doctor, ``if you can
engineer their taking them.''

``I suppose you'd hold their noses and pour stuff down
them.''

``I would if necessary.''

``Well, it is.''

``All right----I'll fix something, and you see that
they use it.''

``I can try,'' said the Harvester.

``Try!  Pah!  You aren't half a man!''

``That's a half more than being a woman, anyway.''

``She called you feminine, did she?'' cried the doctor,
dancing and laughing.  ``She ought to see you harvesting
skunk cabbage and blue flag or when you are angry
enough.''

The doctor left the room and it was a half hour before
he returned.

``Try that on them according to directions,'' he said,
handing over a couple of bottles.

``Thank you!'' said the Harvester, ``I will!''

``That sounds manly enough.''

``Oh pother!  It's not that I'm not a man, or a laggard
in love; but I'd like to know what you'd do to a girl
dumb with grief over the recent loss of her mother, who
was her only relative worth counting, sick from God
knows what exposure and privation, and now a dying
relative on her hands.  What could you do?''

``I'd marry her and pick her out of it!''

``I wouldn't have her, if she'd leave a sick woman for
me!''

``I wouldn't either.  She's got to stick it out until
her aunt grows better, and then I'll go out there and
show you how to court a girl.''

``I guess not!  You keep the girl you did court, courted,
and you'll have your hands full.  How does that appear
to you?''

The Harvester opened the pamphlet he carried and
held up the drawing of the moth.

The doctor turned to the light.

``Good work!'' he cried.  ``Did she do that?''

``She did.  In a little over an hour.''

``Fine!  She should have a chance.''

``She is going to.  She is going to have all the
opportunity that is coming to her.''

``Good for you, David!  Any time I can help!''

The Harvester replaced the sketch and went to the
wagon; but he left Belshazzar in charge, and visited the
largest dry goods store in Onabasha, where he held a
conference with the floor walker.  When he came out he
carried a heaping load of boxes of every size and shape,
with a label on each.  He drove to Medicine Woods
singing and whistling.

``She didn't want me to go, Belshazzar!'' he chuckled
to the dog.  ``She was more afraid of a cow than she
was of me.  I made some headway to-day, old boy.
She doesn't seem to have a ray of an idea what I am
there for, but she is going to trust me soon now; that is
written in the books.  Oh I hope she will be there to-
morrow, and the luna will be out.  Got half a notion to
take the case and lay it in the warmest place I can find.
But if it comes out and she isn't there, I'll be sorry.
Better trust to luck.''

The Harvester stabled Betsy, fed the stock, and visited
with the birds.  After supper he took his purchases
and entered her room.  He opened the drawers of the
chest he had made, and selecting the labelled boxes he
laid them in.  But not a package did he open.  Then
he arose and radiated conceit of himself.

``I'll wager she will like those,'' he commented proudly,
``because Kane promised me fairly that he would have the
right things put up for a girl the size of the clerk I selected
for him, and exactly what Ruth should have.  That girl
was slenderer and not quite so tall, but he said everything
was made long on purpose.  Now what else should I get?''

He turned to the dressing table and taking a notebook
from his pocket made this list:
    Rugs for bed and bath room.
    Mattresses, pillows and bedding,
    Dresses for all occasions.
    All kinds of shoes and overshoes.


``There are gloves, too!'' exclaimed the Harvester.
``She has to have some, but how am I going to know what
is right?  Oh, but she needs shoes!  High, low, slippers,
everything!  I wonder what that clerk wears.  I don't
believe shoes would be comfortable without being fitted,
or at least the proper size.  I wonder what kind of dresses
she likes.  I hope she's fond of white.  A woman always
appears loveliest in that.  Maybe I'd better buy what
I'm sure of and let her select the dresses.  But I'd love
to have this room crammed with girl-fixings when she
comes.  Doesn't seem as if she ever has had any little
luxuries.  I can't miss it on anything a woman uses.
Let me think!''

Slowly he wrote again:
         Parasols.
         Fans.
         Veils.
         Hats.


``I never can get them!  I think that will keep me busy
for a few days,'' said the Harvester as he closed the door
softly, and went to look at the pupae cases.  Then he
carved on the vine of the candlestick for her dressing
table; with one arm around Belshazzar, re-read the story
of John Muir's dog, went into the lake, and to bed.
Just as he was becoming unconscious the beast lifted an
inquiring head and gazed at the man.

``More 'fraid of cow,'' the Harvester was muttering
in a sleepy chuckle.



CHAPTER XI

DEMONSTRATED COURTSHIP

When the Harvester saw the Girl coming toward
the woods, he spread the rug, opened and
placed the table and chair, laid out the colour
box, and another containing the last luna.

``Did the green one come out?'' she asked, touching
the box lightly.

``It did!'' said the Harvester proudly, as if he were
responsible for the performance.  ``It is an omen!  It
means that I am to have my long-coveted pattern for
my best candlestick.  It also clearly indicates that
the gods of luck are with me for the day, and I
get my way about everything.  There won't be the
least use in your asking `why' or interposing objections.
This is my clean sweep.  I shall be fearfully
dictatorial and you must submit, because the fates
have pointed out that they favour me to-day, and
if you go contrary to their decrees you will have a
bad time.''

The Girl's smile was a little wan.  She sank on a chair
and picked up a pencil.

``Lay that down!'' cried the Harvester.  ``You haven't
had permission from the Dictator to begin drawing.  You
are to sit and rest a long time.''

``Please may I speak?'' asked the Girl.

The Harvester grew foolishly happy.  Was she really
going to play the game?  Of course he had hoped, but
it was a hope without any foundation.

``You may,'' he said soberly.

``I am afraid that if you don't allow me to draw the
moth at once, I'll never get it done.  I dislike to mention
it on your good day, but Aunt Molly is very restless.  I
got a neighbour's little girl to watch her and call me if
I'm wanted.  It's quite certain that I must go soon, so if
you would like the moth----''

``When luck is coming your way, never hurry it!  You
always upset the bowl if you grow greedy and crowd.
If it is a gamble whether I get this moth, I'll take the
chance; but I won't change my foreordained programme
for this afternoon.  First, you are to sit still ten minutes,
shut your eyes, and rest.  I can't sing, but I can whistle,
and I'm going to entertain you so you won't feel alone.
Ready now!''

The Girl leaned her elbows on the table, closed her
eyes, and pressed her slender white hands over them.

``Please don't call the birds,'' she said.  ``I can't rest
if you do.  It was so exciting trying to see all of them
and guess what they were saying.''

``No,'' said the Harvester gently.  ``This ten minutes
is for relaxation, you know.  You ease every muscle,
sink limply on your chair, lean on the table, let go all
over, and don't think.  Just listen to me.  I assure you
it's going to be perfectly lovely.''

Watching intently he saw the strained muscles
relaxing at his suggestion and caught the smile over the
last words as he slid into a soft whistle.  It was an
easy, slow, old-fashioned tune, carrying along gently,
with neither heights nor depths, just monotonous, sleepy,
soothing notes, that went on and on with a little ripple
of change at times, only to return to the theme, until at
last the Girl lifted her head.

``It's away past ten minutes,'' she said, ``but that was
a real rest.  Truly, I am better prepared for work.''

``Broke the rule, too!'' said the Harvester.  ``It was,
for me to say when time was up.  Can't you allow me
to have my way for ten minutes?''

``I am so anxious to see and draw this moth,'' she
answered.  ``And first of all you promised to bring the
drawings you have been using.''

``Now where does my programme come in?'' inquired
the Harvester.  ``You are spoiling everything, and I
refuse to have my lucky day interfered with; therefore
we will ignore the suggestion until we arrive at the place
where it is proper.  Next thing is refreshments.''

He arose and coming over cleared the table.  Then
he spread on it a paper tray cloth with a gay border,
and going into the thicket brought out a box and a big
bucket containing a jug packed in ice.  The Girl's eyes
widened.  She reached down, caught up a piece, and
holding it to drip a second started to put it in her mouth.

``Drop that!'' commanded the Harvester.  ``That's
a very unhealthful proceeding.  Wait a minute.''

From one end of the box he produced a tin of wafers
and from the other a plate.  Then he dug into the ice
and lifted several different varieties of chilled fruit.  From
the jug he poured a combination that he made of the
juices of oranges, pineapples, and lemons.  He set the
glass, rapidly frosting in the heat, and the fruit before
the Girl.

``Now!'' he said.

For one instant she stared at the table.  Then she
looked at him and in the depths of her dark eyes was an
appeal he never forgot.

``I made that drink myself, so it's all right,'' he
assured her.  ``There's a pretty stiff touch of pineapple
in it, and it cuts the cobwebs on a hot day.  Please
try it!''

``I can't!'' cried the Girl with a half-sob.  ``Think of
Aunt Molly!''

``Are you fond of her?''

``No.  I never saw her until a few weeks ago.  Since
then I've seen nothing save her poor, tired back.  She lies
in a heap facing the wall.  But if she could have things
like these, she needn't suffer.  And if my mother could
have had them she would be living to-day.  Oh Man,
I can't touch this.''

``I see,'' said the Harvester.

He reached over, picked up the glass, and poured its
contents into the jug.  He repacked the fruit and closed
the wafer box.  Then he made a trip to the thicket and
came out putting something into his pocket.

``Come on!'' he said.  ``We are going to the house.''

She stared at him.

``I simply don't dare.''

``Then I will go alone,'' said the Harvester, picking
up the bucket and starting.

The Girl followed him.

``Uncle Henry may come any minute,'' she urged.

``Well if he comes and acts unpleasantly, he will get
what he richly deserves.''

``And he will make me pay for it afterward.''

``Oh no he won't!'' said the Harvester, ``because I'll
look out for that.  This is my lucky day.  He isn't going
to come.''

When he reached the back door he opened it and
stepped inside.  Of all the barren places of crude,
disheartening ugliness the Harvester ever had seen, that was
the worst.

``I want a glass and a spoon,'' he said.

The Girl brought them.

``Where is she?''

``In the next room.''

At the sound of their voices a small girl came to the
kitchen door.

``How do you do?'' inquired the Harvester.  ``Is Mrs.
Jameson asleep?''

``I don't know,'' answered the child.  ``She just lies
there.''

The Harvester gave her the glass.  ``Please fill that
with water,'' he said.  Then he picked up the bucket and
went into the front room.  When the child came with
the water he took a bottle from his pocket, filled the spoon,
and handed it to her.

``Hold that steadily,'' he said.

Then he slid his strong hands under the light frame and
turned the face of the faded little creature toward him.

``I am a Medicine Man, Mrs. Jameson,'' he said casually.
``I heard you were sick and I came to see if a
little of this stuff wouldn't brace you up.  Open your
lips.''

He held out the spoon and the amazed woman swallowed
the contents before she realized what she was
doing.  Then the Harvester ran a hand under her shoulders
and lifting her gently he tossed her pillow with
the other hand.

``You are a light little body, just like my mother,''
he commented.  ``Now I have something else sick people
sometimes enjoy.''

He held the fruit juice to her lips as he slightly raised
her on the pillow.  Her trembling fingers lifted and
closed around the sparkling glass.

``Oh it's cool!'' she gasped.

``It is,'' said the Harvester, ``and sour!  I think you
can taste it.  Try!''

She drank so greedily he drew away the glass and
urged caution, but the shaking fingers clung to him and
the wavering voice begged for more.

``In a minute,'' said the Harvester gently.  But the
fevered woman would not wait.  She drank the cooling
liquid until she could take no more.  Then she watched
him fill a small pitcher and pack it in a part of the ice
and lay some fruit around it.

``Who, Ruth?'' she panted.

``A Medicine Man who heard about you.''

``What will Henry say?''

``He won't know,'' explained the Girl, smoothing the
hot forehead.  ``I'll put it in the cupboard, and slip it
to you while he is out of the room.  It will make you
strong and well.''

``I don't want to be strong and well and suffer it all
over again.  I want to rest.  Give me more of the cool
drink.  Give me all I want, then I'll go to sleep.''

``It's wonderful,'' said the Girl.  ``That's more than
I've heard her talk since I came.  She is much stronger.
Please let her have it.''

The Harvester assented.  He gave the child some of
the fruit, and told her to sit beside the bed and hold the
drink when it was asked for.  She agreed to be very
careful and watchful.  Then he picked up the bucket,
and followed by the Girl, returned to the woods.

``Now we have to begin all over again,'' he said, as
she seated herself at the table.  ``Because of the walk in
the heat, this time the programme is a little different.''

He replaced the wafer box and opened it, filled the
glass, and heaped the cold fruit.

``Your aunt is going to have a refreshing sleep now,''
he said, ``and your mind can be free about her for an hour
or two.  I am very sure your mother would not want you
deprived of anything because she missed it, so you are
to enjoy this, if you care for it.  At least try a sample.''

The Girl lifted the glass to her lips with a trembling
hand.

``I'm like Aunt Molly,'' she said; ``I wish I could drink
all I could swallow, and then lie down and go to sleep
forever.  I suppose this is what they have in Heaven.''

``No, it's what they drink all over earth at present,
but I have a conceit of my own brand.  Some of it is
too strong of one fruit or of the other, and all too sweet
for health.  This is compounded scientifically and it's
just right.  If you are not accustomed to cold drinks,
go slowly.''

``You can't scare me,'' said the Girl; ``I'm going to
drink all I want.''

There was a note of excitement in the Harvester's
laugh.

``You must have some, too!''

``After a while,'' he said.  ``I was thirsty when I made
it, so I don't care for any more now.  Try the fruit and
those wafers.  Of course they are not home made--
they are the best I could do at a bakery.  Take time
enough to eat slowly.  I'm going to tell you a tale while
you lunch, and it's about a Medicine Man named David
Langston.  It's a very peculiar story, but it's quite
true.  This man lives in the woods east of Onabasha,
accompanied by his dog, horse, cow, and chickens, and
a forest full of birds, flowers, and matchless trees.  He
has lived there in this manner for six long years, and
every spring he and his dog have a seance and agree
whether he shall go on gathering medicinal herbs and
trying his hand at making medicine or go to the city
and live as other men.  Always the dog chooses to remain
in the woods.

``Then every spring, on the day the first bluebird comes,
the dog also decides whether the man shall go on alone
or find a mate and bring her home for company.  Each
year the dog regularly has decided that they live as
always.  This spring, for some unforeseen reason, he
changed his mind, and compelled the man, according to
his vow in the beginning, to go courting.  The man was
so very angry at the idea of having a woman in his home,
interfering with his work, disturbing his arrangements,
and perhaps wanting to spend more money than he could
afford, that he struck the dog for making that decision;
struck him for the very first time in his life----I believe
you'd like those apricots.  Please try one.''

``Go on with the story,'' said the Girl, sipping
delicately but constantly at the frosty glass.

The Harvester arose and refilled it.  Then he dropped
pieces of ice over the fruit.

``Where was I?'' he inquired casually.

``Where you struck Belshazzar, and it's no wonder,''
answered the Girl.

Without taking time to ponder that, the Harvester
continued:

``But that night the man had a wonderful, golden
dream.  A beautiful girl came to him, and she was so
gracious and lovely that he was sufficiently punished
for striking his dog, because he fell unalterably in love
with her.''

``Meaning you?'' interrupted the Girl.

``Yes,'' said the Harvester, ``meaning me.  I----if
you like----fell in love with the girl.  She came so
alluringly, and I was so close to her that I saw her better
than I ever did any other girl, and I knew her for all time.
When she went, my heart was gone.''

``And you have lived without that important organ
ever since?''

``Without even the ghost of it!  She took it with her.
Well, that dream was so real, that the next day I began
building over my house, making furniture, and planting
flowers for her; and every day, wherever I went, I watched
for her.''

``What nonsense!''

``I can't see it.''

``You won't find a girl you dreamed about in a
thousand years.''

``Wrong!'' cried the Harvester triumphantly.  ``Saw
her in little less than three months, but she vanished and
it took some time and difficult work before I located
her again; but I've got her all solid now, and she doesn't
escape.''

``Is she a `lovely and gracious lady'?''

``She is!'' said the Harvester, with all his heart.

``Young and beautiful, of course!''

``Indeed yes!''

``Please fill this glass.  I told you what I was going
to do.''

The Harvester refilled the glass and the Girl drained it.

``Now won't you set aside these things and allow me
to go to work?'' she asked.  ``My call may come any
minute, and I'll never forgive myself if I waste time, and
don't draw your moth pattern for you.''

``It's against my principles to hurry, and besides, my
story isn't finished.''

``It is,'' said the Girl.  ``She is young and lovely, gentle
and a lady, you have her `all solid,' and she can't `escape';
that's the end, of course.  But if I were you, I wouldn't
have her until I gave her a chance to get away, and saw
whether she would if she could.''

``Oh I am not a jailer,'' said the Harvester.  ``She shall
be free if I cannot make her love me; but I can, and I
will; I swear it.''

``You are not truly in earnest?''

``I am in deadly earnest.''

``Honestly, you dreamed about a girl, and found the
very one?''

``Most certainly, I did.''

``It sounds like the wildest romancing.''

``It is the veriest reality.''

``Well I hope you win her, and that she will be
everything you desire.''

``Thank you,'' said the Harvester.  ``It's written in
the book of fate that I succeed.  The very elements are
with me.  The South Wind carried a message to her for
me.  I am going to marry her, but you could make it
much easier for me if you would.''

``I!  What could I do?'' cried the Girl.

``You could cease being afraid of me.  You could
learn to trust me.  You could try to like me, if you see
anything likeable about me.  That would encourage me
so that I could tell you of my Dream Girl, and then you
could show me how to win her.  A woman always knows
about those things better than a man.  You could be the
greatest help in all the world to me, if only you would.''

``I couldn't possibly!  I can't leave here.  I have no
proper clothing to appear before another girl.  She would
be shocked at my white face.  That I could help you is
the most improbable dream you have had.''

``You must pardon me if I differ from you, and persist
in thinking that you can be of invaluable assistance to
me, if you will.  But you can't influence my Dream
Girl, if you fear and distrust me yourself.  Promise me
that you will help me that much, anyway.''

``I'll do all I can.  I only want to make you see that
I am in no position to grant any favours, no matter how
much I owe you or how I'd like to.  Is the candlestick
you are carving for her?''

``It is,'' said the Harvester.  ``I am making a pair of
maple to stand on a dressing table I built for her.  It is
unusually beautiful wood, I think, and I hope she will
be pleased with it.''

``Please take these things away and let me begin.  This
is the only thing I can see that I can do for you, and the
moth will want to fly before I have finished.''

The Harvester cleared the table and placed the box,
while the Girl spread the paper and began work eagerly.

``I wonder if I knew there were such exquisite things
in all the world,'' she said.  ``I scarcely think I did.  I am
beginning to understand why you couldn't kill one.  You
could make a chair or a table, and so you feel free to destroy
them; but it takes ages and Almighty wisdom to evolve
a creature like this, so you don't dare.  I think no one else
would if they really knew.  Please talk while I work.''

``Is there a particular subject you want discussed?''

``Anything but her.  If I think too strongly of her, I
can't work so well.''

``Your ginseng is almost dry,'' said the Harvester.
``I think I can bring you the money in a few days.''

``So soon!'' she cried.

``It dries day and night in an even temperature, and
faster than you would believe.  There's going to be
between seven and eight pounds of it, when I make up
what it has shrunk.  It will go under the head of the
finest wild roots.  I can get eight for it sure.''

``Oh what good news!'' cried the Girl.  ``This is my
lucky day, too.  And the little girl isn't coming, so Aunt
Molly must be asleep.  Everything goes right!  If only
Uncle Henry wouldn't come home!''

``Let me fill your glass,'' proffered the Harvester.

``Just half way, and set it where I can see it,'' said the
Girl.  She worked with swift strokes and there was a
hint of colour in her face, as she looked at him.  ``I
hope you won't think I'm greedy,'' she said, ``but truly,
that's the first thing I've had that I could taste in----I
can't remember when.''

``I'll bring a barrel to-morrow,'' offered the Harvester,
``and a big piece of ice wrapped in coffee sacking.''

``You mustn't think of such a thing!  Ice is expensive
and so are fruits.''

``Ice costs me the time required to saw and pack it at
my home.  I almost live on the fruit I raise.  I confess
to a fondness for this drink.  I have no other personal
expenses, unless you count in books, and a very few
clothes, such as I'm wearing; so I surely can afford all
the fruit juice I want.''

``For yourself, yes.''

``Also for a couple of women or I am a mighty poor
attempt at a man,'' said the Harvester.  ``This is my
day, so you are not to talk, because it won't do any good.
Things go my way.''

``Please see what you think of this,'' she said.

The Harvester arose and bent over her.

``That will do finely,'' he answered.  ``You can stop.
I don't require all those little details for carving, I just
want a good outline.  It is finished.  See here!''

He drew some folded papers from his pocket and laid
them before her.

``Those are what I have been working from,'' he said.

The Girl took them and studied each carefully.

``If those are worth five dollars to you,'' she said gently,
``why then I needn't hesitate to take as much for mine.
They are superior.''

``I should say so,'' laughed the Harvester as he took
up the drawing and laid down the money.

``If you would make it half that much I'd feel better
about it,'' she said.

``How could I?'' asked the Harvester.  ``Your fingers
are well trained and extremely skilful.  Because some
one has not been paying you enough for your work is
no reason why I should keep it up.  From now on you
must have what others get.  As soon as you can arrange
for work, I want to tell you about some designs I have
studied out from different things, show you the plants
and insects, and have you make some samples.  I'll
send them to proper places, and see what experts say
about the ideas and drawing.  Work in the woods is
healthful, with proper precautions; it's easy compared
with the exactions of being bound to sewing or embroidering
in the confinement of a room; it's vividly interesting
in the search for new subjects, changes of material, and
differing harmonious combinations; it's truly artistic; and
it brings the prices high grade stuff always does.''

``Almost you give me hope,'' said the Girl.  ``Almost,
Man----almost!  Since mother died, I haven't thought
or planned beyond paying for the medicine she took and
the shelter she lies in.  Oh I didn't mean to say that----!''

She buried her face in her hands.  The Harvester
suffered until he scarcely knew how to bear it.

``Please finish,'' he begged.  ``You hadn't planned
beyond the debt, you were saying----''

The Girl lifted her tired, strained face.

``Give me a little more of that delicious drink,'' she
said.  ``I am ravenous for it.  It puts new life in me.
This and what you say bring a far away, misty vision
of a clean, bright, peaceful room somewhere, and work
one could love and live on in comfort; enough to give a
desire to finish life to its natural end.  Oh Man, you
make me hope in spite of myself!''

`` `Praise God from whom all blessings flow;' '' quoted
the Harvester reverently.  ``Now try one of these peaches.
It's juicy and cold.  Get that room right in focus in your
brain, and nurture the idea.  Its walls shall be bright
as sunshine, its floor creamy white, and it shall open
into a little garden, where only yellow flowers grow, and
the birds shall sing.  The first ray of sun that peeps
over the hills of morning shall fall through its windows
across your bed, and you shall work only as you please,
after you've had months of play and rest; and it's coming
true the instant you can leave here.  Dream of
it, make up your mind to it, because it's coming.  I
have a little streak of second sight, and I see it on the
way.''

``You are talking wildly,'' said the Girl, ``else you are
a good genie trying to conjure a room for me.''

``This room I am talking of is ready whenever you want
to take possession,'' said the Harvester.  ``Accept it as
a reality, because I tell you I know where it is, that it
is waiting, and you can earn your way into it with no
obligation to any one.''

The Girl stretched out her right hand and slowly turned
and opened and closed it.  Then she glanced at the Harvester
with a weary smile.

``From somewhere I feel a glimmering of the spirit,
but Oh, dear Lord, the flesh is weak!'' she said.

``That's where nourishing foods, appetizing drinks,
plenty of pure, fresh air, and good water come in.  Now
we have talked enough for one day, and worked too
much.  The fruit and drink go with you.  I will carry
it to the house, and you can hide it in your room.  I am
going to put a bottle of tonic on top that the best surgeon
in the state gave me for you.  Try to eat something
strengthening and then take a spoonful of this, and use
all the fruit you want.  I'll bring more to-morrow and
put it here, with plenty of ice.  Now suppose you let
the moth go free,'' he suggested to avoid objections.
``You must take my word for it, that it is perfectly harmless,
lacking either sting or bite, and hold your hand before
it, so that it will climb on your fingers.  Then stand
where a ray of sunshine falls and in a few minutes it will
go out to live its life.''

The Girl hesitated a second as she studied the clean-cut,
interested face of the man; then she held out her hand,
and he urged the moth to climb on her fingers.  She
stepped where a ray of strong light fell on the forest floor
and held the moth in it.  The brightness also touched
her transparent hand and white face and the gleaming
black hair.  The Harvester choked down a rising surge
of desire for her, and took a new grip on himself.

``Oh!'' she cried breathlessly, as the clinging feet
suddenly loosened and the luna slowly flew away among the
trees.  She turned on the Harvester.  ``You teach me
wonders!'' she cried.  ``You give life different meanings.
You are not as other men.''

``If that be true, it is because I am of the woods.  The
Almighty does not evolve all his wonders in animal,
bird, and flower form; He keeps some to work out in
the heart, if humanity only will go to His school, and allow
Him to have dominion.  Come now, you must go.  I
will come back and put away all the things and tomorrow
I will bring your ginseng money.  Any time you
cannot come, if you want to tell me why, or if there is
anything I can do for you, put a line under the oilcloth.
I will carry the bucket.''

``I am so afraid,'' she said.

``I will only go to the edge of the woods.  You can
see if there is any one at the house first.  If not, you can
send the child away, and then I will carry the bucket to
the door for you, and it will furnish comfort for one night,
at least.''

They went to the cleared land and the Girl passed on
alone.  Soon she reappeared and the Harvester saw the
child going down the road.  He took up the bucket and
set it inside the door.

``Is there anything I can do for you?''

``Nothing but go, before you make trouble.''

``Will you hide that stuff and walk back as far as the
woods with me?  There is something more I want to
say to you.''

The Girl staggered under the heavy load, and the man
turned his head and tried to pretend he did not see.
Presently she came out to him, and they returned to
the line of the woods.  Just as they entered the shade
there was a flash before them, and on a twig a few rods
away a little gray bird alighted, while in precipitate
pursuit came a flaming wonder of red, and in a burst
of excited trills, broken whistles, and imploring gestures,
perched beside her.

The Harvester hastily drew the Girl behind some
bushes.

``Watch!'' he whispered.  ``You are going to see a
sight so lovely and so rare it is vouchsafed to few mortals
ever to behold.''

``What are they fighting about?'' she whispered.

``You are witnessing a cardinal bird declare his love,''
breathed the Harvester.

``Do cardinals love different birds?''

``No.  The female is gray, because if she is coloured
the same as the trees and branches and her nest, she
will have more chance to bring off her young in safety.
He is blood red, because he is the bravest, gayest, most
ardent lover of the whole woods,'' explained the Harvester.

The Girl leaned forward breathlessly watching and a
slow surge of colour crept into her cheeks.  The red bird
twisted, whistled, rocked, tilted, and trilled, and the gray
sat demurely watching him, as if only half convinced
he really meant it.  The gay lover began at the beginning
and said it all over again with more impassioned gestures
than before, and then he edged in touch and softly
stroked her wing with his beak.  She appeared startled,
but did not fly.  So again the fountain of half-whistled,
half-trilled notes bubbled with the acme of pleading
intonation and that time he leaned and softly kissed her
as she reached her bill for the caress.  Then she fled in
headlong flight, while the streak of flame darted after her.
The Girl caught her breath in a swift spasm of surprise
and wonder.  She turned to the Harvester.

``What was it you wanted to say to me?'' she asked
hurriedly.

The Harvester was not the man to miss the goods the
gods provided.  Truly this was his lucky day.  Unhesitatingly
he took the plunge.

``Precisely what he said to her.  And if you observed
closely, you noticed that she didn't ask him `why.' ''

Before she could open her lips, he was gone, his swift
strides carrying him through the woods.



CHAPTER XII

``THE WAY OF A MAN WITH A MAID''

The next day the Harvester lifted the oilcloth,
and picking up a folded note he read----

``Aunt Molly found rest in the night.  She was
more comfortable than she had been since I have known
her.  Close the end she whispered to me to thank you
if I ever saw you again.  She will be buried to-morrow.
Past that, I dare not think.''

The Harvester sat on the log and studied the lines.
She would not come that day or the next.  After a long
time he put the note in his pocket, wrote an answer
telling her he had been there, and would come on the
following day on the chance of her wanting anything
he could do, and the next he would bring the ginseng
money, so she must be sure to meet him.

Then he went back to the wagon, turned Betsy, and
drove around the Jameson land watching closely.  There
were several vehicles in the barn lot, and a couple of
men sitting under the trees of the door yard.  Faded
bedding hung on the line and women moved through
the rooms, but he could not see the Girl.  Slowly he
drove on until he came to the first house, and there he
stopped and went in.  He saw the child of the previous
day, and as she came forward her mother appeared in
the doorway.

The Harvester explained who he was and that he was
examining the woods in search of some almost extinct
herbs he needed in his business.  Then he told of having
been at the adjoining farm the day before and mentioned
the sick woman.  He added that later she had died.
He casually mentioned that a young woman there seemed
pale and ill and wondered if the neighbours would see
her through.  He suggested that the place appeared as
if the owner did not take much interest, and when the
woman finished with Henry Jameson, he said how very
important it seemed to him that some good, kind-hearted
soul should go and mother the poor girl, and the woman
thought she was the very person.  Without knowing
exactly how he did it, the Harvester left with her promise
to remain with the Girl the coming two nights.  The
woman had her hands full of strange and delicious fruit
without understanding why it had been given her, or
why she had made those promises.  She thought the
Harvester a remarkably fine young man to take such
interest in strangers and she told him he was welcome
to anything he could find on her place that would help
with his medicines.

The Harvester just happened to be coming from the
woods as the woman freshly dressed left the house, so
he took her in the wagon and drove back to the Jameson
place, because he was going that way.  Then he returned
to Medicine Woods and worked with all his might.

First he polished floors, cleaned windows, and arranged
the rooms as best he could inside the cabin; then he
gave a finishing touch to everything outside.  He could
not have told why he did it, but he thought it was
because there was hope that now the Girl would come
to Onabasha.  If he found opportunity to bring her
to the city, he hoped that possibly he might drive home
with her and show Medicine Woods, so everything must
be in order.  Then he worked with flying fingers in the
dry-house, putting up her ginseng for market, and never
was weight so liberal.

The next morning he drove early to Onabasha and
came home with a loaded wagon, the contents of which
he scattered through the cabin where it seemed most
suitable, but the greater part of it was for her.  He
glanced at the bare floors and walls of the other rooms,
and thought of trying to improve them, but he was
afraid of not getting the right things.

``I don't know much about what is needed here,''
he said, ``but I am perfectly safe in buying anything a
girl ever used.''

Then he returned to the city, explained the situation
to the doctor, and selected the room he wanted in case
the Girl could be persuaded to come to the hospital.
After that he went to see the doctor's wife, and made
arrangements for her to be ready for a guest, because
there was a possibility he might want to call for help.
He had another jug of fruit juice and all the delicacies
he could think of, also a big cake of ice, when he
reached the woods.  There were only a few words for
him.

``I will come to-morrow at two, if at all possible; if
not, keep the money until I can.''

There was nothing to do except to place his offering
under the oilcloth and wait, but he simply was compelled
to add a line to say he would be there, and to express
the hope that she was comfortable as possible and thinking
of the sunshine room.  Then he returned to Medicine
Woods to wait, and found that possible only by
working to exhaustion.  There were many things he
could do, and one after another he finished them, until
completely worn out; and then he slept the deep sleep
of weariness.

At noon the next day he bathed, shaved, and dressed
in fresh, clean clothing.  He stopped in Onabasha for
more fruit, and drove to the Jameson woods.  He was
waiting and watching the usual path the Girl followed,
when her step sounded on the other side.  The Harvester
arose and turned.  Her pallor was alarming.  She stepped
on the rug he had spread, and sank almost breathless
to the chair.

``Why do you come a new way that fills you with fear?''
asked the Harvester.

``It seems as if Uncle Henry is watching me every
minute, and I didn't dare come where he could see.  I
must not remain a second.  You must take these things
away and go at once.  He is dreadful.''

``So am I,'' said the Harvester, ``when affairs go too
everlastingly wrong.  I am not afraid of any man living.
What are you planning to do?''

``I want to ask you, are you sure about the prices of
my drawing and the ginseng?''

``Absolutely,'' said the Harvester.  ``As for the ginseng
it went in fresh and early, best wild roots, and it
brought eight a pound.  There were eight pounds when
I made up weight and here is your money.''

He handed her a long envelope addressed to her.

``What is the amount?'' she asked.

``Sixty-four dollars.''

``I can't believe it.''

``You have it in your fingers.''

``You know that I would like to thank you properly,
if I had words to express myself.''

``Never mind that,'' said the Harvester.  ``Tell me
what you are planning.  Say that you will come to the
hospital for the long, perfect rest now.''

``It is absolutely impossible.  Don't weary me by
mentioning it.  I cannot.''

``Will you tell me what you intend doing?''

`I must,'' she said, ``for it depends entirely on your
word.  I am going to get Uncle Henry's supper, and then
go and remain the night with the neighbour who has
been helping me.  In the morning, when he leaves, she
is coming with her wagon for my trunk, and she is going
to drive with me to Onabasha and find me a cheap room
and loan me a few things, until I can buy what I need.
I am going to use fourteen dollars of this and my drawing
money for what I am forced to buy, and pay fifty on
my debt.  Then I will send you my address and be
ready for work.''

She clutched the envelope and for the first time looked
at him.

``Very well,'' said the Harvester.  ``I could take you
to the wife of my best friend, the chief surgeon of
the city hospital, and everything would be ease
and rest until you are strong; she would love to have
you.''

The Girl dropped her hands wearily.

``Don't tire me with it!'' she cried.  ``I am almost
falling despite the stimulus of food and drink I can
touch.  I never can thank you properly for that.  I
won't be able to work hard enough to show you how
much I appreciate what you have done for me.  But
you don't understand.  A woman, even a poverty-poor
woman, if she be delicately born and reared, cannot go
to another woman on a man's whim, and when she
lacks even the barest necessities.  I don't refuse to meet
your friends.  I shall love to, when I can be so dressed
that I will not shame you.  Until that times comes, if
you are the gentleman you appear to be, you will wait
without urging me further.''

``I must be a man, in order to be a gentleman,'' said
the Harvester.  ``And it is because the man in me is
in hot rebellion against more loneliness, pain, and suffering
for you, that the conventions become chains I do
not care how soon or how roughly I break.  If only you
could be induced to say the word, I tell you I could bring
one of God's gentlest women to you.''

``And probably she would come in a dainty gown,
in her carriage or motor, and be disgusted, astonished,
and secretly sorry for you.  As for me, I do not require
her pity.  I will be glad to know the beautiful, refined,
and gentle woman you are so certain of, but not until
I am better dressed and more attractive in appearance
than now.  If you will give me your address, I will write
you when I am ready for work.''

Silently the Harvester wrote it.  ``Will you give me
permission to take these things to your neighbour for
you?'' he asked.  ``They would serve until you can do
better, and I have no earthly use for them.''

She hesitated.  Then she laughed shortly.

``What a travesty my efforts at pride are with you!''
she cried.  ``I begin by trying to preserve some proper
dignity, and end by confessing abject poverty.  I yet
have the ten you paid me the other day, but twenty-four
dollars are not much to set up housekeeping on, and
I would be more glad than I can say for these very
things.''

``Thank you,'' said the Harvester.  ``I will take them
when I go.  Is there anything else?''

``I think not.''

``Will you have a drink?''

``Yes, if you have more with you.  I believe it is really
cooling my blood.''

``Are you taking the medicine?''

``Yes,'' she said, ``and I am stronger.  Truly I am.
I know I appear ghastly to you, but it's loss of sleep,
and trying to lay away poor Aunt Molly decently,
and----''

``And fear of Uncle Henry,'' added the Harvester.

``Yes,'' said the Girl.  ``That most of all!  He thinks
I am going to stay here and take her place.  I can't
tell him I am not, and how I am to hide from him when
I am gone, I don't know.  I am afraid of him.''

``Has he any claim on you?''

``Shelter for the past three months.''

``Are you of age?''

``I am almost twenty-four,'' she said.

``Then suppose you leave Uncle Henry to me,''
suggested the Harvester.

``Why?''

``Careful now!  The red bird told you why!'' said
the man.  ``I will not urge it upon you now, but keep
it steadily in the back of your head that there is a
sunshine room all ready and waiting for you, and I am going
to take you to it very soon.  As things are, I think you
might allow me to tell you----''

She was on her feet in instant panic.  ``I must go,''
she said.  ``Uncle Henry is dogging me to promise to
remain, and I will not, and he is watching me.  I must
go----''

``Can you give me your word of honour that you will
go to the neighbour woman to-night; that you feel
perfectly safe?''

She hesitated.  ``Yes, I----I think so.  Yes, if he
doesn't find out and grow angry.  Yes, I will be safe.''

``How soon will you write me?''

``Just as soon as I am settled and rest a little.''

``Do you mean several days?''

``Yes, several days.''

``An eternity!'' cried the Harvester with white lips.
``I cannot let you go.  Suppose you fall ill and fail to
write me, and I do not know where you are, and there
is no one to care for you.''

``But can't you see that I don't know where I will
be?  If it will satisfy you, I will write you a line to-
morrow night and tell you where I am, and you can come
later.''

``Is that a promise?'' asked the Harvester.

``It is,'' said the Girl.

``Then I will take these things to your neighbour and
wait until to-morrow night.  You won't fail me?''

``I never in all my life saw a man so wild over designs,''
said the Girl, as she started toward the house.

``Don't forget that the design I'm craziest about is
the same as the red bird's,'' the Harvester flung after
her, but she hurried on and made no reply.

He folded the table and chair, rolled the rug, and
shouldering them picked up the bucket and started down
the river bank.

``David!''

Such a faint little call he never would have been sure
he heard anything if Belshazzar had not stopped suddenly.  
The hair on the back of his neck arose and he
turned with a growl in his throat.  The Harvester dropped
his load with a crash and ran in leaping bounds, but the
dog was before him.  Half way to the house, Ruth Jameson
swayed in the grip of her uncle.  One hand clutched
his coat front in a spasmodic grasp, and with the other
she covered her face.

The roar the Harvester sent up stayed the big, lifted
fist, and the dog leaped for a throat hold, and compelled
the man to defend himself.  The Harvester never knew
how he covered the space until he stood between them,
and saw the Girl draw back and snatch together the
front of her dress.

``He took it from me!'' she panted.  ``Make him, oh
make him give back my money!''

Then for a few seconds things happened too rapidly to
record.  Once the Harvester tossed a torn envelope
exposing money to the Girl, and again a revolver, and
then both men panting and dishevelled were on their
feet.

``Count your money, Ruth?'' said the Harvester in a
voice of deadly quiet.

``It is all here,'' said she.

``Her money?'' cried Henry Jameson.  ``My money!
She has been stealing the price of my cattle from my
pockets.  I thought I was short several times lately.''

``You are lying,'' said the Harvester deliberately.
``It is her money.  I just paid it to her.  You were trying
to take it from her, not the other way.''

``Oh, she is in your pay?'' leered the man.

``If you say an insulting word I think very probably
I will finish you,'' said the Harvester.  ``I can, with my
naked hands, and all your neighbours will say it is a
a good job.  You have felt my grip!  I warn you!''

``How does my niece come to be taking money from you!''

``You have forfeited all right to know.  Ruth, you
cannot remain here.  You must come with me.  I will
take you to Onabasha and find you a room.''

A horrible laugh broke from the man.

``So that is the end of my saintly niece!'' he said.

``Remember!'' cried the Harvester advancing a step.
``Ruth, will you go to the rest I suggested for you?''

``I cannot.''

``Will you go to Doctor Carey's wife?''

``Impossible!''

``Will you marry me and go to the shelter of my home
with me?''

Wild-eyed she stared at him.

``Why?''

``Because I love you, and want life made easier for
you, above anything else on earth.''

``But your Dream Girl!''

``YOU ARE THE DREAM GIRL!  I thought the red bird told
you for me!  I didn't know it would be a shock.  I
believed I had made you understand.''

By that time she was shaking with a nervous chill,
and the sight unmanned the Harvester.

``Come with me!'' he urged.  ``We will decide what
you want to do on the way.  Only come, I beg you.''

``First it was marry, now it's decide later,'' broke in
Henry Jameson, crazed with anger.  ``Move a step
and I'll strike you down.  I'd better than see you
disgraced----''

The Harvester advanced and Jameson stepped back.

``Ruth,'' said the Harvester, ``I know how impossible
this seems.  It is giving you no chance at all.  I had
intended, when I found you, to court you tenderly as
girl ever was wooed before.  Come with me, and I'll
do it yet.  The new home was built for you.  The
sunshine room is ready and waiting for you.  There is
pure air, fresh water, nothing but rest and comfort.
I'll nurse you back to health and strength, and you shall
be courted until you come to me of your own accord.''

``Impossible!'' cried the girl.

``Only if you make it so.  If you will come now, we
can be married in a few hours, and you can be safe in
your own home.  I realize now that this is unexpected and
shocking to you, but if you will come with me and allow
me to restore you to health and strength, and if, say, in
a year, you are convinced that you do not love me, I
will set you free.  If you will come, I swear to you that you
shall be my wife first, and my honoured guest afterward,
until such time as you either tell me you love me or that
you never can.  Will you come on those terms, Ruth?''

``I cannot!''

``It will end fear, uncertainty, and work, until you
are strong and well.  It will give you home, rest, and
love, that you will find is worth your consideration.  I
will keep my word; of that you may be sure.''

``No,'' she cried.  ``No!  But take back this money!
Keep it until I tell you to whom to pay it.''

She started toward him holding out the envelope.

Henry Jameson, with a dreadful oath, sprang for it,
his contorted face a drawn snarl.  The Harvester caught
him in air and sent him reeling.  He snatched the revolver
from the Girl and put the money in his pocket.

``Ruth, I can't leave you here,'' he said.  ``Oh my
Dream Girl!  Are you afraid of me yet?  Won't you
trust me?  Won't you come?''

``No.''

``You are right about that, my lady; you will come
back to the house, that's what you'll do,'' said Henry
Jameson, starting toward her.

``No!'' cried the Girl retreating.  ``Oh Heaven help
me!  What am I to do?''

``Ruth, you must come with me,'' said the Harvester.
``I don't dare leave you here.''

She stood between them and gave Henry Jameson
one long, searching look.  Then she turned to the Harvester.

``I am far less afraid of you.  I will accept your offer,''
she said.

``Thank you!'' said the Harvester.  ``I will keep my
word and you shall have no regrets.  Is there anything
here you wish to take with you?''

``I want a little trunk of my mother's.  It contains
some things of hers.''

``Will you show me where it is?''

She started toward the house; he followed, and Henry
Jameson fell in line.  The Harvester turned on him.
``You remain where you are,'' he said.  ``I will take
nothing but the trunk.  I know what you are thinking,
but you will not get your gun just now.  I will return
this revolver to-morrow.''

``And the first thing I do with it will be to use it on
you,'' said Henry Jameson.

``I'll report that threat to the police, so that they
can see you properly hanged if you do,'' retorted the
Harvester, as he followed the girl.

``Where is his gun?'' he asked as he overtook her.
When he reached the house he told her to watch the
door.  He went inside, broke the lock from the gun in
the corner, found the trunk, and swinging it to his
shoulder, passed Henry Jameson and went back through
the woods.  The Harvester set the trunk in the wagon,
helped the Girl in, and returned for the load he had
dropped at her call.  Then he took the lines and started
for Onabasha.

The Girl beside him was almost fainting.  He stopped
to give her a drink and tried to encourage her.

``Brace up the best you can, Ruth,'' he said.  ``You
must go with me for a license; that is the law.  Afterward,
I'll make it just as easy for you as possible.  I
will do everything, and in a few hours you will be
comfortable in your room.  You brave girl!  This must
come out right!  You have suffered more than your
share.  I will have peace for you the remainder of the
way.''

She lifted shaking hands and tried to arrange her
hair and dress.  As they neared the city she spoke.

``What will they ask me?''

``I don't know.  But I am sure the law requires you
to appear in person now.  I can take you somewhere
and find out first.''

``That will take time.  I want to reach my room.
What would you think?''

``If you are of age, where you were born, if you are
a native of this country, what your father and mother
died of, how old they were, and such questions as that.
I'll help you all I can.  You know those things.  don't
you?''

``Yes.  But I must tell you----''

``I don't want to be told anything,'' said the Harvester.
``Save your strength.  All I want to know is any way
in which I can make this easier for you.  Nothing else
matters.  I will tell you what I think; if you have any
objections, make them.  I will drive to the bank and get
a draft for what you owe, and have that off your mind.
Then we will get the license.  After that I'll take you
to the side door, slip you in the elevator and to the
fitting room of a store where I know the manager, and
you shall have some pretty clothing while I arrange for
a minister, and I'll come for you with a carriage.  That
isn't the kind of wedding you or any other girl should
have, but there are times when a man only can do his
best.  You will help me as much as you can, won't
you?''

``Anything you choose.  It doesn't matter----only
be quick as possible.''

``There are a few details to which I must attend,''
said the Harvester, ``and the time will go faster trying
on dresses than waiting alone.  When you are properly
clothed you will feel better.  What did you say the
amount you owe is?''

``You may get a draft for fifty dollars.  I will pay the
remainder when I earn it.''

``Ruth, won't you give me the pleasure of taking you
home free from the worry of that debt?''

``I am not going to `worry.'  I am going to work and
pay it.''

``Very well,'' said the Harvester.  ``This is the bank.
We will stop here.''

They went in and he handed her a slip of paper.

``Write the name and address on that?'' he said.

As the slip was returned to him, without a glance he
folded it and slid it under a wicket.  ``Write a draft
for fifty dollars payable to that party, and send to that
address, from Miss Ruth Jameson,'' he said.

Then he turned to her.

``That is over.  See how easy it is!  Now we will go
to the court house.  It is very close.  Try not to think.
Just move and speak.''

``Hello, Langston!'' said the clerk.  ``What can we do
for you here?''

``Show this girl every consideration,'' whispered the
Harvester, as he advanced.  ``I want a marriage license in
your best time.  I will answer first.''

With the document in his possession, they went to
the store he designated, where he found the Girl a chair
in the fitting room, while he went to see the manager.

``I want one of your most sensible and accommodating
clerks,'' said the Harvester, ``and I would like a few words
with her.''

When she was presented he scrutinized her carefully
and decided she would do.

``I have many thanks and something more substantial
for a woman who will help me to carry through a slightly
unusual project with sympathy and ability,'' he said,
``and the manager has selected you.  Are you willing?''

``If I can,'' said the clerk.

``She has put up your other orders,'' interposed the
manager; ``were they satisfactory?''

``I don't know,'' said the Harvester.  ``They have not
yet reached the one for whom they were intended.  What
I want you to do,'' he said to the clerk, ``is to go to the
fitting room and dress the girl you find there for her
wedding.  She had other plans, but death disarranged
them, and she has only an hour in which to meet the
event most girls love to linger over for months.  She
has been ill, and is worn with watching; but some time
she may look back to her wedding day with joy, and if
only you would help me to make the best of it for her,
I would be, as I said, under more obligations than I can
express.''

`` I will do anything,'' said the clerk.

``Very well,'' said the Harvester.  ``She has come from
the country entirely unprepared.  She is delicate and
refined.  Save her all the embarrassment you can.  Dress
her beautifully in white.  Keep a memorandum slip of
what you spend for my account.''

``What is the limit?'' asked the clerk.

``There is none,'' said the Harvester.  ``Put the prettiest
things on her you have in the right sizes, and if you are
a woman with a heart, be gentle!''

``Is she ready?'' inquired the manager at the door an
hour later.

``I am,'' said the Girl stepping through.

The astounded Harvester stood and stared, utterly
oblivious of the curious people.

``Here, here, here!'' suddenly he whistled it, in the
red bird's most entreating tones.

The Girl laughed and the colour in her face deepened.

``Let us go,'' she said.

``But what about you?'' asked the manager of the
Harvester.

``Thunder!'' cried the man aghast.  ``I was so busy
getting everything else ready, I forgot all about myself.
I can't stand before a minister beside her, can I?''

``Well I should say not,'' said the manager.

``Indeed yes,'' said the Girl.  ``I never saw you in
any other clothing.  You would be a stranger of whom
I'd be afraid.''

``That settles it!'' said the Harvester calmly.  ``Thank
all of you more than words can express.  I will come in
the first of the week and tell you how we get along.''

Then they went to the carriage and started for the
residence of a minister.

``Ruth, you are my Dream Girl to the tips of your
eyelashes,'' said the Harvester.  ``I almost wish you
were not.  It wouldn't keep me thinking so much of the
remainder of that dream.  You are the loveliest sight
I ever saw.''

``Do I really appear well?'' asked the Girl, hungry
for appreciation.

``Indeed you do!'' said the Harvester.  ``I never could
have guessed that such a miracle could be wrought.  And
you don't seem so tired.  Were they good to you?''

``Wonderfully!  I did not know there was kindness
like that in all the world for a stranger.  I did not feel
lost or embarrassed, except the first few seconds when
I didn't know what to do.  Oh I thank you for this!
You were right.  Whatever comes in life I always shall
love to remember that I was daintily dressed and
appeared as well as I could when I was married.  But
I must tell you I am not real.  They did everything
on earth to me, three of them working at a time.  I feel
an increase in self-respect in some way.  David, I do
appear better?''

When she said ``David,'' the Harvester looked out of
the window and gulped down his delight.  He leaned
toward her.

``Shut your eyes and imagine you see the red bird,''
he said.  ``In my soul, I am saying to you again and
again just what he sang.  You are wonderfully beautiful,
Ruth, and more than wonderfully sweet.  Will you
answer me a question?''

``If I can.''

``I love you with all my heart.  Will you marry me?''

``I said I would.''

``Then we are engaged, aren't we?''

``Yes.''

``Please remove the glove from your left hand.  I want
to put on your ring.  This will have to be a very short
engagement, but no one save ourselves need know.''

``David, that isn't necessary.''

``I have it here, and believe me, Ruth, it will help in a
few minutes; and all your life you will be glad.  It is a
precious symbol that has a meaning.  This wedding won't
be hurt by putting all the sacredness into it we can.
Please, Ruth!''

``On one condition.''

``What is it?''

``That you will accept and wear my mother's wedding
ring in exchange,'' she said.  ``It is all I have.''

``Ruth, do you really wish that?''

``I do.''

``I am more pleased than I can tell you.  May I have
it now?''

She took off her glove and the Harvester held her
hand closely a second, then lifted it to his lips, passionately
kissed it and slipped on a ring, the setting a big,
lustrous pearl.

``I looked at some others,'' he said, ``but nothing
got a second glance save this.  They knew you were
coming down the ages, and so they got the pearls ready.
How beautiful it is on your hand!  Put on the glove
and wear that ring as if you had owned it for the long,
happy year of betrothal every girl should have.  You
can start yours to-day, and if by this time next year I
have not won you to my heart and arms, I'm no man
and not worthy of you.  Ruth, you will try just a little
to love me, won't you?''

``I will try with all my heart,'' she said instantly.

``Thank you!  I am perfectly happy with that.  I
never expected to marry you before a year, anyway.
All the difference will be the blessed fact that instead
of coming to see you somewhere else, I now can have
you in my care, and court you every minute.  You
might as well make up your mind to capitulate soon.
It's on the books that you do.''

``If an instant ever comes when I realize that I love
you, I will come straight and tell you; believe me, I
will.''

``Thank you!'' said the Harvester.  ``This is going
to be quite a proper wedding after all.  Here is the
place.  It will be over soon and you on the home way.
Lord, Ruth----!''

The Girl smiled at him as he opened the carriage door,
helped her up the steps and rang the bell.

``Be brave now!'' he whispered.  ``Don't lose your
lovely colour.  These people will be as kind as they were
at the store.''

The minister was gentle and wasted no time.  His
wife and daughter, who appeared for witnesses, kissed
Ruth, and congratulated her.  She and the Harvester
stood, took the vows, exchanged rings, and returned to
the carriage, a man and his wife by the laws of
man.

``Drive to Seaton's cafe','' the Harvester said.

``Oh David, let us go home!''

``This is so good I hate to stop it for something you
may not like so well.  I ordered lunch and if we don't
eat it I will have to pay for it anyway.  You wouldn't
want me to be extravagant, would you?''

``No,'' said the Girl, ``and besides, since you mention
it, I believe I am hungry.''

``Good!'' cried the Harvester.  ``I hoped so!  Ruth,
you wouldn't allow me to hold your hand just until we
reach the cafe'?  It might save me from bursting with
joy.''

``Yes,'' she said.  ``But I must take off my lovely
gloves first.  I want to keep them forever.''

``I'd hate the glove being removed dreadfully,'' said
the Harvester, his eyes dancing and snapping.

``I'm sorry I am so thin and shaky,'' said the Girl.
``I will be steady and plump soon, won't I?''

``On your life you will,'' said the Harvester, taking
the hand gently.

Now there are a number of things a man deeply in
love can think of to do with a woman's white hand.
He can stroke it, press it tenderly, and lay it against his
lips and his heart.  The Harvester lacked experience
in these arts, and yet by some wonderful instinct all
of these things occurred to him.  There was real colour
in the Girl's cheeks by the time he helped her into the
cafe'.  They were guided to a small room, cool and restful,
close a window, beside which grew a tree covered with
talking leaves.  A waiting attendant, who seemed perfectly
adept, brought in steaming bouillon, fragrant tea,
broiled chicken, properly cooked vegetables, a wonderful
salad, and then delicious ices and cold fruit.  The happy
Harvester leaned back and watched the Girl daintily
manage almost as much food as he wanted to see her
eat.

When they had finished, ``Now we are going home,''
he said.  ``Will you try to like it, Ruth?''

``Indeed I will,'' she promised.  ``As soon as I grow
accustomed to the dreadful stillness, and learn what
things will not bite me, I'll be better.''

``I'll have to ask you to wait a minute,'' he said.
``One thing I forgot.  I must hire a man to take Betsy
home.''

``Aren't you going to drive her yourself?''

``No ma'am!  We are going in a carriage or a motor,''
said the Harvester.

``Indeed we are not!'' contradicted the Girl.  ``You
have had this all your way so far.  I am going home
behind Betsy, with Belshazzar at my knee.''

``But your dress!  People will think I am crazy to
put a lovely woman like you in a spring wagon.''

``Let them!'' said the Girl placidly.  ``Why should
we bother about other people?  I am going with Betsy
and Belshazzar.''

The Harvester had been thinking that he adored her,
that it was impossible to love her more, but every
minute was proving to him that he was capable of feeling
so profound it startled him.  To carry the Girl, his
bride, through the valley and up the hill in the little
spring wagon drawn by Betsy--that would have been
his ideal way.  But he had supposed that she would be
afraid of soiling her dress, and embarrassed to ride in
such a conveyance.  Instead it was her choice.  Yes,
he could love her more.  Hourly she was proving that.

``Come this way a few steps,'' he said.  ``Betsy is
here.''

The Girl laid her face against the nose of the faithful
old animal, and stroked her head and neck.  Then she
held her skirts and the Harvester helped her into the
wagon.  She took the seat, and the dog went wild with
joy.

``Come on, Bel,'' she softly commanded.

The dog hesitated, and looked at the Harvester for
permission.

``You may come here and put your head on my knee,''
said the Girl.

``Belshazzar, you lucky dog, you are privileged to sit
there and lay your head on the lady's lap,'' said the
Harvester, and the dog quivered with joy.

Then the man picked up the lines, gave a backward
glance to the bed of the wagon, high piled with large
bundles, and turned Betsy toward Medicine Woods.
Through the crowded streets and toward the country
they drove, when a big red car passed, a man called
to them, then reversed and slowly began backing beside
the wagon.  The Harvester stopped.

``That is my best friend, Doctor Carey, of the hospital,
Ruth,'' he said hastily.  ``May I tell him, and will you
shake hands with him?''

``Certainly!'' said the Girl.

``Is it really you, David?'' the doctor peered with
gleaming eyes from under the car top.

``Really!'' cried the Harvester, as man greets man with
a full heart when he is sure of sympathy.  ``Come, give
us your best send-off, Doc!  We were married an hour
ago.  We are headed for Medicine Woods.  Doctor
Carey, this is Mrs. Langston.''

``Mighty glad to know you!'' cried the doctor, reaching
a happy hand.

The Girl met it cordially, while she smiled on
him.

``How did this happen?'' demanded the doctor.  ``Why
didn't you let us know?  This is hardly fair of you,
David.  You might have let me and the Missus share
with you.''

``That is to be explained,'' said the Harvester.  ``It
was decided on very suddenly, and rather sadly, on
account of the death of Mrs. Jameson.  I forced Ruth
to marry me and come with me.  I grow rather frightened
when I think of it, but it was the only way I knew.  She
absolutely refused my other plans.  You see before you
a wild man carrying away a woman to his cave.''

``Don't believe him, Doctor!'' laughed the Girl.  ``If
you know him, you will understand that to offer all he
had was like him, when he saw my necessity.  You will
come to see us soon?''

``I'll come right now,'' said the doctor.  ``I'll bring
my wife and arrive by the time you do.''

``Oh no you won't!'' said the Harvester.  ``Do you
observe the bed of this wagon?  This happened all
`unbeknownst' to us.  We have to set up housekeeping
after we reach home.  We will notify you when we are
ready for visitors.  Just you subside and wait until you
are sent for.''

``Why David!'' cried the astonished Girl.

``That's the law!'' said the Harvester tersely.  ``Good-
bye, Doc; we'll be ready for you in a day or two.''

He leaned down and held out his hand.  The grip
that caught it said all any words could convey; and
then Betsy started up the hill.



CHAPTER XIII

WHEN THE DREAM CAME TRUE

At first the road lay between fertile farms
dotted with shocked wheat, covered with
undulant seas of ripening oats, and forests
of growing corn.  The larks were trailing melody above
the shorn and growing fields, the quail were ingathering
beside the fences, and from the forests on graceful wings
slipped the nighthawks and sailed and soared, dropping
so low that the half moons formed by white spots on
their spread wings showed plainly.

``Why is this country so different from the other side
of the city?'' asked the Girl.

``It is older,'' replied the Harvester, ``and it lies higher.
This was settled and well cultivated when that was a
swamp.  But as a farming proposition, the money is
in the lowland like your uncle's.  The crops raised there
are enormous compared with the yield of these fields.''

``I see,'' said she.  ``But this is much better to look
at and the air is different.  It lacks a soggy, depressing
quality.''

``I don't allow any air to surpass that of Medicine
Woods,'' said the Harvester, ``by especial arrangement
with the powers that be.''

Then they dipped into a little depression and arose to
cross the railroad and then followed a longer valley
that was ragged and unkempt compared with the road
between cultivated fields.  The Harvester was busy
trying to plan what to do first, and how to do it most
effectively, and working his brain to think if he had
everything the Girl would require for her comfort; so
he drove silently through the deepening shadows.  She
shuddered and awoke him suddenly.  He glanced at
her from the corner of his eye.

Her thoughts had gone on a journey, also, and the
way had been rough, for her face wore a strained
appearance.  The hands lying bare in her lap were tightly
gripped, so that the nails and knuckles appeared blue.
The Harvester hastily cast around seeking for the cause
of the transformation.  A few minutes ago she had
seemed at ease and comfortable, now she was close open
panic.  Nothing had been said that would disturb her.
With brain alert he searched for the reason.  Then it
began to come to him.  The unaccustomed silence and
depression of the country might have been the beginning.
Coming from the city and crowds of people to the gloomy
valley with a man almost a stranger, going she knew not
where, to conditions she knew not what, with the
experiences of the day vivid before her.  The black valley
road was not prepossessing, with its border of green
pools, through which grew swamp bushes and straggling
vines.  The Harvester looked carefully at the road,
and ceased to marvel at the Girl.  But he disliked to let
her know he understood, so he gave one last glance at
those gripped hands and casually held out the lines.

``Will you take these just a second?'' he asked.
``Don't let them touch your dress.  We must not lose
of our load, because it's mostly things that will make
you more comfortable.''

He arose, and turning, pretended to see that everything
was all right.  Then he resumed his seat and
drove on.

``I am a little ashamed of this stretch through here,''
he said apologetically.  ``I could have managed to have
it cleared and in better shape long ago, but in a way
it yields a snug profit, and so far I've preferred the
money.  The land is not mine, but I could grub out
this growth entirely, instead of taking only what I need.''

``Is there stuff here you use?'' the Girl aroused
herself to ask, and the Harvester saw the look of relief
that crossed her face at the sound of his voice.

``Well I should say yes,'' he laughed.  ``Those bushes,
numerous everywhere, with the hanging yellow-green
balls, those, in bark and root, go into fever medicines.
They are not so much used now, but sometimes I have
a call, and when I do, I pass the beds on my----on our
land, and come down here and get what is needed.
That bush,'' he indicated with the whip, ``blooms
exquisitely in the spring.  It is a relative of flowering
dogwood, and the one of its many names I like best is
silky cornel.  Isn't that pretty?''

``Yes,'' she said, ``it is beautiful.''

``I've planted some for you in a hedge along the driveway
so next spring you can gather all you want.  I
think you'll like the odour.  The bark brings more than
true dogwood.  If I get a call from some house that uses
it, I save mine and come down here.  Around the edge
are hop trees, and I realize something from them, and
also the false and true bitter-sweet that run riot here.
Both of them have pretty leaves, while the berries of the
true hang all winter and the colour is gorgeous.  I've
set your hedge closely with them.  When it has grown
a few months it's going to furnish flowers in the spring, a
million different, wonderful leaves and berries in the
summer, many fruits the birds love in the fall, and bright
berries, queer seed pods, and nuts all winter.''

``You planted it for me?''

``Yes.  I think it will be beautiful in a season or two;
it isn't so bad now.  I hope it will call myriads of birds
to keep you company.  When you cross this stretch of
road hereafter, don't see fetid water and straggling bushes
and vines; just say to yourself, this helps to fill orders!''

``I am perfectly tolerant of it now,'' she said.  ``You
make everything different.  I will come with you and
help collect the roots and barks you want.  Which
bush did you say relieved the poor souls scorching with
fever?''

The Harvester drew on the lines, Betsy swerved to
the edge of the road, and he leaned and broke a branch.

``This one,'' he answered.  ``Buttonbush, because
those balls resemble round buttons.  Aren't they
peculiar?  See how waxy and gracefully cut and set
the leaves are.  Go on, Betsy, get us home before night.
We appear our best early in the morning, when the sun
tops Medicine Woods and begins to light us up, and in
the evening, just when she drops behind Onabasha back
there, and strikes us with a few level rays.  Will you
take the lines until I open this gate?''

She laid the twig in her lap on the white gloves and
took the lines.  As the gate swung wide, Betsy walked
through and stopped at the usual place.

``Now my girl,'' said the Harvester, ``cross yourself,
lean back, and take your ease.  This side that gate
you are at home.  From here on belongs to us.''

``To you, you mean,'' said the Girl.

``To us, I mean,'' declared the Harvester.  ``Don't
you know that the `worldly goods bestowal' clause in a
marriage ceremony is a partial reality.  It doesn't give
you `all my worldly goods,' but it gives you one third.
Which will you take, the hill, lake, marsh, or a part of
all of them.''

``Oh, is there water?''

``Did I forget to mention that I was formerly sole
owner and proprietor of the lake of Lost Loons, also a
brook of Singing Water, and many cold springs.  The
lake covers about one third of our land, and my neighbours
would allow me ditch outlet to the river, but they
say I'm too lazy to take it.''

``Lazy!  Do they mean drain your lake into the
river?''

``They do,'' said the Harvester, ``and make the bed
into a cornfield.''

``But you wouldn't?''

She turned to him with confidence.

``I haven't so far, but of course, when you see it,
if you would prefer it in a corn----Let's play a game!
Turn your head in this direction,'' he indicated with
the whip, ``close your eyes, and open them when I say
ready.''

``All right!''

``Now!'' said the Harvester.

``Oh,'' cried the Girl.  ``Stop!  Please stop!''

They were at the foot of a small levee that ran to the
bridge crossing Singing Water.  On the left lay the valley
through which the stream swept from its hurried rush
down the hill, a marshy thicket of vines, shrubs, and
bushes, the banks impassable with water growth.  Everywhere
flamed foxfire and cardinal flower, thousands of
wild tiger lilies lifted gorgeous orange-red trumpets,
beside pearl-white turtle head and moon daisies, while
all the creek bank was a coral line with the first opening
bloom of big pink mallows.  Rank jewel flower poured
gold from dainty cornucopias and lavender beard-tongue
offered honey to a million bumbling bees; water smart-
weed spread a glowing pink background, and twining
amber dodder topped the marsh in lacy mist with its
delicate white bloom.  Straight before them a white-
sanded road climbed to the bridge and up a gentle hill
between the young hedge of small trees and bushes,
where again flowers and bright colours rioted and led
to the cabin yet invisible.  On the right, the hill, crowned
with gigantic forest trees, sloped to the lake; midway
the building stood, and from it, among scattering trees
all the way to the water's edge, were immense beds of
vivid colour.  Like a scarf of gold flung across the face
of earth waved the misty saffron, and beside the road
running down the hill, in a sunny, open space arose
tree-like specimens of thrifty magenta pokeberry.  Down
the hill crept the masses of colour, changing from dry
soil to water growth.

High around the blue-green surface of the lake waved
lacy heads of wild rice, lower cat-tails, bulrushes, and
marsh grasses; arrowhead lilies lifted spines of pearly
bloom, while yellow water lilies and blue water hyacinths
intermingled; here and there grew a pink stretch of water
smartweed and the dangling gold of jewel flower.  Over
the water, bordering the edge, starry faces of white pond
lilies floated.  Blue flags waved graceful leaves, willows
grew in clumps, and vines clambered everywhere.

Among the growth of the lake shore, duck, coot,
and grebe voices commingled in the last chattering
hastened splash of securing supper before bedtime; crying
killdeers crossed the water, and overhead the nighthawks
massed in circling companies.  Betsy climbed the
hill and at every step the Girl cried, ``Slower! please go
slower!''  With wide eyes she stared around her.

``WHY DIDN'T YOU TELL ME IT WOULD BE LIKE THIS?'' she
demanded in awed tones.

``Have I had opportunity to describe much of
anything?''  asked the Harvester.  ``Besides, I was born
and reared here, and while it has been a garden of bloom
for the past six years only, it always has been a picture;
but one forgets to say much about a sight seen every
day and that requires the work this does.''

``That white mist down there, what is it?'' she
marvelled.

``Pearls grown by the Almighty,'' answered the
Harvester.  ``Flowers that I hope you will love.  They
are like you.  Tall and slender, graceful, pearl white and
pearl pure----those are the arrowhead Lilies.''

``And the wonderful purplish-red there on the bank?
Oh, I could kneel and pray before colour like that!'

``Pokeberry!'' said the Harvester.  ``Roots bring five
cents a pound.  Good blood purifier.''

``Man!'' cried the Girl.  ``How can you?  I'm not
going to ask what another colour is.  I'll just worship
what I like in silence.''

``Will you forgive me if I tell you what a woman
whose judgment I respect says about that colour?''

``Perhaps!''

``She says, `God proves that He loves it best of all the
tints in His workshop by using it first and most sparingly.'
Now are you going to punish me by keeping silent?''

``I couldn't if I tried.''
Just then they came upon the bridge crossing
Singing Water, and there was a long view of its
border, rippling bed, and marshy banks; while on
the other hand the lake resembled a richly incrusted
sapphire.

``Is the house close?''

``Just a few rods, at the turn of the drive.''

``Please help me down.  I want to remain here a while.
I don't care what else there is to see.  Nothing can
equal this.  I wish I could bring down a bed and sleep
here.  I'd like to have a table, and draw and paint.
I understand now what you mean about the designs
you mentioned.  Why, there must be thousands!  I
can't go on.  I never saw anything so appealing in all
my life.''

Now the Harvester's mother had designed that bridge
and he had built it with much care.  From bark-covered
railings to solid oak floor and comfortable benches
running along the sides it was intended to be a part of
the landscape.

``I'll send Belshazzar to the cabin with the wagon,''
he said, ``so you can see better.''

``But you must not!'' she cried.  ``I can't walk.  I
wouldn't soil these beautiful shoes for anything.''

``Why don't you change them?'' inquired the Harvester.

``I am afraid I forgot everything I had,'' said the Girl.

``There are shoes somewhere in this load.  I thought
of them in getting other things for you, but I had no
idea as to size, and so I told that clerk to-day when she
got your measure to put in every kind you'd need.''

``You are horribly extravagant,'' she said.  ``But if
you have them here, perhaps I could use one pair.''

The Harvester mounted the wagon and hunted until
he found a large box, and opening it on the bench he
disclosed almost every variety of shoe, walking shoe
and slipper, a girl ever owned, as well as sandals and high
overshoes.

``For pity sake!'' cried the Girl.  ``Cover that box!
You frighten me.  You'll never get them paid for.
You must take them straight back.''

``Never take anything back,'' said the Harvester.
`` `Be sure you are right, then go ahead,' is my motto.
Now I know these are your correct size and that for
differing occasions you will want just such shoes as other
girls have, and here they are.  Simple as life!  I think
these will serve because they are for street wear, yet
they are white inside.''

He produced a pair of canvas walking shoes and kneeling
before her held out his hand.

When he had finished, he loaded the box on the wagon,
gave the hitching strap to Belshazzar, and told him to
lead Betsy to the cabin and hold her until he came.
Then he turned to the Girl.

``Now,'' he said, ``look as long as you choose.  But
remember that the law gives you part of this and your
lover, which same am I, gives you the remainder, so
you are privileged to come here at any hour as often as
you please.  If you miss anything this evening, you
have all time to come in which to re-examine it.''

``I'd like to live right here on this bridge,'' she said.
``I wish it had a roof.''

``Roof it to-morrow,'' offered the Harvester.  ``Simple
matter of a few pillars already cut, joists joined, and
some slab shingles left from the cabin.  Anything else
your ladyship can suggest?''

``That you be sensible.''

``I was born that way,'' explained the Harvester,
``and I've cultivated the faculty until I've developed
real genius.  Talking of sense, there never was a proper
marriage in which the man didn't give the woman a
present.  You seem likely to be more appreciative of
this bridge than anything else I have, so right here and
now would be the appropriate place to offer you my
wedding gift.  I didn't have much time, but I couldn't
have found anything more suitable if I'd taken a year.''

He held out a small, white velvet case.

``Doesn't that look as if it were made for a bride?''
he asked.

``It does,'' answered the Girl.  ``But I can't take it.
You are not doing right.  Marrying as we did, you never
can believe that I love you; maybe it won't ever happen
that I do.  I have no right to accept gifts and expensive
clothing from you.  In the first place, if the love you
ask never comes, there is no possible way in which I can
repay you.  In the second, these things you are offering
are not suitable for life and work in the woods.  In the
third, I think you are being extravagant, and I couldn't
forgive myself if I allowed that.''

``You divide your statements like a preacher, don't
you?'' asked the Harvester ingenuously.  ``Now sit
thee here and gaze on the placid lake and quiet your
troubled spirit, while I demolish your `perfectly good'
arguments.  In the first place, you are now my wife,
and you have a right to take anything I offer, if you
care for it or can use it in any manner.  In the second,
you must recognize a difference in our positions.  What
seems nothing to you means all the world to me, and you
are less than human if you deprive me of the joy of
expressing feelings I am in honour bound to keep in my
heart, by these little material offerings.  In the third
place, I inherited over six hundred acres of land and
water, please observe the water----it is now in evidence
on your left.  All my life I have been taught to be
frugal, economical, and to work.  All I've earned either
has gone back into land, into the bank, or into books,
very plain food, and such clothing as you now see me
wearing.  Just the value of this place as it stands, with
its big trees, its drug crops yielding all the year round,
would be difficult to estimate; and I don't mind telling
you that on the top of that hill there is a gold mine,
and it's mine----ours since four o'clock.''

``A gold mine!''

``Acres and acres of wild ginseng, seven years of age
and ready to harvest.  Do you remember what your few
pounds brought?''

``Why it's worth thousands!''

``Exactly!  For your peace of mind I might add that
all I have done or got is paid for, except what I bought
to-day, and I will write a check for that as soon as the
bill is made out.  My bank account never will feel it
Truly, Ruth, I am not doing or going to do anything
extravagant.  I can't afford to give you diamond necklaces,
yachts, and trips to Europe; but you can have
the contents of this box and a motor boat on the lake,
a horse and carriage, and a trip----say to New York
perfectly well.  Please take it.''

``I wish you wouldn't ask me.  I would be happier
not to.''

``Yes, but I do ask you,'' persisted the Harvester.
``You are not the only one to be considered.  I have
some rights also, and I'm not so self-effacing that I
won't insist upon them.  From your standpoint I am
almost a stranger.  You have spent no time considering
me in near relations; I realize that.  You feel as if you
were driven here for a refuge, and that is true.  I said
to Belshazzar one day that I must remember that you
had no dream, and had spent no time loving me, and I
do I know how this wedding seems to you, but it's
going to mean something different and better soon,
please God.  I can see your side; now suppose you
take a look at mine.  I did have a dream, it was my
dream, and beyond the sum of any delight I ever
conceived.  On the strength of it I rebuilt my home and
remodelled these premises.  Then I saw you, and from
that day I worked early and late.  I lost you and I
never stopped until I found you; and I would have
courted and won you, but the fates intervened and here
you are!  So it's my delight to court and win you now.
If you knew the difference between having a dream that
stirred the least fibre of your being and facing the world in
a demand for realization of it, and then finding what you
coveted in the palm of your hand, as it were, you would
know what is in my heart, and why expression of some
kind is necessary to me just now, and why I'll explode
if it is denied.  It will lower the tension, if you will
accept this as a matter of fact; as if you rather expected
and liked it, if you can.''

The Harvester set his finger on the spring.

``Don't!'' she said.  ``I'll never have the courage if
you do.  Give it to me in the case, and let me open it.
Despite your unanswerable arguments, I am quite sure
that is the only way in which I can take it.''

The Harvester gave her the box.

``My wedding gift!'' she exclaimed, more to herself
than to him.  ``Why should I be the buffet of all the
unkind fates kept in store for a girl my whole life, and
then suddenly be offered home, beautiful gifts, and wonderful
loving kindness by a stranger?''

The Harvester ran his fingers through his crisp hair,
pulled it into a peak, stepped to the seat and sitting on
the railing, he lifted his elbows, tilted his head, and
began a motley outpouring of half-spoken, half-whistled
trills and imploring cries.  There was enough similarity
that the Girl instantly recognized the red bird.  Out
of breath the Harvester dropped to the seat beside her.

``And don't you keep forgetting it!'' he cried.  ``Now
open that box and put on the trinket; because I want
to take you to the cabin when the sun falls level on the
drive.''

She opened the case, exposing a thread of gold that
appeared too slender for the weight of an exquisite
pendant, set with shimmering pearls.

``If you will look down there,'' the Harvester pointed
over the railing to the arrowhead lilies touched with
the fading light, ``you will see that they are similar.''

``They are!'' cried the Girl.  ``How lovely!  Which is
more beautiful I do not know.  And you won't like it
if I say I must not.''

She held the open case toward the Harvester.

`` `Possession is nine points in the law,' '' he quoted.
``You have taken it already and it is in your hands;
now make the gift perfect for me by putting it on and
saying nothing more.''

``My wedding gift!'' repeated the Girl.  Slowly she
lifted the beautiful ornament and held it in the light.
``I'm so glad you just force me to take it,'' she said.
``Any half-normal girl would be delighted.  I do accept
it.  And what's more, I am going to keep and wear it
and my ring at suitable times all my life, in memory
of what you have done to be kind to me on this awful
day.''

``Thank you!'' said the Harvester.  ``That is a flash
of the proper spirit.  Allow me to put it on you.''

``No!'' said the Girl.  ``Not yet!  After a while!  I
want to hold it in my hands, where I can see it!''

``Now there is one other thing,'' said the Harvester.

``If I had known for any length of time that this day was
coming and bringing you, as most men know when a
girl is to be given into their care, I could have made it
different.  As it is, I've done the best I knew.  All
your after life I hope you will believe this:  Just that if
you missed anything to-day that would have made it
easier for you or more pleasant, the reason was because
of my ignorance of women and the conventions, and lack
of time.  I want you to know and to feel that in my
heart those vows I took were real.  This is undoubtedly
all the marrying I will ever want to do.  I am old-fashioned
in my ways, and deeply imbued with the spirit
of the woods, and that means unending evolution along
the same lines.

``To me you are my revered and beloved wife, my
mate now; and I am sure nothing will make me feel
any different.  This is the day of my marriage to the
only woman I ever have thought of wedding, and to
me it is joy unspeakable.  With other men such a day
ends differently from the close of this with me.  Because
I have done and will continue to do the level best I know
for you, this oration is the prologue to asking you for
one gift to me from you, a wedding gift.  I don't want
it unless you can bestow it ungrudgingly, and truly want
me to have it.  If you can, I will have all from this day
I hope for at the hands of fate.  May I have the gift
I ask of you, Ruth?''

She lifted startled eyes to his face.

``Tell me what it is?'' she breathed.

``It may seem much to you,'' said the Harvester;
``to me it appears only a gracious act, from a wonderful
woman, if you will give me freely, one real kiss.  I've
never had one, save from a Dream Girl, Ruth, and you
will have to make yours pretty good if it is anything
like hers.  You are woman enough to know that most
men crush their brides in their arms and take a thousand.
I'll put my hands behind me and never move a muscle,
and I won't ask for more, if you will crown my wedding
day with only one touch of your lips.  Will you kiss
me just once, Ruth?''

The Girl lifted a piteous face down which big tears
suddenly rolled.

``Oh Man, you shame me!'' she cried.  ``What
kind of a heart have I that it fails to respond to such
a plea?  Have I been overworked and starved so long
there is no feeling in me?  I don't understand why
I don't take you in my arms and kiss you a hundred
times, but you see I don't.  It doesn't seem as if I ever
could.''

``Never mind,'' said the Harvester gently.  ``It was
only a fancy of mine, bred from my dream and unreasonable,
perhaps.  I am sorry I mentioned it.  The sun is
on the stoop now; I want you to enter your home in
its light.  Come!''

He half lifted her from the bench.  ``I am going to
help you up the drive as I used to assist mother,'' he
said, fighting to keep his voice natural.  ``Clasp your
hands before you and draw your elbows to your sides.
Now let me take one in each palm, and you will scoot
up this drive as if you were on wheels.''

``But I don't want to `scoot','' she said unsteadily.
``I must go slowly and not miss anything.''

``On the contrary, you don't want to do any such
thing----you should leave most of it for to-morrow.''

``I had forgotten there would be any to-morrow.  It
seems as if the day would end it and set me adrift
again.''

``You are going to awake in the gold room with the
sun shining on your face in the morning, and it's going
to keep on all your life.  Now if you've got a smile in
your anatomy, bring it to the surface, for just beyond
this tree lies happiness for you.''

His voice was clear and steady now, his confidence
something contagious.  There was a lovely smile on her
face as she looked at him, and stepped into the line of
light crossing the driveway; and then she stopped and
cried, ``Oh lovely!  Lovely!  Lovely!'' over and over.
Then maybe the Harvester was not glad he had planned,
worked unceasingly, and builded as well as he knew.

The cabin of large, peeled, golden oak logs, oiled to
preserve them, nestled like a big mushroom on the side
of the hill.  Above and behind the building the trees
arose in a green setting.  The roof was stained to their
shades.  The wide veranda was enclosed in screening,
over which wonderful vines climbed in places, and round
it grew ferns and deep-wood plants.  Inside hung big
baskets of wild growth; there was a wide swinging seat,
with a back rest, supported by heavy chains.  There
were chairs and a table of bent saplings and hickory
withes.  Two full stories the building arose, and the
western sun warmed it almost to orange-yellow, while
the graceful vines crept toward the roof.

The Girl looked at the rapidly rising hedge on each
side of her, at the white floor of the drive, and long and
long at the cabin.

``You did all this since February?'' she asked.

``Even to transforming the landscape,'' answered the
Harvester.

``Oh I wish it was not coming night!'' she cried.  ``I
don't want the dark to come, until you have told me the
name of every tree and shrub of that wonderful hedge,
and every plant and vine of the veranda; and oh I
want to follow up the driveway and see that beautiful
little creek--listen to it chuckle and laugh!  Is it
always glad like that?  See the ferns and things that
grow on the other side of it!  Why there are big beds of
them.  And lilies of the valley by the acre!  What is
that yellow around the corner?''

``Never mind that now,'' said the Harvester, guiding
her up the steps, along the gravelled walk to the screen
that he opened, and over a flood of gold light she crossed
the veranda, and entered the door.

``Now here it appears bare,'' said the Harvester,
``because I didn't know what should go on the walls
or what rugs to get or about the windows.  The table,
chairs, and couch I made myself with some help from a
carpenter.  They are solid black walnut and will age
finely.''

``They are beautiful,'' said the Girl, softly touching
the shining table top with her fingers.  ``Please put
the necklace on me now, I have to use my eyes and hands
for other things.''

She held out the box and the Harvester lifted the
pendant and clasped the chain around her neck.  She
glanced at the lustrous pearls and then the fingers of
one hand softly closed over them.  She went through
the long, wide living-room, examining the chairs and
mantel, stopping to touch and exclaim over its array
of half-finished candlesticks.  At the door of his room
she paused.  ``And this?'' she questioned.

``Mine,'' said the Harvester, turning the knob.  ``I'll
give you one peep to satisfy your curiosity, and show
you the location of the bridge over which you came to
me in my dream.  All the remainder is yours.  I reserve
only this.''

``Will the `goblins git me' if I come here?''

``Not goblins, but a man alive; so heed your warning.
After you have seen it, keep away.''

The floor was cement, three of the walls heavy screening
with mosquito wire inside, the roof slab shingled.
On the inner wall was a bookcase, below it a desk, at
one side a gun cabinet, at the other a bath in a small
alcove beside a closet.  The room contained two chairs
like those of the veranda, and the bed was a low oak
couch covered with a thick mattress of hemlock twigs,
topped with sweet fern, on which the sun shone all day.
On a chair at the foot were spread some white sheets,
a blanket, and an oilcloth.  The sun beat in, the wind
drifted through, and one lying on the couch could see
down the bright hill, and sweep the lake to the opposite
bank without lifting the head.  The Harvester drew the
Girl to the bedside.

``Now straight in a line from here,'' he said, ``across
the lake to that big, scraggy oak, every clear night the
moon builds a bridge of molten gold, and once you walked
it, my girl, and came straight to me, alone and unafraid;
and you were gracious and lovely beyond anything a
man ever dreamed of before.  I'll have that to think of
to-night.  Now come see the dining-room, kitchen, and
hand-made sunshine.''

He led her into what had been the front room of the
old cabin, now a large, long dining-room having on each
side wide windows with deep seats.  The fireplace
backwall was against that of the living-room, but here
the mantel was bare.  All the wood-work, chairs, the
dining table, cupboards, and carving table were golden
oak.  Only a few rugs and furnishings and a woman's
touch were required to make it an unusual and beautiful
room.  The kitchen was shining with a white hard-wood
floor, white wood-work, and pale green walls.  It was a
light, airy, sanitary place, supplied with a pump, sink,
hot and cold water faucets, refrigerator, and every
modern convenience possible to the country.

Then the Harvester almost carried the Girl up the
stairs and showed her three large sleeping rooms, empty
and bare save for some packing cases.

``I didn't know about these, so I didn't do anything.
When you find time to plan, tell me what you want, and
I'll make--or buy it.  They are good-sized, cool rooms.
They all have closets and pipes from the furnace, so they
will be comfortable in winter.  Now there is your place
remaining.  I'll leave you while I stable Betsy and feed
the stock.''

He guided her to the door opening from the living-
room to the east.

``This is the sunshine spot,'' he said.  ``It is bathed
in morning light, and sheltered by afternoon shade.
Singing Water is across the drive there to talk to you
always.  It comes pelting down so fast it never freezes,
so it makes music all winter, and the birds are so numerous
you'll have to go to bed early for they'll wake you by
dawn.  I noticed this room was going to be full of sunshine
when I built it, and I craved only brightness for
you, so I coaxed all of it to stay that I could.  Every
stroke is the work of my hands, and all of the furniture.
I hope you will like it.  This is the room of which I've
been telling you, Ruth.  Go in and take possession,
and I'll entreat God and all His ministering angels to
send you sunshine and joy.''

He opened the door, guided her inside, closed it, and
went swiftly to his work.

The Girl stood and looked around her with amazed
eyes.  The floor was pale yellow wood, polished until
it shone like a table top.  The casings, table, chairs,
dressing table, chest of drawers, and bed were solid
curly maple.  The doors were big polished slabs of it,
each containing enough material to veneer all the furniture
in the room.  The walls were of plaster, tinted
yellow, and the windows with yellow shades were
curtained in dainty white.  She could hear the Harvester
carrying the load from the wagon to the front porch, the
clamour of the barn yard; and as she went to the north
window to see the view, a shining peacock strutted down
the walk and went to the Harvester's hand for grain,
while scores of snow-white doves circled over his head.
She stepped on deep rugs of yellow goat skins, and,
glancing at the windows on either side, she opened the
door.

Outside it lay a porch with a railing, but no roof.
On each post stood a box filled with yellow wood-flowers
and trailing vines of pale green.  A big tree rising through
one corner of the floor supplied the cover.  A gate
opened to a walk leading to the driveway, and on either
side lay a patch of sod, outlined by a deep hedge of
bright gold.  In it saffron, cone-flowers, black-eyed
Susans, golden-rod, wild sunflowers, and jewel flower
grew, and some of it, enough to form a yellow line, was
already in bloom.  Around the porch and down the
walk were beds of yellow violets, pixie moss, and every
tiny gold flower of the woods.  The Girl leaned against
the tree and looked around her and then staggered
inside and dropped on the couch.

``What planning!  What work!'' she sobbed.  ``What
taste!  Why he's a poet!  What wonderful beauty!
He's an artist with earth for his canvas, and growing
things for colours.''

She lay there staring at the walls, the beautiful wood-
work and furniture, the dressing table with its array of
toilet articles, a low chair before it, and the thick rug
for her feet.  Over and over she looked at everything,
and then closed her eyes and lay quietly, too weary and
overwhelmed to think.  By and by came tapping at
the door, and she sprang up and crossing to the
dressing table straightened her hair and composed
her face.

``Ajax demands to see you,'' cried a gay voice.

The Girl stepped outside.

``Don't be frightened if he screams at you,'' warned
the Harvester as she passed him.  ``He detests a stranger,
and he always cries and sulks.''

It was a question what was in the head of the bird as
he saw the strange looking creature invading his domain,
and he did scream, a wild, high, strident wail that
delighted the Harvester inexpressibly, because it sent the
Girl headlong into his arms.

``Oh, good gracious!'' she cried.  ``Has such a
beautiful bird got a noise in it like that?  Why
I've fed them in parks and I never heard one explode
before.''

Then how the Harvester laughed.

``But you see you are in the woods now, and this is
not a park bird.  It will be the test of your power to see
how soon you can coax him to your hand.''

``How do I work to win him?''

``I am afraid I can't tell you that,'' said the Harvester.
``I had to invent a plan for myself.  It required a long
time and much petting, and my methods might not
avail for you.  It will interest you to study that out.
But the member of the family it is positively essential
that you win to a life and death allegiance is Belshazzar.
If you can make him love you, he will protect you at
every turn.  He will go before you into the forest and
all the crawling, creeping things will get out of his way.
He will nose around the flowers you want to gather, and
if he growls and the hair on the back of his neck rises,
never forget that you must heed that warning.  A few
times I have not stopped for it, and I always have been
sorry.  So far as anything animate or uncertain footing
is concerned, you are always perfectly safe if you obey
him.  About touching plants and flowers, you must
confine yourself to those you are certain you know,
until I can teach you.  There are gorgeous and wonderfully
attractive things here, but some of them are rank
poison.  You won't handle plants you don't know,
until you learn, Ruth?''

``I will not,'' she promised instantly.

She went to the seat under the porch tree and leaning
against the trunk she studied the hill, and the rippling
course of Singing Water where it turned and curved
before the cabin, and started across the vivid little
marsh toward the lake.  Then she looked at the Harvester.
He seated himself on the low railing and smiled at
her.

``You are very tired?'' he asked.

``No,'' she said.  ``You are right about the air being
better up here.  It is stimulating instead of depressing.''

``So far as pure air, location, and water are concerned,''
said the Harvester, ``I consider this place ideal.  The
lake is large enough to cool the air and raise sufficient
moisture to dampen it, and too small to make it really
cold and disagreeable.  The slope of the hill gives perfect
drainage.  The heaviest rains do not wet the earth for
more than three hours.  North, south, and west breezes
sweep the cool air from the water to the cabin in summer.
The same suns warm us here on the winter hillside.
My violets, spring beauties, anemones, and dutchman's
breeches here are always two weeks ahead of those in
the woods.  I am not afraid of your not liking the location
or the air.  As for the cabin, if you don't care for
that, it's very simple.  I'll transform it into a laboratory
and dry-house, and build you whatever you want,
within my means, over there on the hill just across
Singing Water and facing the valley toward Onabasha.
That's a perfect location.  The thing that worries me
is what you are going to do for company, especially while
I am away.''

``Don't trouble yourself about anything,'' she said.
``Just say in your heart, `she is going to be stronger than
she ever has been in her life in this lovely place, and she
has more right now than she ever had or hoped to have.'
For one thing, I am going to study your books.  I never
have had time before.  While we sewed or embroidered,
mother talked by the hour of the great writers of the
world, told me what they wrote, and how they expressed
themselves, but I got to read very little for myself.''

``Books are my company,'' said the Harvester.

``Do your friends come often?''

``Almost never!  Doc and his wife come most, and
if you look out some day and see a white-haired, bent
old woman, with a face as sweet as dawn, coming up the
bank of Singing Water, that will be my mother's friend,
Granny Moreland, who joins us on the north over there.
She is frank and brusque, so she says what she thinks
with unmistakable distinctness, but her heart is big and
tender and her philosophy keeps her sweet and kindly
despite the ache of rheumatism and the weight of seventy years.''

``I'd love to have her come,'' said the Girl.  ``Is that
all?''

``Yes.''

``Why?''

``Your favourite word,'' laughed the Harvester.  ``The
reason lies with me, or rather with my mother.  Some
day I will tell you the whole story, and the cause.  I
think now I can encompass it in this.  The place is an
experiment.  When medicinal herbs, roots, and barks
became so scarce that some of the most important were
almost extinct, it occurred to me that it would be a
good idea to stop travelling miles and poaching on the
woods of other people, and turn our land into an herb
garden.  For four years before mother went, and six
since, I've worked with all my might, and results are
beginning to take shape.  While I've been at it, of course,
my neighbours had an inkling of what was going on,
and I've been called a fool, lazy, and a fanatic, because
I did not fell the trees and plow for corn.  You readily
can see I'm a little short of corn ground out there,''
he waved toward the marsh and lake, ``and up there,''
he indicated the steep hill and wood.  ``But somewhere
on this land I've been able to find muck for mallows,
water for flags and willows, shade for ferns, lilies, and
ginseng, rocky, sunny spaces for mullein, and open, fertile
beds for Bouncing Bet----just for examples.  God never
evolved a place better suited for an herb farm; from
woods to water and all that goes between, it is perfect.''

``And indescribably lovely,'' added the Girl.

``Yes, I think it is,'' said the Harvester.  ``But in
the days when I didn't know how it was coming out,
I was sensitive about it; so I kept quiet and worked,
and allowed the other fellow to do the talking.  After
a while the ginseng bed grew a treasure worth guarding,
and I didn't care for any one to know how much I had
or where it was, as a matter of precaution.  Ginseng
and money are synonymous, and I was forced to be away
some of the time.''

``Would any one take it?''

``Certainly!'' said the Harvester.  ``If they knew it
was there, and what it is worth.  Then, as I've told you,
much of the stuff here must not be handled except
by experts, and I didn't want people coming in my
absence and taking risks.  The remainder of my reason
for living so alone is cowardice, pure and simple.''

``Cowardice?  You!  Oh no!''

``Thank you!'' said the Harvester.  ``But it is!
Some day I'll tell you of a very solemn oath I've had to
keep.  It hasn't been easy.  You wouldn't understand,
at least not now.  If the day ever comes when I think
you will, I'll tell you.  Just now I can express it by
that one word.  I didn't dare fail or I felt I would be
lost as my father was before me.  So I remained away
from the city and its temptations and men of my age,
and worked in the woods until I was tired enough to
drop, read books that helped, tinkered with the carving,
and sometimes I had an idea, and I went into that little
building behind the dry-house, took out my different
herbs, and tried my hand at compounding a new cure
for some of the pains of humanity.  It isn't bad work,
Ruth.  It keeps a fellow at a fairly decent level, and some
good may come of it.  Carey is trying several formulae
for me, and if they work I'll carry them higher.  If
you want money, Girl, I know how to get it for you.''

``Don't you want it?''

``Not one cent more than I've got,'' said the Harvester
emphatically.  ``When any man accumulates more than
he can earn with his own hands, he begins to enrich
himself at the expense of the youth, the sweat, the
blood, the joy of his fellow men.  I can go to the city,
take a look, and see what money does, as a rule, and
it's another thing I'm afraid of.  You will find me a
dreadful coward on those two points.  I don't want
to know society and its ways.  I see what it does to
other men; it would be presumption to reckon myself
stronger.  So I live alone.  As for money, I've watched
the cross cuts and the quick and easy ways to accumulate
it; but I've had something in me that held me to
the slow, sure, clean work of my own hands, and it's
yielded me enough for one, for two even, in a reasonable
degree.  So I've worked, read, compounded, and carved.
If I couldn't wear myself down enough to sleep by any
other method, I went into the lake, and swam across and
back; and that is guaranteed to put any man to rest,
clean and unashamed.''

``Six years,'' said the Girl softly, as she studied him.
``I think it has set a mark on you.  I believe I can trace
it.  Your forehead, brow, and eyes bear the lines and
the appearance of all experience, all comprehension,
but your lips are those of a very young lad.  I shouldn't
be surprised if I had that kiss ready for you, and I really
believe I can make it worth while.''

``Oh good Lord!'' cried the Harvester, turning a
backward somersault over the railing and starting in
big bounds up the drive toward the stable.  He passed
around it and into the woods at a rush and a few seconds
later from somewhere on the top of the hill his strong,
deep voice swept down, ``Glory, glory hallelujah!''

He sang it through at the top of his lungs, that
majestic old hymn, but there was no music at all, it was
simply a roar.  By and by he came soberly to the barn
and paused to stroke Betsy's nose.

``Stop chewing grass and listen to me,'' he said.  ``She's
here, Betsy!  She's in our cabin.  She's going to remain,
you can stake your oats on that.  She's going to be the
loveliest and sweetest girl in all the world, and because
you're a beast, I'll tell you something a man never could
know.  Down with your ear, you critter!  She's going
to kiss me, Betsy!  This very night, before I lay me,
her lips meet mine, and maybe you think that won't
be glorious.  I supposed it would be a year, anyway,
but it's now!  Ain't you glad you are an animal, Betsy,
and can keep secrets for a fool man that can't?''

He walked down the driveway, and before the Girl
had a chance to speak, he said, ``I wonder if I had not
better carry those things into your room, and arrange
your bed for you.''

``I can,'' she said.

``Oh no!'' exclaimed the Harvester.  ``You can't lift
the mattress and heavy covers.  Hold the door and tell
me how.''

He laid a big bundle on the floor, opened it, and took
out the shoes.

``Your shoe box is in the closet there.''

``I didn't know what that door was, so I didn't
open it.''

``That is a part of my arrangements for you,'' said
the Harvester.  ``Here is a closet with shelves for your
covers and other things.  They are bare because I
didn't know just what should be put on them.  This
is the shoe box here in the corner; I'll put these in it
now.''

He knelt and in a row set the shoes in the curly maple
box and closed it.

``There you are for all kinds of places and varieties of
weather.  This adjoining is your bathroom.  I put
in towels, soaps; brushes, and everything I could think
of, and there is hot water ready for you----rain water,
too.''

The Girl followed and looked into a shining little
bathroom, with its white porcelain tub and wash bowl,
enamelled wood-work, dainty green walls, and white
curtains and towels.  She could see no accessory she
knew of that was missing, and there were many things
to which she never had been accustomed.  The Harvester
had gone back to the sunshine room, and was kneeling
on the floor beside the bundle.  He began opening
boxes and handing her dresses.

``There are skirt, coat, and waist hangers on the
hooks,'' he said.  ``I only got a few things to start on,
because I didn't know what you would like.  Instead
of being so careful with that dress, why don't you take
it off, and put on a common one?  Then we will have
something to eat, and go to the top of the hill and watch
the moon bridge the lake.''

While she hung the dresses and selected the one to
wear, he placed the mattress, spread the padding and
sheets, and encased the pillow.  Then he bent and pressed
the springs with his hands.

``I think you will find that soft and easy enough for
health,'' he said.  ``All the personal belongings I had
that clerk put up for you are in that chest of drawers
there.  I put the little boxes in the top and went down.
You can empty and arrange them to-morrow.  Just
hunt out what you will need now.  There should be
everything a girl uses there somewhere.  I told them to
be very careful about that.  If the things are not right
or not to your taste, you can take them back as soon as
you are rested, and they will exchange them for you.
If there is anything I have missed that you can think
of that you need to-night, tell me and I'll go and get it.''

The Girl turned toward him.

``You couldn't be making sport of me,'' she said,
``but Man!  Can't you see that I don't know what to
do with half you have here?  I never saw such things
closely before.  I don't know what they are for.  I
don't know how to use them.  My mother would have
known, but I do not.  You overwhelm me!  Fifty
times I've tried to tell you that a room of my very own,
such a room as this will be when to-morrow's sun comes
in, and these, and these, and these,'' she turned from
the chest of boxes to the dressing table, bed, closet, and
bath, ``all these for me, and you know absolutely
nothing about me----I get a big lump in my throat,
and the words that do come all seem so meaningless,
I am perfectly ashamed to say them.  Oh Man, why do
you do it?''

``I thought it was about time to spring another `why'
on me,'' said the Harvester.  ``Thank God, I am now
in a position where I can tell you `why'!  I do it because
you are the girl of my dream, my mate by every law of
Heaven and earth.  All men build as well as they know
when the one woman of the universe lays her spell on
them.  I did all this for myself just as a kind of
expression of what it would be in my heart to do if I
could do what I'd like.  Put on the easiest dress you can
find and I will go and set out something to eat.''

She stood with arms high piled with the prettiest
dresses that could be selected hurriedly, the tears running
down her white cheeks and smiled through them at him.

``There wouldn't be any of that liquid amber would
there?'' she asked.

``Quarts!'' cried the Harvester.  ``I'll bring some.
. . . Does it really hit the spot, Ruth?'' he
questioned as he handed her the glass.

She heaped the dresses on the bed and took it.

``It really does.  I am afraid I am using too much.''

``I don't think it possibly can hurt you.  To-morrow
we will ask Doc.  How soon will you be ready for
lunch?''

``I don't want a bite.''

``You will when you see and smell it,'' said the
Harvester.  ``I am an expert cook.  It's my chiefest
accomplishment.  You should taste the dishes I improvise.
But there won't be much to-night, because I want you
to see the moon rise over the lake.''

He went away and the Girl removed her dress and
spread it on the couch.  Then she bathed her face and
hands.  When she saw the discoloured cloth, it proved
that she had been painted, and made her very indignant.
Yet she could not be altogether angry, for that flush
of colour had saved the Harvester from being pitied by
his friend.  She stood a long time before the mirror,
staring at her gaunt, colourless face; then she went
to the dressing table and committed a crime.  She
found a box of cream and rubbed it on for a foundation.
Then she opened some pink powder, and carefully dusted
her cheeks.

``I am utterly ashamed,'' she said to the image in the
mirror, ``but he has done so much for me, he is so, so----
I don't know a word big enough----that I can't bear him
to see how ghastly I am, how little worth it.  Perhaps
the food, better air, and outdoor exercise will give me
strength and colour soon.  Until it does I'm afraid I'm
going to help out all I can with this.  It is wonderful
how it changes one.  I really appear like a girl instead
of a bony old woman.''

Then she looked over the dresses, selected a pretty
white princesse, slipped it on, and went to the kitchen.
But the Harvester would not have her there.  He seated
her at the dining table, beside the window overlooking
the lake, lighted a pair of his home-made candles in his
finest sticks, and placed before her bread, butter, cold
meat, milk, and fruit, and together they ate their first
meal in their home.

``If I had known,'' said the Harvester, ``Granny
Moreland is a famous cook.  She is a Southern woman,
and she can fry chicken and make some especial dishes
to surpass any one I ever knew.  She would have been
so pleased to come over and get us an all-right supper.''

``I'd much rather have this, and be by ourselves,'' said
the Girl.

``Well, you can bank on it, I would,'' agreed the
Harvester.  ``For instance, if any one were here, I
might feel restrained about telling you that you are
exactly the beautiful, flushed Dream Girl I have adored
for months, and your dress most becoming.  You are
a picture to blind the eyes of a lonely bachelor, Ruth.''

``Oh why did you say that?'' wailed the Girl.  ``Now
I've got to feel like a sneak or tell you----and I didn't
want you to know.''

``Don't you ever tell me or any one else anything you
don't want to,'' said the Harvester roundly.  ``It's
nobody's business!''

``But I must!  I can't begin with deception.  I was
fool enough to think you wouldn't notice.  Man, they
painted me!  I didn't know they were doing it, but when
it all washed off, I looked so ghastly I almost frightened
myself.  I hunted through the boxes they put up for
you and found some pink powder----''

``But don't all the daintiest women powder these
days, and consider it indispensable?  The clerk said so,
and I've noticed it mentioned in the papers.  I bought
it for you to use.''

``Yes, just powder, but Man, I put on a lot of cold
cream first to stick the powder good and thick.  Oh
I wish I hadn't!''

``Well since you've told it, is your conscience
perfectly at ease?  No you don't!  You sit where you are!
You are lovely, and if you don't use enough powder to
cover the paleness, until your colour returns, I'll hold
you and put it on.  I know you feel better when you
appear so that every one must admire you.''

``Yes, but I'm a fraud!''

``You are no such thing!'' cried the Harvester hotly.
``There hasn't a woman in ten thousand got any such
rope of hair.  I have been seeing the papers on the hair
question, too.  No one will believe it's real.  If they
think your hair is false, when it is natural, they won't
be any more fooled when they think your colour is real,
and it isn't.  Very soon it will be and no one need ever
know the difference.  You go on and fix up your level
best.  To see yourself appearing well will make you
ambitious to become so as soon as possible.''

``Harvester-man,'' said the Girl, gazing at him with
wet luminous eyes, ``for the sake of other women, I
could wish that all men had an oath to keep, and had
been reared in the woods.''

``Here is the place we adjourn to the moon,'' cried
the Harvester.  ``I don't know of anything that can cure
a sudden accession of swell head like gazing at the heavens.
One finds his place among the atoms naturally and
instantaneously with the eyes on the night sky.  Should
you have a wrap?  You should!  The mists from the
lake are cool.  I don't believe there is one among my
orders.  I forgot that.  But upstairs with mother's
clothing there are several shawls and shoulder capes.
All of them were washed and carefully packed.  Would
you use one, Ruth?''

``Why not give it to me.  Wouldn't she like me to
wear her things better than to have them lying in moth
balls?''

The Harvester looked at her and shook his head,
marvelling.

``I can't tell how pleased she would be,'' he said.

``Where are her belongings?'' asked the Girl.  ``I
could use them to help furnish the house, and it wouldn't
appear so strange to you.''

The Harvester liked that.

``All the washed things are in those boxes upstairs;
also some fine skins I've saved on the chance of wanting
them.  Her dishes are in the bottom of the china closet
there; she was mighty proud of them.  The furniture
and carpets were so old and abused I burned them.  I'll
go bring a wrap.''

He took the candle and climbed the stairs, soon
returning with a little white wool shawl and a big pink
coverlet.

``Got this for her Christmas one time,'' he said.  ``She'd
never had a white one and she thought it was pretty.''

He folded it around the Girl's shoulders and picked
up the coverlet.

``You're never going to take that to the woods!'' she
cried.

``Why not?''

She took it in her hands to find a corner.

``Just as I thought!  It's a genuine Peter Hartman!
It's one of the things that money can't buy, or, rather,
one that takes a mint of money to own.  They are
heirlooms.  They are not manufactured any more.
At the art store where I worked they'd give you fifty
dollars for that.  It is not faded or worn a particle.
It would be lovely in my room; you mustn't take a
treasure like that out of doors.''

``Ruth, are you in earnest?'' demanded the Harvester.
``I believe there are six of them upstairs.''

``Plutocrat!'' cried the Girl.  ``What colours?''

``More of this pinkish red, blue, and pale green.''

``Famous!  May I have them to help furnish with
to-morrow?''

``Certainly!  Anything you can find, any way on earth
you want it, only in my room.  That is taboo, as I told
you.  What am I going to take to-night?''

``Isn't the rug you had in the woods in the wagon yet?
Use that!''

``Of course!  The very thing!  Bel, proceed!''

``Are you going to leave the house like this?''

``Why not?''

``Suppose some one breaks in!''

``Nothing worth carrying away, except what you have
on.  No one to get in.  There is a big swamp back of
our woods, marsh in front, we're up here where we can
see the drive and bridge.  There is nothing possible
from any direction.  Never locked the cabin in my life,
except your room, and that was because it was sacred,
not that there was any danger.  Clear the way, Bel!''

``Clear it of what?''

``Katydids, hoptoads, and other carnivorous animals.''

``Now you are making fun of me!  Clear it of what?''

``A coon that might go shuffling across, an opossum,
or a snake going to the lake.  Now are you frightened
so that you will not go?''

``No.  The path is broad and white and surely you
and Bel can take care of me.''

``If you will trust us we can.''

``Well, I am trusting you.''

``You are indeed,'' said the Harvester.  ``Now see
if you think this is pretty.''

He indicated the hill sloping toward the lake.  The
path wound among massive trees, between whose branches
patches of moonlight filtered.  Around the lake shore
and climbing the hill were thickets of bushes.  The
water lay shining in the light, a gentle wind ruffled the
surface in undulant waves, and on the opposite bank
arose the line of big trees.  Under a giant oak widely
branching, on the top of the hill, the Harvester spread
the rug and held one end of it against the tree trunk to
protect the Girl's dress.  Then he sat a little distance
away and began to talk.  He mingled some sense with
a quantity of nonsense, and appreciated every hint of a
laugh he heard.  The day had been no amusing matter
for a girl absolutely alone among strange people and
scenes.  Anything more foreign to her previous environment
or expectations he could not imagine.  So he
talked to prevent her from thinking, and worked for a
laugh as he laboured for bread.

``Now we must go,'' he said at last.  ``If there is the
malaria I strongly suspect in your system, this night air
is none too good for you.  I only wanted you to see the
lake the first night in your new home, and if it won't
shock you, I brought you here because this is my holy
of holies.  Can you guess why I wanted you to come,
Ruth?''

``If I wasn't so stupid with alternate burning and
chills, and so deadened to every proper sensibility, I
suppose I could,'' she answered, ``but I'm not brilliant.
I don't know, unless it is because you knew it would be
the loveliest place I ever saw.  Surely there is no other
spot in the world quite so beautiful.''

``Then would it seem strange to you,'' asked the
Harvester going to the Girl and gently putting his arms
around her, ``would it seem strange to you, that a woman
who once homed here and thought it the prettiest place
on earth, chose to remain for her eternal sleep, rather
than to rest in a distant city of stranger dead?''

He felt the Girl tremble against him.

``Where is she?''

``Very close,'' said the Harvester.  ``Under this oak.
She used to say that she had a speaking acquaintance
with every tree on our land, and of them all she loved
this big one the best.  She liked to come here in winter,
and feel the sting of the wind sweeping across the lake,
and in summer this was her place to read and to think.
So when she slept the unwaking sleep, Ruth, I came
here and made her bed with my own hands, and then
carried her to it, covered her, and she sleeps well.  I
never have regretted her going.  Life did not bring her
joy.  She was very tired.  She used to say that after
her soul had fled, if I would lay her here, perhaps the
big roots would reach down and find her, and from
her frail frame gather slight nourishment and then
her body would live again in talking leaves that would
shelter me in summer and whisper her love in winter.
Of all Medicine Woods this is the dearest spot to me.
Can you love it too, Ruth?''

``Oh I can!'' cried the Girl; ``I do now!  Just to see
the place and hear that is enough.  I wish, oh to my
soul I wish----''

``You wish what?'' whispered the Harvester
gently.

``I dare not!  I was wild to think of it.  I would be
ungrateful to ask it.''

``You would be ungracious if you didn't ask anything
that would give me the joy of pleasing you.  How long
is it going to require for you to learn, Ruth, that to make
up for some of the difficulties life has brought you would
give me more happiness than anything else could?
Tell me now.''

``No!''

He gathered her closer.

``Ruth, there is no reason why you should be actively
unkind to me.  What is it you wish?''

She struggled from his arms and stood alone in white
moonlight, staring across the lake, along the shore, deep
into the perfumed forest, and then at the mound she now
could distinguish under the giant tree.  Suddenly she
went to him and with both shaking hands gripped his
arm.

``My mother!'' she panted.  ``Oh she was a beautiful
woman, delicately reared, and her heart was crushed and
broken.  By the inch she went to a dreadful end I could
not avert or allay, and in poverty and grime I fought
for a way to save her body from further horror, and it's
all so dreadful I thought all feeling in me was dried
and still, but I am not quite calloused yet.  I suffer
it over with every breath.  It is never entirely out of
my mind.  Oh Man, if only you would lift her from the
horrible place she lies, where briers run riot and cattle
trample and the unmerciful sun beats!  Oh if only you'd
lift her from it, and bring her here!  I believe it would
take away some of the horror, the shame, and the heartache.
I believe I could go to sleep without hearing the
voice of her suffering, if I knew she was lying on this hill,
under your beautiful tree, close the dear mother you
love.  Oh Man, would you----?''

The Harvester crushed the Girl in his arms and
shuddering sobs shook his big frame, and choked his voice.

``Ruth, for God's sake, be quiet!'' he cried.  ``Why I'd
be glad to!  I'll go anywhere you tell me, and bring her,
and she shall rest where the lake murmurs, the trees
shelter, the winds sing, and earth knows the sun only
in long rays of gold light.''

She stared at him with strained face.

``You----you wouldn't!'' she breathed.

``Ruth, child,'' said the Harvester, ``I tell you I'd be
happy.  Look at my side of this!  I'm in search of bands
to bind you to me and to this place.  Could you tell
me a stronger than to have the mother you idolized
lie here for her long sleep?  Why Girl, you can't know
the deep and abiding joy it would give me to bring
her.  I'd feel I had you almost secure.  Where is she
Ruth?''

``In that old unkept cemetery south of Onabasha,
where it costs no money to lay away your loved ones.''

``Close here!  Why I'll go to-morrow!  I supposed
she was in the city.''

She straightened and drew away from him.

``How could I?  I had nothing.  I could not have
paid even her fare and brought her here in the cheapest
box the decency of man would allow him to make if
her doctor had not given me the money I owe.  Now
do you understand why I must earn and pay it myself?
Save for him, it was charity or her delicate body to
horrors.  Money never can repay him.''

``Ruth, the day you came to Onabasha was she with
you?''

``In the express car,'' said the Girl.

``Where did you go when you left the train shed?''

``Straight to the baggage room, where Uncle Henry
was waiting.  Men brought and put her in his wagon,
and he drove with me to the place and other men lowered
her, and that was all.''

``You poor Girl!'' cried the Harvester.  ``This time
to-morrow night she shall sleep in luxury under this oak,
so help me God!  Ruth, can you spare me? May I
go at once?  I can't rest, myself.''

``You will?'' cried the Girl.  ``You will?''

She was laughing in the moonlight.  ``Oh Man, I
can't ever, ever tell you!''

``Don't try,'' said the Harvester.  ``Call it settled.
I will start early in the morning.  I know that little
cemetery.  The man whose land it is on can point me
the spot.  She is probably the last one laid there.  Come
now, Ruth.  Go to the room I made for you, and sleep
deeply and in peace.  Will you try to rest?''

``Oh David!'' she exulted.  ``Only think!  Here where
it's clean and cool; beside the lake, where leaves fall gently
and I can come and sit close to her and bring flowers; and
she never will be alone, for your dear mother is here.  Oh
David!''

``It is better.  I can't thank you enough for thinking
of it.  Come now, let me help you.''

He half carried her down the hill.  Then he made the
cabin a glamour of light by putting candles in the sticks
he had carved and placing them everywhere.

``There is a lighting plant in the basement,'' he said,
``but I had not expected to use it until winter, and I
have no acetylene.  Candles were our grandmothers'
lights and they are the best anyway.  Go bathe your
face, Ruth, and wash away all trace of tears.  Put on
the pink powder, and in a few weeks you will have
colour to outdo the wildest rose.  You must be as gay
as you can the remainder of this night.''

``I will!'' cried the Girl.  ``I will!  Oh I didn't know
a thing on earth could make me happy!  I didn't know
I really could be glad.  Oh if the ice in my heart would
melt, and the wall break down, and the girlhood I've
never known would come yet!  Oh David, if it would!''

``Before the Lord it shall!'' vowed the Harvester.
``It shall come with the fulness of joy right here in
Medicine Woods.  Think it!  Believe it!  Keep it before
you!  Work for it!  Happiness is worth while!
All of us have a right to it!  It shall be yours and soon.''

``I will try!  I will!'' promised the Girl.  ``I'll go
right now and I'll put on the blessed pink powder so
thickly you'll never know what is under it, and soon it
won't be needed at all.''

She was laughing as she left the room.  The Harvester
restlessly walked the floor a few minutes and then sat
with a notebook and began entering stems.

When the Girl returned, he brought the pillow from her
bed, folded the coverlet, and she lay on them in the big
swing.  He covered her with the white shawl, and while
Singing Water sang its loudest, katydids exulted over
the delightful act of their ancestor, and a million gauze-
winged creatures of night hummed against the screen,
in a voice soft and low he told her in a steady stream,
as he swayed her back and forth, what each sound of the
night was, and how and why it was made all the way
from the rumbling buzz of the June bug to the screech
of the owl and the splash of the bass in the lake.  All
of it, as it appealed to him, was the story of steady
evolution, the natural processes of reproduction, the joy of
life and its battles, and the conquest of the strong in
nature.  At his hands every sound was stripped of terror.
The leaping bass was exulting in life, the screeching owl
was telling its mate it had found a fat mouse for the
children, the nighthawk was courting, the big bull
frogs booming around the lake were serenading the moon.
There was not a thing to fear or a voice left with an
unsympathetic note in it.  She was half asleep when at last
he helped her to her room, set a pitcher of frosty, clinking
drink on her table, locked her door and window screens
inside, spread Belshazzar's blanket on her porch, and set
his door wide open, that he might hear if she called, and then
said good night and went back to his memorandum book.

``No bad beginning,'' he muttered softly, ``no bad
beginning, but I'd almost give my right hand if she hadn't
forgotten----''

In her room the exhausted Girl slipped the pins from
her hair and sank on the low chair before the dressing-
table.  She picked up the shining, silver backed brush
and stared at the monogram, R. F. L, entwined on it.

``My soul!'' she exclaimed.  ``WAS HE SO SURE AS THAT?
Was there ever any other man like him?''

She dropped the brush and with tired hands pushed
back the heavy braids.  Then she arose and going to
the chest of drawers began lifting lids to find a night
robe.  As she searched the boxes she found every dainty,
pretty undergarment a girl ever used and at last the
robes.  She shook out a long white one, slipped into it,
and walked to the bed.  That stood as he had arranged
it, white, clean, and dainty.

``Everything for me!'' she said softly.  ``Everything
for me!  Shall there be nothing for him?  Oh he makes
it easy, easy!''

She stepped to the closet, picked down a lavender
silk kimona and drawing it over her gown she gathered it
around her and opening the bathroom door, she stepped
into a little hall leading to the dining-room.  As she
entered the living-room the Harvester bent over his book.
Her step was very close when he heard it and turned his
head.  In an instant she touched his shoulders.  The
Harvester dropped the pencil, and palm downward laid
his hands on the table, his promise strong in his heart.
The Girl slid a shaking palm under his chin, leaned
his head against her breast, and dropped a sweet, tear-wet
face on his.  With all the strength of her frail arms she
gripped him a second, and then gave the kiss, into which
she tried to put all she could find no words to express.




CHAPTER XIV

SNOWY WINGS

The Harvester sat at the table in deep thoughts
until the lights in the Girl's room were darkened
and everything was quiet.  Then he locked
the screens inside and went into the night.  The moon
flooded all the hillside, until coarse print could have been
read with keen eyes in its light.  A restlessness, born of
exultation he could not allay or control, was on him.  She
had not forgotten!  After this, the dream would be
effaced by reality.  It was the beginning.  He scarcely
had dared hope for so much.  Surely it presaged the love
with which she some day would come to him and crown
his life.  He walked softly up and down the drive, passing
her windows, unable to think of sleep.  Over and over
he dwelt on the incidents of the day, so inevitably he
came to his promise.

``Merciful Heaven!'' he muttered.  ``How can such
things happen?  The poor, overworked, tired, suffering
girl.  It will give her some comfort.  She will feel better.
It has to be done.  I believe I will do the worst part of it
while she sleeps.''

He went to the cabin, crept very close to one of her
windows and listened intently.  Surely no mortal awake
could lie motionless so long.  She must be sleeping.  He
patted Belshazzar, whispered, ``Watch, boy, watch for
your life!'' and then crossed to the dry-house.  Beside
it he found a big roll of coffee sacks that he used in
collecting roots, and going to the barn, he took a spade and
mattock.  Then he climbed the hill to the oak; in the
white moonlight laid off his measurements and began
work.  His heart was very tender as he lifted the earth,
and threw it into the tops of the big bags he had propped
open.

``I'll line it with a couple of sheets and finish the edge
with pond lilies and ferns,'' he planned, ``and I'll drag
this earth from sight, and cover it with brush until I
need it.''

Sometimes he paused in his work to rest a few minutes
and then he stood and glanced around him.  Several
times he went down the hill and slipped close to a window,
but he could not hear a sound.  When his work was
finished, he stood before the oak, scraping clinging earth
from the mattock with which he had cut roots he had
been compelled to remove.  He was tired now and he
thought he would go to his room and sleep until daybreak.
As he turned the implement he remembered how through
it he had found her, and now he was using it in her
service.  He smiled as he worked, and half listened to
the steady roll of sound encompassing him.  A cool
breath swept from the lake and he wondered if it found
her wet, hot cheek.  A wild duck in the rushes below
gave an alarm signal, and it ran in subdued voice, note
by note, along the shore.  The Harvester gripped the
mattock and stood motionless.  Wild things had taught
him so many lessons he heeded their warnings instinctively.
Perhaps it was a mink or muskrat approaching
the rushes.  Listening intently, he heard a stealthy step
coming up the path behind him.

The Harvester waited.  He soundlessly moved around
the trunk of the big tree.  An instant more the night
prowler stopped squarely at the head of the open grave,
and jumped back with an oath.  He stood tense a second,
then advanced, scratched a match and dropped it into
the depths of the opening.  That instant the Harvester
recognized Henry Jameson, and with a spring landed between
the man's shoulders and sent him, face down, headlong
into the grave.  He snatched one of the sacks of
earth, and tipping it, gripped the bottom and emptied
the contents on the head and shoulders of the prostrate
man.  Then he dropped on him and feeling across his
back took an ugly, big revolver from a pocket.  He swung
to the surface and waited until Henry Jameson crawled
from under the weight of earth and began to rise; then,
at each attempt, he knocked him down.  At last he
caught the exhausted man by the collar and dragged
him to the path, where he dropped him and stood gloating.

``So!'' he said; ``It's you!  Coming to execute your
threat, are you?  What's the matter with my finishing
you, loading your carcass with a few stones into this sack,
and dropping you in the deepest part of the lake.''

There was no reply.

``Ain't you a little hasty?'' asked the Harvester.
``Isn't it rather cold blooded to come sneaking when you
thought I'd be asleep?  Don't you think it would be
low down to kill a man on his wedding day?''

Henry Jameson arose cautiously and faced the Harvester.

``Who have you killed?'' he panted.

``No one,'' answered the Harvester.  ``This is for the
victim of a member of your family, but I never dreamed
I'd have the joy of planting any of you in it first, even
temporarily.  Did you rest well?  What I should have
done was to fill in, tread down, and leave you at the
bottom.''

Jameson retreated a few steps.  The Harvester laughed
and advanced the same distance.

``Now then,'' he said, ``explain what you are doing
on my premises, a few hours after your threat, and
armed with another revolver before I could return the
one I took from you this afternoon.  You must grow
them on bushes at your place, they seem so numerous.
Speak up!  What are you doing here?''

There was no answer.

``There are three things it might be,'' mused the
Harvester.  ``You might think to harm me, but you're
watched on that score and I don't believe you'd enjoy
the result sure to follow.  You might contemplate trying
to steal Ruth's money again, but we'll pass that up.
You might want to go through my woods to inform yourself
as to what I have of value there.  But, in all prob-
ability, you are after me.  Well, here I am.  Go ahead!
Do what you came to!''

The Harvester stepped toward the lake bank and
Jameson, turning to watch him, exposed a face ghastly
through its grime.

``Look here!'' cried the Harvester, sickening.  ``We
will end this right now.  I was rather busy this afternoon,
but I wasn't too hurried to take that little weapon
of yours to the chief of police and tell him where and how
I got it and what occurred.  He was to return it to you
to-morrow with his ultimatum.  When I have added
the history of to-night, reinforced by another gun, he
will understand your intentions and know where you
belong.  You should be confined, but because your name
is the same as the Girl's, and there is of your blood in her
veins, I'll give you one more chance.  I'll let you go this
time, but I'll report you, and deliver this implement to
be added to your collection at headquarters.  And I
tell you, and I'll tell them, that if ever I find you on my
premises again, I'll finish you on sight.  Is that clear?''

Jameson nodded.

``What I should do is to plump you squarely into
confinement, as I could easily enough, but that's not my
way.  I am going to let you off, but you go knowing the
law.  One thing more:  Don't leave with any distorted
ideas in your head.  I saw Ruth the day she stepped
from the cars in Onabasha and I loved her.  I wanted
to court and marry her, as any man would the girl he
loves, but you spoiled that with your woman killing
brutality.  So I married her in Onabasha this afternoon.
You can see the records at the county clerk's office and
interview the minister who performed the ceremony,
if you doubt me.  Ruth is in her room, comfortable as
I can make her, asleep and unafraid, thank God!  This
grave is for her mother.  The Girl wants her lifted from
the horrible place you put her, and laid where it is
sheltered and pleasant.  Now, I'll see you off my land.
Hurry yourself!''

With the Harvester following, Henry Jameson went
back over the path he had come, until he reached and
mounted the horse he had ridden.  As the Harvester
watched him, Jameson turned in the saddle and spoke
for the second time.

``What will you give me in cold cash to tell you who
she is, and where her mother's people are?''

The Harvester leaped for the bridle and missed.
Jameson bent over the horse and lashed it to a run.
Half way to the oak the Harvester remembered the
revolver, but being unaccustomed to weapons, he had
forgotten it when he needed it most.  He replaced the
earth in the sack and dragged it away, then plunged
into the lake, and afterward went to bed, where he slept
soundly until dawn.  First, he slipped into the living-
room and wrote a note to the Girl.  Then he fed Belshazzar
and ate a hearty breakfast.  He stationed the
dog at her door, gave him the note, and went to the oak.
There he arranged everything neatly and as he desired,
and then hitching Betsy he quietly guided her down the
drive and over the road to Onabasha.  He went to an
undertaking establishment, made all his arrangements,
and then called up and talked with the minister who
had performed the marriage ceremony the previous day.

The sun shining in her face awoke Ruth and she lay
revelling in the light.  ``Maybe it will colour me faster
than the powder,'' she thought.  ``How peculiar for him
to say what he did!  I always thought men detested it.
But he is not like any one else.  ``She lay looking around
the beautiful room and wondering where the Harvester
was.  She could not hear him.  Then, slowly and painfully,
she dragged her aching limbs from the bed and
went to the door.  The dog was gone from the porch
and she could not see the man at the stable.  She
selected a frock and putting it on opened the door.
Belshazzar arose and offered this letter:

DEAR RUTH:

I have gone to keep my promise.  You are locked in
with Bel.  Please obey me and do not step outside the
door until four o'clock.  Then put on a pretty white
dress, and with the dog, come to the bridge to meet me.
I hope you will not suffer and fret.  Put away your
clothing, arrange the rooms to keep busy, or better
yet, lie in the swing and rest.  There is food in the ice
chest, pantry, and cellar.  Forgive me for leaving you
to-day, but I thought you would feel easier to have this
over.  I am so glad to bring your mother here.  I hope
it will make you happy enough to meet us with a smile.
Do not forget the pink box until the reality comes.
                        With love,
                                  DAVID.


The Girl went to the kitchen and found food.  She
offered to share with Belshazzar, but she could see from
his indifference he was not hungry.  Then she returned
to the room flooded with light, and filled with treasures,
and tried to decide how she would arrange her clothing.
She spent hours opening boxes and putting dainty, pretty
garments in the drawers, hanging the dresses, and placing
the toilet articles.  Often she wearily dropped to the
chairs and couches, or gazed from door and windows at
the pictures they framed.  ``I wonder why he doesn't
want me to go outside,'' she thought.  ``I wouldn't
be afraid in the least, with Bel.  I'd just love to go across
to that wonderful little river of Singing Water and sit
in the shade; but I won't open the door until four o'clock,
just as he wrote.''

When she thought of where he had gone, and why, the
swift tears filled her eyes, but she forced them back and
resolutely went to investigate the dining-room.  Then
for two hours she was a home builder, with a touch of
that homing instinct found in the heart of every good
woman.  First, she looked where the Harvester had said
the dishes were, and suddenly sat on the floor exulting.
There was a quantity of old chipped and cracked white
ware and some gorgeous baking powder prizes; but there
were also big blue, green, and pink bowls, several large
lustre plates, and a complete tea set without chip or
blemish, two beautiful pitchers, and a number of willow
pieces.  She set the green bowl on the dining table,
the blue on the living-room, and took the pink herself,
while a beautiful yellow one she placed in the dining-
room window seat.

``Oh, if I only dared fill them with those lovely flowers!''
She stood in the window and gazed longingly toward the
lake.  ``I know what colour I'd like to put in each of
them,'' she said, ``but I promised not to touch anything,
and the ones I want most I never saw before, and I'm
not to go out anyway.  I can't see the sense in that,
when I'm not at all afraid, but if he does this wonderful
thing for me I must do what he asks.  Oh mother,
mother!  Are you really coming to this beautiful place
and to rest at last?''

She sank to the window seat and lay trembling, but
she bravely restrained the tears.  After a time she
remembered the upstairs and went to see the coverlets.
She found a half dozen beautiful ones, and smiled as
she examined the stiffly conventionalized birds facing
each other in the border designs, and in one corner of
each blanket she read, woven in the cloth----
    Peter and John
       Hartman
       Wooster
        Ohio
        1837

She took a blue and a green one, several fine skins
from the fur box the Harvester had told her about, and
went downstairs.  It required all her strength to push
the heavy tables before the fireplaces.  She spread papers
on them to stand on, and tacked a skin above each
mantel.  She set all of the candlesticks, except those
she wanted to use, in the lower part of an empty bookcase.
A pair of black walnut she placed on the living-
room mantel, together with a big blue plate, a yellow
one, and an old brass candlestick.  She admired the
effect very much.  She spread the blue coverlet on
the couch, and arranged the blue bowl and some books
on the table.  Here and there she hung a skin across a
chair back, or spread it in a wide window seat.  Having
exhausted all her resources, she returned to the dining-
room, spread a skin before the hearth and in each window
seat, set a pink and green lustre plate on the mantel,
and a pair of oak candlesticks, and arranged the lustre
tea set on the side table.  The pink coverlet she took
for herself, and after resting a time she was surprised
on going back to the rooms to see how homelike they
appeared.

At three o'clock she dressed and at almost four unlocked
the screen, called Belshazzar to her side, and slowly
went down the drive to the bridge.  She had used the
pink powder, put on a beautiful white dress, carefully
arranged her hair, and she wore the pearl ornament.
Once her fingers strayed to the pendant and she said
softly, ``I think both he and mother would like me to
wear it.''

At the foot of the hill she stopped at a bench and sat
in the shade waiting.  Belshazzar stretched beside her,
and gazed at her with questioning, friendly dog eyes.
The Girl looked from Singing Water to the lake, and
up the hill to make sure it was real.  She tried to quiet
her quivering muscles and nerves.  He had asked her
to meet him with a smile.  How could she?  He could
not have understood what it meant when he made the
request.  There never would be any way to make him
realize; indeed, why should he?  The smile must be
ready.  He had loved his mother deeply, and yet he
had said he did not grieve to lay her to rest.  Earth
had not been kind.  Then why should she sorrow for
her mother?  Again life had been not only unkind, but
bitterly cruel.

Belshazzar arose and watched down the drive.  The
Girl looked also.  Through the gate and up the levee
came a strange procession.  First walked the Harvester
alone, with bared head, and he carried an arm load of
white lilies.  A carriage containing a man and several
women followed.  Then came a white hearse with snowy
plumes, and behind that another carriage filled with
people, and Betsy followed drawing men in the spring
wagon.  The Girl arose and as she stepped to the drive
she swayed uncertainly an instant.

``Gracious Heaven!'' she gasped.  ``He is bringing
her in white, and with flowers and song!''

Then she lifted her head, and with a smile on her lips
she went to meet him.  As she reached his side, he
tenderly put an arm around her, and came on steadily.

``Courage Girl!'' he whispered.  ``Be as brave as she
was!''

Around the driveway and up the hill he half carried
her, to a seat he had placed under the oak.  Before her
lay the white-lined grave, and the Harvester arranged
his lilies around it.  The teams stopped at the barn and
men came up the hill bearing a white burden.  Behind
them followed the minister who yesterday had performed
their marriage ceremony, and after him a choir
of trained singers softly chanting:

    ``Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord,
    For they shall cease from their labours.''


``But David,'' panted the Girl, ``It was mean and
poor.  That is not she!''

``Sush!'' said the Harvester.  ``It is your mother.
The location was high and dry, and it has been only a
short time.  We wrapped her in white silk, laid her
on a soft cushion and pillow, and housed her securely.
She can sleep well now, Ruth.  Listen!''

Covered with white lilies, slowly the casket sank into
earth.  At its head stood the minister and as it began
to disappear, the white doves, frightened by the strange
conveyances at the stable, came circling above.  The
minister looked up.  He lifted a clear tenor, and softly
and purely he sang, while at a wave of his hand the choir
joined him:

    ``Oh, come angel band!  Oh, come, and around me stand!
    Oh, bear me away on your snowy wings to my immortal home!''


He uttered a low benediction, and singing, the people
turned and went downhill.  The Harvester gathered
the Girl in his arms and carried her to the lake.  He
laid her in his boat and taking the oars sent it along the
bank in the shade, and through cool, green places.

``Now cry all you choose!'' he said.

The overstrained Girl covered her face and sobbed
wildly.  After a time he began to talk to her gently,
and before she realized it, she was listening.

``Death has been kinder to her than life, Ruth,'' he
said.  ``She is lying as you saw her last, I think.  We
lifted her very tenderly, wrapped her carefully, and
brought her gently as we could.  Now they shall rest
together, those little mothers of ours, to whom men
were not kind; and in the long sleep we must forget, as
they have forgotten, and forgive, as no doubt they have
forgiven.  Don't you want to take some lilies to them
before we go to the cabin?  Right there on your left
are unusually large ones.''

The Girl sat up, dried her eyes and gathered the white
flowers.  When the last vehicle crossed the bridge, the
Harvester tied the boat and helped her up the hill.  The
old oak stretched its wide arms above two little mounds,
both moss covered and scattered with flowers.  The
Girl added her store and then went to the Harvester, and
sank at his feet.

``Ruth, you shall not!'' cried the man.  ``I simply
will not have that.  Come now, I will bring you back
this evening.''

He helped her to the veranda and laid her in the swing.
He sat beside her while she rested, and then they went
into the cabin for supper.  Soon he had her telling
what she had found, and he was making notes of what
was yet required to transform the cabin into a home.
The Harvester left it to her to decide whether he should
roof the bridge the next day or make a trip for furnishings.
She said he had better buy what they needed
and then she could make the cabin homelike while he
worked on the bridge.



CHAPTER XV

THE HARVESTER INTERPRETS LIFE

They went through the rooms together, and
the Girl suggested the furnishings she thought
necessary, while the Harvester wrote the list.  The
following morning he was eager to have her company,
but she was very tired and begged to be allowed to
wait in the swing, so again he drove away and left her
with Belshazzar on guard.  When he had gone, she went
through the cabin arranging the furniture the best she
could, then dressed and went to the swinging couch.  It
was so wide and heavy a light wind rocked it gently,
and from it she faced the fern and lily carpeted hillside,
the majesty of big trees of a thousand years, and heard
the music of Singing Water as it sparkled diamond-like
where the sun rays struck its flow.  Across the drive and
down the valley to the brilliant bit of marsh it hurried
on its way to Loon Lake.

There were squirrels barking and racing in the big trees
and over the ground.  They crossed the sodded space
of lawn and came to the top step for nuts, eating them
from cunning paws.  They were living life according
to the laws of their nature.  She knew that their sharp,
startling bark was not to frighten her, but to warn straying
intruders of other species of their kindred from a nest,
because the Harvester had told her so.  He had said
their racing here and there in wild scramble was a game
of tag and she found it most interesting to observe.

Birds of brilliant colour flashed everywhere, singing
in wild joy, and tilted on the rising hedge before her,
hunting berries and seeds.  Their bubbling, spontaneous
song was an instinctive outpouring of their joy over
mating time, nests, young, much food, and running water.
Their social, inquiring, short cry was to locate a mate,
and call her to good feeding.  The sharp wild scream of a
note was when a hawk passed over, a weasel lurked in
the thicket, or a black snake sunned on the bushes.  She
remembered these things, and lay listening intently,
trying to interpret every sound as the Harvester did.

Birds of wide wing hung as if nailed to the sky, or
wheeled and sailed in grandeur.  They were searching
the landscape below to locate a hare or snake in the waving
grass or carrion in the fields.  The wonderful exhibitions
of wing power were their expression of exultation
in life, just as the song sparrow threatened to rupture
his throat as he swung on the hedge, and the red bird
somewhere in the thicket whistled so forcefully it sounded
as if the notes might hurt him.

On the lake bass splashed in a game with each other.
Grebes chattered, because they were very social.  Ducks
dived and gobbled for roots and worms of the lake shore,
and congratulated each other when they were lucky.

Killdeer cried for slaughter, in plaintive tones, as their
white breasts gleamed silver-like across the sky.  They
insisted on the death of their ancient enemies, because
the deer had trampled nests around the shore, roiled the
water, spoiled the food hunting, and had been wholly
unmindful of the laws of feathered folk from the beginning.

Behind the barn imperial cocks crowed challenges
of defiance to each other and all the world, because
they once had worn royal turbans on their heads, and
ruled the forests, even the elephants and lions.  Happy
hens cackled when they deposited an egg, and wandered
through their park singing the spring egg song
unceasingly.

Upon the barn Ajax spread and exulted in glittering
plumage, and screamed viciously.  He was sending a
wireless plea to the forests of Ceylon for a gray mate to
come and share the ridge pole with him, and help him
wage red war on the sickening love making of the white
doves he hated.

Everything was beautiful, some of it was amusing,
all instructive, and intensely interesting.  The Girl
wanted to know about the brown, yellow, and black
butterflies sailing from flower to flower.  She watched
big black and gold bees come from the forest for pollen
and listened to their monotonous bumbling.  Her first
humming bird poised in air, and sipped nectar before
her astonished eyes.  It was marvellous, but more
wonderful to the Girl than anything she saw or heard was
the fact that because of the Harvester's teachings she
now could trace through all of it the ordained processes
of the evolution of life.  Everything was right in its way,
all necessary to human welfare, and so there was nothing
to fear, but marvels to learn and pictures to appreciate.
She would have taken Belshazzar and gone out, but
the Harvester had exacted a promise that she would not.
The fact was, he could see that she was coming gradually
to a sane and natural view of life and living things, and
he did not want some sound or creature to frighten her,
and spoil what he had accomplished.  So she swayed
in the swing and watched, and tried to interpret sights
and sounds as he did.

Before an hour she realized that she was coming
speedily into sympathy with the wild life around her; for,
instead of shivering and shrinking at unaccustomed
sounds, she was listening especially for them, and trying
to arrive at a sane version.  Instead of the senseless
roar of commerce, manufacture, and life of a city,
she was beginning to appreciate sounds that varied and
carried the Song of Life in unceasing measure and
absorbing meaning, while she was more than thankful
for the fresh, pure air, and the blessed, God-given light.
It seemed to the Girl that there was enough sunshine at
Medicine Woods to furnish rays of gold for the whole
world.

``Bel,'' she said to the dog standing beside her, ``it's a
shame to separate you from the Medicine Man and pen
you here with me.  It's a wonder you don't bite off my
head and run away to find him.  He's gone to bring more
things to make life beautiful.  I wanted to go with him,
but oh Bel, there's something dreadfully wrong with
me.  I was afraid I'd fall on the streets and frighten and
shame him.  I'm so weak, I scarcely can walk straight
across one of these big, cool rooms that he has built for
me.  He can make everything beautiful, Bel, a home,
rooms, clothing, grounds, and life----above everything
else he can make life beautiful.  He's so splendid and
wonderful, with his wide understanding and sane
interpretation and God-like sympathy and patience.  Why
Belshazzar, he can do the greatest thing in all the world!
He can make you forget that the grave annihilates your
dear ones by hideous processes, and set you to thinking
instead that they come back to you in whispering leaves
and flower perfumes.  If I didn't owe him so much that
I ought to pay, if this wasn't so alluringly beautiful, I'd
like to go to the oak and lie beside those dear women
resting there, and give my tired body to furnish sap for
strength and leaves for music.  He can take its bitterest
sting----from death, Bel----and that's the most
wonderful thing----in life, Bel----''

Her voice became silent, her eyes closed; the dog
stretched himself beside her on guard, and it was so the
Harvester found them when he drove home from the
city.  He heaped his load in the dining-room, stabled
Betsy, carried the things he had brought where he thought
they belonged, and prepared food.  When she awakened
she came to him.

``How is it going, Girl?'' asked the Harvester.

``I can't tell you how lovely it has been!''

``Do you really mean that your heart is warming a
little to things here?''

``Indeed I do!  I can't tell you what a morning I've had.
There have been such myriad things to see and hear.  Oh,
Harvester, can you ever teach me what all of it means?''

``I can right now,'' said the Harvester promptly.
``It means two things, so simple any little child can
understand----the love of God and the evolution of life.
I am not precisely clear as to what I mean when I say
God.  I don't know whether it is spirit, matter, or force;
it is that big thing that brings forth worlds, establishes
their orbits, and gives us heat, light, food, and water.  To
me, that is God and His love.  Just that we are given
birth, sheltered, provisioned, and endowed for our work.
Evolution is the natural consequence of this.  It is the
plan steadily unfolding.  If I were you, I wouldn't
bother my head over these questions, they never have
been scientifically explained to the beginning; I doubt if
they ever will be, because they start with the origin of
matter and that is too far beyond man for him to
penetrate.  Just enjoy to the depths of your soul----that's
worship.  Be thankful for everything----that's praising
God as the birds praise him.  And `do unto others'
that's all there is of love and religion combined in
one fell swoop.''

``You should go before the world and tell every one
that!''

``No! It isn't my vocation,'' said the Harvester.
``My work is to provide pain-killer.  I don't believe,
Ruth, that there is any one on the footstool who is doing
a better job along that line.  I am boastfully proud of
it----just of sending in the packages that kill fever,
refresh poor blood, and strengthen weak hearts;
unadulterated, honest weight, fresh, and scrupulously clean.
My neighbours have a different name for it; I call it a
man's work.''

``Every one who understands must,'' said the Girl.
``I wish I could help at that.  I feel as if it would do
more to wipe out the pain I've suffered and seen her
endure than anything else.  Man, when I grow strong
enough I want to help you.  I believe that I am going
to love it here.''

``Don't ever suppress your feelings, Ruth!'' hastily
cried the Harvester.  ``It will be very bad for you.  You
will become wrought up, and `het up,' as Granny Moreland
says, and it will make you very ill.  When we drive
the fever from your blood, the ache from your bones, the
poison of wrong conditions from your soul, and good,
healthy, red corpuscles begin pumping through your
little heart like a windmill, you can stake your life you're
going to love it here.  And the location and work are
not all you're going to care for either, honey.  Now
just wait!  That was not `nominated in the bond.'  I'm
allowed to talk.  I never agreed not to SAY things.  What
I promised was not to DO them.  So as I said, honey,
sit at this table, and eat the food I've cooked; and by
that time the furniture van will be here, and the men will
unload, and you shall reign on a throne and tell me where
and how.''

``Oh if I were only stronger, David!''

``You are!'' said the Harvester.  ``You are much
better than you were yesterday.  You can talk, and that's
all that's necessary.  The rooms are ready for furniture.
The men will carry it where you want it.  A decorator
is coming to hang the curtains.  By night we will be
settled; you can lie in the swing while I read to you a
story so wonderful that the wildest fairy tale you ever
heard never touched it.''

``What will it be, David?''

``Eat all the red raspberries and cream, bread and
butter, and drink all the milk you can.  There's blood,
beefsteak, and bones in it.  As I was saying, you have
come here a stranger to a strange land.  The first thing
is for you to understand and love the woods.  Before
you can do that you should master the history of one
tree; just the same as you must learn to know and love
me before your childlike trust in all mankind returns
again.  Understand?  Well, the fates knew you were on
the way, coming trembling down the brink, Ruth, so
they put it into the heart of a great man to write largely
of a wonderful tree, especially for your benefit.  After
it had fallen he took it apart, split it in sections, and year
by year spread out history for all the world to read.  It
made a classic story filled with unsurpassed wonders.
It was a pine of a thousand years, close the age of our
mother tree, Ruth, and when we have learned from Enos
Mills how to wrest secrets from the hearts of centuries,
we will climb the hill and measure our oak, and then I
will estimate, and you will write, and we will make a
record for our tree.''

``Oh, I'd like that!''

``So would I,'' said the Harvester.  ``And a million
other things I can think of that we can learn together.
It won't require long for me to teach you all I know, and
by that time your hand will be clasped in mine, and
our `hearts will beat as one,' and you will give me a kiss
every night and morning, and a few during the day for
interest, and we will go on in life together and learn songs,
miracles, and wonders until the old oak calls us.  Then
we will ascend the hill gladly and lie down and offer
up our bodies, and our children will lay flowers over our
hearts, and gather the herbs and paint the pictures?  Amen.
I hear a van on the bridge.  Just you go to your room
and lie down until I get things unloaded and where they
belong.  Then you and the decorator can make us home-
like, and to-morrow we will begin to live.  Won't that
be great, Ruth?''

``With you, yes, I think it will.''

``That will do for this time,'' said the Harvester, as
he opened the door to her room.  ``Lie and rest until
I say ready.''

As he went to meet the men, she could hear him singing
lustily, ``Praise God from whom all blessings flow.''

``What a child he is!'' she said.  ``And what a man!''

For an hour heavy feet sounded through the cabin
carrying furniture to different rooms.  Then with a floor
brush in one hand, and a polishing cloth in the other,
the Harvester tapped at her door and helped the Girl
upstairs.  He had divided the space into three large, square
sleeping chambers.  In each he had set up a white iron
bed, a dressing table, and wash stand, and placed two
straight-backed and one rocking chair, all white.  The
walls were tinted lightly with green added to the plaster.
There was a mattress and a stack of bedding on each bed,
and a large rug and several small ones on the floors.  He
led her to the rocking chair in the middle room, where
she could see through the open doors of the other two.

``Now,'' said the Harvester, ``I didn't know whether
the room with two windows toward the lake and one on
the marsh, or two facing the woods and one front, was
the guest chamber.  It seemed about an even throw
whether a visitor would prefer woods or water, so I made
them both guest chambers, and got things alike for them.
Now if we are entertaining two, one can't feel more highly
honoured than the other.  Was that a scheme?''

``Fine!'' said the Girl.  ``I don't see how it could be
surpassed.''

`` `Be sure you are right, then go ahead,' '' quoted the
Harvester.  ``Now I'll make the beds and Mr. Rogers
can hang the curtains.  Is white correct for sleeping
rooms?  Won't that wash best and always be fresh?''

``It will,'' said the Girl.  ``White wash curtains are
much the nicest.''

``Make them short Mr. Rogers; keep them off the
floor,'' advised the Harvester.  ``And simple----don't
arrange any thing elaborate that will tire a woman to
keep in order.  Whack them off the right length and pin
them to the poles.''

``How about that, Mrs. Langston?'' asked the decorator.

``I am quite sure that is the very best thing to do,''
said the Girl; and the curtains were hung while the mattress
was placed.

``Now about this?'' inquired the Harvester.  ``Do I
put on sheets and fix these beds ready to use?''

``I would not,'' said the Girl.  ``I would spread the
pad and the counterpane and lay the sheets and pillows
in the closet until they are wanted.  They can be sunned
and the bed made delightfully fresh.''

``Of course,'' said the Harvester.

When he had finished, he spread a cover on the dressing
table and laid out white toilet articles and grouped a
white wash set with green decorations on the stand.
Then he brushed the floor, spread a big green rug in the
middle and small ones before the bed, stand, and table,
and coming out closed the door.

``Guest chamber with lake view is now ready for
company,'' announced the Harvester.  ``Repeat the
operation on the woods room, finished also.  Why do
some people make work of things and string them out
eternally and fuss so much?  Isn't this simple and easy,
Ruth?''

``Yes, if you can afford it,'' said the Girl.

``Forbear!'' cried the Harvester.  ``We have the goods,
the dealer has my check.  Excuse me ten minutes, until
I furnish another room.''

The laughing Girl could catch glimpses of him busy
over beds and dresser, floor and rugs; then he came where
she sat.

``Woods guest chamber ready,'' he said.  ``Now we
come to the interior apartment, that from its view might
be called the marsh room.  Aside from being two windows
short, it is exactly similar to the others.  It occurred
to me that, in order to make up for the loss of those
windows, and also because I may be compelled to ask
some obliging woman to occupy it in case your health
is precarious at any time, and in view of the further fact
that if any such woman could be found, and would kindly
and willingly care for us, my gratitude would be
inexpressible; on account of all these things, I got a shade
the BEST furnishings for this room.''

The Girl stared at him with blank face.

``You see,'' said the Harvester, ``this is a question of
ethics.  Now what is a guest?  A thing of a day!  A
person who disturbs your routine and interferes with
important concerns.  Why should any one be grateful
for company?  Why should time and money be lavished
on visitors?  They come.  You overwork yourself.
They go.  You are glad of it.  You return the visit,
because it's the only way to have back at them; but why
pamper them unnecessarily?  Now a good housekeeper,
that means more than words can express.  Comfort,
kindness, sanitary living, care in illness!  Here's to the
prospective housekeeper of Medicine Woods!  Rogers,
hang those ruffled embroidered curtains.  Observe that
whereas mere guest beds are plain white, this has a
touch of brass.  Where guest rugs are floor coverings,
this is a work of art.  Where guest brushes are celluloid,
these are enamelled, and the dresser cover is hand
embroidered.  Let me also call your attention to the chairs
touched with gold, cushioned for ease, and a decorated
pitcher and bowl.  Watch the bounce of these springs
and the thickness of this mattress and pad, and notice
that where guests, however welcome, get a down
cover of sateen, the lady of the house has silkaline.
Won't she prepare us a breakfast after a night in this
room?''

``David, are you in earnest?'' gasped the Girl.

``Don't these things prove it?'' asked the Harvester.
``No woman can enter my home, when my necessities
are so great I have to hire her to come, and take the
WORST in the house.  After my wife, she gets the best,
every time.  Whenever I need help, the woman who will
come and serve me is what I'd call the real guest of the
house.  Friend?  Where are your friends when trouble
comes?  It always brings a crowd on account of the
excitement, and there is noise and racing; but if your soul
is saved alive, it is by a steady, trained hand you pay to
help you.  Friends come and go, but a good housekeeper
remains and is a business proposition--one that
if conducted rightly for both parties and on a strictly
common-sense basis, gives you living comfort.  Now that
we have disposed of the guests that go and the one that
remains, we will proceed downward and arrange for
ourselves.''

``David, did you ever know any one who treated a
housekeeper as you say you would?''

``No.  And I never knew any one who raised medicinal
stuff for a living, but I'm making a gilt-edged success of
it, and I would of a housekeeper, too.''

``It doesn't seem----''

``That's the bedrock of all the trouble on the earth,''
interrupted the Harvester.  ``We are a nation and a
part of a world that spends our time on `seeming.'  Our
whole outer crust is `seeming.'  When we get beneath
the surface and strike the BEING, then we live as we are
privileged by the Almighty.  I don't think I give
a tinker how anything SEEMS.  What concerns me is
how it IS.  It doesn't `seem' possible to you to hire a
woman to come into your home and take charge of its
cleanliness and the food you eat--the very foundation
of life--and treat her as an honoured guest,
and give her the best comfort you have to offer.  The
cold room, the old covers, the bare floor, and the cast
off furniture are for her.  No wonder, as a rule, she
gives what she gets.  She dignifies her labour in the
same ratio that you do.  Wait until we need a housekeeper,
and then gaze with awe on the one I will raise
to your hand.''

``I wonder----''

``Don't!  It's wearing!  Come tell me how to make our
living-room less bare than it appears at present.''

They went downstairs together, followed by the
decorator, and began work on the room.  The Girl
was placed on a couch and made comfortable and then
the Harvester looked around.

``That bundle there, Rogers, is the curtains we bought
for this room.  If you and my wife think they are not
right, we will not hang them.''

The decorator opened the package and took out
curtains of tan-coloured goods with a border of blue and
brown.

``Those are not expensive,'' said the Harvester, ``but
to me a window appears bare with only a shade, so I
thought we'd try these, and when they become soiled
we'll burn them and buy some fresh ones.''

``Good idea!'' laughed the Girl.  ``As a house
decorator you surpass yourself as a Medicine Man.''

``Fix these as you did those upstairs,'' ordered the
Harvester.  ``We don't want any fol-de-rols.  Put the
bottom even with the sill and shear them off at the top.''

``No, I am going to arrange these,'' said the decorator,
``you go on with your part.''

``All right!'' agreed the Harvester.  ``First, I'll lay
the big rug.''

He cleared the floor, spread a large rug with a rich
brown centre and a wide blue border.  Smaller ones of
similar design and colour were placed before each of the
doors leading from the room.

``Now for the hearth,'' said the Harvester, ``I got this
tan goat skin.  Doesn't that look fairly well?''

It certainly did; and the Girl and the decorator
hastened to say so.  The Harvester replaced the table and
chairs, and then sat on the couch at the Girl's feet.

``I call this almost finished,'' he remarked.  ``All we
need now is a bouquet and something on the walls, and
that is serious business.  What goes on them usually
remains for a long time, and so it should be selected with
care.  Ruth, have you a picture of your mother?''

``None since she was my mother.  I have some lovely
girl photographs.''

``Good!'' cried the Harvester.  ``Exactly the thing!
I have a picture of my mother when she was a pretty
girl.  We will select the best of yours and have them
enlarged in those beautiful brown prints they make in
these days, and we'll frame one for each side of the
mantel.  After that you can decorate the other walls
as you see things you want.  Fifteen minutes gone; we
are ready to take up the line of march to the dining-room.
Oh I forgot my pillows!  Here are a half dozen tan,
brown, and blue for this room.  Ruth, you arrange
them.''

The Girl heaped four on the couch, stood one beside
the hearth, and laid another in a big chair.

``Now I don't know what you will think of this,''
said the Harvester.  ``I found it in a magazine at the
library.  I copied this whole room.  The plan was to
have the floor, furniture, and casings of golden oak and
the walls pale green.  Then it said get yellow curtains
bordered with green and a green rug with yellow figures,
so I got them.  I had green leather cushions made for
the window seats, and these pillows go on them.  Hang
the saffron curtains, Rogers, and we will finish in good
shape for dinner by six.  By the way, Ruth, when will
you select your dishes?  It will take a big set to fill
all these shelves and you shall have exactly what you
want.''

``I can use those you have very well.''

``Oh no you can't!'' cried the Harvester.  ``I may live
and work in the woods, but I am not so benighted that
I don't own and read the best books and magazines, and
subscribe for a few papers.  I patronize the library and
see what is in the stores.  My money will buy just as
much as any man's, if I do wear khaki trousers.  Kindly
notice the word.  Save in deference to your ladyship I
probably would have said pants.  You see how ELITE
I can be if I try.  And it not only extends to my wardrobe,
to a `yaller' and green dining-room, but it takes in
the `chany' as well.  I have looked up that, too.  You
want china, cut glass, silver cutlery, and linen.  Ye!
Ye!  You needn't think I don't know anything but how
to dig in the dirt.  I have been studying this especially,
and I know exactly what to get.''

``Come here,'' said the Girl, making a place for him
beside her.  ``Now let me tell you what I think.  We
are going to live in the woods, and our home is a log
cabin----''

``With acetylene lights, a furnace, baths, and hot and
cold water----'' interpolated the Harvester.

The Girl and the decorator laughed.

``Anyway,'' said she, ``if you are going to let me have
what I would like, I'd prefer a set of tulip yellow dishes
with the Dutch little figures on them.  I don't know
what they cost, but certainly they are not so expensive
as cut glass and china.''

``Is that earnest or is it because you think I am
spending too much money?''

``It is what I want.  Everything else is different; why
should we have dishes like city folk?  I'd dearly love
to have the Dutch ones, and a white cloth with a yellow
border, glass where it is necessary, and silver knives,
forks, and spoons.''

``That would be great, all right!'' endorsed the decorator.
``And you have got a priceless old lustre tea set
there, and your willow ware is as fine as I ever saw.  If
I were you, I wouldn't buy a dish with what you have,
except the yellow set.''

``Great day!'' ejaculated the Harvester.  ``Will you
tell me why my great grandmother's old pink and green
teapot is priceless?''

The Girl explained pink lustre.  ``That set in the
shop I knew in Chicago would sell for from three to five
hundred dollars.  Truly it would!  I've seen one little
pink and green pitcher like yours bring nine dollars there.
And you've not only got the full tea set, but water and
dip pitchers, two bowls, and two bread plates.  They
are priceless, because the secret of making them is lost;
they take on beauty with age, and they were your great-
grandmother's.''

The Harvester reached over and energetically shook
hands.

``Ruth, I'm so glad you've got them!'' he bubbled.
``Now elucidate on my willow ware.  What is it?  Where
is it?  Why have I willow ware and am not informed.
Who is responsible for this?  Did my ancestors buy
better than they knew, or worse?  Is willow ware a
crime for which I must hide my head, or is it further
riches thrust upon me?  I thought I had investigated
the subject of proper dishes quite thoroughly; but I am
very certain I saw no mention of lustre or willow.  I
thought, in my ignorance, that lustre was a dress, and
willow a tree.  Have I been deceived?  Why is a blue
plate or pitcher willow ware?''

``Bring that platter from the mantel,'' ordered the
Girl, ``and I will show you.''

The Harvester obeyed and followed the finger that
traced the design.

``That's a healthy willow tree!'' he commented.  ``If
Loon Lake couldn't go ahead of that it should be drained.
And will you please tell me why this precious platter
from which I have eaten much stewed chicken, fried
ham, and in youthful days sopped the gravy----will
you tell me why this relic of my ancestors is called a
willow plate, when there are a majority of orange trees
so extremely fruitful they have neglected to grow a leaf?
Why is it not an orange plate?  Look at that boat!
And in plain sight of it, two pagodas, a summer house,
a water-sweep, and a pair of corpulent swallows; you
would have me believe that a couple are eloping in broad
daylight.''

``Perhaps it's night!  And those birds are doves.''

``Never!'' cried the Harvester.  ``There is a total
absence of shadows.  There is no moon.  Each orange
tree is conveniently split in halves, so you can see to
count the fruit accurately; the birds are in flight.  Only
a swallow or a stork can fly in decorations, either by day
or by night.  And for any sake look at that elopment!
He goes ahead carrying a cane, she comes behind lugging
the baggage, another man with a cane brings up the
rear.  They are not running away.  They have been
married ten years at least.  In a proper elopement, they
forget there are such things as jewels and they always
carry each other.  I've often looked up the statistics
and it's the only authorized version.  As I regard this
treasure, I grow faint when I remember with what
unnecessary force my father bore down when he carved
the ham.  I'll bet a cooky he split those orange trees.
Now me----I'll never dare touch knife to it again.  I'll
always carve the meat on the broiler, and gently lift it
to this platter with a fork.  Or am I not to be allowed
to dine from my ancestral treasure again?''

``Not in a green and yellow room,'' laughed the Girl.
``I'll tell you what I think.  If I had a tea table to match
the living-room furniture, and it sat beside the hearth,
and on it a chafing dish to cook in, and the willow ware
to eat from, we could have little tea parties in there,
when we aren't very hungry or to treat a visitor.  It
would help make that room `homey,' and it's wonderful
how they harmonize with the other things.''

``How much willow ware have I got to `bestow' on
you?'' inquired the Harvester.  ``Suppose you show me
all of it.  A guilty feeling arises in my breast, and I fear
me I have committed high crimes!''

``Oh Man!  You didn't break or lose any of those
dishes, did you?''

``Show me!'' insisted the Harvester.

The Girl arose and going to the cupboard he had
designed for her china she opened it, and set before him
a teapot, cream pitcher, two plates, a bowl, a pitcher,
the meat platter, and a sugar bowl.  ``If there were all
of the cups, saucers, and plates, I know where they would
bring five hundred dollars,'' she said.

``Ruth, are you getting even with me for poking fun
at them, or are you in earnest?'' asked the Harvester.

``I mean every word of it.''

``You really want a small, black walnut table made
especially for those old dishes?''

``Not if you are too busy.  I could use it with beautiful
effect and much pleasure, and I can't tell you how proud
I'd be of them.''

The Harvester's face flushed.  ``Excuse me,'' he said
rising.  ``I have now finished furnishing a house; I will
go and take a peep at the engine.''  He went into the
kitchen and hearing the rattle of dishes the Girl followed.
She stepped in just in time to see him hastily slide something
into his pocket.  He picked up a half dozen old
white plates and saucers and several cups and started
toward the evaporator.  He heard her coming.

``Look here, honey,'' he said turning, ``you don't want
to see the dry-house just now.  I have terrific heat to
do some rapid work.  I won't be gone but a few minutes.
You better boss the decorator.

``I'm afraid that wasn't very diplomatic,'' he muttered.
``It savoured a little of being sent back.  But if what
she says is right, and she should know if they handle
such stuff at that art store, she will feel considerably
better not to see this.''

He set his load at the door, drew an old blue saucer
from his pocket and made a careful examination.  He
pulled some leaves from a bush and pushed a greasy
cloth out of the saucer, wiped it the best he could, and
held it to light.

``That is a crime!'' he commented.  ``Saucer from your
maternal ancestors' tea set used for a grease dish.  I am
afraid I'd better sink it in the lake.  She'd feel worse
to see it than never to know.  Wish I could clean off
the grease!  I could do better if it was hot.  I can set it
on the engine.''

The Harvester placed the saucer on the engine, entered
the dry-house, and closed the door.  In the stifling air
he began pouring seed from beautiful, big willow plates
to the old white ones.

``About the time I have ruined you,'' he said to a white
plate, ``some one will pop up and discover that the art
of making you is lost and you are priceless, and I'll have
been guilty of another blunder.  Now there are the
dishes mother got with baking powder.  She thought
they were grand.  I know plenty well she prized them
more than these blue ones or she wouldn't have saved
them and used these for every day.  There they set,
all so carefully taken care of, and the Girl doesn't even
look at them.  Thank Heaven, there are the four remaining
plates all right, anyway!  Now I've got seed in some
of the saucers; one is there; where on earth is the last one?
And where, oh unkind fates! are the cups?''

He found more saucers and set them with the plates.
As he passed the engine he noticed the saucer on it was
bubbling grease, literally exuding it from the particles
of clay.

``Hooray!'' cried the Harvester.  He took it up, but
it was so hot he dropped it.  With a deft sweep he caught
it in air, and shoved it on a tray.  Then he danced and
blew on his burned hand.  Snatching out his handkerchief
he rubbed off all the grease, and imagined the saucer
was brighter.

``If `a little is good, more is better,' '' quoted the
Harvester.

Wadding the handkerchief he returned the saucer to
the engine.  Then he slipped out, dripping perspiration,
glanced toward the cabin, and ran into the work room.
The first object he saw was a willow cup half full of red
paint, stuck and dried as if to remain forever.  He took
his knife and tried to whittle it off, but noticing that he
was scratching the cup he filled it with turpentine, set
it under a work bench, turned a tin pan over it, and
covered it with shavings.  A few steps farther brought one
in sight, filled with carpet tacks.  He searched everywhere,
but could find no more, so he went to the laboratory.
Beside his wash bowl at the door stood the last
willow saucer.  He had used it for years as a soap dish.
He scraped the contents on the bench and filled the dish
with water.  Four cups held medicinal seeds and were in
good condition.  He lacked one, although he could not
remember of ever having broken it.  Gathering his
collection, he returned to the dry-house to see how the
saucer was coming on.  Again it was bubbling, and he
polished off the grease and set back the dish.  It certainly
was growing better.  He carried his treasures into the
work room, and went to the barn to feed.  As he was
leaving the stable he uttered a joyous exclamation and
snatched from a window sill a willow cup, gummed and
smeared with harness oil.

``The full set, by hokey!'' marvelled the Harvester.
``Say, Betsy, the only name for this is luck!  Now if
I only can clean them, I'll be ready to make her tea table,
whatever that is.  My I hope she will stay away until
I get these in better shape!''

He filled the last cup with turpentine, set it with the
other under the work bench, stacked the remaining pieces,
polished the saucer he was baking, and went to bring a
dish pan and towel.  He drew some water from the pipes
of the evaporator, put in the soap, and carried it to the
work room.  There he carefully washed and wiped all
the pieces, save two cups and one saucer.  He did not
know how long it would require to bake the grease from
that, but he was sure it was improving.  He thought he
could clean the paint cup, but he imagined the harness
oil one would require baking also.

As he stood busily working over the dishes, with light
step the Girl came to the door.  She took one long look
and understood.  She turned and swiftly went back to
the cabin, but her shoulders were shaking.  Presently
the Harvester came in and explained that after finishing
in the dry-house he had gone to do the feeding.  Then he
suggested that before it grew dark they should go through
the rooms and see how they appeared, and gather the
flowers the Girl wanted.  So together they decided everything
was clean, comfortable, and harmonized.

Then they went to the hillside sloping to the lake.  For
the dining-room, the Girl wanted yellow water lilies, so
the Harvester brought his old boat and gathered enough
to fill the green bowl.  For the living-room, she used wild
ragged robins in the blue bowl, and on one end of the
mantel set a pitcher of saffron and on the other arrowhead
lilies.  For her room, she selected big, blushy
mallows that grew all along Singing Water and around
the lake.

``Isn't that slightly peculiar?'' questioned the Harvester.

``Take a peep,'' said the Girl, opening her door.

She had spread the pink coverlet on her couch, and
when she set the big pink bowl filled with mallows on the
table the effect was exquisite.

``I think perhaps that's a little Frenchy,'' she said,
``and you may have to be educated to it; but salmon
pink and buttercup yellow are colours I love in combination.''

She closed the door and went to find something to
eat, and then to the swing, where she liked to rest, look,
and listen.  The Harvester suggested reading to her, but
she shook her head.

``Wait until winter,'' she said, ``when the days are
longer and cold, and the snow buries everything, and
then read.  Now tell me about my hedge and the things
you have planted in it.''

The Harvester went out and collected a bunch of twigs.
He handed her a big, evenly proportioned leaf of ovate
shape, and explained:  ``This is burning bush, so called
because it has pink berries that hang from long, graceful
stems all winter, and when fully open they expose a
flame-red seed pod.  It was for this colour on gray and
white days that I planted it.  In the woods I grow it in
thickets.  The root bark brings twenty cents a pound,
at the very least.  It is good fever medicine.''

``Is it poison?''

``No.  I didn't set anything acutely poisonous in
your hedge.  I wanted it to be a mass of bloom you were
free to cut for the cabin all spring, an attraction to birds
in summer, and bright with colour in winter.  To draw
the feathered tribe, I planted alder, wild cherry, and
grape-vines.  This is cherry.  The bark is almost as
beautiful as birch.  I raise it for tonics and the birds
love the cherries.  This fern-like leaf is from mountain
ash, and when it attains a few years' growth it will flame
with colour all winter in big clusters of scarlet berries.
That I grow in the woods is a picture in snow time, and
the bark is one of my standard articles.''

The Girl raised on her elbow and looked at the hedge.

``I see it,'' she said.  ``The berries are green now.  I
suppose they change colour as they ripen.''

``Yes,'' said the Harvester.  ``And you must not
confuse them with sumac.  The leaves are somewhat similar,
but the heads differ in colour and shape.  The sumac and
buckeye you must not touch, until we learn what they
will do to you.  To some they are slightly poisonous, to
others not.  I couldn't help putting in a few buckeyes
on account of the big buds in early spring.  You will
like the colour if you are fond of pink and yellow in
combination, and the red-brown nuts in grayish-yellow,
prickly hulls, and the leaf clusters are beautiful, but you
must use care.  I put in witch hazel for variety, and I
like its appearance; it's mighty good medicine, too; so
is spice brush, and it has leaves that colour brightly, and
red berries.  These selections were all made for a purpose.
Now here is wafer ash; it is for music as well as medicine.
I have invoked all good fairies to come and dwell in this
hedge, and so I had to provide an orchestra for their
dances.  This tree grows a hundred tiny castanets in a
bunch, and when they ripen and become dry the wind
shakes fine music from them.  Yes, they are medicine;
that is, the bark of the roots is.  Almost without
exception everything here has medicinal properties.  The
tulip poplar will bear you the loveliest flowers of all,
and its root bark, taken in winter, makes a good fever
remedy.''

``How would it do to eat some of the leaves and see
if they wouldn't take the feverishness from me?''

``It wouldn't do at all,'' said the Harvester.  ``We
are well enough fixed to allow Doc to come now, and he
is the one to allay the fever.''

``Oh no!'' she cried.  ``No!  I don't want to see a
doctor.  I will be all right very soon.  You said I was
better.''

``You are,'' said the Harvester.  ``Much better!  We
will have you strong and well soon.  You should have
come in time for a dose of sassafras.  Your hedge is
filled with that, because of its peculiar leaves and odour.
I put in dogwood for the white display around the little
green bloom, lots of alder for bloom and berries, haws
for blossoms and fruit for the squirrels, wild crab apples
for the exquisite bloom and perfume, button bush for the
buttons, a few pokeberry plants for the colour, and I
tried some mallows, but I doubt if it's wet enough for
them.  I set pecks of vine roots, that are coming nicely,
and ferns along the front edge.  Give it two years and
that hedge will make a picture that will do your eyes
good.''

``Can you think of anything at all you forgot?''

``Yes indeed!'' said the Harvester.  ``The woods are
full of trees I have not used; some because I overlooked
them, some I didn't want.  A hedge like this, in
perfection, is the work of years.  Some species must be cut
back, some encouraged, but soon it will be lovely, and
its colour and fruit attract every bird of the heavens
and butterflies and insects of all varieties.  I set several
common cherry trees for the robins and some blackberry
and raspberry vines for the orioles.  The bloom is pretty
and the birds you'll have will be a treat to see and hear,
if we keep away cats, don't fire guns, scatter food, and
move quietly among them.  With our water attractions
added, there is nothing impossible in the way of making
friends with feathered folk.''

``There is one thing I don't understand,'' said the Girl.
``You wouldn't risk breaking the wing of a moth by keeping
it when you wanted a drawing very much; you don't
seem to kill birds and animals that other people do.  You
almost worship a tree; now how can you take a knife
and peel the bark to sell or dig up beautiful bushes by
the root.''

``Perhaps I've talked too much about the woods,''
said the Harvester gently.  ``I've longed inexpressibly
for sympathetic company here, because I feel rooted for
life, so I am more than anxious that you should care for
it.  I may have made you feel that my greatest interest
is in the woods, and that I am not consistent when I
call on my trees and plants to yield of their store for my
purposes.  Above everything else, the human proposition
comes first, Ruth.  I do love my trees, bushes,
and flowers, because they keep me at the fountain of life,
and teach me lessons no book ever hints at; but above
everything come my fellow men.  All I do is for them.
My heart is filled with feeling for the things you see
around you here, but it would be joy to me to uproot
the most beautiful plant I have if by so doing I could
save you pain.  Other men have wives they love as well,
little children they have fathered, big bodies useful to
the world, that are sometimes crippled with disease.
There is nothing I would not give to allay the pain of
humanity.  It is not inconsistent to offer any growing
thing you soon can replace, to cure suffering.  Get that
idea out of your head!  You said you could worship at
the shrine of the pokeberry bed, you feel holier before
the arrowhead lilies, your face takes on an appearance of
reverence when you see pink mallow blooms.  Which
of them would you have hesitated a second in uprooting
if you could have offered it to subdue fever or pain in the
body of the little mother you loved?''

``Oh I see!'' cried the Girl.  ``Like everything else
you make this different.  You worship all this beauty
and grace, wrought by your hands, but you carry your
treasure to the market place for the good of suffering
humanity.  Oh Man!  I love the work you do!''

``Good!'' cried the Harvester.  ``Good!  And Ruth-
girl, while you are about it, see if you can't combine the
man and his occupation a little.''



CHAPTER XVI

GRANNY MORELAND'S VISIT

The following morning the Girl was awakened by
wheels on the gravel outside her window, and
lifted her head to see Betsy passing with a load
of lumber.  Shortly afterward the sound of hammer
and saw came to her, and she knew that Singing Water
bridge was being roofed to provide shade for her.  She
dressed and went to the kitchen to find a dainty breakfast
waiting, so she ate what she could, and then washed the
dishes and swept.  By that time she was so tired she
dropped on a dining-room window seat, and lay looking
toward the bridge.  She could catch glimpses of the
Harvester as he worked.  She watched his deft ease in
handling heavy timbers, and the assurance with which
he builded.  Sometimes he stood and with tilted head
studied his work a minute, then swiftly proceeded.  He
placed three tree trunks on each side for pillars, laid
joists across, formed his angle, and nailed boards as a
foundation for shingling.  Occasionally he glanced toward
the cabin, and finally came swinging up the drive.  He
entered the kitchen softly, but when he saw the Girl
in the window he sat at her feet.

``Oh but this is a morning, Ruth!'' he said.

She looked at him closely.  He radiated health and
good cheer.  His tanned cheeks were flushed red with
exercise, and the hair on his temples was damp.

``You have been breaking the rules,'' he said.  ``It
is the law that I am to do the work until you are well
and strong again.  Why did you tire yourself?''

``I am so perfectly useless!  I see so many things that
I would enjoy doing.  Oh you can do everything else,
make me well!  Make me strong!''

``How can I, when you won't do as I tell you?''

``I will!  Indeed I will!''

``Then no more attempts to stand over dishes and
clean big floors.  You mustn't overwork yourself at
anything.  The instant you feel in the least tired you must
lie down and rest.''

``But Man!  I'm tired every minute, with a dead, dull
ache, and I don't feel as if I ever would be rested again
in all the world.''

The Harvester took one of her hands, felt its fevered
palm, fluttering wrist pulse, and noticed that the brilliant
red of her lips had extended to spots on her cheeks.  He
formed his resolution.

``Can't work on that bridge any more until I drive
in for some big nails,'' he said.  ``Do you mind being
left alone for an hour?''

``Not at all, if Bel will stay with me.  I'll lie in the
swing.''

``All right!'' answered the Harvester.  ``I'll help you
out and to get settled.  Is there anything you want
from town?''

``No, not a thing!''

``Oh but you are modest!'' cried the Harvester.  ``I
can sit here and name fifty things I want for you.''

``Oh but you are extravagant!'' imitated the Girl.
``Please, please, Man, don't!  Can't you see I have so
much now I don't know what to do with it?  Sometimes
I almost forget the ache, just lying and looking at all the
wonderful riches that have come to me so suddenly.
I can't believe they won't vanish as they came.  By
the hour in the night I look at my lovely room, and I
just fight my eyes to keep them from closing for fear
they'll open in that stifling garret to the heat of day and
work I have not strength to do.  I know yet all this will
prove to be a dream and a wilder one than yours.''

The face of the Harvester was very anxious.

``Please to remember my dream came true,'' he said,
``and much sooner than I had the least hope that it would.
I'm wide awake or I couldn't be building bridges; and
you are real, if I know flesh and blood when I touch
it.''

``If I were well, strong, and attractive, I could
understand,'' she said.  ``Then I could work in the house, at
the drawings, help with the herbs, and I'd feel as if I
had some right to be here.''

``All that is coming,'' said the Harvester.  ``Take
a little more time.  You can't expect to sin steadily
against the laws of health for years, and recover in a
day.  You will be all right much sooner than you think
possible.''

``Oh I hope so!'' said the Girl.  ``But sometimes I
doubt it.  How I could come here and put such a burden
on a stranger, I can't see.  I scarcely can remember what
awful stress drove me.  I had no courage.  I should
have finished in my garret as my mother did.  I must
have some of my father's coward blood in me.  She
never would have come.  I never should!''

``If it didn't make any real difference to you, and meant
all the world to me, I don't see why you shouldn't humour
me.  I can't begin to tell you how happy I am to have
you here.  I could shout and sing all day.''

``It requires very little to make some people happy.''

``You are not much, but you are going to be more
soon,'' laughed the Harvester, as he gently picked up
the Girl and carried her to the swing, where he covered
her, kissed her hot hand, and whistled for Belshazzar.
He pulled the table close and set a pitcher of iced fruit
juice on it.  Then he left her and she could hear the rattle
of wheels as he crossed the bridge and drove away.

``Betsy, this is mighty serious business,'' said the
Harvester.  ``The Girl is scorching or I don't know fever.
I wonder----well, one thing is sure----she is bound to
be better off in pure, cool air and with everything I can
do to be kind, than in Henry Jameson's attic with
everything he could do to be mean.  Pleasant men those
Jamesons!  Wonder if the Girl's father was much like
her Uncle Henry?  I think not or her refined and lovely

mother never would have married him.  Come to think
of it, that's no law, Betsy.  I've seen beautiful and
delicate women fall under some mysterious spell, and
yoke their lives with rank degenerates.  Whatever he
was, they have paid the price.  Maybe the wife deserved
it, and bore it in silence because she knew she did, but
it's bitter hard on Ruth.  Girls should be taught to think
at least one generation ahead when they marry.  I
wonder what Doc will say, Betsy?  He will have to come
and see for himself.  I don't know how she will feel about
that.  I had hoped I could pull her through with care,
food, and tonics, but I don't dare go any farther alone.
Betsy, that's a thin, hot, little hand to hold a man's
only chance for happiness.''

``Well, bridegroom!  I've been counting the days!''
said Doctor Carey.  ``The Missus and I made it up this
morning that we had waited as long as we would.  We
are coming to-night.  David''

``It's all right, Doc,'' said the Harvester.  ``Don't
you dare think anything is wrong or that I am not the
proudest, happiest man in this world, because I appear
anxious.  I am not trying to conceal it from you.  You
know we both agreed at first that Ruth should be in the
hospital, Doc.  Well, she should!  She is what would
be a lovely woman if she were not full of the poison of
wrong food and air, overwork, and social conditions that
have warped her.  She is all I dreamed of and more,
but I've come for you.  She is too sick for me.  I hoped
she would begin to gain strength at once on changed
conditions.  As yet I can't see any difference.  She needs
a doctor, but I hate for her to know it.  Could you come
out this afternoon, and pretend as if it were a visit?
Bring Mrs. Carey and watch the Girl.  If you need an
examination, I think she will obey me.  If you can avoid
it, fix what she should have and send it back to me
by a messenger.  I don't like to leave her when she is
so ill.''

``I'll come at once, David.''

``Then she will know that I came for you, and that
will frighten her.  You can do more good to wait until
afternoon, and pretend you are making a social call.
I must go now.  I'd have brought her in, but I have no
proper conveyance yet.  I'm promised something soon,
perhaps it is ready now.  Good-bye!  Be sure to come!''

The Harvester drove to a livery barn and examined a
little horse, a shining black creature that seemed gentle
and spirited.  He thought favourably of it.  A few days
before he had selected a smart carriage, and with this
outfit tied behind the wagon he returned to Medicine
Woods.  He left the horse at the bridge, stabled Betsy,
and then returned for the new conveyance, driving it
to the hitching post.  At the sound of unexpected wheels
the Girl lifted her head and stared at the turnout.

``Come on!'' cried the Harvester opening the screen.
``We are going to the woods to initiate your carriage.''

She went with little cries of surprised wonder.

``This is how you travel to Onabasha to do your shopping,
to call on Mrs. Carey and the friends you will
make, and visit the library.  When I've tried out Mr.
Horse enough to prove him reliable as guaranteed, he
is yours, for your purposes only, and when you grow
wonderfully well and strong, we'll sell him and buy you a
real live horse and a stanhope, such as city ladies have;
and there must be a saddle so that you can ride.''

``Oh I'd love that!'' cried the Girl.  ``I always wanted
to ride!  Where are we going?''

``To show you Medicine Woods,'' said the Harvester.
``I've been waiting for this.  You see there are several
hundred acres of trees, thickets, shrubs, and herb beds
up there, and if the wagon road that winds between
them were stretched straight it would be many miles in
length, so we have a cool, shaded, perfumed driveway
all our own.  Let me get you a drink before you start
and the little shawl.  It's chilly there compared with
here.  Now are you comfortable and ready?''

``Yes,'' said the Girl.  ``Hurry!  I've just longed
to go, but I didn't like to ask.''

``I am sorry,'' said the Harvester.  ``Living here for
years alone and never having had a sister, how am I
going to know what a girl would like if you don't tell
me?  I knew it would be too tiresome for you to walk,
and I was waiting to find a reliable horse and a suitable
carriage.''

``You won't scratch or spoil it up there?''

``I'll lower the top.  It is not as wide as the wagon,
so nothing will touch it.''

``This is just so lovely, and such a wonderful treat, do
you observe that I'm not saying a word about extravagance?''
asked the Girl, as she leaned back in the carriage
and inhaled the invigorating wood air.

The horse climbed the hill, and the Harvester guided
him down long, dim roads through deep forest, while
he explained what large thickets of bushes were, why he
grew them, how he collected the roots or bark, for what
each was used and its value.  On and on they went,
the way ahead always appearing as if it were too narrow
to pass, yet proving amply wide when reached.  Excited
redbirds darted among the bushes, and the Harvester
answered their cry.  Blackbirds protested against
the unusual intrusion of strange objects, and a brown
thrush slipped from a late nest close the road wailing in
anxiety.

One after another the Harvester introduced the Girl
to the best trees, speculated on their age, previous history,
and pointed out which brought large prices for
lumber and which had medicinal bark and roots.  On
and on they slowly drove through the woods, past the
big beds of cranesbill, violets, and lilies.  He showed her
where the mushrooms were most numerous, and for the
first time told the story of how he had sold them and the
violets from door to door in Onabasha in his search for
her, and the amazed Girl sat staring at him.  He told
of Doctor Carey having seen her once, and inquired
as they passed the bed if the yellow violets had revived.
He stopped to search and found a few late ones, deep
among the leaves.

``Oh if I only had known that!'' cried the Girl, ``I would
have kept them forever.''

``No need,'' said the Harvester.  ``Here and now I
present you with the sole ownership of the entire white
and yellow violet beds.  Next spring you shall fill your
room.  Won't that be a treat?''

``One money never could buy!'' cried the Girl.

``Seems to be my strong point,'' commented the
Harvester.  ``The most I have to offer worth while is
something you can't buy.  There is a fine fairy platform.
They can spare you one.  I'll get it.''

The Harvester broke from a tree a large fan-shaped
fungus, the surface satin fine, the base mossy, and
explained to the Girl that these were the ballrooms of the
woods, the floors on which the little people dance in
the moonlight at their great celebrations.  Then he
added a piece of woolly dog moss, and showed her how
each separate spine was like a perfect little evergreen
tree.

``That is where the fairies get their Christmas pines,''
he explained.

``Do you honestly believe in fairies?''

``Surely!'' exclaimed the Harvester.  ``Who would
tell me when the maples are dripping sap, and the mushrooms
springing up, if the fairies didn't whisper in the
night?  Who paints the flower faces, colours the leaves,
enamels the ripening fruit with bloom, and frosts the
window pane to let me know that it is time to prepare
for winter?  Of course!  They are my friends and
everyday helpers.  And the winds are good to me.
They carry down news when tree bloom is out, when
the pollen sifts gold from the bushes, and it's time to
collect spring roots.  The first bluebird always brings
me a message.  Sometimes he comes by the middle of
February, again not until late March.  Always on his
day, Belshazzar decides my fate for a year.  Six years
we've played that game; now it is ended in blessed reality.
In the woods and at my work I remain until I die, with
a few outside tries at medicine making.  I am putting
up some compounds in which I really have faith.  Of
course they have got to await their time to be tested, but
I believe in them.  I have grown stuff so carefully,
gathered it according to rules, washed it decently, and
dried and mixed it with such scrupulous care.  Night
after night I've sat over the books until midnight and
later, studying combinations; and day after day I've
stood in the laboratory testing and trying, and two or three
will prove effective, or I've a disappointment coming.''

``You haven't wasted time!  I'd much rather take
medicines you make than any at the pharmacies.  Several
times I've thought I'd ask you if you wouldn't give me
some of yours.  The prescription Doctor Carey sent
does no good.  I've almost drunk it, and I am constantly
tired, just the same.  You make me something from
these tonics and stimulants you've been telling me about.
Surely you can help me!''

``I've got one combination that's going to save life,
in my expectations.  But Ruth, it never has been tried,
and I couldn't experiment on the very light of my eyes
with it.  If I should give you something and you'd
grow worse as a result--I am a strong man, my girl,
but I couldn't endure that.  I'd never dare.  But
dear, I am expecting Carey and his wife out any time;
probably they will come to-day, it's so beautiful; and
when they do, for my sake, won't you talk with him, tell
him exactly what made you ill, and take what he gives
you? He's a great man.  He was recently President
of the National Association of Surgeons.  Long ago he
abandoned general practice, but he will prescribe for you;
all his art is at your command.  It's quite an honour,
Ruth.  He performs all kinds of miracles, and saves
life every day.  He had not seen you, and what he gave
me was only by guess.  He may not think it is the right
thing at all after he meets you.''

``Then I am really ill?''

``No.  You only have the germs of illness in your blood,
and if you will help me that much we can eliminate
them; and then it is you for housekeeper, with first assistant
in me, the drawing tools, paint box, and all the woods
for subjects.  So, as I was going to tell you, Belshazzar
and I have played our game for the last time.  That
decision was ultimate.  Here I will work, live, and die.
Here, please God, strong and happy, you shall live with
me.  Ruth, you have got to recover quickly.  You will
consult the doctor?''

``Yes, and I wish he would hurry,'' said the Girl.
``He can't make me new too soon to suit me.  If I had
a strong body, oh Man, I just feel as if you could find a
soul somewhere in it that would respond to all these
wonders you have brought me among.  Oh! make me well,
and I'll try as woman never did before to bring you
happiness to pay for it.''

``Careful now,'' warned the Harvester.  ``There is
to be no talk of obligations between you and me.
Your presence here and your growing trust in me are all
I ask at the hands of fate at present.  Long ago I learned
to `labour and to wait.'  By the way----here's my
most difficult labour and my longest wait.  This is the
precious gingseng bed.''

``How pretty!'' exclaimed the Girl.

Covering acres of wood floor, among the big trees,
stretched the lacy green carpet.  On slender, upright
stalks waved three large leaves, each made up of five
stemmed, ovate little leaves, round at the base, sharply
pointed at the tip.  A cluster of from ten to twenty small
green berries, that would turn red later, arose above.
The Harvester lifted a plant to show the Girl that the
Chinese name, Jin-chen, meaning man-like, originated
because the divided root resembled legs.  Away through
the woods stretched the big bed, the growth waving
lightly in the wind, the peculiar odour filling the air.

``I am going to wait to gather the crop until the seeds
are ripe,'' said the Harvester, ``then bury some as I
dig a root.  My father said that was the way of the
Indians.  It's a mighty good plan.  The seeds are
delicate, and difficult to gather and preserve properly.
Instead of collecting and selling all of them to start rivals
in the business, I shall replant my beds.  I must find
a half dozen assistants to harvest this crop in that way,
and it will be difficult, because it will come when my
neighbours are busy with corn.''

``Maybe I can help you.''

``Not with ginseng digging,'' laughed the Harvester.
``That is not woman's work.  You may sit in an especially
attractive place and boss the job.''

``Oh dear!'' cried the Girl.  ``Oh dear!  I want to
get out and walk.''

Gradually they had climbed the summit of the hill,
descended on the other side, and followed the road through
the woods until they reached the brier patches, fruit
trees; and the garden of vegetables, with big beds of sage,
rue, wormwood, hoarhound, and boneset.  From there
to the lake sloped the sunny fields of mullein and catnip,
and the earth was molten gold with dandelion creeping
everywhere.

``Too hot to-day,'' cautioned the Harvester.  ``Too
rough walking.  Wait until fall, and I have a treat
there for you.  Another flower I want you to love because
I do.''

``I will,'' said the Girl promptly.  ``I feel it in my
heart.''

``Well I am glad you feel something besides the ache
of fever,'' said the Harvester.  Then noticing her tired
face he added:  ``Now this little horse had quite a trip
from town, and the wheels cut deeply into this woods
soil and make difficult pulling, so I wonder if I had not
better put him in the stable and let him become
acquainted with Betsy.  I don't know what she will think.
She has had sole possession for years.  Maybe she will be
jealous, perhaps she will be as delighted for company
as her master.  Ruth, if you could have heard what
I said to Belshazzar when he decided I was to go courting
this year, and seen what I did to him, and then take
a look at me now----merciful powers, I hope the
dog doesn't remember!  If he does, no wonder he forms a
new allegiance so easily.  Have you observed that lately
when I whistle, he starts, and then turns back to see if
you want him?  He thinks as much of you as he does of
me right now.''

``Oh no!'' cried the Girl.  ``That couldn't be possible.
You told me I must make friends with him, so I have
given him food, and tried to win him.''

``You sit in the carriage until I put away the horse,
and then I'll help you to the cabin, and save you being
alone while I work.  Would you like that?''

``Yes.''

She leaned her head against the carriage top the
Harvester had raised to screen her, and watched him
stable the horse.  Evidently he was very fond of animals
for he talked as if it were a child he was undressing and
kept giving it extra strokes and pats as he led it away.
Ajax disliked the newcomer instantly, noticed the carriage
and the woman's dress, and screamed his ugliest.
The Girl smiled.  As the Harvester appeared she inquired,
``Is Ajax now sending a wireless to Ceylon asking
for a mate?''

The Harvester looked at her quizzically and saw a
gleam of mischief in the usually dull dark eyes that
delighted him.

``That is the customary supposition when he finds
voice,'' he said.  ``But since this has become your home,
you are bound to learn some of my secrets.  One of them
I try to guard is the fact that Ajax has a temper.  No
my dear, he is not always sending a wireless, I am sorry
to say.  I wish he was!  As a matter of fact he is venting
his displeasure at any difference in our conditions.  He
hates change.  He learned that from me.  I will enjoy
seeing him come for favour a year from now, as I learned
to come for it, even when I didn't get much, and the road
lay west of Onabasha.  Ajax, stop that!  There's no
use to object.  You know you think that horse is nice
company for you, and that two can feed you more than
one.  Don't be a hypocrite!  Cease crying things you
don't mean, and learn to love the people I do.  Come
on, old boy!''

The peacock came, but with feathers closely pressed
and stepping daintily.  As the bird advanced, the Harvester
retreated, until he stood beside the Girl, and then
he slipped some grain to her hand and she offered it.
But Ajax would not be coaxed.  He was too fat and well
fed.  He haughtily turned and marched away, screaming
at intervals.

``Nasty temper!'' commented the Harvester.  ``Never
mind!  He soon will become accustomed to you, and then
he will love you as Belshazzar does.  Feed the doves
instead.  They are friendly enough in all conscience.
Do you notice that there is not a coloured feather among
them?  The squab that is hatched with one you may
have for breakfast.  Now let's go find something to eat,
and I will finish the bridge so you can rest there to-night
and watch the sun set on Singing Water.''

So they went into the cabin and prepared food, and
then the Harvester told the Girl to make herself so pretty
that she would be a picture and come and talk to him
while he finished the roof.  She went to her room, found
a pale lavender linen dress and put it on, dusted the
pink powder thickly, and went where a wide bench made
an inviting place in the shade.  There she sat and
watched her lightly expressed whim take shape.

``Soon as this is finished,'' said the Harvester, ``I am
going to begin on that tea table.  I can make it in a
little while, if you want it to match the other furniture.''

``I do,'' said the Girl.

``Wonder if you could draw a plan showing how it
should appear.  I am a little shy on tea tables.''

``I think I can.''

The Harvester brought paper, pencil, and a shingle
for a drawing pad.

``Now remember one thing,'' he said.  ``If you are
in earnest about using those old blue dishes, this has
got to be a big, healthy table.  A little one will appear
top heavy with them.  It would be a good idea to set
out what you want to use, arranged as you would like
them, and let me take the top measurement that way.''

``All right!  I'll only indicate how its legs should be
and we will find the size later.  I could almost weep
because that wonderful set is broken.  If I had all of
it I'd be so proud!''

The Girl bent over the drawing.  The Harvester
worked with his attention divided between her, the bridge,
and the road.  At last he saw the big red car creeping up
the valley.

``Seems to be some one coming, Ruth!  Guess it must
be Doc.  I'll go open the gate?''

``Yes,'' said the Girl.  ``I'm so glad.  You won't
forget to ask him to help me if he can?''

The Harvester wheeled hastily.  ``I won't forget!''
he said, as he hurried to the gate.  The car ran slowly,
and the Girl could see him swing to the step and stand
talking as they advanced.  When they reached her they
stopped and all of them came forward.  She went to
meet them.  She shook hands with Mrs. Carey and
then with the doctor.

``I am so glad you have come,'' she said.

``I hope you are not lonesome already,'' laughed the
doctor.

``I don't think any one with brains to appreciate half
of this ever could become lonely here,'' answered the
Girl.  ``No, it isn't that.''

``A-ha!'' cried the doctor, turning to his wife.  ``You
see that the beautiful young lady remembers me, and has
been wishing I would come.  I always said you didn't
half appreciate me.  What a place you are making,
David!  I'll run the car to the shade and join you.''

For a long time they talked under the trees, then they
went to see the new home and all its furnishings.

``Now this is what I call comfort,'' said the doctor.
``David, build us a house exactly similar to this over
there on the hill, and let us live out here also.  I'd love
it.  Would you, Clara?''

``I don't know.  I never lived in the country.  One
thing is sure:  If I tried it, I'd prefer this to any other
place I ever saw.  David, won't you take me far enough
up the hill that I can look from the top to the lake?''

``Certainly,'' said the Harvester.  ``Excuse us a little
while, Ruth!''

As soon as they were gone the Girl turned to the
doctor.

``Doctor Carey, David says you are great.  Won't
you exercise your art on me.  I am not at all well, and
oh!  I'd so love to be strong and sound.''

``Will you tell me,'' asked the doctor, ``just enough to
show me what caused the trouble?''

``Bad air and water, poor light and food at irregular
times, overwork and deep sorrow; every wrong condition
of life you could imagine, with not a ray of hope in the
distance, until now.  For the sake of the Harvester, I
would be well again.  Please, please try to cure me!''

So they talked until the doctor thought he knew all he
desired, and then they went to see the gold flower garden.

``I call this simply superb,'' said he, taking a seat
beneath the tree roof of her porch.  ``Young woman, I
don't know what I'll do to you if you don't speedily grow
strong here.  This is the prettiest place I ever saw,
and listen to the music of that bubbling, gurgling little
creek!''

``Isn't he wonderful?'' asked the Girl, looking up the
hill, where the tall form of the Harvester could be seen
moving around.  ``Just to see him, you would think
him the essence of manly strength and force.  And he is!
So strong!  Into the lake at all hours, at the dry-house,
on the hill, grubbing roots, lifting big pillars to support a
bridge roof, and with it all a fancy as delicate as any
dreaming girl.  Doctor, the fairies paint the flowers,
colour the fruit, and frost the windows for him; and the
winds carry pollen to tell him when his growing things
are ready for the dry-house.  I don't suppose I can tell
you anything new about him; but isn't he a perpetual
surprise?  Never like any one else!  And no matter how
he startles me in the beginning, he always ends by
convincing me, at least, that he is right.''

``I never loved any other man as I do him,'' said the
doctor.  ``I ushered him into the world when I was a
young man just beginning to practise, and I've known
him ever since.  I know few men so scrupulously clean.
Try to get well and make him happy, Mrs. Langston.
He so deserves it.''

``You may be sure I will,'' answered the Girl.

After the visitors had gone, the Harvester told her to
place the old blue dishes as she would like to arrange
them on her table, so he could get a correct idea of the
size, and he left to put a few finishing strokes on the
bridge cover.  She went into the dining-room and opened
the china closet.  She knew from her peep in the work-
room that there would be more pieces than she had seen
before; but she did not think or hope that a full half dozen
tea set and plates, bowl, platter, and pitcher would be
waiting for her.

``Why Ruth, what made you tire yourself to come
down?  I intended to return in a few minutes.''

``Oh Man!'' cried the laughing Girl, as she clung
pantingly to a bridge pillar for support, ``I just had to
come to tell you.  There are fairies!  Really truly ones!
They have found the remainder of the willow dishes for
me, and now there are so many it isn't going to be a table
at all.  It must be a little cupboard especially for them,
in that space between the mantel and the bookcase.
There should be a shining brass tea canister, and a wafer
box like the arts people make, and I'll pour tea and tend
the chafing dish and you can toast the bread with a long
fork over the coals, and we will have suppers on the
living-room table, and it will be such fun.''

``Be seated!'' cried the Harvester.  ``Ruth, that's the
longest speech I ever heard you make, and it sounded,
praise the Lord, like a girl.  Did Doc say he would fix
something for you?''

``Yes, such a lot of things!  I am going to shut my eyes
and open my mouth and swallow all of them.  I'm going
to be born again and forget all I ever knew before I came
here, and soon I will be tagging you everywhere, begging
you to suggest designs for my pencil, and I'll simply
force life to come right for you.''

The Harvester smiled.

``Sounds good!'' he said.  ``But, Ruth, I'm a little
dubious about force work.  Life won't come right for
me unless you learn to love me, and love is a stubborn,
contrary bulldog element of our nature that won't be
driven an inch.  It wanders as the wind, and strikes
us as it will.  You'll arrive at what I hope for much
sooner if you forget it and amuse yourself and be as
happy as you can.  Then, perhaps all unknown to you,
a little spark of tenderness for me will light in your breast;
and if it ever does we will buy a fanning mill and put it
in operation, and we'll raise a flame or know why.''

``And there won't be any force in that?''

``What you can't compel is the start.  It's all right to
push any growth after you have something to work on.''

``That reminds me,'' said the Girl, ``there is a question
I want to ask you.''

``Go ahead!'' said the Harvester, glancing at her as he
hewed a joist.

She turned away her face and sat looking across the
lake for a long time.

``Is it a difficult question, Ruth?'' inquired the Harvester
to help her.

``Yes,'' said the Girl.  ``I don't know how to make
you see.''

``Take any kind of a plunge.  I'm not usually dense.''

``It is really quite simple after all.  It's about a
girl----a girl I knew very well in Chicago.  She had a
problem----and it worried her dreadfully, and I just
wondered what you would think of it.''

The Harvester shifted his position so that he could
watch the side of the averted face.

``You'll have to tell me, before I can tell you,'' he
suggested.

``She was a girl who never had anything from life but
work and worry.  Of course, that's the only kind I'd
know!  One day when the work was most difficult, and
worry cut deepest, and she really thought she was losing
her mind, a man came by and helped her.  He lifted her
out, and rescued all that was possible for a man to save
to her in honour, and went his way.  There wasn't anything
more.  Probably there never would be.  His heart
was great, and he stooped and pitied her gently and
passed on.  After a time another man came by, a good
and noble man, and he offered her love so wonderful she
hadn't brains to comprehend how or why it was.''

The Girl's voice trailed off as if she were too weary to
speak further, while she leaned her head against a pillar
and gazed with dull eyes across the lake.

``And your question,'' suggested the Harvester at
last.

She roused herself.  ``Oh, the question!  Why this----
if in time, and after she had tried and tried, love to equal
his simply would not come would----would----she be
wrong to PRETEND she cared, and do the very best she could,
and hope for real love some day?  Oh David, would
she?''

The Harvester's face was whiter than the Girl's.  He
pounded the chisel into the joist savagely.

``Would she, David?''

``Let me understand you clearly,'' said the man in a
dry, breathless voice.  ``Did she love this first man to
whom she came under obligations?''

The Girl sat gazing across the lake and the tortured
Harvester stared at her.

``I don't know,'' she said at last.  ``I don't know
whether she knew what love was or ever could.  She
never before had known a man; her heart was as undeveloped
and starved as her body.  I don't think she realized
love, but there was a SOMETHING.  Every time she
would feel most grateful and long for the love that was
offered her, that `something' would awake and hurt her
almost beyond endurance.  Yet she knew he never would
come.  She knew he did not care for her.  I don't know
that she felt she wanted him, but she was under such
obligations to him that it seemed as if she must wait to
see if he might not possibly come, and if he did she
should be free.''

``If he came, she preferred him?''

``There was a debt she had to pay----if he asked it.
I don't know whether she preferred him.  I do know she
had no idea that he would come, but the POSSIBILITY was
always before her.  If he didn't come in time, would she
be wrong in giving all she had to the man who loved
her?''

The Harvester's laugh was short and sharp.

``She had nothing to give, Ruth!  Talk about worm-
wood, colocynth apples, and hemlock!  What sort of
husks would that be to offer a man who gave honest
love?  Lie to him!  Pretend feeling she didn't experience.
Endure him for the sake of what he offered her?  Well
I don't know how calmly any other man would take that
proceeding, Ruth, but tell your friend for me, that if I
offered a woman the deep, lasting, and only loving passion
of my heart, and she gave back a lie and indifferent lips,
I'd drop her into the deepest hole of my lake and take
my punishment cheerfully.''

``But if it would make him happy?  He deserves
every happiness, and he need never know!''

The Harvester's laugh raised to an angry roar.

``You simpleton!'' he cried roughly.  ``Do you know
so little of human passion in the heart that you think
love can be a successful assumption?  Good Lord, Ruth!
Do you think a man is made of wood or stone, that a
woman's lips in her first kiss wouldn't tell him the truth?
Why Girl, you might as well try to spread your tired arms
and fly across the lake as to attempt to pretend a love
you do not feel.  You never could!''

``I said a girl I knew!''

`` `A Girl you knew,' then!  Any woman!  The idea
is monstrous.  Tell her so and forget it.  You almost
scared the life out of me for a minute, Ruth.  I thought
it was going to be you.  But I remember your debt is
to be paid with the first money you earn, and you can
not have the slightest idea what love is, if you honestly
ask if it can be simulated.  No ma'am!  It can't!  Not
possibly!  Not ever!  And when the day comes that
its fires light your heart, you will come to me, and tell
of a flood of delight that is tingling from the soles of your
feet through every nerve and fibre of your body, and you
will laugh with me at the time when you asked if it could
be imitated successfully.  No, ma'am!  Now let me help
you to the cabin, serve a good supper, and see you eat
like a farmer.''

All evening the Harvester was so gay he kept the
Girl laughing and at last she asked him the cause.

``Relief, honey!  Relief!'' cried the man.  ``You had
me paralyzed for a minute, Ruth.  I thought you were
trying to tell me that there was some one so possessing
your heart that it failed every time you tried to think
about caring for me.  If you hadn't convinced me before
you finished that love never has touched you, I'd be
the saddest man in the world to-night, Ruth.''

The Girl stared at him with wide eyes and silently
turned away.

Then for a week they worked out life together in the
woods.  The Harvester was the housekeeper and the
cook.  He added to his store many delicious broths and
stimulants he brought from the city.  They drove every
day through the cool woods, often rowed on the lake in
the evenings, walked up the hill to the oak and scattered
fresh flowers on the two mounds there, and sat beside
them talking for a time.  The Harvester kept up his work
with the herbs, and the little closet for the blue dishes
was finished.  They celebrated installing them by having
supper on the living-room table, with the teapot on one
end, and the pitcher full of bellflowers on the other.

The Girl took everything prescribed for her, bathed,
slept all she could, and worked for health with all the
force of her frail being, and as the days went by it seemed
to the Harvester her weight grew lighter, her hands hotter,
and she drove herself to a gayety almost delirious.  He
thought he would have preferred a dull, stupid sleep of
malaria.  There was colour in plenty on her cheeks now,
and sometimes he found her wrapped in the white shawl
at noon on the warmest days Medicine Woods knew in
early August; and on cool nights she wore the thinnest
clothing and begged to be taken on the lake.  The
Careys came out every other evening and the doctor
watched and worked, but he did not get the results he
desired.  His medicines were not effective.

``David,'' he said one evening, ``I don't like the looks
of this.  Your wife has fever I can't break.  It is eating
the little store of vitality she has right out of her, and
some of these days she is coming down with a crash.
She should yield to the remedies I am giving her.  She
acts to me like a woman driven wild by trouble she is
concealing.  Do you know anything that worries her?''

``No,'' said the Harvester, ``but I'll try to find out if
it will help you in your work.''

After they were gone he left the Girl lying in the
swing guarded by the dog, and went across the marsh
on the excuse that he was going to a bed of thorn apple
at the foot of the hill.  There he sat on a log and tried
to think.  With the mists of night rising around him,
ghosts arose he fain would have escaped.  ``What will
you give me in cold cash to tell you who she is, and who
her people are?''  Times untold in the past two weeks
he had smothered, swallowed, and choked it down.
That question she had wanted to ask----was it for a
girl she had known, or was it for herself?  Days of
thought had deepened the first slight impression he so
bravely had put aside, not into certainty, but a great
fear that she had meant herself.  If she did, what was
he to do?  Who was the man?  There was a debt she had
to pay if he asked it?  What debt could a woman pay
a man that did not involve money?  Crouched on a log
he suffered and twisted in agonizing thought.  At last
he arose and returned to the cabin.  He carried a few
frosty, blue-green leaves of velvet softness and unusual
cutting, prickly thorn apples full of seeds, and some of
the smoother, more yellowish-green leaves of the jimson
weed, to give excuse for his absence.

``Don't touch them,'' he warned as he came to her.
``They are poison and have disagreeable odour.  But
we are importing them for medicinal purposes.  On the
far side of the marsh, where the ground rises, there is a
waste place just suited to them, and so long as they will
seed and flourish with no care at all, I might as well have
the price as the foreign people who raise them.  They
don't bring enough to make them worth cultivating, but
when they grow alone and with no care, I can make
money on the time required to clip the leaves and dry the
seeds.  I must go wash before I come close to you.''

The next day he had business in the city, and again
she lay in the swing and talked to the dog while the
Harvester was gone.  She was startled as Belshazzar arose
with a gruff bark.  She looked down the driveway,
but no one was coming.  Then she followed the dog's
eyes and saw a queer, little old woman coming up the
bank of Singing Water from the north.  She remembered
what the Harvester had said, and rising she opened
the screen and went down the path.  As the Girl
advanced she noticed the scrupulous cleanliness of
the calico dress and gingham apron, and the snowy hair
framing a bronzed face with dancing dark eyes.

``Are you David's new wife?'' asked Granny Moreland
with laughing inflection.

``Yes,'' said the Girl.  ``Come in.  He told me to
expect you.  I am so sorry he is away, but we can get
acquainted without him.  Let me help you.''

``I don't know but that ought to be the other way
about.  You don't look very strong, child.''

``I am not well,'' said the Girl, ``but it's lovely here,
and the air is so fine I am going to be better soon.  Take
this chair until you rest a little, and then you shall see
our pretty home, and all the furniture and my dresses.''

``Yes, I want to see things.  My, but David has tried
himself!  I heard he was just tearin' up Jack over here,
and I could get the sound of the hammerin', and one
day he asked me to come and see about his beddin'.
He had that Lizy Crofter to wash for him, but if I hadn't
jest stood over her his blankets would have been ruined.
She's no more respect for fine goods than a pig would
have for cream pie.  I hate to see woollens abused, as
if they were human.  My, but things is fancy here
since what David planted is growin'!  Did you ever
live in the country before?''

``No.''

``Where do you hail from?''

``Well not from the direction of hail,'' laughed the
Girl.  ``I lived in Chicago, but we were----were not
rich, and so I didn't know the luxury of the city; just the
lonely, difficult part.''

``Do you call Chicago lonely?''

``A thousand times more so than Medicine Woods.
Here I know the trees will whisper to me, and the water
laughs and sings all day, and the birds almost split their
throats making music for me; but I can imagine no loneliness
on earth that will begin to compare with being among
the crowds and crowds of a large city and no one has a
word or look for you.  I miss the sea of faces and the roar
of life; at first I was almost wild with the silence, but now
I don't find it still any more; the Harvester is teaching
me what each sound means and they seem to be countless.''

``You think, then, you'll like it here?''

``I do, indeed!  Any one would.  Even more than
the beautiful location, I love the interesting part of the
Harvester's occupation.  I really think that gathering
material to make medicines that will allay pain is the
very greatest of all the great work a man can do.''

``Good!'' cried Granny Moreland, her dark eyes
snapping.  ``I've always said it!  I've tried to encourage
David in it.  And he's just capital at puttin' some of his
stuff in shape, and combinin' it in as good medicine as
you ever took.  This spring I was all crippled up with
the rheumatiz until I wanted to holler every time I had
to move, and sometimes it got so aggravatin' I'm not
right sure but I done it.  'Long comes David and says,
`I can fix you somethin',' and bless you, if the boy didn't
take the tucks out of me, until here I am, and tickled
to pieces that I can get here.  This time last year I didn't
care if I lived or not.  Now seems as if I'm caperish
as a three weeks' lamb.  I don't see how a man could
do a bigger thing than to stir up life in you like that.''

``I think this place makes an especial appeal to me,
because, shortly before I came, I had to give up my
mother.  She was very ill and suffered horribly.  Every
time I see David going to his little laboratory on the hill
to work a while I slip away and ask God to help him to
fix something that will ease the pain of humanity as
I should like to have seen her relieved.''

``Why you poor child!  No wonder you are lookin'
so thin and peaked!''

``Oh I'll soon be over that,'' said the Girl.  ``I am
much better than when I came.  I'll be coming over to
trade pie with you before long.  David says you are my
nearest neighbour, so we must be close friends.''

``Well bless your big heart!  Now who ever heard
of a pretty young thing like you wantin' to be friends with
a plain old country woman?''

``Why I think you are lovely!'' cried the Girl.  ``And
all of us are on the way to age, so we must remember
that we will want kindness then more than at any other
time.  David says you knew his mother.  Sometime won't
you tell me all about her?  You must very soon.  The
Harvester adored her, and Doctor Carey says she was the
noblest woman he ever knew.  It's a big contract to
take her place.  Maybe if you would tell me all you can
remember I could profit by much of it.''

Granny Moreland watched the Girl keenly.

``She wa'ant no ordinary woman, that's sure,'' she
commented.  ``And she didn't make no common man
out of her son, either.  I've always contended she took
the job too serious, and wore herself out at it, but she
certainly done the work up prime.  If she's above cloud
leanin' over the ramparts lookin' down----though it gets me
as to what foundation they use or where they get the
stuff to build the ramparts----but if they is ramparts,
and she's peekin' over them, she must take a lot of solid
satisfaction in seeing that David is not only the man she
fought and died to make him, but he's give her quite a
margin to spread herself on.  She 'lowed to make him a
big man, but you got to know him close and plenty 'fore it
strikes you jest what his size is.  I've watched him pretty
sharp, and tried to help what I could since Marthy went,
and I'm frank to say I druther see David happy than
to be happy myself.  I've had my fling.  The rest of
the way I'm willin' to take what comes, with the best
grace I can muster, and wear a smilin' face to betoken
the joy I have had; but it cuts me sore to see the young
sufferin'.''

``Do you think David is unhappy?'' asked the Girl
eagerly.

``I don't see how he could be!'' cried the old lady.
``Of course he ain't!  'Pears as if he's got everythin' to
make him the proudest, best satisfied of men.  I'll own I
was mighty anxious to see you.  I know the kind o'
woman it would take to make David miserable, and it
seems sometimes as if men----that is good men----are
plumb, stone blind when it comes to pickin' a woman.
They jest hitch up with everlastin' misery easy as dew
rolling off a cabbage leaf.  It's sech a blessed sight to
see you, and hear your voice and know you're the woman
anybody can see you be.  Why I'm so happy when I
set here and con-tem'-plate you, I want to cackle like a
pullet announcin' her first egg.  Ain't this porch the
purtiest place?''

``Come see everything,'' invited the Girl, rising.

Granny Moreland followed with alacrity.

``Bare floors!'' she cried.  ``Wouldn't that best you?
I saw they was finished capital when I was over, but
I 'lowed they'd be covered afore you come.  Don't you
like nice, flowery Brissels carpets, honey?''

``No I don't,'' said the Girl.  ``You see, when rugs
are dusty they can be rolled, carried outside, and cleaned.
The walls can be wiped, the floors polished and that
way a house is always fresh.  I can keep this shining,
germ proof, and truly clean with half the work and none
of the danger of heavy carpets and curtains.''

``I don't doubt but them is true words,'' said Granny
Moreland earnestly.  ``Work must be easier and sooner
done than it was in my day, or people jest couldn't have
houses the size of this or the time to gad that women
have now.  From the looks of tile streets of Onabasha,
you wouldn't think a woman 'ud had a baby to tend, a
dinner pot a-bilin', or a bakin' of bread sence the flood.
And the country is jest as bad as the city.  We're a
apin' them to beat the monkeys at a show.  I hardly
got a neighbour that ain't got figgered Brissels carpet,
a furnace, a windmill, a pianny, and her own horse and
buggy.  Several's got autermobiles, and the young folks
are visitin' around a-ridin' the trolleys, goin' to college,
and copyin' city ways.  Amos Peters, next to us; goes
bareheaded in the hay field, and wears gloves to pitch
and plow in.  I tell him he reminds me of these city
women that only wears the lower half of a waist and no
sleeves, and a yard of fine goods moppin' the floors.
Well if that don't 'beat the nation!  Ain't them Marthy's
old blue dishes?''

``Let me show you!''  The Girl opened the little
cupboard and exhibited the willow ware.  The eyes of the
old woman began to sparkle.

``Foundation or no foundation, I do hope them
ramparts is a go!'' she cried.  ``If Marthy Langston is
squintin' over them and she sees her old chany put in a
fine cupboard, and her little shawl round as purty a girl
as ever stepped, and knows her boy is gittin' what he
deserves, good Lord, she'll be like to oust the Almighty,
and set on the throne herself!  'Bout everythin' in life
was a disappointment to her, 'cept David.  Now if
she could see this!  Won't I rub it into the neighbours?
And my boys' wives!''

``I don't understand,'' said the bewildered Girl.

`` 'Course you don't, honey,'' explained the visitor.
``It's like this:  I don't know anybody, man or woman,
in these parts, that ain't rampagin' for CHANGE.  They
ain't one of them that would live in a log cabin, though
they's not a house in twenty miles of here that fits its
surroundin's and looks so homelike as this.  They run
up big, fancy brick and frame things, all turns and
gables and gay as frosted picnic pie, and work and slave
to git these very carpets you say ain't healthy, and the
chairs you say you wouldn't give house room, an' they
use their grandmother's chany for bakin', scraps, and
grease dishes, and hide it if they's visitors.  All of them
strainin' after something they can't afford, and that
ain't healthy when they git it, because somebody else
is doin' the same thing.  Mary Peters says she is afeared
of her life in their new steam wagon, and she says Andy
gits so narvous runnin' it, he jest keeps on a-jerkin' and
drivin' all night, and she thinks he'll soon go to smash
himself, if the machine doesn't beat him.  But they are
keepin' it up, because Graceston's is, and so it goes all
over the country.  Now I call it a slap right in the face
to have a Chicagy woman come to the country to live
and enjoy a log cabin, bare floors, and her man's grandmother's
dishes.  If there ain't Marthy's old blue coverlid
also carefully spread on a splinter new sofy.  Landy,
I can't wait to get to my son John's!  He's got a woman
that would take two coppers off the collection plate while
she was purtendin' to put on one, if she could, and then
spend them for a brass pin or a string of glass beads.
Won't her eyes bung when I tell her about this?  She
wanted my Peter Hartman kiver for her ironin' board.
Show me the rest!''

``This is the dining-room,'' said the Girl, leading the
way.

Granny Moreland stepped in and sent her keen eyes
ranging over the floor, walls, and furnishings.  She sank
on a chair and said with a chuckle, ``Now you go on and
tell me all about it, honey.  Jest what things are and why
you fixed them, and how they are used.''

The Girl did her best, and the old woman nodded in
delighted approval.

``It's the purtiest thing I ever saw,'' she announced.
``A minute ago, I'd 'a' said them blue walls back there,
jest like October skies in Indian summer, and the brown
rugs, like leaves in the woods, couldn't be beat; but this
green and yaller is purtier yet.  That blue room will
keep the best lookin' part of fall on all winter, and with
a roarin' wood fire, it'll be capital, and no mistake; but
this here is spring, jest spring eternal, an' that's best of
all.  Looks like it was about time the leaves was bustin'
and things pushin' up.  It wouldn't surprise me a mite
to see a flock of swallers come sailin' right through these
winders.  And here's a place big enough to lay down
and rest a spell right handy to the kitchen, where a-body
gits tiredest, without runnin' a half mile to find a bed,
and in the mornin' you can look down to the `still waters';
and in the afternoon, when the sun gits around here, you
can pull that blind and `lift your eyes to the hills,' like
David of the Bible says.  My, didn't he say the purtiest
things!  I never read nothin' could touch him!''

``Have you seen the Psalms arranged in verse as we
would write it now?''

``You don't mean to tell me David's been put into
real poetry?''

``Yes.  Some Bibles have all the poetical books in
our forms of verse.''

``Well!  Sometimes I git kind o' knocked out!  As
a rule I hold to old ways.  I think they're the healthiest
and the most faver'ble to the soul.  But they's some
changes come along, that's got sech hard common-sense
to riccomend them, that I wonder the past generations
didn't see sooner.  Now take this!  An hour ago I'd
told you I'd read my father's Bible to the end of my
days.  But if they's a new one that's got David, Solomon,
and Job in nateral form, I'll have one, and I'll git a joy
I never expected out of life.  I ain't got so much poetry
in me, but it always riled me to read, `7. The law of
the Lord is perfect, covertin' the soul.  8. The statutes
of the Lord are right.  9. The fear of the Lord is clean.'
And so it goes on, 'bout as much figgers as they is poetry.
Always did worry me.  So if they make Bibles 'cordin'
to common sense, I'll have one to-morrow if I have to
walk to Onabasha to get it.  Lawsy me! if you ain't
gathered up Marthy's old pink tea set, and give it a
show, too!  Did you do that to please David, or do you
honestly think them is nice dishes?''

``I think they are beautiful,'' laughed the Girl, sinking
to a chair.  ``I don't know that it did please him.  He
had been studying the subject, but something saved him
from buying anything until I came.  I'd have felt dreadfully
if he had gotten what he wanted.''

``What did he want, honey?'' asked the old lady in an
awestruck whisper.

``Egg-shell china and cut glass.''

``And you wouldn't let him!  Woman!  What do you
want?''

``A set of tulip-yellow dishes, with Dutch little figures
on them.  They are so quaint and they would harmonize
perfectly with this room.''

The old lady laughed gleefully.

``My!  I wouldn't 'a' missed this for a dollar,'' she cried.
``It jest does my soul good.  More'n that, if you really
like Marthy's dishes and are going to take care of them
and use them right, I'll give you mine, too.  I ain't never
had a girl.  I've always hoped she'd 'a' had some jedgment
of her own, and not been eternally apin', if I had, but
the Lord may 'a' saved me many a disappointment by
sendin' all mine boys.  Not that I'm layin' the babies on
to the Lord at all----I jest got into the habit of sayin'
that, 'cos everybody else does, but all mine, I had a purty
good idy how I got them.  If a girl of mine wouldn't
'a' had more sense, raised right with me, I'd' a' been purty
bad cut up over it.  Of course, I can't be held responsible
for the girls my boys married, but t'other day Emmeline
----that's John's wife----John is the youngest, and I
sort o' cling to him----Emmeline she says to me,
`Mother, can't I have this old pink and green teapot?'  My
heart warmed right up to the child, and I says, `What do
you want it for, Emmeline?'  And she says, `To draw the
tea in.'  Cracky Dinah!  That fool woman meant to set
my grandmother's weddin' present from her pa and ma,
dishes same as Marthy Washington used, on the stove
to bile the tea in.  I jest snorted!  `No, says I, `you
can't!  'Fore I die,' says I, `I'll meet up with some
woman that 'll love dishes and know how to treat them.'
I think jest about as much of David as I do my own boys,
and I don't make no bones of the fact that he's a heap
more of a man.  I'd jest as soon my dishes went to his
children as to John's.  I'll give you every piece I got,
if you'll take keer of them.''

``Would it be right?'' wavered the girl.

``Right!  Why, I'm jest tellin' you the fool wimmen
would bile tea in them, make grease sassers of them, and
use them to dish up the bakin' on!  Wouldn't you
a heap rather see them go into a cupboard like David's
ma's is in, where they'd be taken keer of, if they was
yours?  I guess you would!''

``Well if you feel that way, and really want us to
have them, I know David will build another little cupboard
on the other side of the fireplace to put yours in,
and I can't tell you how I'd love and care for them.''

``I'll jest do it!'' said Granny Moreland.  ``I got
about as many blue ones as Marthy had an' mine are
purtier than hers.  And my lustre is brighter, for I
didn't use it so much.  Is this the kitchen?  Well if
I ever saw sech a cool, white place to cook in before!
Ain't David the beatenest hand to think up things?
He got the start of that takin' keer of his ma all his
life.  He sort of learned what a woman uses, and how
it's handiest.  Not that other men don't know; it's
jest that they are too mortal selfish and keerless to fix
things.  Well this is great!  Now when you bile cabbage
and the wash, always open your winders wide and let
tho steam out, so it won't spile your walls.''

``I'll be very careful,'' promised the Girl.  ``Now come
see my bathroom, closet and bedroom.''

``Well as I live!  Ain't this fine.  I'll bet a purty
that if I'd 'a' had a room and a trough like this to soak in
when I was wore to a frazzle, I wouldn't 'a' got all twisted
up with rheumatiz like I am.  It jest looks restful to
see.  I never washed in a place like this in all my days.
Must feel grand to be wet all over at once!  Now everybody
ought to have sech a room and use it at all hours,
like David does the lake.  Did you ever see his beat to
go swimmin'?  He's always in splashin'!  Been at it
all his life.  I used to be skeered when he was a little
tyke.  He soaked so much 'peared like he'd wash all the
substance out of him, but it only made him strong.''

``Has he ever been ill?''

``Not that I know of, and I reckon I'd knowed it if
he had.  Well what a clothespress!  I never saw so
many dresses at once.  Ain't they purty?  Oh I wish
I was young, and could have one like that yaller.  And
I'd like to have one like your lavender right now.  My!
You are lucky to have so many nice clothes.  It's a
good thing most girls haven't got them, or they'd stand
primpin' all day tryin' to decide which one to put on.
I don't see how you tell yourself.''

``I wear the one that best hides how pale I am,''
answered the Girl.  ``I use the colours now.  When I
grow plump and rosy, I'll wear the white.''

Granny Moreland dropped on the couch and assured
herself that it was Martha's pink Peter Hartman.  Then
she examined the sunshine room.

``Well I got to go back to the start,'' she said at last.
``This beats the dinin'-room.  This is the purtiest thing
I ever saw.  Oh I do hope they ain't so run to white
in Heaven as some folks seem to think!  Used to be
scandalized if a-body took anythin' but a white flower
to a funeral.  Now they tell me that when Jedge Stilton's
youngest girl come from New York to her pa's
buryin' she fetched about a wash tub of blood-red roses.
Put them all over him, too!  Said he loved red roses
livin' and so he was goin' to have them when he passed
over.  Now if they are lettin' up a little on white on
earth, mebby some of the stylish ones will carry the
fashion over yander.  If Heaven is like this, I won't spend
none of my time frettin' about the foundations.  I'll
jest forget there is any, even if we do always have to be
so perticler to get them solid on earth.  Talk of gold
harps!  Can't you almost hear them?  And listen to
the birds and that water!  Say, you won't get lonesome
here, will you?''

``Indeed no!'' answered the Girl.  ``Wouldn't you
like to lie on my beautiful couch that the Harvester made
with his own hands, and I'll spread Mother Langston's
coverlet over you and let you look at all my pretty things
while I slip away a few minutes to something I'd like
to do?''

``I'd love to!'' said the old woman.  ``I never had a
chance at such fine things.  David told me he was makin'
your room all himself, and that he was goin' to fill it
chuck full of everythin' a girl ever used, and I see he
done it right an' proper.  Away last March he told me he
was buildin' for you, an' I hankered so to have a woman
here again, even though I never s'posed she'd be sochiable
like you, that I egged him on jest all I could.  I
never would 'a' s'posed the boy could marry like this----
all by himself.''

The Girl went to the ice chest to bring some of the
fruit juice, chilled berries, and to the pantry for bread and
wafers to make a dainty little lunch that she placed on
the veranda table; and then she and Granny Moreland
talked, until the visitor said that she must go.  The
Girl went with her to the little bridge crossing Singing
Water on the north.  There the old lady took her
hand.

``Honey,'' she said, ``I'm goin' to tell you somethin'.
I am so happy I can purt near fly.  Last night I was
comin' down the pike over there chasin' home a contrary
old gander of mine, and I looked over on your land and
I see David settin' on a log with his head between his
hands a lookin' like grim death, if I ever see it.  My
heart plum stopped.  Says I, `she's a failure!  She's a
bustin' the boy's heart!  I'll go straight over and tell
her so.'  I didn't dare bespeak him, but I was on nettles
all night.  I jest laid a-studyin' and a-studyin', and I
says, `Come mornin' I'll go straight and give her a curry-
combin' that'll do her good.'  And I started a-feelin'
pretty grim, and here you came to meet me, and wiped
it all out of my heart in a flash.  It did look like the boy
was grievin'; but I know now he was jest thinkin' up what
to put together to take the ache out of some poor old
carcass like mine.  It never could have been about you.
Like a half blind old fool I thought the boy was sufferin',
and here he was only studyin'!  Like as not he was thinkin'
what to do next to show you how he loves you.  What
an old silly I was!  I'll sleep like a log to-night to pay
up for it.  Good-bye, honey!  You better go back and
lay down a spell.  You do look mortal tired.''

The Girl said good-bye and staggering a few steps
sank on a log and sat staring at the sky.

``Oh he was suffering, and about me!'' she gasped.
A chill began to shake her and feverish blood to race
through her veins.  ``He does and gives everything; I
do and give nothing!  Oh why didn't I stay at Uncle
Henry's until it ended?  It wouldn't have been so bad
as this.  What will I do?  Oh what will I do?  Oh
mother, mother! if I'd only had the courage you did.''

She arose and staggered up the hill, passed the cabin
and went to the oak.  There she sank shivering to earth,
and laid her face among the mosses.  The frightened
Harvester found her at almost dusk when he came from
the city with the Dutch dishes, and helped a man launch
a gay little motor boat for her on the lake.

``Why Ruth!  Ruth-girl!'' he exclaimed, kneeling
beside her.

She lifted a strained, distorted face.

``Don't touch me!  Don't come near me!'' she cried.
``It is not true that I am better.  I am not!  I am worse!
I never will be better.  And before I go I've got to tell
you of the debt I owe; then you will hate me, and then I
will be glad!  Glad, I tell you!  Glad!  When you despise
me? then I can go, and know that some day you will
love a girl worthy of you.  Oh I want you to hate me
I am fit for nothing else.''

She fell forward sobbing wildly and the Harvester
tried in vain to quiet her.  At last he said, ``Well then
tell me, Ruth.  Remember I don't want to hear what
you have to say.  I will believe nothing against you, not
even from your own lips, when you are feverish and
excited as now, but if it will quiet you, tell me and have
it over.  See, I will sit here and listen, and when you
have finished I'll pick you up and carry you to your room,
and I am not sure but I will kiss you over and over.
What is it you want to tell me, Ruth?''

She sat up panting and pushed back the heavy coils
of hair.

``I've got to begin away at the beginning to make you
see,'' she said.  ``The first thing I can remember is a small,
such a small room, and mother sewing and sometimes
a man I called father.  He was like Henry Jameson made
over tall and smooth, and more, oh, much more heartless!
He was gone long at a time, and always we had most to
eat, and went oftener to the parks, and were happiest
with him away.  When I was big enough to understand,
mother told me that she had met him and cared for him
when she was an inexperienced girl.  She must have
been very, very young, for she was only a girl as I first
remember her, and oh! so lovely, but with the saddest
face I ever saw.  She said she had a good home and
every luxury, and her parents adored her; but they knew
life and men, and they would not allow him in their home,
and so she left it with him, and he married her and
tried to force them to accept him, and they would not.
At first she bore it.  Later she found him out, and
appealed to them, but they were away or would not forgive,
and she was a proud thing, and would not beg more after
she had said she was wrong, and would they take her
back.

``I grew up and we were girls together.  We embroidered,
and I drew, and sometimes we had little treats
and good times, and my father did not come often, and
we got along the best we could.  Always it was worse on
her, because she was not so strong as I, and her heart
was secretly breaking for her mother, and she was afraid
he would come back any hour.  She was tortured that
she could not educate me more than to put me through
the high school.  She wore herself out doing that, but
she was wild for me to be reared and trained right.  So
every day she crouched over delicate laces and embroidery,
and before and after school I carried it and got
more, and in vacation we worked together.  But living
grew higher, and she became ill, and could not work,
and I hadn't her skill, and the drawings didn't bring much,
and I'd no tools----''

``Ruth, for mercy sake let me take you in my arms.
If you've got to tell this to find peace, let me hold you
while you do it.''

``Never again,'' said the Girl.  ``You won't want to
in a minute.  You must hear this, because I can't bear
it any longer, and it isn't fair to let you grieve and think
me worth loving.  Anyway, I couldn't earn what she did,
and I was afraid, for a great city is heartless to the poor.
One morning she fainted and couldn't get up.  I can see
the awful look in her eyes now.  She knew what was
coming.  I didn't.  I tried to be brave and to work.
Oh it's no use to go on with that!  It was just worse and
worse.  She was lovely and delicate, she was my mother,
and I adored her.  Oh Man!  You won't judge harshly?''

``No!'' cried the Harvester, ``I won't judge at all,
Ruth.  I see now.  Get it over if you must tell me.''

``One day she had been dreadfully ill for a long time
and there was no food or work or money, and the last
scrap was pawned, and she simply would not let me
notify the charities or tell me who or where her people
were.  She said she had sinned against them and broken
their hearts, and probably they were dead, and I was
desperate.  I walked all day from house to house where I
had delivered work, but it was no use; no one wanted anything
I could do, and I went back frantic, and found her
gnawing her fingers and gibbering in delirium.  She did not
know me, and for the first time she implored me for food.

``Then I locked the door and went on the street and I
asked a woman.  She laughed and said she'd report me
and I'd be locked up for begging.  Then I saw a man
I passed sometimes.  I thought he lived close.  I went
straight to him, and told him my mother was very ill, and
asked him to help her.  He told me to go to the proper
authorities.  I told him I didn't know who they were
or where, and I had no money and she was a woman of
refinement, and never would forgive me.  I offered, if he
would come to see her, get her some beef tea, and take
care of her while she lived, that afterward----''

The Girl's frail form shook in a storm of sobs.  At
last she lifted her eyes to the Harvester's.  ``There must
be a God, and somewhere at the last extremity He must
come in.  The man went with me, and he was a young
doctor who had an office a few blocks away, and he knew
what to do.  He hadn't much himself, but for several
weeks he divided and she was more comfortable and not
hungry when she went.  When it was over I dressed
her the best I could in my graduation dress, and folded
her hands, and kissed her good-bye, and told him I was
ready to fulfill my offer; and oh Man!----He said
he had forgotten!''

``God!'' panted the Harvester.

``We couldn't bury her there.  But I remembered
my father had said he had a brother in the country,
and once he had been to see us when I was very little,
and the doctor telegraphed him, and he answered
that his wife was sick, and if I was able to work I could
come, and he would bury her, and give me a home.
The doctor borrowed the money and bought the
coffin you found her in.  He couldn't do better or he
would, for he learned to love her.  He paid our
fares and took us to the train.  Before I started I
went on my knees to him and worshipped him as the
Almighty, and I am sure I told him that I always would
be indebted to him, and any time he required I would
pay.  The rest you know.''

``Have you heard from him, Ruth?''

``No.''

``It WAS yourself the other day on the bridge?''

``Yes.''

``Did he love you?''

``Not that I know of.  No!  Nobody but you would
love a girl who appeared as I did then.''

The Harvester strove to keep a set face, but his lips
drew back from his teeth.

``Ruth, do you love him?''

``Love!'' cried the Girl.  ``A pale, expressionless word!
Adore would come closer!  I tell you she was delirious
with hunger, and he fed her.  She was suffering horrors
and he eased the pain.  She was lifeless, and he kept
her poor tired body from the dissecting table.  I would
have fulfilled my offer, and gone straight into the lake,
but he spared me, Man!  He spared me!  Worship
is a good word.  I think I worship him.  I tried to tell
you.  Before you got that license, I wanted you to
know.''

``I remember,'' said the Harvester.  ``But no man
could have guessed that a girl with your face had agony
like that in her heart, not even when he read deep trouble
there.''

``I should have told you then!  I should have forced
you to hear!  I was wild with fear of Uncle Henry,
and I had nowhere to go.  Now you know!  Go away,
and the end will come soon.''

The Harvester arose and walked a few steps toward
the lake, where he paused stricken, but fighting for
control.  For him the light had gone out.  There was
nothing beyond.  The one passion of his life must live
on, satisfied with a touch from lips that loved another
man.  Broken sobbing came to him.  He did not even
have time to suffer.  Stumblingly he turned and going
to the Girl he picked her up, and sat on the bench holding
her closely.

``Stop it, Ruth!'' he said unsteadily.  ``Stop this!
Why should you suffer so?  I simply will not have it.
I will save you against yourself and the world.  You
shall have all happiness yet; I swear it, my girl!  You
are all right.  He was a noble man, and he spared
you because he loved you, of course.  I will make you
well and rosy again, and then I will go and find
him, and arrange everything for you.  I have spared
you, too, and if he doesn't want you to remain
here with me, Mrs. Carey would be glad to have you
until I can free you.  Judges are human.  It will be
a simple matter.  Hush, Ruth, listen to me!  You shall
be free!  At once, if you say so!  You shall have him!
I will go and bring him here, and I will go away.
Ruth, darling, stop crying and hear me.  You will grow
better, now that you have told me.  It is this secret
that has made you feverish and kept you ill.  Ruth,
you shall have happiness yet, if I have got to circle
the globe and scale the walls of Heaven to find it for
you.''

She struggled from his arms and ran toward the lake.
When the Harvester caught her, she screamed wildly,
and struck him with her thin white hands.  He lifted and
carried her to the laboratory, where he gave her a few
drops from a bottle and soon she became quiet.  Then
he took her to the sunshine room, laid her on the bed,
locked the screens and her door, called Belshazzar to
watch, and ran to the stable.  A few minutes later with
distended nostrils and indignant heart Betsy, under the
flail of an unsparing lash, pounded down the hill toward
Onabasha.



CHAPTER XVII

LOVE INVADES SCIENCE

The Harvester placed the key in the door and
turned to Doctor Carey and the nurse.

``I drugged her into unconsciousness before I
left, but she may have returned, at least partially.  Miss
Barnet, will you kindly see if she is ready for the doctor?
You needn't be in the least afraid.  She has no strength,
even in delirium.''

He opened the door, his head averted, and the nurse
hurried into the room.  The Girl on the bed was beginning
to toss, moan, and mutter.  Skilful hands straightened
her, arranged the covers, and the doctor was called.
In the living-room the Harvester paced in misery too
deep for consecutive thought.  As consciousness returned,
the Girl grew wilder, and the nurse could not follow the
doctor's directions and care for her.  Then Doctor
Carey called the Harvester.  He went in and sitting
beside the bed took the feverish, wildly beating hands
in his strong, cool ones, and began stroking them and
talking.

``Easy, honey,'' he murmured softly.  ``Lie quietly
while I tell you.  You mustn't tire yourself.  You are
wasting strength you need to fight the fever.  I'll hold
your hands tight, I'll stroke your head for you.  Lie
quietly, dear, and Doctor Carey and his head nurse
are going to make you well in a little while.  That's
right!  Let me do the moving; you lie and rest.  Only
rest and rest, until all the pain is gone, and the strong
days come, and they are going to bring great joy, love,
and peace, to my dear, dear girl.  Even the moans take
strength.  Try just to lie quietly and rest.  You can't
hear Singing Water if you don't listen, Ruth.''

``She doesn't realize that it is you or know what you
say, David,'' said Doctor Carey gently.

``I understand,'' said the Harvester.  ``But if you
will observe, you will see that she is quiet when I stroke
her head and hands, and if you notice closely you will
grant that she gets a word occasionally.  If it is the
right one, it helps.  She knows my voice and touch, and
she is less nervous and afraid with me.  Watch a
minute!''

The Harvester took both of the Girl's fluttering hands
in one of his and with long, light strokes gently brushed
them, and then her head, and face, and then her hands
again, and in a low, monotonous, half sing-song voice he
crooned, ``Rest, Ruth, rest!  It is night now.  The
moon is bridging Loon Lake, and the whip-poor-will
is crying.  Listen, dear, don't you hear him crying?
Still, Girl, still!  Just as quiet!  Lie so quietly.  The
whip-poor-will is going to tell his mate he loves her,
loves her so dearly.  He is going to tell her, when you
listen.  That's a dear girl.  Now he is beginning.  He
says, `Come over the lake and listen to the song I'm
singing to you, my mate, my mate, my dear, dear mate,'
and the big night moths are flying; and the katydids are
crying, positive and sure they are crying, a thing that's
past denying.  Hear them crying?  And the ducks are
cheeping, soft little murmurs while they're sleeping,
sleeping.  Resting, softly resting!  Gently, Girl, gently!
Down the hill comes Singing Water, laughing, laughing!
Don't you hear it laughing?  Listen to the big owl courting;
it sees the coon out hunting, it hears the mink softly
slipping, slipping, where the dews of night are dripping.
And the little birds are sleeping, so still they are sleeping.
Girls should be a-sleeping, like the birds a-sleeping, for
to-morrow joy comes creeping, joy and life and love come
creeping, creeping to my Girl.  Gently, gently, that's
a dear girl, gently!  Tired hands rest easy, tired head
lies still!  That's the way to rest----''

On and on the even voice kept up the story.  All over
and around the lake, the length of Singing Water, the
marsh folk found voices to tell of their lives, where it
was a story of joy, rest, and love.  Up the hill ranged the
Harvester, through the forest where the squirrels slept,
the owl hunted, the fire-flies flickered, the fairies squeezed
flower leaves to make colour to paint the autumn foliage,
and danced on toadstool platforms.  Just so long as
his voice murmured and his touch continued, so long the
Girl lay quietly, and the medicines could act.  But no
other touch would serve, and no other voice would answer.
If the harvester left the room five minutes to show the
nurse how to light the fire, and where to find things, he
returned to tossing, restless delirium.

``It's magic David,'' said Doctor Carey.  ``Magic!''

``It is love,'' said the Harvester.  ``Even crazed with
fever, she recognizes its voice and touch.  You've got
your work cut out, Doc.  Roll your sleeves and collect
your wits.  Set your heart on winning.  There is one
thing shall not happen.  Get that straight in your mind,
right now.  And you too, Miss Barnet!  There is nothing
like fighting for a certainty.  You may think the
Girl is desperately ill, and she is, but make up your minds
that you are here to fight for her life, and to save it.
Save, do you understand?  If she is to go, I don't need
either of you.  I can let her do that myself.  You are
here on a mission of life.  Keep it before you!  Life
and health for this Girl is the prize you are going to win.
Dig into it, and I'll pay the bills, and extra besides.  If
money is any incentive, I'll give you all I've got for life
and health for the Girl.  Are you doing all you know?''

``I certainly am, David.''

``But when day comes you'll have to go back to the
hospital and we may not know how to meet crises that
will arise.  What then?  We should have a competent
physician in the house until this fever breaks.''

``I had thought of that, David.  I will arrange to send
one of the men from the hospital who will be able to
watch symptoms and come for me when needed.''

``Won't do!'' said the Harvester calmly.  ``She has
no strength for waiting.  You are to come when you can,
and remain as long as possible.  The case is yours; your
decisions go, but I will select your assistant.  I know the
man I want.''

``Who is he, David?''

``I'll tell you when I learn whether I can get him.
Now I want you to give the Girl the strongest sedative
you dare, take off your coat, roll your sleeves, and see
how well you can imitate my voice, and how much you
have profited by listening to my song.  In other words,
before day calls, I want you to take my place so successfully
that you deceive her, and give me time to make a
trip to town.  There are a few things that must be done,
and I think I can work faster in the night.  Will
you?''

Doctor Carey bent over the bed.  Gently he slipped
a practised hand under the Harvester's and made the
next stroke down the white arm.  Gradually he took
possession of the thin hands and his touch fell on the
masses of dark hair.  As the Harvester arose the doctor
took the seat.

``You go on!'' he ordered gruffly.  ``I'll do better
alone.''

The Harvester stepped back.  The doctor's touch was
easy and the Girl lay quietly for an instant, then she
moved restlessly.

``You must be still now,'' he said gently.  ``The moon
is up, the lake is all white, and the birds are flying all
around.  Lie still or you'll make yourself worse.  Stiller
than that!  If you don't you can't hear things courting.
The ducks are quacking, the bull frogs are croaking, and
everything.  Lie still, still, I tell you!''

``Oh good Lord, Doc!'' groaned the Harvester in desperation.

The Girl wrenched her hands free and her head rolled
on the pillow.

``Harvester!  Harvester!'' she cried.

The doctor started to arise.

``Sit still!'' commanded the Harvester.  ``Take her
hands and go to work, idiot!  Give her more sedative,
and tell her I'm coming.  That's the word, if she realizes
enough to call for me.''

The doctor possessed himself of the flying hands, and
gently held and stroked them.

``The Harvester is coming,'' he said.  ``Wait just a
minute, he's on the way.  He is coming.  I think I hear
him.  He will be here soon, very soon now.  That's
a good girl!  Lie still for David.  He won't like it if you
toss and moan.  Just as still, lie still so I can listen.  I
can't tell whether he is coming until you are quiet.''

Then he said to the Harvester, ``You see, I've got it
now.  I can manage her, but for pity sake, hurry man!
Take the car!  Jim is asleep on the back seat----Yes, yes,
Girl!  I'm listening for him.  I think I hear him!  I
think he's coming!''

Here and there a word penetrated, and she lay more
quietly, but not in the rest to which the Harvester had
lulled her.

``Hurry man!'' groaned the doctor in a whispered
aside, and the Harvester ran to the car, awakened the
driver and told him he had a clear road to Onabasha, to
speed up.

``Where to?'' asked the driver.

``Dickson, of the First National.''

In a few minutes the car stopped before the residence
and the Harvester made an attack on the front door.
Presently the man came.

``Excuse me for routing you out at this time of night,''
said the Harvester, ``but it's a case of necessity.  I have
an automobile here.  I want you to go to the bank with
me, and get me an address from your draft records.
I know the rules, but I want the name of my wife's
Chicago physician.  She is delirious, and I must telephone
him.''

The cashier stepped out and closed the door.

``Nine chances out of ten it will be in the vault,''
he said.

``That leaves one that it won't,'' answered the
Harvester.  ``Sometimes I've looked in when passing in the
night, and I've noticed that the books are not always
put away.  I could see some on the rack to-night.  I
think it is there.''

It was there, and the Harvester ordered the driver to
hurry him to the telephone exchange, then take the
cashier home and return and wait.  He called the Chicago
Information office.

``I want Dr. Frank Harmon, whose office address is 1509
Columbia Street.  I don't know the 'phone number.''

Then came a long wait, and after twenty minutes the
blessed buzzing whisper, ``Here's your party.''

``Doctor Harmon?''

``Yes.''

``You remember Ruth Jameson, the daughter of a
recent patient of yours?''

``I do.''

``Well my name is Langston.  The Girl is in my home
and care.  She is very ill with fever, and she has much
confidence in you.  This is Onabasha, on the Grand
Rapids and Indiana.  You take the Pennsylvania at
seven o'clock, telegraph ahead that you are coming so
that they will make connection for you, change at twelve-
twenty at Fort Wayne, and I will meet you here.  You
will find your ticket and a check waiting you at the
Chicago depot.  Arrange to remain a week at least.
You will be paid all expenses and regular prices for your
time.  Will you come?''

``Yes.''

``All right.  Make no failure.  Good-bye.''

Then the Harvester left an order with the telephone
company to run a wire to Medicine Woods the first thing
in the morning, and drove to the depot to arrange for
the ticket and check.  In less than an hour he was holding
the Girl's hands and crooning over her.

``Jerusalem!'' said Doctor Carey, rising stiffly.  ``I'd
rather undertake to cut off your head and put it back
on than to tackle another job like that.  She's quite
delirious, but she has flashes, and at such times she knows
whom she wants; the rest of the time it's a jumble and
some of it is rather gruesome.  She's seen dreadful
illness, hunger, and there's a debt she's wild about.  I
told you something was back of this.  You've got to find
out and set her mind at ease.''

``I know all about it,'' said the Harvester patiently
between crooning sentences to the Girl.  ``But the crash
came before I could convince her that it was all right and
I could fix everything for her easily.  If she only could
understand me!''

``Did you find your man?''

``Yes.  He will be here this afternoon.''

``Quick work!''

``This takes quick work.''

``Do you know anything about him?''

``Yes.  He is a young fellow, just starting out.  He is
a fine, straight, manly man.  I don't know how much
he knows, but it will be enough to recognize your
ability and standing, and to do what you tell him.
I have perfect confidence in him.  I want you to come
back at one, and take my place until I go to meet
him.''

`I can bring him out.''

``I have to see him myself.  There are a few words
to be said before he sees the Girl.''

``David, what are you up to?''

``Being as honourable as I can.  No man gets any too
decent, but there is no law against doing as you would
be done by, and being as straight as you know how.
When I've talked to him, I'll know where I am and I'll
have something to say to you.''

``David, I'm afraid----''

``Then what do you suppose I am?'' said the Harvester.
``It's no use, Doc.  Be still and take what comes!
The manner in which you meet a crisis proves you a
whining cur or a man.  I have got lots of respect for a
dog, as a dog; but I've none for a man as a dog.  If you've
gathered from the Girl's delirium that I've made a mistake,
I hope you have confidence enough in me to believe
I'll right it, and take my punishment without
whining.  Go away, you make her worse.  Easy, Girl, the
world is all right and every one is sleeping now, so you
should be at rest.  With the day the doctor will come,
the good doctor you know and like, Ruth.  You haven't
forgotten your doctor, Ruth?  The kind doctor who cared
for you.  He will make you well, Ruth; well and oh,
so happy!  Harmon, Harmon, Doctor Harmon is coming
to you, Girl, and then you will be so happy!''

``Why you blame idiot!'' cried Doctor Carey in a
harsh whisper.  ``Have you lost all the sense you ever
had?  Stop that gibber!  She wants to hear about the
birds and Singing Water.  Go on with that woods line of
talk; she likes that away the best.  This stuff is making
her restless.  See!''

``You mean you are,'' said the Harvester wearily.
``Please leave us alone.  I know the words that will
bring comfort.  You don't.''

He began the story all over again, but now there ran
through it a continual refrain.  ``Your doctor is coming,
the good doctor you know.  He will make you
well and strong, and he will make life so lovely for
you.''

He was talking without pause or rest when Doctor
Carey returned in the afternoon to take his place.  He
brought Mrs. Carey with him, and she tried a woman's
powers of soothing another woman, and almost drove the
Girl to fighting frenzy.  So the doctor made another
attempt, and the Harvester raced down the hill to the
city.  He went to the car shed as the train pulled in, and
stood at one side while the people hurried through the
gate.  He was watching for a young man with a travelling
bag and perhaps a physician's satchel, who would be
looking for some one.

``I think I'll know him,'' muttered the Harvester
grimly.  ``I think the masculine element in me will
pop up strongly and instinctively at the sight of this man
who will take my Dream Girl from me.  Oh good God!
Are You sure You ARE good?''

In his brown khaki trousers and shirt, his head bare,
his bronze face limned with agony he made no attempt to
conceal, the Harvester, with feet planted firmly, and
tightly folded arms, his head tipped slightly to one side,
braced himself as he sent his keen gray eyes searching the
crowd.  Far away he selected his man.  He was young,
strong, criminally handsome, clean and alert; there was
discernible anxiety on his face, and it touched the
Harvester's soul that he was coming just as swiftly as he
could force his way.  As he passed the gates the Harvester
reached his side.

``Doctor Harmon, I think,'' he said.

``Yes.''

``This way!  If you have luggage, I will send for it
later.''

The Harvester hurried to the car.

``Take the shortest cut and cover space,'' he said to
the driver.  The car kept to the speed limit until toward
the suburbs.

Doctor Harmon removed his hat, ran his fingers
through dark waving hair and yielded his body to the
swing of the car.  Neither man attempted to talk.
Once the Harvester leaned forward and told the driver
to stop on the bridge, and then sat silently.  As the
car slowed down, they alighted.

``Drive on and tell Doc we are here, and will be up
soon,'' said the Harvester.  Then he turned to the
stranger.  ``Doctor Harmon, there's little time for words.
This is my place, and here I grow herbs for medicinal
houses.''

``I have heard of you, and heard your stuff
recommended,'' said the doctor.

``Good!'' exclaimed the Harvester.  ``That saves
time.  I stopped here to make a required explanation
to you.  The day you sent Ruth Jameson to Onabasha,
I saw her leave the train and recognized in her my ideal
woman.  I lost her in the crowd and it took some time
to locate her.  I found her about a month ago.  She
was miserable.  If you saw what her father did to her
and her mother in Chicago, you should have seen what
his brother was doing here.  The end came one day in
my presence, when I paid her for ginseng she had found
to settle her debt to you.  He robbed her by force.
I took the money from him, and he threatened her.  She
was ill then from heat, overwork, wrong food----every
misery you can imagine heaped upon the dreadful conditions
in which she came.  It had been my intention
to court and marry her if I possibly could.  That day
she had nowhere to go; she was wild with fear; the fever
that is scorching her now was in her veins then.  I did
an insane thing.  I begged her to marry me at once and
come here for rest and protection.  I swore that if she
would, she should not be my wife, but my honoured
guest, until she learned to love me and released me from
my vow.  She tried to tell me something; I had no idea
it was anything that would make any real difference, and
I wouldn't listen.  Last night, when the fever was
beginning to do its worst, she told me of your entrance into
her life and what it meant to her.  Then I saw that I
had made a mistake.  You were her choice, the man
she could love, not me, so I took the liberty of sending
for you.  I want you to cure her, court her, marry her,
and make her happy.  God knows she has had her share
of suffering.  You recognize her as a girl of refinement?''

``I do.''

``You grant that in health she would be lovelier than
most women, do you not?''

``She was more beautiful than most in sickness and
distress.''

``Good!'' cried the Harvester.  ``She has been here
two weeks.  I give you my word, my promise to her has
been kept faithfully.  As soon as I can leave her to
attend to it, she shall have her freedom.  That will be
easy.  Will you marry her?''

The doctor hesitated.

``What is it?'' asked the Harvester.

``Well to be frank,'' said Doctor Harmon, ``it is
money!  I'm only getting a start.  I borrowed funds
for my schooling and what I used for her.  She is
in every way attractive enough to be desired by
any man, but how am I to provide a home and
support her and pay these debts?  I'll try it, but I
am afraid it will be taking her back to wrong conditions
again.''

``If you knew that she owned a comfortable cottage
in the suburbs, where it is cool and clean, and had,
say a hundred a month of her own for the coming three
years, could you see your way?''

``That would make all the difference in the world.  I
thought seriously of writing her.  I wanted to, but I
concluded I'd better work as hard as I could for some
practice first, and see if I could make a living for two,
before I tried to start anything.  I had no idea she would
not be comfortably cared for at her uncle's.''

``I see,'' said the Harvester.  ``If I had kept out, life
would have come right for her.''

``On the contrary,'' said the doctor, ``it appears very
probable that she would not be living.''

``It is understood between us, then, that you will
court and marry her so soon as she is strong enough?''

``It is understood,'' agreed the doctor.

``Will you honour me by taking my hand?'' asked the
Harvester.  ``I scarcely had hoped to find so much of a
man.  Now come to your room and get ready for the
stiffest piece of work you ever attempted.''

The Harvester led the way to the guest chamber over
looking the lake, and installed its first occupant.  Then he
hurried to the Girl.  The doctor was holding her head
and one hand, his wife the other, and the nurse her feet.
It took the Harvester ten strenuous minutes to make
his touch and presence known and to work quiet.  All
over he began crooning his story of rest, joy, and love.
He broke off with a few words to introduce Doctor
Harmon to the Careys and the nurse, and then calmly
continued while the other men stood and watched him.

``Seems rather cut out for it,'' commented Doctor
Harmon.

``I never yet have seen him attempt anything that he
didn't appear cut out for,'' answered Doctor Carey.

``Will she know me?'' inquired the young man,
approaching the bed.

When the Girl's eyes fell on him she grew rigid and lay
staring at him.  Suddenly with a wild cry she struggled
to rise.

``You have come!'' she cried.  ``Oh I knew you would
come!  I felt you would come!  I cannot pay you now!
Oh why didn't you come sooner?''

The young doctor leaned over and took one of the
white hands from the Harvester, stroking it gently.

``Why you did pay, Ruth!  How did you come to
forget?  Don't you remember the draft you sent me?
I didn't come for money; I came to visit you, to nurse
you, to do all I can to make you well.  I am going to
take care of you now so finely you'll be out on the lake
and among the flowers soon.  I've got some medicine
that makes every one well.  It's going to make you strong,
and there's something else that's going to make you
happy; and me, I'm going to be the proudest man alive.''

He reached over and took possession of the other hand,
stroking them softly, and the Girl lay tensely staring
at him and gradually yielding to his touch and voice.
The Harvester arose, and passing around the bed, he
placed a chair for Doctor Harmon and motioning for
Doctor Carey left the room.  He went to the shore to
his swimming pool, wearily dropped on the bench, and
stared across the water.

``Well thank God it worked, anyway!'' he muttered.

``What's that popinjay doing here?'' thundered
Doctor Carey.  ``Got some medicine that cures everybody.
Going to make her well, is he?  Make the cows,
and the ducks, and the chickens, and the shitepokes well,
and happy----no name for it!  After this we are all
going to be well and happy!  You look it right now,
David!  What under Heaven have you done?''

``Left my wife with the man she loves, and to whom I
release her, my dear friend,'' said the Harvester.  ``And
it's so easy for me that you needn't give making it a
little harder, any thought.''

``David, forgive me!'' cried Doctor Carey.  ``I don't
understand this.  I'm almost insane.  Will you tell
me what it means?''

``Means that I took advantage of the Girl's illness, utter
loneliness, and fear, and forced her into marrying me for
shelter and care, when she loved and wanted another
man, who was preparing to come to her.  He is her Chicago
doctor, and fine in every fibre, as you can see.  There
is only one thing on earth for me to do, and that is to
get out of their way, and I'll do it as soon as she is well;
but I vow I won't leave her poor, tired body until she
is, not even for him.  I thought sure I could teach her to
love me!  Oh but this is bitter, Doc!''

``You are a consummate fool to bring him here!''
cried Doctor Carey.  ``If she is too sick to realize the
situation now, she will be different when she is normal
again.  Any sane girl that wouldn't love you, David,
ain't fit for anything!''

``Yes, I'm a whale of a lover!'' said the Harvester
grimly.  ``Nice mess I've made of it.  But there is no real
harm done.  Thank God, Harmon was not the only
white man.''

``David, what do you mean?''

``Is it between us, Doc?''

``Yes.''

``For all time?''

``It is.''

The Harvester told him.  He ended, ``Give the fellow
his dues, Doc.  He had her at his mercy, utterly alone
and unprotected, in a big city.  There was not a living
soul to hold him to account.  He added to his burdens,
borrowed more money, and sent her here.  He thought
she was coming to the country where she would be safe
and well cared for until he could support her.  I did the
remainder.  Now I must undo it, that's all!  But
you have got to go in there and practise with him.
You've got to show him every courtesy of the profession.
You must go a little over the rules, and teach him all
you can.  You will have to stifle your feelings, and be
as much of a man as it is in you to be, at your level
best.''

``I'm no good at stifling my feelings!''

``Then you'll have to learn,'' said the Harvester.
``If you'd lived through my years of repression in the
woods you'd do the fellow credit.  As I see it, his side
of this is nearly as fine as you make it.  I tell you she was
utterly stricken, alone, and beautiful.  She sought his
assistance.  When the end came he thought only of her.
Won't you give a young fellow in a place like Chicago
some credit for that?  Can't you get through you what
it means?''

Doctor Carey stood frowning in deep thought, but the
lines of his face gradually changed.

``I suppose I've got to stomach him,'' he said.

The nurse came down the gravel path.

``Mr. Langston, Doctor Harmon asked me to call
you,'' she said.

The Harvester arose and went to the sunshine room.

``What does he want, Molly?'' asked the doctor.

``Wants to turn over his job,'' chuckled the nurse.  ``He
held it about seven minutes in peace, and then she began
to fret and call for the Harvester.  He just sweat blood
to pacify her, but he couldn't make it.  He tried to
hold her, to make love to her, and goodness knows what,
but she struggled and cried, `David,' until he had to give
it up and send me.''

``Molly,'' said Doctor Carey, ``we've known the
Harvester a long time, and he is our friend, isn't he?''

``Of course!'' said the nurse.

``We know this is the first woman he ever loved,
probably ever will, as he is made.  Now we don't like
this stranger butting in here; we resent it, Molly.  We
are on the side of our friend, and we want him to win.
I'll grant that this fellow is fine, and that he has done
well, but what's the use in tearing up arrangements
already made?  And so suitable!  Now Molly, you are
my best nurse, and a good reliable aid in times like this.
I gave you instructions an hour ago.  I'll add this to
them.  YOU ARE ON THE HARVESTER'S SIDE.  Do you understand?
In this, and the days to come, you'll have a
thousand chances to put in a lick with a sick woman.
Put them in as I tell you.''

``Yes, Doctor Carey.''

``And Molly!  You are something besides my best
nurse.  You're a smashing pretty girl, and your occupation
should make you especially attractive to a young
doctor.  I'm sure this fellow is all right, so while you are
doing your best with your patient for the Harvester, why
not have a try for yourself with the doctor?  It couldn't
do any harm, and it might straighten out matters.  Anyway,
you think it over.''

The nurse studied his face silently for a time, and then
she began to laugh softly.

``He is up there doing his best with her,'' she said.

The doctor threw out his hands in a gesture of disdain,
and the nurse laughed again; but her cheeks were pink
and her eyes flashing as she returned to duty.

``Random shot, but it might hit something, you
never can tell,'' commented the doctor.

The Harvester entered the Girl's room and stood still.
She was fretting and raising her temperature rapidly.
Before he reached the door his heart gave one great leap
at the sound of her voice calling his name.  He knew what
to do, but he hesitated.

``She seems to have become accustomed to you, and at
times does not remember me,'' said Doctor Harmon.  ``I
think you had better take her again until she grows quiet.''

The Harvester stepped to the bed and looked the
doctor in the eye.

``I am afraid I left out one important feature in our
little talk on the bridge,'' he said.  ``I neglected to tell
you that in your fight for this woman's life and love you
have a rival.  I am he.  She is my wife, and with the
last fibre of my being I adore her.  If you win, and she
wants you to take her away, I will help you; but my heart
goes with her forever.  If by any chance it should occur
that I have been mistaken or misinterpreted her delirium
or that she has been deceived and finds she prefers me and
Medicine Woods, to you and Chicago, when she has had
opportunity to measure us man against man, you must
understand that I claim her.  So I say to you frankly,
take her if you can, but don't imagine that I am passive.
I'll help you if I know she wants you, but I fight you
every inch of the way.  Only it has got to be square and
open.  Do you understand?''

``You are certainly sufficiently clear.''

``No man who is half a man sees the last chance of
happiness go out of his life without putting up the stiffest
battle he knows,'' said the Harvester grimly.  ``Ruth-
girl, you are raising the fever again.  You must be quiet.''

With infinite tenderness he possessed himself of her
hands and began stroking her hair, and in a low and soothing
voice the story of the birds, flowers, lake, and woods
went on.  To keep it from growing monotonous the
Harvester branched out and put in everything he knew.
In the days that followed he held a position none could
take from him.  While the doctors fought the fever,
he worked for rest and quiet, and soothed the tortured
body as best he could, that the medicines might act.

But the fever was stubborn, and the remedies were
slow; and long before the dreaded coming day the doctors
and nurse were quietly saying to each other that when
the crisis came the heart would fail.  There was no
vitality to sustain life.  But they did not dare tell the
Harvester.  Day and night he sat beside the maple
bed or stretched sleeping a few minutes on the couch
while the Girl slept; and with faith never faltering and
courage unequalled, he warned them to have their remedies
and appliances ready.

``I don't say it's going to be easy,'' he said.  ``I just
merely state that it must be done.  And I'll also mention
that, when the hour comes, the man who discovers that
he could do something if he had digitalis, or a remedy he
should have had ready and has forgotten, that man had
better keep out of my sight.  Make your preparations
now.  Talk the case over.  Fill your hypodermics.  Clean
your air pumps.  Get your hot-water bottles ready.
Have system.  Label your stuff large and set it conveniently.
You see what is coming, be prepared!''

One day, while the Girl lay in a half-drugged, feverish
sleep, the Harvester went for a swim.  He dressed a little
sooner than was expected and in crossing the living-room
he heard Doctor Harmon say to Doctor Carey on the
veranda, ``What are we going to do with him when the
end comes?''

The Harvester stepped to the door.  ``That won't
be the question,'' he said grimly.  ``It will be what will
HE do with us?''

Then, with an almost imperceptible movement, he
caught Doctor Harmon at the waist line, and lifted and
dangled him as a baby, and then stood him on the floor.
``Didn't hardly expect that much muscle, did you?''
he inquired lightly.  ``And I'm not in what you could call
condition, either.  Instead of wasting any time on fool
questions like that, you two go over your stuff and ask
each other, have we got every last appliance known to
physics and surgery?  Have we got duplicates on hand
in case we break delicate instruments like hypodermic
syringes and that sort of thing?  Engage yourselves with
questions pertaining to life; that is your business.
Instead of planning what you'll do in failure, bolster your
souls against it.  Granny Moreland beats you two put
together in grip and courage.''

The Harvester returned to his task, and the fight went
on.  At last the hour came when the temperature fell
lower and lower.  The feeble pulses flickered and grew
indiscernible; a gray pallor hovered over the Girl, and a
cold sweat stood on her temples.

``Now!'' said the Harvester.  ``Exercise your calling!
Fight like men or devils, but win you must.''

They did work.  They administered stimulants; applied
heat to the chilled body; fans swept the room with
vitalized air; hypodermics were used; and every last resort
known to science was given a full test, and the weak
heart throbbed slower and slower, and life ran out with
each breath.  The Harvester stood waiting with set
jaws.  He could detect no change for the better.  At
last he picked up a chilled hand and could discover no
pulse, and the gray nails and the dark tips told a story
of arrested circulation.  He laid down the hand and
faced the men.

``This is what you'd call the crisis, Doc?'' he asked
gently.

``Yes.''

``Are you stemming it?  Are you stemming it?  Are
you sure she is holding her own?''

Doctor Carey looked at him silently.

``Have you done all you can do?'' asked the Harvester.

``Yes.''

``You believe her going out?''

``Yes''

The Harvester turned to Doctor Harmon.  ``Do you
concur in that?''

``Yes.''

Then to the nurse, ``And you?''

``Yes.''

``Then,'' said the Harvester, ``all of you are useless.
Get out of here.  I don't want your atmosphere.  If you
can believe only in death, leave us!  She is my wife, and
if this is the end she belongs to me, and I will do as I
choose with her.  All of you go!''

The Harvester stepped to the bathroom door and
called Granny Moreland.  ``Granny,'' he said, ``science
has turned tail, and left me in extremity.  Fill your hot-
water bottles and come in here with your heart big with
hope and help me save my Dream Girl.  She is breathing
Granny; we've got to make her keep it up, that's
all----just keep her breathing.''

He returned to the sunshine room, placed a small
table beside the bed, and on it a glass of water, spoon, and
a hypodermic syringe.  When Granny Moreland came
he said:  ``Now you begin on her feet and rub with long,
sweeping, upward strokes to drive the blood to her heart.''

Around the Girl he piled hot-water bottles and
breathlessly hung over her, rubbing her hands.  He wiped
the perspiration from her forehead, and then dropped
by her bed and for a second laid his face on her cold
palm.

``If I am wrong, Heaven forgive me,'' he prayed.
``And you, oh, my darling Dream Girl, forgive me, but
I am forced to try----God helping me!  Amen.''

He arose, took a small bottle from his pocket, filled
the spoon with water, and measured into it three drops
of liquid as yellow as gold.  Then he held the spoon to
the blue lips, and with his fingers worked apart the set
teeth, and poured the medicine down her throat.  Then
they rubbed and muttered snatches of prayer for fifteen
minutes when the Harvester administered another three
drops.  It might have been fancy, but it seemed to him
her jaws were not so stiff.  Faster flew his hands and he
sent Granny Moreland to refill the hot bottles.  When
he gave the Girl the third dose he injected some of
the liquid over her heart and of the glycerine the doctors
had left, in the extremities.  He released more air and
began rubbing again.

The second hour started in the same way, and ended
with slowly relaxing muscles and faint tinges of colour
in the white cheeks.  The feet were not so cold, and when
the Harvester held the spoon he knew that the Girl
made an effort to swallow, and he could see her eyelids
tremble.  Thereupon he pointed these signs to Granny,
and implored her to rub and pray, and pray and rub,
while he worked until the perspiration rolled down his
gray face.  At the end of the second hour he began
decreasing the doses and shortening the time, and again he
commenced in a low rumble his song of life and health,
to encourage the Girl as consciousness returned.

Occasionally Doctor Carey opened the door slightly
and peeped in to see if he were wanted, but he received
no invitation to enter.  The last time he left with the
impression that the Harvester was raving, while he
worked over a lifeless body.  He had the Girl warmly
covered and bent over her face and hands.  At her feet
crouched Granny Moreland, rubbing, still rubbing, beneath
the covers, while in a steady stream the Harvester
was pouring out his song.  If he had listened
an instant longer he would have recognized that the tone
and the words had changed.  Now it was, ``Gently,
breathe gently, Girl!  Slowly, steadily, easily!  Deeper,
a little deeper, Ruth!  Brave Girl, never another so
wonderful!  That's my Dream Girl coming from the
shadows, coming to life's sunshine, coming to hope,
coming to love!  Deeper, just a little deeper!  Smoothly and
evenly!  You are making it, Girl!  You are making it!
By all that is holy and glorious!  Stick to it, Ruth, hold
tight to me!  I'll help you, dear!  You are coming,
coming back to life and love.  Don't worry yourself
trying too hard, if only you can send every breath as
deeply as the last one, you can make it.  You brave girl!
You wonderful Dream Girl!  Ah, Ruth, the name of this
is victory!''

An hour before Doctor Carey had said to Doctor
Harmon and the nurse, as he softly closed the door:  ``It
is over and the Harvester is raving.  We'll give him a
little more time and see if he won't realize it himself.
That will be easier for him than for us to try to tell
him.''

Now he opened the door, stared a second, and coming
to the opposite side of the bed, he leaned over the Girl.
Then he felt her feet.  They were warm and slightly
damp.  A surprised look crept over his face.  He gently
reached for a hand that the Harvester yielded to him.
It was warm, the blue tips becoming rosy, the wrist
pulse discernible.  Then he bent closer, touched her face,
and saw the tremulous eyelids.  He turned back the
cover, and held his ear over her heart.  When he straightened,
``As God lives, she's got a chance, David!'' he
exulted in an awed whisper.

The Harvester lifted a graven face, down which the
sweat of agony rolled, and his lips parted in a twitching
smile.  ``Then this is where love beats the doctors,
Carey!'' he said.

``It is where love has ventured what science dares not.
Love didn't do all of this.  In the name of the Almighty,
what did you give her, David?''

``Life!'' cried the Harvester.  ``Life!  Come on, Ruth,
come on!  Out of the valley come to me!  You
are well now, Girl!  It's all over!  The last trace
of fever is gone, the last of the dull ache.  Can
you swallow just two more drops of bottled sunshine, Ruth?''

The flickering lids slowly opened, and the big black
eyes looked straight into the Harvester's.  He met them
steadily, smiling encouragement.

``Hang on to each breath, dear heart!'' he urged.
``The fever is gone.  The pain is over!  Long life and
the love you crave are for you.  You've only to keep
breathing a few more hours and the battle is yours.
Glorious Girl!  Noble!  You are doing finely!  Ruth,
do you know me?''

Her lips moved.

``Don't try to speak,'' said the Harvester.  ``Don't
waste breath on a word.  Save the good oxygen to
strengthen your tired body.  But if you do know me,
maybe you could smile, Ruth!''

She could just smile, and that was all.  Feeble,
flickering, transient, but as it crossed the living face the
Harvester lifted her hands and kissed them over and
over, back, palm, and finger tips.

``Now just one more drop, honey, and then a long rest.
Will you try it again for me?''

She assented, and the Harvester took the bottle from
his pocket, poured the drop, and held the spoon to willing
lips.  The big eyes were on him with a question.
Then they fell to the spoon.  The Harvester understood.

``Yes, it's mine!  It's got sixty years of wonderful
life in it, every one of them full of love and happiness
for my dear Dream Girl.  Can you take it, Ruth?''

Her lips parted, the wine of life passed between.  She
smiled faintly, and her eyelids dropped shut, but presently
they opened again.

``David!''

``My Dream Girl!''

``Harvester?''

``Yes!''

``Medicine Man?''

``Don't, Ruth!  Save every breath to help your heart.''

``Life?''

``Life it is, Girl!'' exulted the Harvester.  ``Long
life!  Love!  Home!  The man you love!  Every happiness
that ever came to a girl!  Nothing shall be denied
you!  Nothing shall be lacking!  It's all in your hands
now, Ruth.  We've all done everything we can; you must
do the remainder.  It's your work to send every breath
as deeply as you can.  Doc, release another tank of air.
Are her feet warm, Granny?  Let the nurse take your
place now.  And, honey, go to sleep!  I'll keep watch
for you.  I'll measure each breath you draw.  If they
shorten or weaken, I'll wake you for more medicine.  You
can trust me!  Always you can trust me, Ruth.''

The Girl smiled and fell into a light, even slumber.
Granny Moreland stumbled to the couch and rolled on
it sobbing with nervous exhaustion.  Doctor Carey
called the nurse to take her place.  Then he came to the
Harvester's side and whispered, ``Let me, David!''

The Harvester looked up with his queer grin, but he
made no motion to arise.

``Won't you trust me, David?  I'll watch as if it
were my own wife.''

``I wouldn't trust any man on earth, for the coming
three hours,'' replied the Harvester.  ``If I keep this
up that long, she is safe.  Go and rest until I call you.''

He again bent over the Girl, one hand on her left
wrist, the other over her heart, his eyes on her lips,
watching the depth and strength of her every breath.
Regularly he administered the medicine he was giving
her.  Sometimes she took it half asleep; again she gave
him a smile that to the Harvester was the supreme thing
of earth or Heaven.  Toward the end of the long vigil,
in exhaustion he slipped to the floor, and laid his head on
the side of the bed, and for a second his hand relaxed and
he fell asleep.  The Girl awakened as his touch loosened
and looking down she saw his huddled body.  A second
later the Harvester awoke with a guilty start to find her
fingers twisted in the shock of hair on the top of his head.

``Poor stranded Girl,'' he muttered.  ``She's clinging
to me for life, and you can stake all you are worth she's
going to get it!''

Then he gently relaxed her grip, gave her the last dose
he felt necessary, yielded his place to Doctor Carey and
staggered up the hill.  As the sun peeped over Medicine
Woods he stretched himself between the two mounds
under the oak, and for a few minutes his body was rent
with the awful, torn sobbing of a strong man.  Belshazzar
nosed the twisting figure and whined pitifully.  A
chattering little marsh wren tilted on a bush and scolded.
A blue jay perched above and tried to decide whether
there was cause for an alarm signal.  A snake coming from
the water to hunt birds ran close to him, and changing
its course, went weaving away among the mosses.
Gradually the pent forces spent themselves, and for hours
the Harvester lay in the deep sleep of exhaustion, and
stretched beside him, Belshazzar guarded with anxious
dog eyes.



CHAPTER XVIII

THE BETTER MAN

In the middle of the afternoon the Harvester
arose and went into the lake, ate a hearty
dinner, and then took up his watch again.  For
two days and nights he kept his place, until he had the
Girl out of danger, and where careful nursing was all that
was required to insure life and health.  As he sat beside
her the last day, his physical endurance strained to the
breaking point, she laid her hand over his, and looked
long and steadily into his eyes.

``There are so many things I want to know,'' she said.

The Harvester's firm fingers closed over hers.  ``Ruth,
have you ever been sorry that you trusted me?''

``Never!'' said the Girl instantly.

``Then suppose you keep it up,'' said he.  ``Whatever
it is that you want to know, don't use an iota of
strength to talk or to think about it now.  Just say to
yourself, he loves me well enough to do what is right, and
I know that he will.  All you have to do is to be patient
until you grow stronger than you ever have been in your
life, and then you shall have exactly what you want,
Ruth.  Sleep like a baby for a week or two.  Then,
slowly and gradually, we will build up such a constitution
for you that you shall ride, drive, row, swim, dance,
play, and have all that your girlhood has missed in fun
and frolic, and all that your womanhood craves in love
and companionship.  Happiness has come at last, Ruth.
Take it from me.  Everything you crave is yours.  The
love you want, the home, and the life.  As soon
as you are strong enough, you shall know all about
it.  Your business is to drink stimulants and sleep
now, dear.''

``So tired of this bed!''

``It won't be long until you can lie on the couch and
the veranda swing again.''

``Glory!'' said the Girl.  ``David, I must have been
full of fever for a long time.  I can't remember everything.''

``Don't try, I tell you.  Life is coming out right for
you; that's all you need know now.''

``And for you, David?''

``Whenever things are right for you, they are for me,
Ruth.''

``Don't you ever think of yourself?''

``Not when I am close you.''

``Ah!  Then I shall have to grow strong very soon and
think of you.''

The Harvester's smile was pathetic.  He was
unspeakably tired again.

``Never mind me!'' he said.  ``Only get well.''

``David, was there a little horse?''

``There certainly was and is,'' said the Harvester.

``You had not named him yet, but in a few days I can
lead him to the window.''

``Was there something said about a boat?''

``Two of them.''

``Two?''

``Yes.  A row boat for you, and a launch that will
take you all over the lake with only the exertion of steering
on your part.''

``David, I want my pendant and ring.  I am so tired
of lying here, I want to play with them.''

``Where do you keep them, Ruth?''

``In the willow teapot.  I thought no one would look
there.''

The Harvester laughed and brought the little boxes.
He had to open them, but the Girl put on the ring and
asked him if he would not help her with the pendant.  He
slipped the thread around her neck and clasped it.  With
a sigh of satisfaction she took the ornament in one hand
and closed her eyes.  He thought she was falling asleep,
but presently she looked at him.

``You won't allow them to take it from me?''

``Indeed no!  There is no reason on earth why you
should not have that thread around your neck if you want
it.''

``I am going to sleep now.  I want two things.  May
I have them?''

``You may,'' said the Harvester promptly, ``provided
they are not to eat.''

``No,'' said the Girl.  ``I've suffered and made others
trouble.  I won't bother you by asking for anything more
than is brought me.  This is different.  You are completely
worn out.  Your face frightens me, David, and
white hairs that were not there a few days ago have come
along your temples.  I can see them.''

``You gave me a mighty serious scare, Ruth.''

``I know,'' said the Girl.  ``Forgive me.  I didn't
mean to.  I want you to leave me to Doctor Harmon
and the nurse and go sleep a week.  Then I will be ready
for the swing, and to hear some more about the trees and
birds.''

``I can keep it up if you really need me, but if you don't
I am sleepy.  So, if you feel safe, I think I will go.''

``Oh I am safe enough,'' said the Girl.  ``It isn't that.
I'm so lonely.  I've made up my mind not to grieve for
mother, but I miss her so now.  I feel so friendless.''

``But, honey,'' said the Harvester, ``you mustn't do
that!  Don't you see how all of us love you?  Here is
Granny shutting up her house and living here, just to
be with you.  The nurse will do anything you say.  Here
is the man you know best, and think so much of, staying
in the cabin, and so happy to give you all his time, and
anything else you will have, dear.  And the Careys
come every day, and will do their best to comfort you,
and always I am here for you to fall back on.''

``Yes, I'm falling right now,'' said the Girl.  ``I
almost wish I had the fever again.  No one has touched
me for days.  I feel as if every one was afraid of me.''

The Harvester was puzzled.

``Well, Ruth, I'm doing the best I know,'' he said.
``What is it you want?''

``Nothing!'' answered the Girl with slightly dejected
inflection.  ``Say good-bye to me, and go sleep your week.
I'll be very good, and then you shall take me a drive up
the hill when you awaken.  Won't that be fine?''

``Say good-bye to me!''  She felt a ``little lonely!''
They all acted as if they were ``afraid'' of her.  The
Harvester indulged in a flashing mental review and
arrived at a decision.  He knelt beside the bed, took both
slender, cool hands and covered them with kisses.  Then
he slid a hand under the pillow and raised the tired head.

``If I am to say good-bye, I have to do it in my own
way, Ruth,'' he said.

Thereupon he began at the tumbled mass of hair and
kissed from her forehead to her lips, kisses warm and
tender.

``Now you go to sleep, and grow strong enough by the
time I come back to tell me whom you love,'' he said,
and went from the room without waiting for any reply.

With short intervals for food and dips in the lake the
Harvester very nearly slept the week.  When he finally
felt himself again, he bathed, shaved, dressed freshly,
and went to see the Girl.  He had to touch her to be
sure she was real.  She was extremely weak and tremulous,
but her face and hands were fuller, her colour
was good, she was ravenously hungry.  Doctor Harmon
said she was a little tryant, and the nurse that she was
plain cross.  The first thing the Harvester noticed was
that the dull blue look in the depth of the dark eyes was
gone.  They were clear, dusky wells, with shining
lights at the bottom.

``Well I never would have believed it!'' he cried.
``Doctor Harmon, you are a great physician!  You have
made her all over new, and in a few more days she will
be on the veranda.  This is great!''

``Do I appear so much better to you, Harvester?''
asked the Girl.

``Has no one thought to show you,'' cried the
Harvester.  ``Here, let me!'

He stepped to her dressing table, picked up a mirror,
and held it before her so that she could see herself.

``Seems to me I am dreadfully white and thin yet!''

``If you had seen what I saw ten days ago, my Girl,
you would think you appear like a pink, rosy angel now,
or a wonderful dream.''

``Truly, do I in the least resemble a dream, David?''

``You are a dream.  The loveliest one a man ever had.
With three months of right care and exercise you'll
be the beautiful woman nature intended.  I'm so proud
of you.  You are being so brave!  Just lie there in
patience a few more days, and out you come again to life;
and life that will thrill your being with joy.''

``All right,'' said the Girl, ``I will.  David are you
attending to your herbs?''

``Not for a few weeks.''

``You are very much behind?''

``No.  Nothing important.  I don't make enough
to count on what is ready now.  I can soon gather
jimson leaves and seed to fill orders, the hemlock is
about right to take the fruit, the mustard is yet in pod,
and the saffron and wormseed can be attended later.
I can catch up in two days.''

``What about----about the big bed on the hill?''

The Harvester experienced an inward thrill of delight.
She was so impressed with the value of the ginseng she
would not mention it, even before the man she loved----
no more than that----``adored''----``worshipped!''
He smiled at her in understanding.

``I'll have to take a peep at that and report,'' he said.

``Are you rested now?''

``Indeed yes!''

``You are dreadfully thin.''

``I always am.  I'll pick up a little when I get back to
work.''

``David, I want you to go to work now.''

``Can you spare me?''

``Haven't we done well these last few days?''

``I can't tell you how well.''

``Then please go gather everything you need to fill
orders except the big bed, and by that time maybe you
could take another week off, and I could go to the hill
top and on the lake.  I'm so anxious to put my feet on
the earth.  They feel so dead.''

``Are your feet well rubbed to draw down the circulation?''

``They are rubbed shiny and almost skinned, David.
No one ever had better care, of that I am sure.  Go
gather what you should have.''

``All right,'' said the Harvester.

He arose and as he started to leave the room he took
one last look at the Girl to see if he could detect anything
he could suggest for her comfort, and read a message
in her eyes.  Instantly there was an answering flash
in his.

``I'll be back in a minute,'' he said.  ``I just noticed
discorea villosa has the finest rattle boxes formed.  I've
been waiting to show you.  And the hop tree has its
castanets all green and gold.  In a few more weeks it
will begin to play for you.  I'll bring you some.''

Soon he returned with the queer seed formations, and
as he bent above her, with his back to Doctor Harmon, he
whispered, ``What is it?''

Her lips barely formed the one word, ``Hurry!''

The Harvester straightened.

``All comfortable, Ruth?'' he asked casually.

``Yes.''

``You understand, of course, that there is not the
slightest necessity for my going to work if you really
want me for anything, even if it's nothing more than to
have me within calling distance, in case you SHOULD
want something.  The whole lot I can gather now won't
amount to twenty dollars.  It's merely a matter of
pride with me to have what is called for.  I'd much rather
remain, if you can use me in any way at all.''

``Twenty dollars is considerable, when expenses are
as heavy as now.  And it's worth more than any money
to you not to fail when orders come.  I have learned that,
and David, I don't want you to either.  You must fill
all demands as usual.  I wouldn't forgive myself this
winter if you should be forced to send orders only partly
filled because I fell ill and hindered you.  Please go and
gather all you possibly will need of everything you take
at this season, only remember!''

``There is no danger of my forgetting.  If you are
going to send me away to work, you will allow me to kiss
your hand before I go, fair lady?''

He did it fervently.

``One word with you, Harmon,'' he said as he left the
room.

Doctor Harmon arose and followed him to the gold
garden, and together they stood beside the molten hedge
of sunflowers, coneflowers, elecampane, and jewel flower.

``I merely want to mention that this is your inning,''
said the Harvester.  ``Find out if you are essential to the
Girl's happiness as soon as you can, and the day she tells
me so, I will file her petition and take a trip to the city
to study some little chemical quirks that bother me.
That's all.''

The Harvester went to the dry-house for bags and
clipping shears, and the doctor returned to the sunshine room.

``Ruth,'' he said, ``do you know that the Harvester
is the squarest man I ever met?''

``Is he?'' asked the Girl.

``He is!  He certainly is!''

``You must remember that I have little acquaintance
with men,'' said she.  ``You are the first one I ever knew,
and the only one except him.''

``Well I try to be square,'' said Doctor Harmon,
``but that is where Langston has me beaten a mile.  I
have to try.  He doesn't.  He was born that way.''

The Girl began to laugh.

``His environment is so different,'' she said.  ``Perhaps
if he were in a big city, he would have to try
also.''

``Won't do!'' said the doctor.  ``He chose his location.
So did I.  He is a stronger physical man than I ever was
or ever will be.  The struggle that bound him to the
woods and to research, that made him the master of
forces that give back life, when a man like Carey says
it is the end, proves him a master.  The tumult in his
soul must have been like a cyclone in his forest, when he
turned his back on the world and stuck to the woods.
Carey told me about it.  Some day you must hear.  It's
a story a woman ought to know in order to arrive at
proper values.  You never will understand the man until
you know that he is clean where most of us are blackened
with ugly sins we have no right on God's footstool
to commit and not so much reason as he.  Every man
should be as he is, but very few are.  Carey says Langston's
mother was a wonderful element in the formation
of his character; but all mothers are anxious, and none
of them can build with no foundation and no soul timber.
She had material for a man to her hand, or she couldn't
have made one.''

``I see what you mean.''

``So far as any inexperienced girl ever sees,'' said the
doctor.  ``Some day if you live to fifty you will know,
but you can't comprehend it now.''

``If you think I lived all my life in Chicago's poverty
spots and don't know unbridled human nature!''

``I found you and your mother unusually innocent
women.  You may understand some things.  I hope
you do.  It will help you to decide who is the real man
among the men who come into your life.  There are
some men, Ruth, who are fit to mate with a woman,
and to perpetuate themselves and their mental and
moral forces in children, who will be like them, and there
are others who are not.  It is these `others' who are
responsible for the sin of the world, the sickness and
suffering.  Any time you are sure you have a chance at a
moral man, square and honest, in control of his brain and
body, if you are a wise woman, Ruth, stick to him as the
limpet to the rock.''

``You mean stick to the Harvester?''

``If you are a wise woman!''

``When was a woman ever wise?''

``A few have been.  They are the only care-free,
really happy ones of the world, the only wives without
a big, poison, blue-bottle fly in their ointment.''

``I detest flies!'' said the Girl.

``So do I,'' said the doctor.  ``For this reason I say
to you choose the ointment that never had one in it.
Take the man who is `master of his fate, captain of his
soul.'  Stick to the Harvester!  He is infinitely the
better man!''

``Well have you seen anything to indicate that I
wasn't sticking?'' asked the Girl.

``No.  And for your sake I hope I never will.''

She laughed softly.

``You do love him, Ruth?''

``As I did my mother, yes.  There is not a trace in
my heart of the thing he calls love.''

``You have been stunted, warped, and the fountains
of life never have opened.  It will come with right
conditions of living.''

``Do you think so?''

``I know so.  At least there is no one else you love,
Ruth?''

``No one except you.''

``And do you feel about me just as you do him?''

``No!  It is different.  What I owe him is for myself.
What I owe you is for my mother.  You saw!  You
know!  You understand what you did for her, and what
it meant to me.  The Harvester must be the finest man
on earth, but when I try to think of either God or Heaven,
your face intervenes.''

``That's all right, Ruth, I'm so glad you told me,''
said Doctor Harmon.  ``I can make it all perfectly clear
to you.  You just go on and worship me all you please.
It's bound to make a cleaner, better man of me.
What you feel for me will hold me to a higher moral
level all my life than I ever have known before; but never
forget that you are not going to live in Heaven.  You
will be here at least sixty years yet, so when you come
to think of selecting a partner for the relations of the
world, you stick to the finest man on earth; see?''

``I do!'' said the Girl.  ``I saw you kiss Molly a
week ago.  She is lovely, and I hope you will be
perfectly happy.  It won't interfere with my worshipping
you; not the least in the world.  Go ahead and be
joyful!''

The doctor sprang to his feet in crimson confusion.
The Girl lay and laughed at him.

``Don't!'' she cried.  ``It's all right!  It takes a weight
off my soul as heavy as a mountain.  I do adore you, as
I said.  But every hour since I left Chicago a big, black
cloud has hung over me.  I didn't feel free.  I didn't
feel absolved.  I felt that my obligations to you were so
heavy that when I had settled the last of the money debt
I was in honour bound----''

``Don't, Ruth!  Forget those dreadful times, as I told
you then!  Think only of a happy future!''

``Let me finish,'' said the Girl.  ``Let me get this out
of my system with the other poison.  From the day I
came here, I've whispered in my heart, `I am not free!'
But if you love another woman!  If you are going to take
her to your heart and to your lips, why that is my
release.  Oh Man, speak the words!  Tell me I am free
indeed!''

``Ruth, be quiet, for mercy sake!  You'll raise a
temperature, and the Harvester will pitch me into the lake.
You are free, child, of course!  You always have been.
I understood the awful pressure that was on you with
the very first glimpse I had of your mother.  Who was
she, Ruth?''

``She never would tell me.''

``She thought you would appeal to her people?''

``She knew I would!  I couldn't have helped it.''

``Would you like to know?''

``I never want to.  It is too late.  I infinitely prefer
to remain in ignorance.  Talk of something else.''

``Let me read a wonderful book I found on the
Harvester's shelves.''

``Anything there will contain wonders, because he only
buys what appeals to him, and it takes a great book to
do that.  I am going to learn.  He will teach me, and
when I come within comprehending distance of him, then
we are going on together.''

``What an attractive place this is!''

``Isn't it?  I only have seen enough to understand the
plan.  I scarcely can wait to set my feet on earth and go
into detail.  Granny Moreland says that when spring
comes over the hill, and brings up the flowers in the big
woods, she'd rather walk through them than to read
Revelation.  She says it gives her an idea of Heaven
she can come closer realizing and it seems more stable.
You know she worries about the foundations.  She can't
understand what supports Heaven.  But up there in
Medicine Woods the old dear gets so close her God
that some day she is going to realize that her idea
of Heaven there is quite as near right as marble
streets and gold pillars and vastly more probable.  The
day I reach that hill top again, Heaven begins for me.
Do you know the wonderful thing the Harvester did up
there?''

``Under the oak?''

``Yes.''

``Carey told me.  It was marvellous.''

``Not such a marvel as another the doctor couldn't have
known.  The Harvester made passing out so natural,
so easy, so a part of elemental forces, that I almost have
forgotten her tortured body.  When I think of her now,
it is to wonder if next summer I can distinguish her
whisper among the leaves.  Before you go, I'll take you
up there and tell you what he says, and show you what
he means, and you will feel it also.''

``What if I shouldn't go?''

``What do you mean?''

``Doctor Carey has offered me a splendid position in
his hospital.  There would be work all day, instead of
waiting all day in the hope of working an hour.  There
would be a living in it for two from the word go.  There
would be better air, longer life, more to be got out of it,
and if I can make good, Carey's work to take up as he
grows old.''

``Take it!  Take it quickly!'' cried the Girl.  ``Don't
wait a minute!  You might wear out your heart in
Chicago for twenty years or forever, and not have an
opportunity to do one half so much good.  Take it at
once!''

``I was waiting to learn what you and Langston would
say.''

``He will say take it.''

``Then I will be too happy for words.  Ruth, you have
not only paid the debt, but you have brought me the
greatest joy a man ever had.  And there is no need to
wait the ages I thought I must.  He can tell in a year if
I can do the work, and I know I can now; so it's all
settled, if Langston agrees.''

``He will,'' said the Girl.  ``Let me tell him!''

``I wish you would,'' said the doctor.  ``I don't know
just how to go at it.''

Then for two days the Harvester and Belshazzar
gathered herbs and spread them on the drying trays.
On the afternoon of the third, close three, the doctor
came to the door.

``Langston,'' he said, ``we have a call for you.  We
can't keep Ruth quiet much longer.  She is tired.  We
want to change her bed completely.  She won't allow
either of us to lift her.  She says we hurt her.  Will
you come and try it?''

``You'll have to give me time to dip and rub off and
get into clean clothing,'' he said.  ``I've been keeping
away, because I was working on time, and I smell to
strangulation of stramonium and saffron.''

``Can't give you ten seconds,'' said the doctor.  ``Our
temper is getting brittle.  We are cross as the proverbial
fever patient.  If you don't come at once we will imagine
you don't want to, and refuse to be moved at all.''

``Coming!'' cried the Harvester, as he plunged his
hands in the wash bowl and soused his face.  A second
later he appeared on the porch.

``Ruth,'' he said, ``I am steeped in the odours of
the dry-house.  Can't you wait until I bathe and
dress?''

``No, I can't,'' said a fretful voice.  ``I can't endure
this bed another minute.''

``Then let Doctor Harmon lift you.  He is so fresh and
clean.''

The Harvester glanced enviously at the shaven face
and white trousers and shirt of the doctor.

``I just hate fresh, clean men.  I want to smell herbs.
I want to put my feet in the dirt and my hands in the
water.''

The Harvester came at a rush.  He brought a big easy
chair from the living-room, straightened the cover, and
bent above the Girl.  He picked her up lightly, gently,
and easing her to his body settled in the chair.  She laid her
face on his shoulder, and heaved a deep sigh of content.

``Be careful with my back, Man,'' she said.  ``I think
my spine is almost worn through.''

``Poor girl,'' said the Harvester.  ``That bed should
be softer.''

``It should not!''contradicted the Girl.  ``It should be
much harder.  I'm tired of soft beds.  I want to lie
on the earth, with my head on a root; and I wish it would
rain dirt on me.  I am bathed threadbare.  I want to
be all streaky.''

``I understand,'' said the Harvester.  ``Harmon, bring
me a pad and pencil a minute, I must write an order
for some things I want.  Will you call up town and
have them sent out immediately?''

On the pad he wrote:  ``Telephone Carey to get the
highest grade curled-hair mattress, a new pad, and pillow,
and bring them flying in the car.  Call Granny
and the girl and empty the room.  Clean, air, and fumigate
it thoroughly.  Arrange the furniture differently,
and help me into the living-room with Ruth.''  He
handed the pad to the doctor.

``Please attend to that,'' he said, and to the Girl:
``Now we go on a journey.  Doc, you and Molly take
the corners of the rug we are on and slide us into the other
room until you get this aired and freshened.''

In the living-room the Girl took one long look at the
surroundings and suddenly relaxed.  She cuddled against
the Harvester and lifting a tremulous white hand, drew
it across his unshaven cheek.

``Feels so good,'' she said.  ``I'm sick and tired of
immaculate men.''

The Harvester laughed, tucked her feet in the cover and
held her tenderly.  The Girl lay with her cheek against
the rough khaki, palpitant with the excitement of being
moved.

``Isn't it great?'' she panted.

He caught the hand that had touched his cheek in a
tender grip, and laughed a deep rumble of exultation
that came from the depths of his heart.

``There's no name for it, honey,'' he said.  ``But
don't try to talk until you have a long rest.  Changing
positions after you have lain so long may be making
unusual work for your heart.  Am I hurting your back?''

``No,'' said the Girl.  ``This is the first time I have been
comfortable in ages.  Am I tiring you?''

``Yes,'' laughed the Harvester.  ``You are almost as
heavy as a large sack of leaves, but not quite equal to a
bridge pillar or a log.  Be sure to think of that, and worry
considerably.  You are in danger of straining my muscles
to the last degree, my heart included.''

``Where is your heart?'' whispered the Girl.

``Right under your cheek,'' answered the Harvester.
``But for Heaven's sake, don't intimate that you are
taking any interest in it, or it will go to pounding until
your head will bounce.  It's one member of my body that
I can't control where you are concerned.''

``I thought you didn't like me any more.''

``Careful!'' warned the Harvester.  ``You are yet
too close Heaven to fib like that, Ruth.  What have I
done to indicate that I don't love you more than ever?''

``Stayed away nearly every minute for three awful
days, and wouldn't come without being dragged; and
now you're wishing they would hurry and fix that bed,
so you can put me down and go back to your rank old
herbs again.''

``Well of all the black prevarications!  I went when
you sent me, and came when you called.  I'd willingly
give up my hope of what Granny calls `salvation' to
hold you as I am for an hour, and you know it.''

``It's going to be much longer than that,'' said the
Girl nestling to him.  ``I asked for you because you
never hurt me, and they always do.  I knew you were
so strong that my weight now wouldn't be a load for one
of your hands, and I am not going back to that bed
until I am so tired that I will be glad to lie down.''

For a long time she was so silent the Harvester thought
her going to sleep; and having learned that for him joy
was probably transient, he deliberately got all he could.
He closely held the hand she had not withdrawn, and
often lifted it to his lips.  Sometimes he stroked the
heavy braid, gently ran his hands across the tired shoulders,
or eased her into a different position.  There was
not a doubt in his mind of one thing.  He was having a
royal, good time, and he was thankful for the work he
had set his assistants that kept them out of the room.
They seemed in no hurry, and from scuffling, laughing,
and a steady stream of talk, they were entertained at
least.  At last the Girl roused.

``There is something I want to ask you,'' she said.
``I promised Doctor Harmon I would.''

Instantly the heart of the Harvester gave a leap
that jarred the head resting on it.

``You don't like him?'' questioned the Girl.

``I do!'' declared the Harvester.  ``I like him immensely.  
There is not a fine, manly good-looking feature
about him that I have missed.  I don't fail to do
him justice on every point.''

``I'm so glad!  Then you will want him to remain.''

``Here?'' asked the Harvester with a light, hot breath.

``In Onabasha!  Doctor Carey has offered him the
place of chief assistant at the hospital.  There is a good
salary and the chance of taking up the doctor's work as
he grows older.  It means plenty to do at once, healthful
atmosphere, congenial society----everything to a young
man.  He only had a call once in a while in Chicago,
often among people who received more than they paid,
like me, and he was very lonely.  I think it would be
great for him.''

``And for you, Ruth?''

``It doesn't make the least difference to me; but for
his sake, because I think so much of him, I would like
to see him have the place.''

``You still think so much of him, Ruth?''

``More, if possible,'' said the Girl.  ``Added to all I
owed him before, he has come here and worked for days
to save me, and it wasn't his fault that it took a bigger
man.  Nothing alters the fact that he did all he could,
most graciously and gladly.''

``What do you mean, Ruth?'' stammered the Harvester.

``Oh they have worn themselves out!'' cried the Girl
impatiently.  ``First, Granny Moreland told me every
least little detail of how I went out, and you resurrected
me.  I knew what she said was true, because she worked
with you.  Then Doctor Carey told me, and Mrs. Carey,
and Doctor Harmon, and Molly, and even Granny's
little assistant has left the kitchen to tell me that I
owe my life to you, and all of them might as well have
saved breath.  I knew all the time that if ever I came
out of this, and had a chance to be like other women,
it would be your work, and I'm glad it is.  I'd hate
to be under obligations to some people I know; but I
feel honoured to be indebted to you.''

``I'm mighty sorry they worried you.  I had no idea----''

``They didn't `worry,' me!  I am just telling you that
I knew it all the time; that's all!''

``Forget that!'' said the Harvester.  ``Come back to
our subject.  What was it you wanted, dear?''

``To know if you have any objections to Doctor Harmon
remaining in Onabasha?''

``Certainly not!  It will be a fine thing for him.''

``Will it make any difference to you in any way?''

``Ruth, that's probing too deep,'' said the Harvester.

``I don't see why!''

``I'm glad of it!''

``Why?''

``I'd least rather show my littleness to you than to
any one else on earth.''

``Then you have some feeling about it?''

``Perhaps a trifle.  I'll get over it.  Give me a little
time to adjust myself.  Doctor Harmon shall have the
place, of course.  Don't worry about that!''

``He will be so happy!''

``And you, Ruth?''

``I'll be happy too!''

``Then it's all right,'' said the Harvester.

He laid down her hand, drew the cover over it, and
slightly shifted her position to rest her.  The door
opened, and Doctor Harmon announced that the room
was ready.  It was shining and fresh.  The bed was
now turned with its head to the north, so that from it one
could see the big trees in Medicine Woods, the sweep
of the hillside, the sparkle of mallow-bordered Singing
Water, the driveway and the gold flower garden.  Everything
was so changed that the room had quite a different
appearance.  The instant he laid her on it the Girl said,
``This bed is not mine.''

``Yes it is,'' said the Harvester.  ``You see, we were
a little excited sometimes, and we spilled a few quarts of
perfectly good medicine on your mattress.  It was hopelessly
smelly and ruined; so I am going to cremate it
and this is your splinter new one and a fresh pad and
pillow.  Now you try them and see if they are not much
harder and more comfortable.''

``This is just perfect!'' she sighed, as she sank into the bed.

The Harvester bent over her to straighten the cover,
when suddenly she reached both arms around his neck,
and gripped him with all her strength.

``Thank you!'' she said.

``May I hold you to-morrow?'' whispered the Harvester,
emboldened by this.

``Please do,'' said the Girl.

The Harvester, with dog to heel, went to the oak to
think.

``Belshazzar, kommen Sie!'' said the man, dropping
on the seat and holding out his hand.  The dog laid his
muzzle in the firm grip.

``Bel,'' said the Harvester, ``I am all at sea.  One day
I think maybe I have a little chance, the next----none at
all.  I had an hour of solid comfort to-day, now I'm in the
sweat box again.  It's a little selfish streak in me, Bel,
that hates to see Harmon go into the hospital and take
my place with the Careys.  They are my best and only
friends.  He is young, social, handsome, and will be
ever present.  In three months he will become so popular
that I might as well be off the earth.  I wish I didn't
think it, but I'm so small that I do.  And then there is
my Dream Girl, Bel.  The girl you found for me, old
fellow.  There never was another like her, and she has
my heart for all time.  And he has hers.  That hospital
plan is the best thing in the world for her.  It will keep
her where Carey can have an eye on her, where the air
is better, where she can have company without the city
crush, where she is close the country, and a good living
is assured.  Bel, it's the nicest arrangement you ever
saw for every one we know, except us.''

The Harvester laughed shortly.  ``Bel,'' he said, ``tell
me!  If a man lived a hundred years, could he have the
heartache all the way?  Seems like I've had it almost
that long now.  In fact, I've had it such ages I'd be
lonesome without it.  This is some more of my very
own medicine, so I shouldn't make a wry face over
taking it.  I knew what would happen when I sent for
him, and I didn't hesitate.  I must not now.

``Only I got to stop one thing, Bel.  I told him I
would play square, and I have.  But here it ends.
After this, I must step back and be big brother.  Lots
of fun in this brother business, Bel.  But maybe I am
cut out for it.  Anyway it's written!  But if it is, how
did she come to allow me such privileges as I took to-
day?  That wasn't professional by any means.  It
was just the stiffest love-making I knew how to do, Bel,
and she didn't object by the quiver of an eyelash.  God
knows I was watching closely enough for any sign that I
was distasteful.  And I might have been well enough.
Rough, herb-stained old clothes, unshaven, everything
to offend a dainty girl.  She said I might hold her again
to-morrow.  And, Bel, what the nation did she hug me
like that for, if she's going to marry him?  Boy, I see
my way clear to an hour more.  While I'm at it, just to
surprise myself, I believe I'll take it like other men.  I
think I'll go on a little bender, and make what probably
will be the last day a plumb good one.  Something
worth remembering is better than nothing at all, Bel!
He hasn't told me that he has won.  She didn't SAY
she was going to marry him, and she did say he hurt
her, and she wanted me.  Bel, how about the grimness
of it, if she should marry him and then discover that
he hurts her, and she wants me.  Lord God Almighty,
if you have any mercy at all, never put me up against
that,'' prayed the Harvester, ``for my heart is water
where she is concerned.''

The Harvester arose, and going to the lake, he cut an
arm load of big, pink mallows, covered each mound with
fresh flowers, whistled to the dog, and went to his work.
Many things had accumulated, and he cleaned the barn,
carried herbs from the dry-house to the store-room,
and put everything into shape.  Close noon the next
day he went to Onabasha, and was gone three hours.
He came back barbered in the latest style, and carrying
a big bundle.  When the hour for arranging the bed
came, he was yet in his room, but he sent word he
would be there in a second.

As he crossed the living-room he pulled a chair to the
veranda and placed a footstool before it.  Then he
stepped into the sunshine room.  A quizzical expression
crossed the face of Doctor Harmon as he closed the book
he was reading aloud to the Girl and arose.  Wholly
unembarrassed the Harvester smiled.

``Have I got this rigging anywhere near right?'' he
inquired.

``David, what have you done?'' gasped the amazed
Girl.

``I didn't feel anywhere near up to the `mark of my
high calling' yesterday,'' quoted the Harvester.  ``I
don't know how I appear, but I'm clean as shaving,
soap and hot water will make me, and my clothing will
not smell offensively.  Now come out of that bed for a
happy hour.  Where is that big coverlet?  You are going
on the veranda to-day.''

``You look just like every one else,'' complained
Doctor Harmon.

``You look perfectly lovely,'' declared the Girl.

``The swale sends you this invitation to come and see
star-shine at the foot of mullein hill,'' said the Harvester,
offering a bouquet.  It was a loose bunch of long-
stemmed, delicate flowers, each an inch across, and
having five pearl-white petals lightly striped with pale
green.  Five long gold anthers arose, and at their base
gold stamens and a green pistil.  The leaves were heart-
shaped and frosty, whitish-green, resembling felt.  The
Harvester bent to offer them.

``Have some Grass of Parnassus, my dear,'' he said.

The Girl waved them away.  ``Go stand over there by
the door and slowly turn around.  I want to see you.''

The Harvester obeyed.  He was freshly and carefully
shaven.  His hair was closely cropped at the base of
the head, long, heavy, and slightly waving on top.  He
wore a white silk shirt, with a rolling collar and tie, white
trousers, belt, hose, and shoes, and his hands were
manicured with care.

``Have I made a mess of it, or do I appear anything
like other men?'' he asked, eagerly.

The Girl lifted her eyes to Doctor Harmon and smiled.

``Do you observe anything messy?'' she inquired.

``You needn't fish for compliments quite so obviously,''
he answered.  ``I'll pay them without being asked.
I do not.  He is quite correct, and infinitely better
looking than the average.  Distinguished is a proper
word for the gentleman in my opinion.  But why, in
Heaven's name, have we never had the pleasure of seeing
you thus before?''

``Look here, Doc,'' said the Harvester, ``do you mean
that you enjoy looking at me merely because I am dressed
this way?''

``I do indeed,'' said the doctor.  ``It is good to see
you with the garb of work laid aside, and the stamp of
cleanliness and ease upon you.''

``By gum, that is rubbing it in a little too rough!''
cried the Harvester.  ``I bathe oftener than you do.  My
clothing is always clean when I start out.  Of course,
in my work I come hourly in contact with muck, water,
and herb juices.''

``It's understood that is unavoidable,'' said Doctor
Harmon.

``And if cleanliness is made an issue, I'd rather roll
in any of it than put my finger tips into the daily work
of a surgeon,'' added the Harvester, and the Girl
giggled.

``That's enough Medicine Man!'' she said.  ``You
did not make a `mess' of it, or anything else you ever
attempted.  As for appearing like other men, thank
Heaven, you do not.  You look just a whole world
bigger and better and finer.  Come, carry me out
quickly.  I am wild to go.  Please put my lovely flowers
in water, Molly, only give me a few to hold.''

The Harvester arranged the pink coverlet, picked up
the Girl, and carried her to the living-room.

``We will rest here a little,'' he said, ``and then, if you
feel equal to it, we will try the veranda.  Are you easy
now?''

She nestled her face against the soft shirt and smiled
at him.  She lifted her hand, laid it on his smooth cheek
and then the crisp hair.

``Oh Man!'' she cried.  ``Thank God you didn't give
me up, too!  I want life!  I want LIFE!''

The Harvester tightened his grip just a trifle.  ``Then
I thank God, too,'' he said.  ``Can you tell me how you
are, dear?  Is there any difference?''

``Yes,'' she answered.  ``I grow tired lying so long,
but there isn't the ghost of an ache in my bones.  I can
just feel pure, delicious blood running in my veins.  My
hands and feet are always warm, and my head cool.''

The Harvester's face drew very close.  ``How about
your heart, honey?'' he whispered.  ``Anything new there?''

``Yes, I am all over new inside and out.  I want to
shout, run, sing, and swim.  Oh I'd give anything to
have you carry me down and dip me in the lake right
now.''

``Soon, Girl!  That will come soon,'' prophesied the
Harvester.

``I scarcely can wait.  And you did say a saddle,
didn't you?  Won't it be great to come galloping up the
levee, when the leaves are red and the frost is in the air.
Oh am I going fast enough?''

``Much faster than I expected,'' said the Harvester.
``You are surprising all of us, me most of any.  Ruth,
you almost make me hope that you regard this as home.
Honey, you are thinking a little of me these days?''

The hand that had fallen from his hair lay on his
shoulder.  Now it slid around his neck, and gripped him with
all its strength.

``Heaps and heaps!'' she said.  ``All I get a chance to,
for being bothered and fussed over, and everlastingly
read mushy stuff that's intended for some one else.
Please take me to the veranda now; I want to tell you
something.''

His head swam, but the Harvester set his feet firmly,
arose, and carried his Dream Girl back to outdoor life.
When he reached the chair, she begged him to go a few
steps farther to the bench on the lake shore.

``I am afraid,'' said the man.

``It's so warm.  There can't be any difference in the
air.  Just a minute.''

The Harvester pushed open the screen, went to the
bench, and seating himself, drew the cover closely around
her.

``Don't speak a word for a long time,'' he said.  ``Just
rest.  If I tire you too much and spoil everything, I
will be desperate.''

He clasped her to him, laid his cheek against her hair,
and his lips on her forehead.  He held her hand and
kissed it over and over, and again he watched and could
find no resentment.  The cool, pungent breeze swept
from the lake, and the voices of wild life chattered at
their feet.  Sometimes the water folks splashed, while a
big black and gold butterfly mistook the Girl's dark hair
for a perching place and settled on it, slowly opening
its wonderful wings.

``Lie quietly, Girl,'' whispered the Harvester.  ``You
are wearing a living jewel, an ornament above price, on
your hair.  Maybe you can see it when it goes.  There!''

``Oh I did!'' she cried.  ``How I love it here!  Before
long may I lie in the dining-room window a while so I
can see the water.  I like the hill, but I love the lake
more.''

``Now if you just would love me,'' said the
Harvester, ``you would have all Medicine Woods in your
heart.''

``Don't hurry me so!'' said the Girl.  ``You gave me a
year; and it's only a few weeks, and I've not been myself,
and I'm not now.  I mustn't make any mistake, and all
I know for sure is that I want you most, and I can rest
best with you, and I miss you every minute you are
gone.  I think that should satisfy you.''

``That would be enough for any reasonable man,''
said the Harvester angrily.  ``Forgive me, Ruth, I have
been cruel.  I forgot how frail and weak you are.  It is
having Harmon here that makes me unnatural.  It almost
drives me to frenzy to know that he may take you
from me.''

``Then send him away!''

``SEND HIM AWAY?''

``Yes, send him away!  I am tired to death of his
poetry, and seeing him spoon around.  Send both of
them away quickly!''

The Harvester gulped, blinked, and surreptitiously felt
for her pulse.

``Oh, I've not developed fever again,'' she said.  ``I'm
all right.  But it must be a fearful expense to have both
of them here by the week, and I'm so tired of them,
Granny says she can take care of me just as well, and the
girl who helps her can cook.  No one but you shall lift
me, if I don't get my nose Out until I can walk alone
Both of them are perfectly useless, and I'd much rather
you'd send them away.''

``There, there!  Of course!'' said the Harvester
soothingly.  ``I'll do it as soon as I possibly dare.  You
don't understand, honey.  You are yet delicate beyond
measure, internally.  The fever burned so long.  Every
morsel you eat is measured and cooked in sterilized vessels,
and I'd be scared of my life to have the girl undertake it.''

``Why she is doing it straight along now!  She and
Granny!  Molly isn't out of Doctor Harmon's sight long
enough to cook anything.  Granny says there is `a lot of
buncombe about what they do, and she is going to tell
them so right to their teeth some of these days, if they
badger her much more,' and I wish she would, and you,
too.''

The Harvester gathered the Girl to him in one
crushing bear hug.

``For the love of Heaven, Ruth, you drive me crazy!
Answer me just one question.  When you told me that
you `adored and worshipped' Doctor Harmon, did you
mean it, or was that the delirium of fever?''

``I don't know WHAT I told you!  If I said I `adored'
him, it was the truth.  I did!  I do!  I always will!
So do I adore the Almighty, but that's no sign I want
him to read poetry to me, and be around all the time
when I am wild for a minute with you.  I can worship
Doctor Harmon in Chicago or Onabasha quite as well.
Fire him!  If you don't, I will!''

``Good Lord!'' cried the Harvester, helpless until
the Girl had to cling to him to prevent rolling from his
nerveless arms.  ``Ruth, Ruth, will you feel my pulse?''

``No, I won't!  But you are going to drop me.  Take
me straight back to my beautiful new bed, and send them
away.''

``A minute!  Give me a minute!'' gasped the
Harvester.  ``I couldn't lift a baby just now.  Ruth, dear, I
thought you LOVED the man.''

``What made you think so?''

``You did!''

``I didn't either!  I never said I loved him.  I said
I was under obligations to him; but they are as well
repaid as they ever can be.  I said I adored him, and I
tell you I do!  Give him what we owe him, both of us,
in money, and send them away.  If you'd seen as much
of them as I have, you'd be tired of them, too.  Please,
please, David!''

``Yes,'' said the Harvester, arising in a sudden tide
of effulgent joy.  ``Yes, Girl, just as quickly as I can
with decency.  I----I'll send them on the lake, and I'll
take care of you.''

``You won't read poetry to me?''

``I will not.''

``You won't moon at me?''

``No!''

``Then hurry!  But have them take your boat.  I am
going to have the first ride in mine.''

``Indeed you are, and soon, too!'' said the Harvester,
marching up the hill as if he were leading hosts to
battle.

He laid the Girl on the bed and covered her, and called
Granny Moreland to sit beside her a few minutes.  He
went into the gold garden and proposed that the doctor
and the nurse go rowing until supper time, and they
went with alacrity.  When they started he returned to
the Girl and, sitting beside her, he told Granny to take
a nap.  Then he began to talk softly all about wild music,
and how it was made, and what the different odours
sweeping down the hill were, and when the red leaves
would come, and the nuts rattle down, and the frost
fairies enamel the windows, and soon she was sound asleep.
Granny came back, and the Harvester walked around
the lake shore to be alone a while and think quietly,
for he was almost too dazed and bewildered for full
realization.

As he softly followed the foot path he heard voices,
and looking down, he saw the boat lying in the shade and
beneath a big tree on the bank sat the doctor and the
nurse.  His arm was around her, and her head was on
his shoulder; and she said very distinctly, ``How long
will it be until we can go without offending him?''



CHAPTER XIX

A VERTICAL SPINE

By middle September the last trace of illness
had been removed from the premises, and it
was rapidly disappearing from the face and form
of the Girl.  She was showing a beautiful roundness,
there was lovely colour on her cheeks and lips, and in
her dark eyes sparkled a touch of mischief.  Rigidly
she followed the rules laid down for diet and exercise,
and as strength flowed through her body, and no trace
of pain tormented her, she began revelling in new and
delightful sensations.  She loved to pull her boat as
she willed, drive over the wood road, study the books,
cook the new dishes, rearrange furniture, and go with
the Harvester everywhere.

But that was greatly the management of the man.
He was so afraid that something might happen to undo
all the wonders accomplished in the Girl, and again
whiten her face with pain, that he scarcely allowed her
out of his sight.  He remained in the cabin, helping
when she worked, and then drove with her and a big
blanket to the woods, arranged her chair and table,
found some attractive subject, and while the wind
ravelled her hair and flushed her cheeks, her fingers
drew designs.  At noon they went to the cabin to lunch,
and the Girl took a nap, while the Harvester spread
his morning's reaping on the shelves to dry.  They
returned to the woods until five o'clock; then home again
and the Girl dressed and prepared supper, while the
Harvester spread his stores and fed the stock.  Then
he put on white clothing for the evening.  The Girl
rested while he washed the dishes, and they explored
the lake in the little motor boat, or drove to the city
for supplies, or to see their friends.

``Are you even with your usual work at this time of
the year?'' she asked as they sat at breakfast.

``I am,'' said the Harvester.  ``The only things that
have been crowded out are the candlesticks.  They
will have to remain on the shelf until the herbs and roots
are all in, and the long winter evenings come.  Then
I'll use the luna pattern and finish yours first of all.''

``What are you going to do to-day?''

``Start on a regular fall campaign.  Some of it for the
sake of having it, and some because there is good money
in it.  Will you come?''

``Indeed yes.  May I help, or shall I take my drawing
along?''

``Bring your drawing.  Next fall you may help, but as
yet you are too close suffering for me to see you do anything
that might be even a slight risk.  I can't endure it.''

``Baby!'' she jeered.

``Christen me anything you please,'' laughed the
Harvester.  ``I'm short on names anyway.''

He went to harness Betsy, and the Girl washed the
dishes, straightened the rooms, and collected her drawing
material.  Then she walked up the hill, wearing a shirt
and short skirt of khaki, stout shoes, and a straw hat
that shaded her face.  She climbed into the wagon,
laid the drawing box on the seat, and caught the lines
as the Harvester flung them to her.  He went swinging
ahead, Belshazzar to heel, the Girl driving after.  The
white pigeons circled above, and every day Ajax allowed
his curiosity to overcome his temper, and followed a
little farther.

``Whoa, Betsy!'' The Girl tugged at the lines; but
Betsy took the bit between her teeth, and plodded after
the Harvester.  She pulled with all her might, but her
strength was not nearly sufficient to stop the stubborn
animal.

``Whoa, David!'' cried the Girl.

``What is it?'' the Harvester turned.

``Won't you please wait until I can take off my hat?
I love to ride bareheaded through the woods, and Betsy
won't stop until you do, no matter how hard I pull.''

``Betsy, you're no lady!'' said the Harvester.  ``Why
don't you stop when you're told?''

``I shan't waste any more strength on her,'' said the
Girl.  ``Hereafter I shall say, `Gee, David,' `Haw, David,'
`Whoa, David,' and then she will do exactly as you.''

The Harvester stopped half way up the hill, and
beside a large, shaded bed spread the rug, and set up the
little table and chair for the Girl.

``Want a plant to draw?'' he asked.  ``This is very
important to us.  It has a string of names as long as a
princess, but I call it goldenseal, because the roots are
yellow.  The chemists ask for hydrastis.  That sounds
formidable, but it's a cousin of buttercups.  The woods
of Ohio and Indiana produce the finest that ever grew,
but it is so nearly extinct now that the trade can be
supplied by cultivation only.  I suspect I'm responsible
for its disappearance around here.  I used to get a dollar
fifty a pound, and most of my clothes and books when
a boy I owe to it.  Now I get two for my finest grade;
that accounts for the size of these beds.''

``It's pretty!'' said the Girl, studying a plant
averaging a foot in height.  On a slender, round, purplish
stem arose one big, rough leaf, heavily veined, and having
from five to nine lobes.  Opposite was a similar leaf,
but very small, and a head of scarlet berries resembling a
big raspberry in shape.  The Harvester shook the
black woods soil from the yellow roots, and held up the
plant.

``You won't enjoy the odour,'' he said.

``Well I like the leaves.  I know I can use them some
way.  They are so unusual.  What wonderful colour in
the roots!''

``One of its names is Indian paint,'' explained the
Harvester.  ``Probably it furnished the squaws of these
woods with colouring matter.  Now let's see what we
can get out of it.  You draw the plant and I'll dig the
roots.''

For a time the Girl bent over her work and the
Harvester was busy.  Belshazzar ranged the woods chasing
chipmunks.  The birds came asking questions.  When
the drawing was completed, other subjects were found
at every turn, and the Girl talked almost constantly,
her face alive with interest.  The May-apple beds lay
close, and she drew from them.  She learned the uses
and prices of the plant, and also made drawings of
cohosh, moonseed and bloodroot.  That was so wonderful
in its root colour, the Harvester filled the little cup
with water and she began to paint.  Intensely absorbed
she bent above the big, notched, silvery leaves and
the blood-red roots, testing and trying to match them
exactly.  Every few minutes the Harvester leaned over
her shoulder to see how she was progressing and to
offer suggestions.  When she finished she picked up a
trailing vine of moonseed.

``You have this on the porch,'' she said.  ``I think it
is lovely.  There is no end to the beautiful combinations
of leaves, and these are such pretty little grape-like
clusters; but if you touch them the slightest you soil
the wonderful surface.''

``And that makes the fairies very sad,'' said the
Harvester.  ``They love that vine best of any, because
they paint its fruit with the most care.  `Bloom' the
scientists call it.  You see it on cultivated plums, grapes,
and apples, but never in any such perfection as on moonseed
and black haws in the woods.  You should be able
to design a number of pretty things from the cohosh
leaves and berries, too.  You scarcely can get a start
this fall, but early in the spring you can begin, and follow
the season.  If your work comes out well this winter,
I'll send some of it to the big publishing houses, and
you can make book and magazine covers and decorations,
if you would like.''

`` `If I would like!'  How modest!  You know perfectly
well that if I could make a design that would be
accepted, and used on a book or magazine, I would almost
fly.  Oh do you suppose I could?''

``I don't `suppose' anything about it, I know,'' said
the Harvester.  ``It is not possible that the public can
be any more tired of wild roses, golden-rod, and swallows
than the poor art editors who accept them because
they can't help themselves.  Dangle something fresh
and new under their noses and see them snap.  The next
time I go to Onabasha I'll get you some popular magazines,
and you can compare what is being used with
what you see here, and judge for yourself how glad they
would be for a change.  And potteries, arts and crafts
shops, and wall paper factories, they'd be crazy for the
designs I could furnish them.  As for money, there's
more in it than the herbs, if I only could draw.''

``I can do that,'' said the Girl.  ``Trail the vine and
give me an idea how to scale it.  I'll just make studies
now, and this winter I'll conventionalize them and work
them into patterns.  Won't that be fun?''

``That's more than fun, Ruth,'' said the Harvester
solemnly.  ``That is creation.  That touches the
provinces of the Almighty.  That is taking His unknown
wonders and making them into pleasure and benefit
for thousands, not to mention filling your face with awe
divine, and lighting your eyes with interest and ambition.
That is life, Ruth.  You are beginning to live right now.''

``I see,'' said the Girl.  ``I understand! I am!''

``You get your subjects now.  When the harvest is
over I'll show you what I have in my head, and before
Christmas the fun will begin.''

``What next?''

``Sketch a sarsaparilla plant and this yam vine.  It
grows on your veranda too----the rattle box, you
remember.  The leaves and seeding arrangements are
wonderful.  You can do any number of things with them,
and all will be new.''

He called her attention to and brought her samples
of ginger leaves, Indian hemp, queen-of-the-meadow,
cone-flower, burdock, baneberry, and Indian turnip,
as he harvested them in turn.  When they came to the
large beds of orange pleurisy root the Girl cried out with
pleasure.

``We will take its prosaic features first,'' said the
Harvester.  ``It is good medicine and worth handling.
Forget that!  The Bird Woman calls it butterfly flower.
That's better.  Now try to analyze a single bloom of
this gaudy mass, and you will see why there's poetry
coming.''

He knelt beside the Girl, separating the blooms and
pointing out their marvellous colour and construction.
She leaned against his shoulder, and watched with breathless
interest.  As his bare head brought its mop of damp
wind-rumpled hair close, she ran her fingers through it,
and with her handkerchief wiped his forehead.

``Sometimes I almost wish you'd get sick,'' she said
irrelevantly.

``In the name of common sense, why?'' demanded the
Harvester.

``Oh it must be born in the heart of a woman to want
to mother something,'' answered the Girl.  ``I feel
sometimes as if I would like to take care of you, as if
you were a little fellow.  David, I know why your mother
fought to make you the man she desired.  You must
have been charming when small.  I can shut my eyes
and just see the boy you were, and I should have loved
you as she did.''

``How about the man I am?'' inquired the Harvester
promptly.  ``Any leanings toward him yet, Ruth?''

``It's getting worser and worser every day and hour,''
said the Girl.  ``I don't understand it at all.  I wouldn't
try to live without you.  I don't want you to leave my
sight.  Everything you do is the way I would have it.
Nothing you ever say shocks or offends me.  I'd love
to render you any personal service.  I want to take you
in my arms and hug you tight half a dozen times a
day as a reward for the kind and lovely things you do
for me.''

A dull red flamed up the neck and over the face of the
Harvester.  One arm lifted to the chair back, the other
dropped across the table so that the Girl was almost
encircled.

``For the love of mercy, Ruth, why haven't I had a
hint of this before?'' he cried.

``You said you'd hate me.  You said you'd drop me
into the deepest part of the lake if I deceived you; and
if I have to tell the truth, why, that is all of it.  I think
it is nonsense about some wonderful feeling that is going
to take possession of your heart when you love any one.
I love you so much I'd gladly suffer to save you pain or
sorrow.  But there are no thrills; it's just steady, sober,
common sense that I should love you, and I do.  Why
can't you be satisfied with what I can give, David?''

``Because it's husks and ashes,'' said the Harvester
grimly.  ``You drive me to desperation, Ruth.  I am
almost wild for your love, but what you offer me is plain,
straight affection, nothing more.  There isn't a trace of
the feeling that should exist between man and wife in it.
Some men might be satisfied to be your husband, and
be regarded as a father or brother.  I am not.  The red
bird didn't want a sister, Ruth, he was asking for a mate.
So am I.  That's as plain as I know how to put it.
There is some way to awaken you into a living, loving
woman, and, please God, I'll find it yet, but I'm slow
about it; there's no question of that.  Never you mind!
Don't worry!  Some of these days I have faith to believe
it will sweep you as a tide sweeps the shore, and then I
hope God will be good enough to let me be where you
will land in my arms.''

The Girl sat looking at him between narrowed lids.
Suddenly she took his head between her hands, drew his
face to hers and deliberately kissed him.  Then she drew
away and searched his eyes.

``There!'' she challenged.  ``What is the matter with
that?''

The Harvester's colour slowly faded to a sickly white.

``Ruth, you try me almost beyond human endurance,''
he said.  `` `What's the matter with that?' ''  He arose,
stepped back, folded his arms, and stared at her.  `` `What's
the matter with that?' '' he repeated.  ``Never was I so
sorely tempted in all my life as I am now to lie to you,
and say there is nothing, and take you in my arms and
try to awaken you to what I mean by love.  But suppose
I do----and fail!  Then comes the agony of slow endurance
for me, and the possibility that any day you may
meet the man who can arouse in you the feelings I
cannot.  That would mean my oath broken, and my heart
as well; while soon you would dislike me beyond tolerance,
even.  I dare not risk it!  The matter is, that was the
loving caress of a ten-year-old girl to a big brother she
admired.  That's all!  Not much, but a mighty big
defect when it is offered a strong man as fuel on which
to feed consuming passion.''

``Consuming passion,'' repeated the Girl.  ``David
you never lie, and you never exaggerate.  Do you
honestly mean that there is something----oh, there is!
I can see it!  You are really suffering, and if I come to
you, and try my best to comfort you, you'll only call it
baby affection that you don't want.  David, what am
I going to do?''

``You are going to the cabin,'' said the Harvester, ``and
cook us a big supper.  I am dreadfully hungry.  I'll be along
presently.  Don't worry, Ruth, you are all right!  That
kiss was lovely.  Tell me that you are not angry with me.''

Her eyes were wet as she smiled at him.

``If there is a bigger brute than a man anywhere on the
footstool, I should like to meet it,'' said the Harvester,
``and see what it appears like.  Go along, honey; I'll
be there as soon as I load.''

He drove to the dry-house, washed and spread his
reaping on the big trays, fed the stock, dressed in the
white clothing and entered the kitchen.  That the Girl
had been crying was obvious, but he overlooked it,
helped with the work, and then they took a boat ride.
When they returned he proposed that she should select
her favourite likeness of her mother, and the next time
he went to the city he would take it with his, and order
the enlargements he had planned.  To save carrying a
lighted lamp into the closet he brought her little trunk
to the living-room, where she opened it and hunted the
pictures.  There were several, and all of them were of a
young, elegantly dressed woman of great beauty.  The
Harvester studied them long.

``Who was she, Ruth?'' he asked at last.

``I don't know, and I have no desire to learn.''

``Can you explain how the girl here represented came
to marry a brother of Henry Jameson?''

``Yes.  I was past twelve when my father came the
last time, and I remember him distinctly.  If Uncle
Henry were properly clothed, he is not a bad man in
appearance, unless he is very angry.  He can use proper
language, if he chooses.  My father was the best in him,
refined and intensified.  He was much taller, very good
looking, and he dressed and spoke well.  They were
born and grew to manhood in the East, and came out
here at the same time.  Where Uncle Henry is a trickster
and a trader in stock, my father went a step higher, and
tricked and traded in men----and women!  Mother
told me this much once.  He saw her somewhere and
admired her.  He learned who she was, went to her
father's law office and pretended he was representing
some great business in the West, until he was welcomed
as a promising client.  He hung around and when she
came in one day her father was forced to introduce them.
The remainder is the same world-old story----a good
looking, glib-tongued man, plying every art known to
an expert, on an innocent girl.''

``Is he dead, Ruth?''

``We thought so.  We hoped so.''

``Your mother did not feel that her people might be
suffering for her as she was for them?''

``Not after she appealed to them twice and received
no reply.''

``Perhaps they tried to find her.  Maybe she has a
father or mother who is longing for word from her now.
Are you very sure you are right in not wanting to know?''

``She never gave me a hint from which I could tell
who or where they were.  In so gentle a woman as my
mother that only could mean she did not want them to
know of her.  Neither do I.  This is the photograph
I prefer; please use it.''

``I'll put back the trunk in the morning, when I can
see better,'' said the Harvester.

The Girl closed it, and soon went to bed.  But there
was no sleep for the man.  He went into the night, and
for hours he paced the driveway in racking thought.
Then he sat on the step and looked at Belshazzar before
him.

``Life's growing easier every minute, Bel,'' said the
Harvester.  ``Here's my Dream Girl, lovely as the most
golden instant of that wonderful dream, offering me----
offering me, Bel----in my present pass, the lips and the
love of my little sister who never was born.  And I've
hurt Ruth's feelings, and sent her to bed with a heartache,
trying to make her see that it won't do.  It won't,
Bel!  If I can't have genuine love, I don't want anything.
I told her so as plainly as I could find words, and set her
crying, and made her unhappy to end a wonderful day.
But in some way she has got to learn that propinquity,
tolerance, approval, affection, even----is not love.  I
can't take the risk, after all these years of waiting for
the real thing.  If I did, and love never came, I would end
----well, I know how I would end----and that would
spoil her life.  I simply have got to brace up, Bel, and
keep on trying.  She thinks it is nonsense about thrills,
and some wonderful feeling that takes possession of
you.  Lord, Bel!  There isn't much nonsense about the
thing that rages in my brain, heart, soul, and body.  It
strikes me as the gravest reality that ever overtook a
man.

``She is growing wonderfully attached to me.  `Couldn't
live without me,' Bel, that is what she said.  Maybe
it would be a scheme to bring Granny here to stay with
her, and take a few months in some city this winter on
those chemical points that trouble me.  There is an old
saying about `absence making the heart grow fonder.'
Maybe separation is the thing to work the trick.  I've
tried about everything else I know.

``But I'm in too much of a hurry!  What a fool a
man is!  A few weeks ago, Bel, I said to myself that if
Harmon were away and had no part in her life I'd be
the happiest man alive.  Happiest man alive!  Bel,
take a look at me now!  Happy!  Well, why shouldn't
I be happy?  She is here.  She is growing in strength and
beauty every hour.  She cares more for me day by day.
From an outside viewpoint it seems as if I had almost
all a man could ask in reason.  But when was a strong
man in the grip of love ever reasonable?  I think the
Almighty took a pretty grave responsibility when He
made men as He did.  If I had been He, and understood
the forces I was handling, I would have been too
big a coward to do it.  There is nothing for me, Bel, but
to move on doing my level best; and if she doesn't
awaken soon, I will try the absent treatment.  As sure
as you are the most faithful dog a man ever owned, Bel,
I'll try the absent treatment.''

The Harvester arose and entered the cabin, stepping
softly, for it was dark in the Girl's room, and he could
not hear a sound there.  He turned up the lights in the
living-room.  As he did so the first thing he saw was the
little trunk.  He looked at it intently, then picked up a
book.  Every page he turned he glanced again at the
trunk.  At last he laid down the book and sat staring,
his brain working rapidly.  He ended by carrying the
trunk to his room.  He darkened the living-room,
lighted his own, drew the rain screens, and piece by piece
carefully examined the contents.  There were the
pictures, but the name of the photographer had been
removed.  There was not a word that would help in
identification.  He emptied it to the bottom, and as
he picked up the last piece his fingers struck in a
peculiar way that did not give the impression of touching
a solid surface.  He felt over it carefully, and when he
examined with a candle he plainly could see where the
cloth lining had been cut and lifted.

For a long time he knelt staring at it, then he
deliberately inserted his knife blade and raised it.  The
cloth had been glued to a heavy sheet of pasteboard the
exact size of the trunk bottom.  Beneath it lay half a
dozen yellow letters, and face down two tissue-wrapped
photographs.  The Harvester examined them first.  They
were of a man close forty, having a strong, aggressive
face, on which pride and dominant will power were
prominently indicated.  The other was a reproduction
of a dainty and delicate woman, with exquisitely tender
and gentle features.  Long the Harvester studied them.
The names of the photographer and the city were missing.
There was nothing except the faces.  He could detect
traces of the man in the poise of the Girl and the carriage
of her head, and suggestions of the woman in the refined
sweetness of her expression.  Each picture represented
wealth in dress and taste in pose.  Finally he laid them
together on the table, picked up one of the letters, and
read it.  Then he read all of them.

Before he finished, tears were running down his cheeks,
and his resolution was formed.  These were the appeals
of an adoring mother, crazed with fear for the safety of
an only child, who unfortunately had fallen under the
influence of a man the mother dreaded and feared, because
of her knowledge of life and men of his character.  They
were one long, impassioned plea for the daughter not
to trust a stranger, not to believe that vows of passion
could be true when all else in life was false, not to trust
her untried judgment of men and the world against the
experience of her parents.  But whether the tears that
stained those sheets had fallen from the eyes of the
suffering mother or the starved and deserted daughter,
there was no way for the Harvester to know.  One
thing was clear:  It was not possible for him to rest
until he knew if that woman yet lived and bore such
suffering.  But every trace of address had been
torn away, and there was nothing to indicate where
or in what circumstances these letters had been written.

A long time the Harvester sat in deep thought.  Then
he returned all the letters save one.  This with the
pictures he made into a packet that he locked in his
desk.  The trunk he replaced and then went to bed.
Early the next morning he drove to Onabasha and posted
the parcel.  The address it bore was that of the largest
detective agency in the country.  Then he bought an
interesting book, a box of fruit, and hurried back to the
Girl.  He found her on the veranda, Belshazzar stretched
close with one eye shut and the other on his charge,
whose cheeks were flushed with lovely colour as she bent
over her drawing material.  The Harvester went to
her with a rush, and slipping his fingers under her chin,
tilted back her head against him.

``Got a kiss for me, honey?'' he inquired.

``No sir,'' answered the Girl emphatically.  ``I gave
you a perfectly lovely one yesterday, and you said it
was not right.  I am going to try just once more, and
if you say again that it won't do, I'm going back to
Chicago or to my dear Uncle Henry, I haven't decided
which.''

Her lips were smiling, but her eyes were full of tears.

``Why thank you, Ruth!  I think that is wonderful,''
said the Harvester.  ``I'll risk the next one.  In the
meantime, excuse me if I give you a demonstration
of the real thing, just to furnish you an idea of how it
should be.''

The Harvester delivered the sample, and went striding
to the marsh.  The dazed Girl sat staring at her work,
trying to realize what had happened; for that was the
first time the Harvester had kissed her on the lips, and
it was the material expression a strong man gives the
woman he loves when his heart is surging at high tide.
The Girl sat motionless, gazing at her study.

In the marsh she knew the Harvester was reaping
queen-of-the-meadow, and around the high borders,
elecampane and burdock.  She could hear his voice
in snatches of song or cheery whistle; notes that she
divined were intended to keep her from worrying.  Intermingled
with them came the dog's bark of defiance as
he digged for an escaping chipmunk, his note of pleading
when he wanted a root cut with the mattock, his cry of
discovery when he thought he had found something the
Harvester would like, or his yelp of warning when he
scented danger.  The Girl looked down the drive to
the lake and across at the hedge.  Everywhere she saw
glowing colour, with intermittent blue sky and green
leaves, all of it a complete picture, from which nothing
could be spared.  She turned slowly and looked toward
the marsh, trying to hear the words of the song above
the ripple of Singing Water, and to see the form of the
man.  Slowly she lifted her handkerchief and pressed
it against her lips, as she whispered in an awed voice,

``My gracious Heaven, is THAT the kind of a kiss he is
expecting me to give HIM?  Why, I couldn't----not to
save my life.''

She placed her brushes in water, set the colour box
on the paper, and went to the kitchen to prepare the
noon lunch.  As she worked the soft colour deepened
in her cheeks, a new light glowed in her eyes, and she
hummed over the tune that floated across the marsh.
She was very busy when the Harvester came, but he
spoke casually of his morning's work, ate heartily, and
ordered her to take a nap while he washed roots and
filled the trays, and then they went to the woods
together for the afternoon.

In the evening they came home to the cabin and finished
the day's work.  As the night was chilly, the Harvester
heaped some bark in the living-room fireplace, and lay
on the rug before it, while the Girl sat in an easy chair
and watched him as he talked.  He was telling her
about some wonderful combinations he was going to
compound for different ailments and he laughingly
asked her if she wanted to be a millionaire's wife and
live in a palace.

``Of course I could if I wanted to!'' she suggested.

``You could!'' cried the Harvester.  ``All that is
necessary is to combine a few proper drugs in one great
remedy and float it.  That is easy!  The people will do the
remainder.''

``You talk as if you believe that,'' marvelled the Girl.

``Want it proven?'' challenged the Harvester.

``No!'' she cried in swift alarm.  ``What do we want
with more than we have?  What is there necessary
to happiness that is not ours now?  Maybe it is true
that the `love of money is the root of all evil.'  Don't
you ever get a lot just to find out.  You said the night
I came here that you didn't want more than you had
and now I don't.  I won't have it!  It might bring
restlessness and discontent.  I've seen it make other
people unhappy and separate them.  I don't want money,
I want work.  You make your remedies and offer them
to suffering humanity for just a living profit, and I'll
keep house and draw designs.  I am perfectly happy,
free, and unspeakably content.  I never dreamed that
it was possible for me to be so glad, and so filled with
the joy of life.  There is only one thing on earth I want.
If I only could----''

``Could what, Ruth?''

``Could get that kiss right----''

The Harvester laughed.

``Forget it, I tell you!'' he commanded.  ``Just so
long as you worry and fret, so long I've got to wait.  If
you quit thinking about it, all `unbeknownst' to yourself
you'll awake some morning with it on your lips.  I
can see traces of it growing stronger every day.  Very
soon now it's going to materialize, and then get out of
my way, for I'll be a whirling, irresponsible lunatic,
with the wild joy of it.  Oh I've got faith in that kiss
of yours, Ruth!  It's on the way.  The fates have
booked it.  There isn't a reason on earth why I should
be served so scurvy a trick as to miss it, and I never will
believe that I shall----''

``David,'' interrupted the Girl, ``go on talking and
don't move a muscle, just reach over presently and fix
the fire or something, and then turn naturally and look
at the window beside your door.''

``Shall miss it,'' said the Harvester steadily.
``That would be too unmerciful.  What do you see,
Ruth?''

``A face.  If I am not greatly mistaken, it is my
Uncle Henry and he appears like a perfect fiend.  Oh
David, I am afraid!''

``Be quiet and don't look,'' said the Harvester.

He turned and tossed a piece of bark on the fire.
Then he reached for the poker, pushed it down and
stirred the coals.  He arose as he worked.

``Rise slowly and quietly and go to your room.  Stay
there until I call you.''

With the Girl out of the way, the Harvester pottered
over the fire, and when the flame leaped he lifted a stick
of wood, hesitated as if it were too small, and laying it
down, started to bring a larger one.  In the dining-
room he caught a small stick from the wood box, softly
stepped from the door, and ran around the house.  But
he awakened Belshazzar on the kitchen floor, and the
dog barked and ran after him.  By the time the Harvester
reached the corner of his room the man leaped upon
a horse and went racing down the drive.  The Harvester
flung the stick of wood, but missed the man and hit
the horse.  The dog sprang past the Harvester and
vanished.  There was the sound and flash of a revolver,
and the rattle of the bridge as the horse crossed it.  The
dog came back unharmed.  The Harvester ran to the
telephone, called the Onabasha police, and asked them
to send a mounted man to meet the intruder before he
could reach a cross road; but they were too slow and
missed him.  However, the Girl was certain she had
recognized her uncle, and was extremely nervous; but
the Harvester only laughed and told her it was a trip
made out of curiosity.  Her uncle wanted to see if
he could learn if she were well and happy, and he finally
convinced her that this was the case, although he was
not very sanguine himself.

For the next three days the Harvester worked in the
woods and he kept the Girl with him every minute.
By the end of that time he really had persuaded himself
that it was merely curiosity.  So through the cooling
fall days they worked together.  They were very happy.
Before her wondering eyes the Harvester hung queer
branches, burs, nuts, berries, and trailing vines with
curious seed pods.  There were masses of brilliant
flowers, most of them strange to the Girl, many to the
great average of humanity.  While she sat bending over
them, beside her the Harvester delved in the black earth
of the woods, or the clay and sand of the open hillside,
or the muck of the lake shore, and lifted large bagfuls
of roots that he later drenched on the floating raft on
the lake, and when they had drained he dried them.
Some of them he did not wet, but scraped and wiped
clean and dry.  Often after she was sleeping, and long
before she awoke in the morning, he was at work carry-
ing heaped trays from the evaporator to the store-
room, and tying the roots, leaves, bark, and seeds into
packages.

While he gathered trillium roots the Girl made
drawings of the plant and learned its commercial value.
She drew lady's slipper and Solomon's seal, and learned
their uses and prices; and carefully traced wild ginger
leaves while nibbling the aromatic root.  It was difficult
to keep from protesting when the work carried them
around the lake shore and to the pokeberry beds, for the
colour of these she loved.  It required careful explanation
as to the value of the roots and seeds as blood purifier,
and the argument that in a few more days the frost
would level the bed, to induce her to consent to its
harvesting.  But when the case was properly presented,
she put aside her drawing and stained her slender fingers
gathering the seeds, and loved the work.

The sun was golden on the lake, the birds of the upland
were clustering over reeds and rushes, for the sake of
plentiful seed and convenient water.  Many of them
sang fitfully, the notes of almost all of them were
melodious, and the day was a long, happy dream.  There
was but little left to gather until ginseng time.  For
that the Harvester had engaged several boys to help
him, for the task of digging the roots, washing and drying
them, burying part of the seeds and preparing the
remainder for market seemed endless for one man to
attempt.  After a full day the Harvester lay before the
fire, and his head was so close the Girl's knee that her
fingers were in reach of his hair.  Every time he mended
the fire he moved a little, until he could feel the touch
of her garments against him.  Then he began to plan
for the winter; how they would store food for the long,
cold days, how much fuel would be required, when
they would go to the city for their winter clothing,
what they would read, and how they would work together
at the drawings.

``I am almost too anxious to wait longer to get back
to my carving,'' he said.  ``Whoever would have thought
this spring that fall would come and find the birds talking
of going, the caterpillars spinning winter quarters, the
animals holing up, me getting ready for the cold, and
your candlesticks not finished.  Winter is when you
really need them.  Then there is solid cheer in numbers
of candles and a roaring wood fire.  The furnace is going
to be a good thing to keep the floors and the bathroom
warm, but an open fire of dry, crackling wood is the
only rational source of heat in a home.  You must
watch for the fairy dances on the backwall, Ruth, and
learn to trace goblin faces in the coals.  Sometimes there
is a panorama of temples and trees, and you will find
exquisite colour in the smoke.  Dry maple makes a
lovely lavender, soft and fine as a floating veil, and damp
elm makes a blue, and hickory red and yellow.  I almost
can tell which wood is burning after the bark is gone, by
the smoke and flame colour.  When the little red fire
fairies come out and dance on the backwall it is fun
to figure what they are celebrating.  By the way, Ruth,
I have been a lamb for days.  I hope you have observed!
But I would sleep a little sounder to-night if you only
could give me a hint whether that kiss is coming on
at all.''

He tipped back his head to see her face, and it was
glorious in the red firelight; the big eyes never appeared
so deep and dark.  The tilted head struck her hand,
and her fingers ran through his hair.

``You said to forget it,'' she reminded him, ``and then
it would come sooner.''

``Which same translated means that it is not here yet.
Well, I didn't expect it, so I am not disappointed; but
begorry, I do wish it would materialize by Christmas.
I think I will work for that.  Wouldn't it make a day
worth while, though?  By the way, what do you want
for Christmas, Ruth?''

``A doll,'' she answered.

The Harvester laughed.  He tipped his head again
to see her face and suddenly grew quiet, for it was very
serious.

``I am quite in earnest,'' she said.  ``I think the big
dolls in the stores are beautiful, and I never owned only
a teeny little one.  All my life I've wanted a big doll as
badly as I ever longed for anything that was not absolutely
necessary to keep me alive.  In fact, a doll is
essential to a happy childhood.  The mother instinct
is so ingrained in a girl that if she doesn't have dolls
to love, even as a baby, she is deprived of a part of her
natural rights.  It's a pitiful thing to have been the
little girl in the picture who stands outside the window
and gazes with longing soul at the doll she is anxious
to own and can't ever have.  Harvester, I was always
that little girl.  I am quite in earnest.  I want a big,
beautiful doll more than anything else.''

As she talked the Girl's fingers were idly threading
the Harvester's hair.  His head lightly touched her
knee, and she shifted her position to afford him a
comfortable resting place.  With a thrill of delight that
shook him, the man laid his head in her lap and looked
into the fire, his face glowing as a happy boy's.

``You shall have the loveliest doll that money can buy,
Ruth,'' he promised.  ``What else do you want?''

``A roasted goose, plum pudding, and all those horrid
indigestible things that Christmas stories always tell
about; and popcorn balls, and candy, and everything
I've always wanted and never had, and a long beautiful
day with you.  That's all!''

``Ruth, I'm so happy I almost wish I could go to
Heaven right now before anything occurs to spoil this,''
said the Harvester.

The wheels of a car rattled across the bridge.  He
whirled to his knees, and put his arms around the
Girl.

``Ruth,'' he said huskily.  ``I'll wager a thousand
dollars I know what is coming.  Hug me tight, quick!
and give me the best kiss you can----any old kind of a
one, so you touch my lips with yours before I've got
to open that door and let in trouble.''

The Girl threw her arms around his neck and with the
imprint of her lips warm on his the Harvester crossed
the room, and his heart dropped from the heights with a
thud.  He stepped out, closing the door behind him, and
crossing the veranda, passed down the walk.  He recognized
the car as belonging to a garage in Onabasha, and
in it sat two men, one of whom spoke.

``Are you David Langston?''

``Yes,'' said the Harvester.

``Did you send a couple of photographs to a New
York detective agency a few days ago with inquiries
concerning some parties you wanted located?''

``I did,'' said the Harvester.  ``But I was not expecting
any such immediate returns.''

``Your questions touched on a case that long has been
in the hands of the agency, and they telegraphed the
parties.  The following day the people had a letter,
giving them the information they required, from another
source.''

``That is where Uncle Henry showed his fine Spencerian
hand,'' commented the Harvester.  ``It always
will be a great satisfaction that I got my fist in first.''

``Is Miss Jameson here?''

``No,'' said the Harvester.  ``My wife is at home.  Her
surname was Ruth Jameson, but we have been married
since June.  Did you wish to speak with Mrs. Langston?''

``I came for that purpose.  My name is Kennedy.
I am the law partner and the closest friend of the young
lady's grandfather.  News of her location has prostrated
her grandmother so that he could not leave her, and I
was sent to bring the young woman.''

``Oh!'' said the Harvester.  ``Well you will have to
interview her about that.  One word first.  She does
not know that I sent those pictures and made that
inquiry.  One other word.  She is just recovering from
a case of fever, induced by wrong conditions of life
before I met her.  She is not so strong as she appears.
Understand you are not to be abrupt.  Go very gently!
Her feelings and health must be guarded with extreme
care.''

The Harvester opened the door, and as she saw the
stranger, the Girl's eyes widened, and she arose and
stood waiting.

``Ruth,'' said the Harvester, ``this is a man who has
been making quite a search for you, and at last he has
you located.''

The Harvester went to the Girl's side, and put a
reinforcing arm around her.

``Perhaps he brings you some news that will make
life most interesting and very lovely for you.  Will
you shake hands with Mr. Kennedy?''

The Girl suddenly straightened to unusual height.

``I will hear why he has been making `quite a search
for me,' and on whose authority he has me `located,'
first,'' she said.

A diabolical grin crossed the face of the Harvester,
and he took heart.

``Then please be seated, Mr. Kennedy,'' he said,
``and we will talk over the matter.  As I understand,
you are a representative of my wife's people.''

The Girl stared at the Harvester.

``Take your chair, Ruth, and meet this as a matter
of course,'' he advised casually.  ``You always have
known that some day it must come.  You couldn't
look in the face of those photographs of your mother
in her youth and not realize that somewhere hearts
were aching and breaking, and brains were busy in a
search for her.''

The Girl stood rigid.

``I want it distinctly understood,'' she said, ``that I
have no use on earth for my mother's people.  They
come too late.  I absolutely refuse to see or to hold any
communication with them.''

``But young lady, that is very arbitrary!'' cried Mr.
Kennedy.  ``You don't understand!  They are a couple
of old people, and they are slowly dying of broken hearts!''

``Not so badly broken or they wouldn't die slowly,''
commented the Girl grimly.  ``The heart that was really
broken was my mother's.  The torture of a starved,
overworked body and hopeless brain was hers.  There
was nothing slow about her death, for she went out with
only half a life spent, and much of that in acute agony,
because of their negligence.  David, you often have
said that this is my home.  I choose to take you at
your word.  Will you kindly tell this man that he is
not welcome in this house, and I wish him to leave it
at once?''

The Harvester stepped back, and his face grew very
white.

``I can't, Ruth,'' he said gently.

``Why not?''

``Because I brought him here.''

``You brought him here!  You!  David, are you
crazy?  You!''

``It is through me that he came.''

The Girl caught the mantel for support.

``Then I stand alone again,'' she said.  ``Harvester,
I had thought you were on my side.''

``I am at your feet,'' said the man in a broken voice.
``Ruth dear, will you let me explain?''

``There is only one explanation, and with what you
have done for me fresh in my mind, I can't put it into
words.''

``Ruth, hear me!''

``I must!  You force me!  But before you speak
understand this:  Not now, or through all eternity, do
I forgive the inexcusable neglect that drove my mother
to what I witnessed and was helpless to avert.''

``My dear!  My dear!'' said the Harvester, ``I had
hoped the woods had done a more perfect work in your
heart.  Your mother is lying in state now, Girl, safe
from further suffering of any kind; and if I read aright,
her tired face and shrivelled frame were eloquent of
forgiveness.  Ruth dear, if she so loved them that her
heart was broken and she died for them, think what
they are suffering!  Have some mercy on them.''

``Get this very clear, David,'' said the Girl.  ``She
died of hunger for food.  Her heart was not so broken
that she couldn't have lived a lifetime, and got much
comfort out of it, if her body had not lacked sustenance.
Oh I was so happy a minute ago.  David, why did you
do this thing?''

The Harvester picked up the Girl, placed her in a
chair, and knelt beside her with his arms around her.

``Because of the PAIN IN THE WORLD, Ruth,'' he said
simply.  ``Your mother is sleeping sweetly in the long
sleep that knows neither anger nor resentment; and so
I was forced to think of a gentle-faced, little old mother
whose heart is daily one long ache, whose eyes are dim
with tears, and a proud, broken old man who spends his
time trying to comfort her, when his life is as desolate
as hers.''

``How do you know so wonderfully much about their
aches and broken hearts?''

``Because I have seen their faces when they were happy,
Ruth, and so I know what suffering would do to them.
There were pictures of them and letters in the bottom
of that old trunk.  I searched it the other night and
found them; and by what life has done to your mother
and to you, I can judge what it is now bringing them.
Never can you be truly happy, Ruth, until you have
forgiven them, and done what you can to comfort the
remainder of their lives.  I did it because of the pain
in the world, my girl.''

``What about my pain?''

``The only way on earth to cure it is through
forgiveness.  That, and that only, will ease it all away, and
leave you happy and free for life and love.  So long as
you let this rancour eat in your heart, Ruth, you are not,
and never can be, normal.  You must forgive them,
dear, hear what they have to say, and give them the
comfort of seeing what they can discover of her in you.
Then your heart will be at rest at last, your soul free,
you can take your rightful place in life, and the love
you crave will awaken in your heart.  Ruth, dear you
are the acme of gentleness and justice.  Be just and
gentle now!  Give them their chance!  My heart aches,
and always will ache for the pain you have known, but
nursing and brooding over it will not cure it.  It is
going to take a heroic operation to cut it out, and I
chose to be the surgeon.  You have said that I once
saved your body from pain Ruth, trust me now to
free your soul.''

``What do you want?''

``I want you to speak kindly to this man, who through
my act has come here, and allow him to tell you why
he came.  Then I want you to do the kind and womanly
thing your duty suggests that you should.''

``David, I don t understand you!''

``That is no difference,'' said the Harvester.  ``The
point is, do you TRUST me?''

The Girl hesitated. ``Of course I do,'' she said at
last.

``Then hear what your grandfather's friend has come
to say for him, and forget yourself in doing to others
as you would have them----really, Ruth, that is
all of religion or of life worth while.  Go on, Mr. Kennedy.''

The Harvester drew up a chair, seated himself beside
the Girl, and taking one of her hands, he held it closely
and waited.

``I was sent here by my law partner and my closest
friend, Mr. Alexander Herron, of Philadelphia,'' said
the stranger.  ``Both he and Mrs. Herron were bitterly
opposed to your mother's marriage, because they knew
life and human nature, and there never is but one end
to men such as she married.''

``You may omit that,'' said the Girl coldly.  ``Simply
state why you are here.''

``In response to an inquiry from your husband
concerning the originals of some photographs he sent to a
detective agency in New York.  They have had the
case for years, and recognizing the pictures as a clue,
they telegraphed Mr. Herron.  The prospect of news
after years of fruitless searching so prostrated Mrs.
Herron that he dared not leave her, and he sent me.''

``Kindly tell me this,'' said the Girl.  ``Where were
my mother's father and mother for the four years
immediately following her marriage?''

``They went to Europe to avoid the humiliation of
meeting their friends.  There, in Italy, Mrs. Herron
developed a fever, and it was several years before she
could be brought home.  She retired from society, and
has been confined to her room ever since.  When they
could return, a search was instituted at once for their
daughter, but they never have been able to find a trace.
They have hunted through every eastern city they
thought might contain her.''

``And overlooked a little insignificant place like
Chicago, of course.''

``I myself conducted a personal search there, and
visited the home of every Jameson in the directory or
who had mail at the office or of whom I could get a clue
of any sort.''

``I don't suppose two women in a little garret room
would be in the directory, and there never was any mail.''

``Did your mother ever appeal to her parents?''

``She did,'' said the Girl.  ``She admitted that she
had been wrong, asked their forgiveness, and begged to
go home.  That was in the second year of her marriage,
and she was in Cleveland.  Afterward she went to
Chicago, from there she wrote again.''

``Her father and mother were in Italy fighting for the
mother's life, two years after that.  It is very easy to
become lost in a large city.  Criminals do it every day
and are never found, even with the best detectives on
their trail.  I am very sorry about this.  My friends
will be broken-hearted.  At any time they would have
been more than delighted to have had their daughter
return.  A letter on the day following the message from
the agency brought news that she was dead, and now
their only hope for any small happiness at the close of
years of suffering lies with you.  I was sent to plead
with you to return with me at once and make them a
visit.  Of course, their home is yours.  You are their
only heir, and they would be very happy if you were
free, and would remain permanently with them.''

``How do they know I will not be like the father they
so detested?''

``They had sufficient cause to dislike him.  They have
every reason to love and welcome you.  They are consumed
with anxiety.  Will you come?''

``No.  This is for me to decide.  I do not care for
them or their property.  Always they have failed me
when my distress was unspeakable.  Now there is only
one thing I ask of life, more than my husband has given
me, and if that lay in his power I would have it.  You
may go back and tell them that I am perfectly happy.
I have everything I need.  They can give me nothing
I want, not even their love.  Perhaps, sometime, I will
go to see them for a few days, if David will go with
me.''

``Young woman, do you realize that you are issuing
a death sentence?'' asked the lawyer gently.

``It is a just one.''

``I do not believe your husband agrees with you.
I know I do not.  Mrs. Herron is a tiny old lady, with
a feeble spark of vitality left; and with all her strength
she is clinging to life, and pleading with it to give her
word of her only child before she goes out unsatisfied.
She knows that her daughter is gone, and now her hopes
are fastened on you.  If for only a few days, you certainly
must go with me.''

``I will not!''

The lawyer turned to the Harvester.

``She will be ready to start with you to-morrow morning,
on the first train north,'' said the Harvester.  ``We
will meet you at the station at eight.''

``I----I am afraid I forgot to tell my driver to wait.''

``You mean your instructions were not to let the Girl
out of your sight,'' said the Harvester.  ``Very well!
We have comfortable rooms.  I will show you to one.
Please come this way.''

The Harvester led the guest to the lake room and
arranged for the night.  Then he went to the telephone
and sent a message to an address he had been furnished,
asking for an immediate reply.  It went to Philadelphia
and contained a description of the lawyer, and asked if
he had been sent by Mr. Herron to escort his grand-
daughter to his home.  When the Harvester returned
to the living-room the Girl, white and defiant, waited
before the fire.  He knelt beside her and put his arms
around her, but she repulsed him; so he sat on the rug
and looked at her.

``No wonder you felt sure you knew what that was!''
she cried bitterly.

``Ruth, if you will allow me to lift the bottom of that
old trunk, and if you will read any one of the half dozen
letters I read, you will forgive me, and begin making
preparations to go.''

``It's a wonder you don't hold them before me and
force me to read them,'' she said.

``Don't say anything you will be sorry for after you
are gone, dear.''

``I'm not going!''

``Oh yes you are!''

``Why?''

``Because it is right that you should, and right is
inexorable.  Also, because I very much wish you to;
you will do it for me.''

``Why do you want me to go?''

``I have three strong reasons:  First, as I told you,
it is the only thing that will cleanse your heart of
bitterness and leave it free for the tenanting of a great and
holy love.  Next, I think they honestly made every
effort to find your mother, and are now growing old in
despair you can lighten, and you owe it to them and
yourself to do it.  Lastly, for my sake.  I've tried
everything I know, Ruth, and I can't make you love me, or
bring you to a realizing sense of it if you do.  So before
I saw that chest I had planned to harvest my big crop,
and try with all my heart while I did it, and if love
hadn't come then, I meant to get some one to stay with
you, and I was going away to give you a free perspective
for a time.  I meant to plead that I needed a few weeks
with a famous chemist I know to prepare me better for
my work.  My real motive was to leave you, and let
you see if absence could do anything for me in your
heart.  You've been very nearly the creature of my
hands for months, my girl; whatever any one else may
do, you're bound to miss me mightily, and I figured
that with me away, perhaps you could solve the problem
alone I seem to fail in helping you with.  This is only
a slight change of plans.  You are going in my stead.
I will harvest the ginseng and cure it, and then, if you
are not at home, and the loneliness grows unbearable,
I will take the chemistry course, until you decide when
you will come, if ever.''

`` `If ever?' ''

``Yes,'' said the Harvester.  ``I am growing
accustomed to facing big propositions----I will not dodge
this.  The faces of the three of your people I have seen
prove refinement.  Their clothing indicates wealth.  These
long, lonely years mean that they will shower you with
every outpouring of loving, hungry hearts.  They will
keep you if they can, my dear.  I do not blame them.
The life I propose for you is one of work, mostly for
others, and the reward, in great part, consists of the joy
in the soul of the creator of things that help in the world.
I realize that you will find wealth, luxury, and lavish
love.  I know that I may lose you forever, and if it is
right and best for you, I hope I will.  I know exactly
what I am risking, but I yet say, go.''

``I don't see how you can, and love me as you prove
you do.''

``That is a little streak of the inevitableness of nature
that the forest has ground into my soul.  I'd rather
cut off my right hand than take yours with it, in the
parting that will come in the morning; but you are
going, and I am sending you.  So long as I am shaped
like a human being, it is in me to dignify the possession
of a vertical spine by acting as nearly like a man as I
know how.  I insist that you are my wife, because it
crucifies me to think otherwise.  I tell you to-night,
Ruth, you are not and never have been.  You are free
as air.  You married me without any love for me in
your heart, and you pretended none.  It was all my
doing.  If I find that I was wrong, I will free you without
a thought of results to me.  I am a secondary proposition.
I thought then that you were alone and helpless, and
before the Almighty, I did the best I could.  But I
know now that you are entitled to the love of relatives,
wealth, and high social position, no doubt.  If I allowed
the passion in my heart to triumph over the reason of
my brain, and worked on your feelings and tied you to
the woods, without knowing but that you might greatly
prefer that other life you do not know, but to which
you are entitled, I would go out and sink myself in
Loon Lake.''

``David, I love you.  I do not want to go.  Please,
please let me remain with you.''

``Not if you could say that realizing what it means,
and give me the kiss right now I would stake my soul
to win!  Not by any bribe you can think of or any
allurement you can offer.  It is right that you go to
those suffering old people.  It is right you know what
you are refusing for me, before you renounce it.  It is
right you take the position to which you are entitled,
until you understand thoroughly whether this suits you
better.  When you know that life as well as this, the
people you will meet as intimately as me, then you can
decide for all time, and I can look you in the face with
honest, unwavering eye; and if by any chance your
heart is in the woods, and you prefer me and the cabin
to what they have to offer----to all eternity your place
here is vacant, Ruth.  My love is waiting for you;
and if you come under those conditions, I never can have
any regret.  A clear conscience is worth restraining
passion a few months to gain, and besides, I always have got
the fact to face that when you say `I love,' and when
I say `I love,' it means two entirely different things.
When you realize that the love of man for woman, and
woman for man, is a thing that floods the heart, brain,
soul, and body with a wonderful and all-pervading
ecstasy, and if I happen to be the man who makes you
realize it, then come tell me, and we will show God and
His holy angels what earth means by the Heaven inspired
word, `radiance.' ''

``David, there never will be any other man like you.''

``The exigencies of life must develop many a finer and
better.''

``You still refuse me?  You yet believe I do not love
you?''

``Not with the love I ask, my girl.  But if I did not
believe it was germinating in your heart, and that it would
come pouring over me in a torrent some glad day, I
doubt if I could allow you to go, Ruth!  I am like any
other man in selfishness and in the passions of the body.''

``Selfishness!  You haven't an idea what it means,''
said the Girl.  ``And what you call love----there I
haven't.  But I know how to appreciate you, and you
may be positively sure that it will be only a few days
until I will come back to you.''

``But I don't want you until you can bring the love
I crave.  I am sending you to remain until that time,
Ruth.''

``But it may be months, Man!''

``Then stay months.''

``But it may be----''

``It may be never!  Then remain forever.  That will
be proof positive that your happiness does not lie in
my hands.''

``Why should I not consider you as you do me?''

``Because I love you, and you do not love me.''

``You are cruel to yourself and to me.  You talk about
the pain in the world.  What about the pain in my heart
right now?  And if I know you in the least, one degree
more would make you cry aloud for mercy.  Oh David,
are we of no consideration at all?''

The muscles of the Harvester's face twisted an instant.

``This is where we lop off the small branches to grow
perfect fruit later.  This is where we do evil that good
may result.  This is where we suffer to-night in order
we may appreciate fully the joy of love's dawning.  If I
am causing you pain, forgive me, dear heart.  I would
give my life to prevent it, but I am powerless.  It is
right!  We cannot avoid doing it, if we ever would
be happy.''

He picked up the Girl, and held her crushed in his
arms a long time.  Then he set her inside her door and
said, ``Lay out what you want to take and I will help
you pack, so that you can get some sleep.  We must
be ready early in the morning.''

When the clothing to be worn was selected, the new
trunk packed, and all arrangements made, the Girl sat in
his arms before the fire as he had held her when she was
ill, and then he sent her to bed and went to the lake shore
to fight it out alone.  Only God and the stars and the
faithful Belshazzar saw the agony of a strong man in
his extremity.

Near dawn he heard the tinkle of the bell and went
to receive his message and order a car for morning.
Then he returned to the merciful darkness of night, and
paced the driveway until light came peeping over the
tree tops.  He prepared breakfast and an hour later
put the Girl on the train, and stood watching it until
the last rift of smoke curled above the spires of the city.



CHAPTER XX

THE MAN IN THE BACKGROUND

Then the Harvester returned to Medicine Woods
to fight his battle alone.  At first the pain
seemed unendurable, but work always had
been his panacea, it was his salvation now.  He went
through the cabin, folding bedding and storing it in
closets, rolling rugs sprinkled with powdered alum,
packing cushions, and taking window seats from the
light.

``Our sleeping room and the kitchen will serve for us,
Bel,'' he said.  ``We will put all these other things away
carefully, so they will be as good as new when the Girl
comes home.''

The evening of the second day he was called to the
telephone.

``There is a telegram for you,'' said a voice.  ``A
message from Philadelphia.  It reads:  `Arrived safely.
Thank you for making me come.  Dear old people.  Will
write soon.  With love, Ruth.'

``Have you got it?''

``No,'' lied the Harvester, grinning rapturously.  ``Repeat
it again slowly, and give me time after each sentence
to write it.  Now!  Go on!''

He carried the message to the back steps and sat
reading it again and again.

``I supposed I'd have to wait at least four days,'' he
said to Ajax as the bird circled before him.  ``This is
from the Girl, old man, and she is not forgetting us to
begin with, anyway.  She is there all safe, she sees that
they need her, they are lovable old people, she is going to
write us all about it soon, and she loves us all she knows
how to love any one.  That should be enough to keep us
sane and sensible until her letter comes.  There is no use
to borrow trouble, so we will say everything in the world
is right with us, and be as happy as we can on that until
we find something we cannot avoid worrying over.  In
the meantime, we will have faith to believe that we
have suffered our share, and the end will be happy for
all of us.  I am mighty glad the Girl has a home, and
the right kind of people to care for her.  Now, when she
comes back to me, I needn't feel that she was forced,
whether she wanted to or not, because she had nowhere
to go.  This will let me out with a clean conscience,
and that is the only thing on earth that allows a man to
live in peace with himself.  Now I'll go finish everything
else, and then I'll begin the ginseng harvest.''

So the Harvester hitched Betsy and with Belshazzar
at his feet he drove through the woods to the sarsaparilla
beds.  He noticed the beautiful lobed leaves,
at which the rabbits had been nibbling, and the heads
of lustrous purple-black berries as he began digging the
roots that he sold for stimulants.

``I might have needed a dose of you now myself,''
the Harvester addressed a heap of uprooted plants,
``if the electric wires hadn't brought me a better.  Great
invention that!  Never before realized it fully!  I
thought to-day would be black as night, but that message
changes the complexion of affairs mightily.  So
I'll dig you for people who really are in need of something
to brace them up.''

After the sarsaparilla was on the trays, he attacked
the beds of Indian hemp, with its long graceful pods,
and took his usual supply.  Then he worked diligently
on the warm hillside over the dandelion.  When these
were finished he brought half a dozen young men from
the city and drilled them on handling ginseng.  He was
warm, dirty, and tired when he came from the beds the
evening of the fourth day.  He finished his work at the
barn, prepared and ate his supper, slipped into clean
clothing, and walked to the country road where it crossed
the lane.  There he opened his mail box.  The letter he
expected with the Philadelphia postmark was inside.  He
carried it to the bridge, and sitting in her favourite place,
with the lake breeze threading his hair, opened his
first letter from the Girl.

``My dear Friend, Lover, Husband,'' it began.

The Harvester turned the sheets face down across his
knee, laid his hand on them, and stared meditatively at
the lake.  `` `Friend,' '' he commented.  ``Well, that's
all right!  I am her friend, as well as I know how to be.
`Lover.'  I come in there, full force.  I did my level
best on that score, though I can't boast myself a howling
success; a man can't do more than he knows, and if I
had been familiar with all the wiles of expert, professional
love-makers, they wouldn't have availed me in the Girl's
condition.  I had a mighty peculiar case to handle in
her, and not a particle of training.  But if she says
`Lover,' I must have made some kind of a showing on the
job.  `Husband.' ''  A slow flush crept up the brawny
neck and tinged the bronzed face.  ``That's a good
word,'' said the Harvester, ``and it must mean a wonderful
thing----to some men.  `Who bides his time.'  Well,
I'm `biding,' and if my time ever comes to be my Dream
Girl's husband, I'll wager all I'm worth on one thing.  I'll
study the job from every point of the compass, and
I'll see what showing I can make on being the kind
of a husband that a woman clings to and loves at
eighty.''

Taking a deep breath the Harvester lifted the letter,
and laying one hand on Belshazzar's head, he proceeded
----``I might as well admit in the beginning that I cried
most of the way here.  Some of it was because I was
nervous and dreaded the people I would meet, and more
on account of what I felt toward them, but most of it
was because I did not want to leave you.  I have been
spoiled dreadfully!  You have taught me so to depend
on you----and for once I feel that I really can claim
to have been an apt pupil----that it was like having
the heart torn out of me to come.  I want you to know
this, because it will teach you that I have a little bit
of appreciation of how good you are to me, and to all the
world as well.  I am glad that I almost cried myself
sick over leaving you.  I wish now I just had stood up
in the car, and roared like a burned baby.

``But all the tears I shed in fear of grandfather and
grandmother were wasted.  They are a couple of dear
old people, and it would have been a crime to allow
them to suffer more than they must of necessity.  It all
seems so different when they talk; and when I see the
home, luxuries, and friends my mother had, it appears
utterly incomprehensible that she dared leave them
for a stranger.  Probably the reason she did was
because she was grandfather's daughter.  He is gentle
and tender some of the time, but when anything irritates
him, and something does every few minutes, he breaks
loose, and such another explosion you never heard.
It does not mean a thing, and it seems to lower his
tension enough to keep him from bursting with palpitation
of the heart or something, but it is a strain for
others.  At first it frightened me dreadfully.  Grandmother
is so tiny and frail, so white in her big bed, and
when he is the very worst, and she only smiles at him,
why I know he does not mean it at all.  But, David,
I hope you never will get an idea that this would be
a pleasant way for you to act, because it would not,
and I never would have the courage to offer you the
love I have come to find if you slammed a cane and
yelled, `demnation,' at me.  Grandmother says she
does not mind at all, but I wonder if she did not acquire
the habit of lying in bed because it is easier to endure in
a prostrate position.

``The house is so big I get lost, and I do not know yet
which are servants and which friends; and there is a
steady stream of seamstresses and milliners making things
for me.  Grandmother and father both think I will be
quite passable in appearance when I am what they call
`modishly dressed.'  I think grandmother will forget
herself some day and leave her bed before she knows
it, in her eagerness to see how something appears.  I
could not begin to tell you about all the lovely things to
wear, for every occasion under the sun, and they say
these are only temporary, until some can be made
especially for me.

``They divide the time in sections, and there is an hour
to drive, I am to have a horse and ride later, and a time
to shop, so long to visit grandmother, and set hours to
sleep, dress, to be fitted, taken to see things, music lessons,
and a dancing teacher.  I think a longer day will have
to be provided.

``I do not care anything about dancing.  I know
what would make me dance nicely enough for anything,
but I am going to try the music, and see if I can learn
just a few little songs and some old melodies for evening,
when the work is done, the fire burns low, and you
are resting on the rug.  There is enough room for a
piano between your door and the south wall and that
corner seems vacant anyway.  You would like it, David,
I know, if I could play and sing just enough to put you
to sleep nicely.  It is in the back of my head that I will
try to do every single thing, just as they want me to,
and that will make them happy, but never forget that
the instant I feel in my soul that your kiss is right on
my lips, I am coming to you by lightning express; and I
told them so the first thing, and that I only came because
you made me.

``They did not raise an objection, but I am not so dull
that I cannot see they are trying to bind me to them from
the very first with chains too strong to break.  We had
just one little clash.  Grandfather was mightily pleased
over what you told Mr. Kennedy about my never having
been your wife, and that I was really free.  There
seems to be a man, the son of his partner, whom grandfather
dearly loves, and he wants me to be friends with
his friend.  One can see at once what he is planning,
because he said he was going to introduce me as Miss
Jameson.  I told him that would be creating a false
impression, because I was a married woman; but he only laughed
at me and went straight to doing it.

``Of course, I know why, but he is so terribly set I
cannot stop him, so I shall have to tell people myself
that I am a staid, old married lady.  After all, I suppose
I might as well let him go, if it pleases him.  I shall
know how to protect myself and any one else, from any
mistakes concerning me; and in my heart I know what
I know, and what I cannot make you believe, but I
will some day.

``I suspect you're harvesting the ginseng now.  The
roar and rush of the city seem strange, as if I never had
heard it before, and I feel so crowded.  I scarcely can
sleep at night for the clamour of the cars, cabs, and
throbbing life.  Grandfather will not hear a word,
and he just sputters and says `demnation' when I try to
tell him about you; but grandmother will listen, and I
talk to her of you and Medicine Woods by the hour.
She says she thinks you must be a wonderfully nice person.
I haven't dared tell her yet the thing that will win
her.  She is so little and frail, and she has heart trouble
so badly; but some day I shall tell her all about Chicago
that I can, and then of Uncle Henry, and then about you
and the oak, and that will make her love you as I do.
There are so many things to do; they have sent for me
three times.  I shall tell them they must put you on the
schedule, and give me so much time to write or I will
upset the whole programme.

``I think you will like to know that Mr. Kennedy told
grandfather all you said to him about my illness, for
almost as soon as I came he brought a very wonderful
man to my room, and he asked many questions and
I told him all about it, and what I had been doing.  He
made out a list of things to eat and exercises.  I am
being taken care of just as you did, so I will go on growing
well and strong.  The trouble is they are too good to
me.  I would just love to shuffle my feet in dead leaves,
and lie on the grass this morning.  I never got my swim
in the lake.  I will have to save that until next summer.
He also told grandfather what you said about Uncle
Henry, and I think he was pleased that you tried to
find him as soon as you knew.  He let me see the letter
Uncle Henry wrote, and it was a vile thing----just
such as he would write.  It asked how much he would be
willing to pay for information concerning his heir.  I told
grandfather all about it, and I saw the answer he wrote.
I told him some things to say, and one of them was that
the honesty of a man without a price prevented the necessity
of anything being paid to find me.  The other was
that you located my people yourself, and at once sent me
to them against my wishes.  I was determined he should
know that.  So Uncle Henry missed his revenge on you.
He evidently thought he not only would hurt you by
breaking up your home and separating us, but also he
would get a reward for his work.  He wrote some untrue
things about you, and I wish he hadn't, for grandfather
can think of enough himself.  But I will soon
change that.  Please, please take good care of all my
things, my flowers and vines, and most of all tell
Belshazzar to protect you with his life.  And you be very
good to my dear, dear lover.  I will write again soon,
Ruth.''

When the Harvester had studied the letter until he
could repeat it backward, he went to the cabin and answered
it.  Then he sent subscriptions for two of Philadelphia's
big dailies, and harvested ginseng from dawn
until black darkness.  Never was such a crop grown in
America.  The beds had been made in the original home
of the plant, so that it throve under perfectly natural
conditions in the forest, but here and there branches had
been thinned above, and nature helped by science below.
This resulted in thick, pulpy roots of astonishing size
and weight.  As the Harvester lifted them he bent the
tops and buried part of the seed for another crop.  For
weeks he worked over the bed.  Then the last load went
down the hill to the dry-house and the helpers were paid.
Next the fall work was finished.  Fuel and food were
stored for winter, while the cold crept from the lake,
swept down the hill and surrounded the cabin.

The Harvester finished long days in the dry-house and
store-room, and after supper he sat by the fire reading
over the Girl's letters, carving on her candlesticks, or
in the work room, bending above the boards he was
shaving and polishing for a gift he had planned for her
Christmas.  The Careys had him in their home for
Thanksgiving.  He told them all about sending the Girl
away himself, read them some of her letters, and they
talked with perfect confidence of how soon she would
come home.  The Harvester tried to think confidently,
but as the days went by the letters became fewer, always
with the excuse that there was no time to write, but
with loving assurance that she was thinking of him and
would do better soon.

However they came often enough that he had something
new to tell his friends so that they did not suspect
that waiting was a trial to him.  A few days after Thanksgiving
the gift that he had planned was finished.  It was
a big, burl-maple box, designed after the hope chests
that he saw advertised in magazines.  The wood was
rare, cut in heavy slabs, polished inside and out, dove-
tailed corners with ornate brass bindings, hinges and lock,
and hand-carved feet.  On the inside of the lid cut on a
brass plate was the inscription, ``Ruth Langston, Christmas
of Nineteen Hundred and Ten.  David.''

Then he began packing the chest.  He put in the
finished candlesticks and a box of candleberry dips he
had made of delightfully spiced wax, coloured pale
green.  He ordered the doll weeks before from the largest
store in Onabasha, and the dealer brought on several
that he might make a selection.  He chose a large baby
doll almost life size, and sent it to the dress-making
department to be completely and exquisitely clothed.  Long
before the day he was picking kernels to glaze from nuts,
drying corn to pop, and planning candies to be made of
maple sugar.  When he figured it was time to start the,
box, he worked carefully, filling spaces with chestnut
and hazel burs, and finishing the tops of boxes with
gaudy red and yellow leaves he had kept in their original
brightness by packing them in sand.  He put in scarlet
berries of mountain ash and long twining sprays of yellow
and red bitter-sweet berries, for her room.  Then he carefully
covered the chest with cloth, packed it in an outside
box, and sent it to the Girl by express.  As he came
from the train shed, where he had helped with loading,
he met Henry Jameson.  Instantly the long arm of the
Harvester shot out, and in a grip that could not be
broken he caught the man by the back of the neck and
proceeded to dangle him.  As he did so he roared with
laughter.

``Dear Uncle Henry!'' he cried.  ``How did you feel
when you got your letter from Philadelphia?  Wasn't it a
crime that an honest man, which same refers to me, beat
you?  Didn't you gnash your teeth when you learned
that instead of separating me from my wife I had found
her people and sent her to them myself?  Didn't it rend
your soul to miss your little revenge and fail to get
the good, fat reward you confidently expected?  Ho!
Ho!  Thus are lofty souls downcast.  I pity you, Henry
Jameson, but not so much that I won't break your
back if you meddle in my affairs again, and I am taking
this opportunity to tell you so.  Here you go out of my
life, for if you appear in it once more I will finish you like
a copperhead.  Understand?''

With a last shake the Harvester dropped him, and went
into the express office, where several men had watched
the proceedings.

``Been dipping in your affairs, has he?'' asked the
expressman.

``Trying it,'' laughed the Harvester.

``Well he is just moving to Idaho, and you probably
won't be bothered with him any more.''

``Good news!'' said the Harvester.  He felt much
relieved as he went back to Betsy and drove to Medicine
Woods.

The Careys had invited him, but he chose to spend
Christmas alone.  He had finished breakfast when the
telephone bell rang, and the expressman told him there
was a package for him from Philadelphia.  The Harvester
mounted Betsy and rode to the city at once.
The package was so very small he slipped it into his
pocket, and went to the doctor's to say Merry Christmas!
To Mrs. Carey he gave a pretty lavender silk
dress, and to the doctor a new watch chain.  Then
he went to the hospital, where he left with Molly a set
of china dishes from the Girl, and a fur-lined great coat,
his gift to Doctor Harmon.  He rode home and stabled
Betsy, giving her an extra quart of oats, and going into
the house he sat by the kitchen fire and opened the
package.

In a nest of cotton lay a tissue-wrapped velvet box, and
inside that, in a leather pocket case, an ivory miniature of
the Girl by an artist who knew how to reproduce life.  It
was an exquisite picture, and a face of wonderful beauty.
He looked at it for a long time, and then called Belshazzar
and carried it out to show Ajax.  Then he put it
into his breast pocket squarely over his heart, but he
wore the case shiny the first day taking it out.  Before
noon he went to the mail box and found a long letter from
the Girl, full of life, health, happiness, and with steady
assurances of love for him, but there was no mention made
of coming home.

She seemed engrossed in the music lessons, riding,
dancing, pretty clothing, splendid balls, receptions, and
parties of all kinds.  The Harvester answered it with
his heart full of love for her, and then waited.  It was
a long week before the reply came, and then it was short
on account of so many things that must be done, but she
insisted that she was well, happy, and having a fine time.
After that the letters became less frequent and shorter.
At times there would be stretches of almost two weeks
with not a line, and then only short notes to explain that
she was too busy to write.

Through the dreary, cold days of January and
February the Harvester invented work in the store-room, in
the workshop, at the candlesticks, sat long over great
books, and spent hours in the little laboratory preparing
and compounding drugs.  In the evenings he carved and
read.  First of all he scanned the society columns of
the papers he was taking, and almost every day he found
the name of Miss Ruth Jameson, often a paragraph describing
her dress and her beauty of face and charm of
manner; and constantly the name of Mr. Herbert Kennedy
appeared as her escort.  At first the Harvester
ignored this, and said to himself that he was glad she could
have enjoyable times and congenial friends, and he was.
But as the letters became fewer, paper paragraphs more
frequent, and approaching spring worked its old insanity
in the blood, gradually an ache crept into his heart again,
and there were days when he could not work it out.

Every letter she wrote he answered just as warmly as he
felt that he dared, but when they were so long coming
and his heart was overflowing, he picked up a pen one
night and wrote what he felt.  He told her all about the
ice-bound lake, the lonely crows in the big woods, the
sap suckers' cry, and the gay cardinals' whistle.  He told
her about the cocoons dangling on bushes or rocking on
twigs that he was cutting for her.  He warned her that
spring was coming, and soon she would begin to miss
wonders for her pencil.  Then he told her about the
silent cabin, the empty rooms, and a lonely man.  He
begged her not to forget the kiss she had gone to find
for him.  He poured out his heart unrestrainedly, and
then folded the letter, sealed and addressed it to her, in
care of the fire fairies, and pitched it into the ashes of
the living-room fire place.  But expression made him
feel better.

There was another longer wait for the next letter, but
he had written her so many in the meantime that a
little heap of them had accumulated as he passed through
the living-room on his way to bed.  He had supposed she
would be gone until after Christmas when she left, but
he never had thought of harvesting sassafras and opening
the sugar camp alone.  In those days his face appeared
weary, and white hairs came again on his temples.  Carey
met him on the street and told him that he was going
to the National Convention of Surgeons at New York
in March, and wanted him to go along and present his
new medicine for consideration.

``All right,'' said the Harvester instantly, ``I will
go.''

He went and interviewed Mrs. Carey, and then visited
the doctor's tailor, and a shoe store, and bought everything
required to put him in condition for travelling in
good style, and for the banquet he would be asked to
attend.  Then he got Mrs. Carey to coach him on spoons
and forks, and declared he was ready.  When the doctor
saw that the Harvester really would go, he sat down and
wrote the president of the association, telling him in
brief outline of Medicine Woods and the man who had
achieved a wonderful work there, and of the compounding
of the new remedy.

As he expected, return mail brought an invitation for
the Harvester to address the association and describe his
work and methods and present his medicine.  The
doctor went out in the car over sloppy roads with that
letter, and located the Harvester in the sugar camp.
He explained the situation and to his surprise found his
man intensely interested.  He asked many questions
as to the length of time, and amount of detail required
in a proper paper, and the doctor told him.

``But if you want to make a clean sweep, David,'' he
said, ``write your paper simply, and practise until it
comes easy before you speak.''

That night the Harvester left work long enough to
get a notebook, and by the light of the camp fire, and in
company with the owls and coons, he wrote his outline.
One division described his geographical location, another
traced his ancestry and education in wood lore.  One
was a tribute to the mother who moulded his character
and ground into him stability for his work.  The remainder
described his methods in growing drugs, drying
and packing them, and the end was a presentation for
their examination of the remedy that had given life
where a great surgeon had conceded death.  Then he
began amplification.

When the sugar making was over the Harvester
commenced his regular spring work, but his mind was so
busy over his paper that he did not have much time to
realize just how badly his heart was beginning to ache.
Neither did he consign so many letters to the fire fairies,
for now he was writing of the best way to dry hydrastis
and preserve ginseng seed.  The day before time to start
he drove to Onabasha to try on his clothing and have Mrs.
Carey see if he had been right in his selections.

While he was gone, Granny Moreland, wearing a clean
calico dress and carrying a juicy apple pie, came to the
stretch of flooded marsh land, and finding the path under
water, followed the road and crossing a field reached
the levee and came to the bridge of Singing Water where
it entered the lake.  She rested a few minutes there,
and then went to the cabin shining between bare branches.
She opened the front door, entered, and stood staring
around her.

``Why things is all tore up here,'' she said.  ``Now
ain't that sensible of David to put everything away and
save it nice and careful until his woman gets back.  Seems
as if she's good and plenty long coming; seems as if her
folks needs her mighty bad, or she's having a better time
than the boy is or something.''

She set the pie on the table, went through the cabin
and up the hill a little distance, calling the Harvester.
When she passed the barn she missed Betsy and the
wagon, and then she knew he was in town.  She returned
to the living-room and sat looking at the pie as she
rested.

``I'd best put you on the kitchen table,'' she mused.
``Likely he will see you there first and eat you while you
are fresh.  I'd hate mortal bad for him to overlook you,
and let you get stale, after all the care I've took with
your crust, and all the sugar, cinnamon, and butter that's
under your lid.  You're a mighty nice pie, and you ort
to be et hot.  Now why under the sun is all them clean
letters pitched in the fireplace?''

Granny knelt and selecting one, she blew off the ashes,
wiped it with her apron and read:  ``To Ruth, in care of
the fire fairies.''

``What the Sam Hill is the idiot writin' his woman like
that for?'' cried Granny, bristling instantly.  ``And
why is he puttin' pages and pages of good reading like
this must have in it in care of the fire fairies?  Too
much alone, I guess!  He's going wrong in his head.
Nobody at themselves would do sech a fool trick as this.
I believe I had better do something.  Of course I had!
These is writ to Ruth; she ort to have them.  Wish't
I knowed how she gets her mail, I'd send her some.
Mebby three!  I'd send a fat and a lean, and a middlin'
so's that she'd have a sample of all the kinds they is.
It's no way to write letters and pitch them in the ashes.
It means the poor boy is honin' to say things he dassent
and so he's writin' them out and never sendin' them
at all.  What's the little huzzy gone so long for,
anyway?  I'll fix her!''

Granny selected three letters, blew away the ashes,
and tucked the envelopes inside her dress.

``If I only knowed how to get at her,'' she muttered.
She stared at the pie.  ``I guess you got to go back,''
she said, ``and be et by me.  Like as not I'll stall myself,
for I got one a-ready.  But if David has got these fool
things counted and misses any, and then finds that pie
here, he'll s'picion me.  Yes, I got to take you back, and
hurry my stumps at that.''

Granny arose with the pie, cast a lingering and
covetous glance at the fireplace, stooped and took another
letter, and then started down the drive.  Just as she
reached the bridge she looked ahead and saw the Harvester
coming up the levee.  Instantly she shot the pie
over the railing and with a groan watched it strike the
water and disappear.

``Lord of love!'' she gasped, sinking to the seat, ``that
was one of grandmother's willer plates that I promised
Ruth.  'Tain't likely I'll ever see hide ner hair of it again.
But they wa'ant no place to put it, and I dassent let
him know I'd been up to the cabin.  Mebby I can fetch
a boy some day and hire him to dive for it.  How
long can a plate be in water and not get spiled anyway?
Now what'll I do?  My head's all in a whirl!  I'll
bet my bosom is a sticking out with his letters 'til he'll
notice and take them from me.''

She gripped her hands across her chest and sat staring
at the Harvester as he stopped on the bridge, and seeing
her attitude and distressed face, he sprang from the wagon.

``Why Granny, are you sick?'' he cried anxiously.

``Yes!'' gasped Granny Moreland.  ``Yes, David, I
am!  I'm a miserable woman.  I never was in sech a
shape in all my days.''

``Let me help you to the cabin, and I'll see what I
can do for you,'' offered the Harvester.

``No.  This is jest out of your reach,'' said the old
lady.  ``I want----I want to see Doctor Carey bad.''

``Are you strong enough to ride in or shall I bring him?''

``I can go!  I can go as well as not, David, if you'll
take me.''

``Let me run Betsy to the barn and get the Girl's
phaeton.  The wagon is too rough for you.  Are the
pains in your chest dreadful?''

``I don't know how to describe them,'' said Granny
with perfect truth.

The Harvester leaped into the wagon and caught up
the lines.  As he disappeared around the curve of the
driveway Granny snatched the letters from her dress
front and thrust them deep into one of her stockings.

``Now, drat you!'' she cried.  ``Stick out all you please.
Nobody will see you there.''

In a few minutes the Harvester helped her into the
carriage and drove rapidly toward the city.

``You needn't strain your critter,'' said Granny.  ``It's
not so bad as that, David.''

``Is your chest any better?''

``A sight better,'' said Granny.  ``Shakin' up a little
'pears to do me good.''

``You never should have tried to walk.  Suppose I
hadn't been here.  And you came the long way, too!
I'll have a telephone run to your house so you can call
me after this.''

Granny sat very straight suddenly.

``My! wouldn't that get away with some of my foxy
neighbours,'' she said.  ``Me to have a 'phone like they
do, an' be conversin' at all hours of the day with my
son's folks and everybody.  I'd be tickled to pieces,
David.''

``Then I'll never dare do it,'' said the Harvester,
``because I can't keep house without you.''

``Where's your own woman?'' promptly inquired
Granny.

``She can't leave her people.  Her grandmother is
sick.''

``Grandmother your foot!'' cried the old woman.
``I've been hearing that song and dance from the neighbours,
but you got to fool younger people than me on
it, David.  When did any grandmother ever part a
pair of youngsters jest married, for months at a clip?
I'd like to cast my eyes on that grandmother.  She's
a new breed!  I was as good a mother as 'twas in my skin
to be, and I'd like to see a child of mine do it for me; and
as for my grandchildren, it hustles some of them to
re-cog-nize me passing on the big road, 'specially if
it's Peter's girl with a town beau.''

The Harvester laughed.  The old lady leaned toward
him with a mist in her eyes and a quaver in her voice,
and asked softly, ``Got ary friend that could help you,
David?''

The man looked straight ahead in silence.

``Bamfoozle all the rest of them as much as you please,
lad, but I stand to you in the place of your ma, and so
I ast you plainly----got ary friend that could help?''

``I can think of no way in which any one possibly
could help me, dear,'' said the Harvester gently.  ``It
is a matter I can't explain, but I know of nothing that
any one could do.''

``You mean you're tight-mouthed!  You COULD tell
me just like you would your ma, if she was up and comin';
but you can't quite put me in her place, and spit it out
plain.  Now mebby I can help you!  Is it her fault or
yourn?''

``Mine!  Mine entirely!''

``Hum!  What a fool question!  I might a knowed it!
I never saw a lovinger, sweeter girl in these parts.  I
jest worship the ground she treads on; and you, lad
you hain't had a heart in your body sence first you saw
her face.  If I had the stren'th, I'd haul you out of this
keeridge and I'd hammer you meller, David Langston.
What in the name of sense have you gone and done to
the purty, lovin' child?''

The Harvester's face flushed, but a line around his
mouth whitened.

``Loosen up!'' commanded Granny.  ``I got some rights
in this case that mebby you don't remember.  You asked
me to help you get ready for her, and I done what you
wanted.  You invited me to visit her, and I jest loved
her sweet, purty ways.  You wanted me to shet up my
house and come over for weeks to help take keer of her,
and I done it gladly, for her pain and your sufferin' cut
me as if 'twas my livin' flesh and blood; so you can't
shet me out now.  I'm in with you and her to the end.
What a blame fool thing have you gone and done to drive
away for months a girl that fair worshipped you?''

``That's exactly the trouble, Granny,'' said the
Harvester.  ``She didn't!  She merely respected and was
grateful to me, and she loved me as a friend; but I never
was any nearer her husband than I am yours.''

``I've always knowed they was a screw loose
somewhere,'' commented Granny.  ``And so you've sent
her off to her worldly folks in a big, wicked city to get
weaned away from you complete?''

``I sent her to let her see if absence would teach her
anything.  I had months with her here, and I lay awake
at nights thinking up new plans to win her.  I worked
for her love as I never worked for bread, but I couldn't
make it.  So I let her go to see if separation would teach
her anything.''

``Mercy me!  Why you crazy critter!  The child did
love you!  She loved you 'nough an' plenty!  She loved
you faithful and true!  You was jest the light of her eyes.
I don't see how a girl could think more of a man.  What
in the name of sense are you expecting months of separation
to teach her, but to forget you, and mebby turn
her to some one else?''

``I hoped it would teach her what I call love, means,''
explained the Harvester.

``Why you dratted popinjay!  If ever in all my born
days I wanted to take a man and jest lit'rally mop up
the airth with him, it's right here and now.  `Absence
teach her what you call love.'  Idiot!  That's your job!''

``But, Granny, I couldn't!''

``Wouldn't, you mean, no doubt!  I hain't no manner
of a notion in my head but that child, depending on you,
and grateful as she was, and tender and loving, and all
sech as that I hain't a doubt but she come to you
plain and told you she loved you with all her heart.
What more could you ast?''

``That she understand what love means before I can
accept what she offers.''

``You puddin' head!  You blunderbuss!'' cried Granny.
``Understand what you mean by love.  If you're going
to bar a woman from being a wife 'til she knows what
you mean by love, you'll stop about nine tenths of the
weddings in the world, and t'other tenth will be women
that no decent-minded man would jine with.''

``Granny, are you sure?''

``Well livin' through it, and up'ard of seventy years
with other women, ort to teach me something.  The
Girl offered you all any man needs to ast or git.  Her
foundations was laid in faith and trust.  Her affections
was caught by every loving, tender, thoughtful thing
you did for her; and everybody knows you did a-plenty,
David.  I never see sech a master hand at courtin' as
you be.  You had her lovin' you all any good woman
knows how to love a man.  All you needed to a-done was
to take her in your arms, and make her your wife, and
she'd 'a' waked up to what you meant by love.''

``But suppose she never awakened?''

``Aw, bosh!  S'pose water won't wet!  S'pose fire
won't burn!  S'pose the sun won't shine!  That's the
law of nature, man!  If you think I hain't got no sense
at all I jest dare you to ask Doctor Carey.  'Twouldn't
take him long to comb the kinks out of you.''

``I don't think you have left any, Granny,'' said the
Harvester.  ``I see what you mean, and in all probability
you are right, but I can't send for the Girl.''

``Name o' goodness why?''

``Because I sent her away against her will, and now she
is remaining so long that there is every probability she
prefers the life she is living and the friends she has made
there, to Medicine Woods and to me.  The only thing
I can do now is to await her decision.''

``Oh, good Lord!'' groaned Granny.  ``You make me
sick enough to kill.  Touch up your nag and hustle me to
Doc.  You can't get me there quick enough to suit me.''

At the hospital she faced Doctor Carey.  ``I think
likely some of my innards has got to be cut out and
mended,'' she said.  ``I'll jest take a few minutes of your
time to examination me, and see what you can do.''

In the private office she held the letters toward the
doctor.  ``They hain't no manner of sickness ailin' me,
Doc.  The boy out there is in deep water, and I knowed
how much you thought of him, and I hoped you'd give
me a lift.  I went over to his place this mornin' to take
him a pie, and I found his settin' room fireplace heapin'
with letters he'd writ to Ruth about things his heart was
jest so bustin' full of it eased him to write them down,
and then he hadn't the horse sense and trust in her
jedgment to send them on to her.  I picked two fats,
a lean, and a middlin' for samples, and I thought I'd
send them some way, and I struck for home with them
an' he ketched me plumb on the bridge.  I had to throw
my pie overboard, willer plate and all, and as God is my
witness, I was so flustered the boy had good reason to
think I was sick a-plenty; and soon as he noticed it,
I thought of you spang off, and I knowed you'd know her
whereabouts, and I made him fetch me to you.  On the
way I jest dragged it from him that he'd sent her away
his fool self, because she didn't sense what he meant by
love, and she wa'ant beholden to him same degree and
manner he was to her.  Great day, Doc!  Did you ever
hear a piece of foolishness to come up with that?  I
told him to ast you!  I told him you'd tell him that no
clean, sweet-minded girl ever had known nor ever would
know what love means to a man 'til he marries her and
teaches her.  Ain't it so, Doc?''

``It certainly is.''

``Then will you grind it into him, clean to the marrer,
and will you send these letters on to Ruthie?''

``Most certainly I will,'' said the doctor emphatically.
Granny opened the door and walked out

``I'm so relieved, David,'' she said.  ``He thinks they
won't be no manner o' need to knife me.  Likely he can
fix up a few pills and send them out by mail so's that I'll
be as good as new again.  Now we must get right out
of here and not take valuable time.  What do I owe
you, Doc?''

``Not a cent,'' said Doctor Carey.  ``Thank you very
much for coming to me.  You'll soon be all right
again.''

``I was some worried.  Much obliged I am sure.  Come
on!''

``One minute,'' said the doctor.  ``David, I am making
up a list of friends to whom I am going to send
programmes of the medical meeting, and I thought your
wife might like to see you among the speakers, and
your subject.  What is her address?''

A slow red flushed the Harvester's cheeks.  He opened
his lips and hesitated.  At last he said, ``I think perhaps
her people prefer that she receive mail under her
maiden name while with them.  Miss Ruth Jameson, care
of Alexander Herron, 5770 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia,
will reach her.''

The doctor wrote the address, as if it were the most
usual thing in the world, and asked the Harvester if
he was ready to make the trip east.

``I think we had best start to-night,'' he said.  ``We
want a day to grow accustomed to our clothes and new
surroundings before we run up squarely against serious
business.''

``I will be ready,'' promised the Harvester.

He took Granny home, set his house in order, installed
the man he was leaving in charge, touched a match to
the heap in the fireplace, and donning the new travelling
suit, he went to Doctor Carey's.

Mrs. Carey added a few touches, warned him to remember
about the forks and spoons, and not to forget
to shave often, and saw them off.  At the station Carey
said to him, ``You know, David, we can change at Wayne
and go through Buffalo, or we can take the Pittsburg
and go and come through Philadelphia.''

``I am contemplating a trip to Philadelphia,'' said the
Harvester, ``but I believe I will not be ready for, say a
month yet.  I have a theory and it dies hard.  If it
does not work out the coming month, I will go, perhaps,
but not now.  Let us see how many kinds of a fool I
make of myself in New York before I attempt the
Quakers.''

Almost to the city, the doctor smiled at the Harvester.

``David, where did you get your infernal assurance?''
he asked.

``In the woods,'' answered the Harvester placidly.
``In doing clean work.  With my fingers in the muck,
and life literally teeming and boiling in sound and action,
around, above, and beneath me, a right estimate of my
place and province in life comes naturally in daily
handling stores on which humanity depends, I go even
deeper than you surgeons and physicians.  You are
powerless unless I reinforce your work with drugs on
which you can rely.  I do clean, honest work.  I know
its proper place and value to the world.  That is why I
called what I have to say, `The Man in the Background.'
There is no reason why I should shiver and shrink at
meeting and explaining my work to my fellows.  Every
man has his vocation, and some of you in the limelight
would cut a sorry figure if the man in the background
should fail you at the critical moment.  Don't worry
about me, Doc.  I am all serene.  You won't find I
possess either nerves or fear.  `Be sure you are right, and
then go ahead,' is my law.''

``Well I'll be confounded!'' said the doctor.

In a large hall, peopled with thousands of medical men,
the name of the Harvester was called the following day
and his subject was announced.  He arose in his place
and began to talk.

``Take the platform,'' came in a roar from a hundred
throats.

The Harvester hesitated.

``You must, David,'' whispered Carey.

The Harvester made his way forward and was guided
through a side door, and a second later calmly walked
down the big stage to the front, and stood at ease looking
over his audience, as if to gauge its size and the pitch
to which he should raise his voice.  His lean frame loomed
every inch of his six feet, his broad shoulders were square,
his clean shaven face alert and afire.  He wore a spring
suit of light gray of good quality and cut, and he was
perfect as to details.

``This scarcely seems compatible with my subject,'' he
remarked casually.  ``I certainly appear very much in
the foreground just at present, but perhaps that is quite
as well.  It may be time that I assert myself.  I doubt if
there is a man among you who has not handled my products
more or less; you may enjoy learning where and how
they are prepared, and understanding the manner in
which my work merges with yours.  I think perhaps
the first thing is to paint you as good a word picture as
I can of my geographical location.''

Then the Harvester named latitude and longitude
and degrees of temperature.  He described the lake,
the marsh, the wooded hill, the swale, and open sunny
fields.  He spoke of water, soil, shade, and geographical
conditions.  ``Here I was born,'' he said, ``on land owned
by my father and grandfather before me, and previous
to them, by the Indians.  My male ancestors, so far as I
can trace them, were men of the woods, hunters, trappers,
herb gatherers.  My mother was from the country, educated
for a teacher.  She had the most inexorable will
power of any woman I ever have known.  From my father
I inherited my love for muck on my boots, resin in my
nostrils, the long trail, the camp fire, forest sounds and
silences in my soul.  From my mother I learned to
read good books, to study subjects that puzzled me,
to tell the truth, to keep my soul and body clean, and
to pursue with courage the thing to which I set my
hand.

``There was not money enough to educate me as she
would; together we learned to find it in the forest.  In
early days we sold ferns and wild flowers to city people,
harvested the sap of the maples in spring, and the nut
crop of the fall.  Later, as we wanted more, we trapped
for skins, and collected herbs for the drug stores.  This
opened to me a field I was peculiarly fitted to enter.  I
knew woodcraft instinctively, I had the location of every
herb, root, bark, and seed that will endure my climate;
I had the determination to stick to my job, the right
books to assist me, and my mother's invincible will
power to uphold me where I wavered.

``As I look into your faces, men, I am struck with the
astounding thought that some woman bore the cold
sweat and pain of labour to give life to each of you.
I hope few of you prolonged that agony as I did.  It
was in the heart of my mother to make me physically
clean, and to that end she sent me daily into the lake,
so long as it was not ice covered, and put me at exercises
intended to bring full strength to every sinew and
fibre of my body.  It was in her heart to make me morally
clean, so she took me to nature and drilled me in its
forces and its methods of reproducing life according
to the law.  Her work was good to a point that all
men will recognize.  From there on, for a few years,
she held me, not because I was man enough to stand, but
because she was woman enough to support me.  Without
her no doubt I would have broken the oath I took; with
her I won the victory and reached years of manhood
and self-control as she would have had me.  The struggle
wore her out at half a lifetime, but as a tribute to her
memory I cannot face a body of men having your
opportunities without telling you that what was possible
to her and to me is possible to all mothers and men.
If she is above and hears me perhaps it will recompense
some of her shortened years if she knows I am pleading
with you, as men having the greatest influence of any
living, to tell and to teach the young that a clean life
is possible to them.  The next time any of you are
called upon to address a body of men tell them to learn
for themselves and to teach their sons, and to hold them
at the critical hour, even by sweat and blood, to a clean
life; for in this way only can feeble-minded homes,
almshouses, and the scarlet woman be abolished.  In this
way only can men arise to full physical and mental force,
and become the fathers of a race to whom the struggle
for clean manhood will not be the battle it is with us.

``By the distorted faces, by the misshapen bodies,
by marks of degeneracy, recognizable to your practised
eyes everywhere on the streets, by the agony of the
mother who bore you, and later wept over you, I conjure
you men to live up to your high and holy privilege, and
tell all men that they can be clean, if they will.  This
in memory of the mother who shortened her days to make
me a moral man.  And if any among you is the craven
to plead immorality as a safeguard to health, I ask,
what about the health of the women you sacrifice to
shield your precious bodies, and I offer my own as the
best possible refutation of that cowardly lie.  I never
have been ill a moment in all my life, and strength never
has failed me for work to which I set my hand.

``The rapidly decreasing supply of drugs and the
adulterated importations early taught me that the
day was coming when it would be an absolute necessity
to raise our home supplies.  So, while yet in my teens,
I began collecting from the fields and woods for miles
around such medicinal stuff as grew in my father's
fields, marsh, and woods, and planting more wherever I
found anything growing naturally in its prime.  I merely
enlarged nature's beds and preserved their natural
condition.  As the plants spread and the harvest increased,
I built a dry-house on scientific principles, a large store-
room, and later a laboratory in which I have been learning
to prepare some of my crude material for the market,
combining ideas of my own in remedies, and at last
producing one your president just has indicated that I come
to submit to you as a final resort in certain conditions.

``My operations now have spread to close six hundred
acres of almost solid medicinal growth, including a
little lake, around the shores of which flourish a quadruple
setting of water-loving herbs.''

Occasionally he shifted his position or easily walked
across the platform and faced his audience from a different
direction.  His voice was strong, deep, and rang clearly
and earnestly.  His audience sat on the front edge of
their chairs, and listened to something new, with mouths
half agape.  A few times Carey turned from the speaker
to face the audience.  He agonized in his heart that it
was a closed session, and that his wife was not there to
hear, and that the Girl was missing it.

By the bent backs and flying fingers of the reporters
at their table in front he could see that to-morrow the
world would read the Harvester's speech; and if it were
true that the little mother had shortened her days to
produce him, she had done earth a service for which many
generations would call her blessed.  For the doctor could
look ahead, and he knew that this man would not escape.
The call for him and his unimpeachable truth would come
from everywhere, and his utterances would carry as far
as newspapers and magazines were circulated.  The
good he would do would be past estimation.

The Harvester continued.  He was describing the most
delicate and difficult of herbs to secure.  He was telling
how they could be raised, prepared, kept, and compounded.
He was discussing diseases that did not readily
yield to treatment, pointing out what drugs were
customarily employed and offering, if any of them had such
cases, and would send to him, to forward samples of
unadulterated stuff sufficient for a test comparison with
what they were using.  He was walking serenely and
surely into the heart of every man before him.

Just at the point where it was the psychological time
to close, he stopped and stood a long instant facing them,
and then he asked softly, ``Did any man among you ever
see the woman to whom he had given a strong man's
first passion of love, slowly dying before him?''

One breathless instant he waited and then continued,
``Gentlemen, I recently saw this in my own case.  For
days it was coming, so at night I shut myself in my
laboratory, and from the very essence of the purest of
my self-compounded drugs I distilled a stimulant into
which I put a touch of heart remedy, a brace for weakening
nerves, a vitalization of sluggish blood.  As I worked,
I thought in that thought which embodied the essence
of prayer, and when my day and my hour came, and a
man who has been the president of your honourable
body, and is known to all of you, said it was death, I
took this combination that I now present to you, and
with the help of the Almighty and a woman above the
price of rubies, I kept breath in the girl I love, and to-day
she is at full tide of womanhood.  As a thank offering,
the formula is yours.  Test it as you will.  Use it if you
find it good.  Gentlemen, I thank you!''

Carey sank in his chair and watched the Harvester
cross the stage.  As he disappeared the tumult began,
and it lasted until the president arose and brought him
back to make another bow, and then they rioted until
they wore themselves out.  In an immaculate dress
suit the Harvester sat that night on the right of the gray-
haired president and responded to the toast, ``The
Harvester of the Woods.''  Then the reporters carried
him away to be photographed, and to show him the gay
sights of New York.

In the train the next day, steadily speeding west, he
said to Doctor Carey:  ``I feel as the old woman of Mother
Goose who said, `Lawk-a-mercy on us, can this be really
I?' ''

``You just bet it is!'' cried the doctor.  ``And you
have cut out work for yourself in good shape.''

``What do you mean?''

``I mean that this is a beginning.  You will be called
upon to speak again and again.''

``The point is, do you honestly think I helped any?''

``You did inestimable good.  It only can help men to
hear plain truth that is personal experience.  As for that
dope of yours, it will come closer raising the dead than
anything I ever saw.  Next case I see slipping, after
I've done my best, I'm going to try it out for myself.''

``All right!  'Phone me and I'll bring some fresh and
help you.''

At Buffalo the doctor left the car and bought a paper.
As he had expected the portrait and speech of the Harvester
were featured.  The reporters had been gracious.
They had done all that was just to a great event,
and allowed themselves some latitude.  He immediately
mailed the paper to the Girl, and at Cleveland bought
another for himself.  When he showed it to the Harvester,
as he glanced at it he observed, ``Do I appear
like that?''  Then he went on talking with a man he
had met who interested him.



CHAPTER XXI

THE COMING OF THE BLUEBIRD

The Harvester stopped at the mail box on his way
home and among the mass of matter it contained
was something from the Girl.  It was a scrap
as long as his least finger and three times as wide, and
by the postmark it had lain four days in the box.  On
opening it, he found only her card with a line written
across it, but the man went up the hill and into the
cabin as if a cyclone were driving him, for he read, ``Has
your bluebird come?''

He threw his travelling bag on the floor, ran to the
telephone, and called the station.  ``Take this message,'' he
said.  ``Mrs. David Langston, care of Alexander Herron,
5770 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.  Found note after
four days' absence.  Bluebird long past due.  The fairies
have told it that my fate hereafter lies in your hands.

As always.  David.''

The Harvester turned from the instrument and bent
to embrace Belshazzar, leaping in ecstasy beside him.

``Understand that, Bel?'' he asked.  ``I don't know but
it means something.  Maybe it doesn't----not a thing!
And again, there is a chance----only the merest
possibility----that it does.  We'll risk it, Bel, and to begin
on I have nailed it as hard as I knew how.  Next, we will
clean the house----until it shines, and then we will fill
the cupboard, and if anything does happen we won't be
caught napping.  Yes, boy, we will take the chance!
We can't be any worse disappointed than we have been
before and survived it.  Come along!''

He picked up the bag and arranged its contents,
carefully brushed and folded on his shelves and in his
closet.  Then he removed the travelling suit, donned
the old brown clothes and went to the barn to see that
his creatures had been cared for properly.  Early the
next morning he awoke and after feeding and breakfasting
instead of going to harvest spice brush and alder he
stretched a line and hung the bedding from room after
room to air and sun.  He swept, dusted, and washed
windows, made beds, and lastly polished the floors
throughout the cabin.  He set everything in order,
and as a finishing touch, filled vases, pitchers, and bowls
with the bloom of red bud and silky willow catkins.
He searched the south bank, but there was not a violet,
even in the most exposed places.  By night he was tired
and a little of the keen edge of his ardour was dulled.
The next day he worked scrubbing the porches, straightening
the lawn and hedges, even sweeping the driveway
to the bridge clear of wind-whirled leaves and straw.
He scouted around the dry-house and laboratory, and
spent several extra hours on the barn so that when
evening came everything was in perfect order.  Then he
dressed, ate his supper and drove to the city.


He stopped at the mail box, but there was nothing
from the Girl.  The Harvester did not know whether
he was sorry or glad.  A letter might have said the
same thing.  Nothing meant a delightful possibility, and
between the two he preferred the latter.  He whistled
and sang as he drove to Onabasha, and Belshazzar looked
at him with mystified eyes, for this was not the master
he had known of late.  He did not recognize the dress
or the manner, but his dog heart was sympathetic to
the man's every mood, and he remembered times when a
drive down the levee always had been like this, for to-
night the Harvester's tongue was loosened and he talked
in the old way.

``Just four words, Bel'' he said.  ``And, as I
remarked before, they may mean the most wonderful thing
on earth, and possibly nothing at all.  But it is in the
heart of man to hope, Bel, and so we are going to live
royally for a week or two, just on hope, old boy.  If
anything should happen, we are ready, rooms shining,
beds fresh, fireplaces filled and waiting a match, ice
chest cool, and when we get back it will be stored.  Also
a secret, Bel; we are going to a florist and a fruit store.
While we are at it, we will do the thing right; but we will
stay away from Doc, until we are sure of something.
He means well, but we don't like to be pitied, do we,
Bel?  Our friends don't manage their eyes and voices
very well these days.  Never mind!  Our time will come
yet.  The bluebird will not fail us, but never before has
it been so late.''

On his return he filled the pantry shelves with packages,
stored the ice chest, and set a basket of delicious fruit on
the dining table.  Two boxes remained.  He opened the
larger one and took from it an arm load of white lilies
that he carried up the hill and divided between the mounds
under the oak.  Then he uncovered his head, and standing
at the foot of them he looked among the boughs of
the big tree and listened intently.  After a time a soft,
warm wind, catkin-scented, crept from the lake, and
began a murmur among the clusters of brown leaves
clinging to the branches.

``Mother,'' said the Harvester, ``were you with me?
Did I do it right?  Did I tell them what you would have
had me say for the boys?  Are you glad now you held
me to the narrow way?  Do you want me to go before
men if I am asked, as Doc says I will be, and tell them
that the only way to abolish pain is for them to begin
at the foundation by living clean lives?  I don't know
if I did any good, but they listened to me.  Anyway,
I did the best I knew.  But that isn't strange; you ground
it into me to do that every day, until it is almost an
instinct.  Mother, dear, can you tell me about the bluebird?
Is that softest little rustle of all your voice?
and does it say `hope'?  I think so, and I thank you for
the word.''

The man's eyes dropped to earth.

``And you other mother,'' he said, ``have you any
message for me?  Up where you are can you sweep the
world with understanding eyes and tell me why my
bluebird does not come?  Does it know that this year
your child and not chance must settle my fate?  Can
you look across space and see if she is even thinking of
me?  But I know that!  She had to be thinking of me
when she wrote that line.  Rather can you tell me----
will she come?  Do you think I am man enough to be
trusted with her future, if she does?  One thing I promise
you: if such joy ever comes to me, I will know how to meet
it gently, thankfully, tenderly, please God.  Good night,
little women.  I hope you are sleeping well----''

He turned and went down the hill, entered the cabin
and took from the other box a mass of Parma violets.
He put these in the pink bowl and placed it on the table
beside the Girl's bed.  He stood for a time, and then
began pulling single flowers from the bowl and dropping
them over the pillow and snowy spread.

``God, how I love her!'' he whispered softly.

At last he went out and closed the door.  He was
tired and soon fell asleep with the night breeze stirring
his hair, and the glamour of moonlight flooding the lake
touched his face.  Clearly it etched the strong, manly
features, the fine brow and chin, and painted in unusual
tenderness the soft lines around the mouth.  The little
owl wavered its love story, a few frogs were piping, and
the Harvester lay breathing the perfumed spring air
deeply and evenly.  Near midnight Belshazzar awakened
him by arising from the bedside and walking to the door.

``What is it, Bel?'' inquired the Harvester.

The dog whined softly.  The man turned his head
toward the lake.  A ray of red light touched the opposite
embankment and came wavering across the surface.
The Harvester sat up.  Two big, flaming eyes were
creeping up the levee.

``That,'' said the Harvester, ``might be Doc coming
for me to help him try out my bottled sunshine, or it
might be my bluebird.''

He tossed back the cover, swung his feet to the floor,
setting each in a slipper beside the bed, and arose, dressing
as he started for the door.  As he opened the screen and
stepped on the veranda a passenger car from the city
stopped, and the Harvester went down the walk to
meet it.  His heart turned over when he saw a woman's
hand on the door.

``Permit me,'' he said, taking the handle and bringing
it back with a sweep.  A tall form arose, bent forward,
and descended to the step.  The full flare of moonlight
fell on the glowing face of the Girl.

``Harvester, is it you?'' she asked.

``Yes,'' gasped the man.

Two hands came fluttering out, and he just had presence
of mind to step in range so that they rested on his
shoulders.

``Has the bluebird come?''

``Not yet!''

``Then I am not too late?''

``Never too late to come to me, Ruth.''

``I am welcome?''

``I have no words to tell you how welcome.''

She swayed forward and the Harvester tried to reach
her lips, but they brushed his cheek and touched his ear.

``I have brought one more kiss I want to try,'' she
whispered.

The Harvester crushed her in his arms until he frightened
himself for fear he had hurt her, and murmured
an ecstasy of indistinct love words to her.  Presently her
feet touched the ground and she drew away from him.

``Harvester,'' she whispered, ``I couldn't wait any
longer; indeed I could not: and I couldn't leave grandfather
and grandmother, and I didn't know what in the
world to do, so I just brought them along.  Are they
welcome?''

``Aside from you, I would rather have them than
any people on earth,'' said the Harvester.

There were two sounds in the car; one was an
approving murmur, and the other an undeniable snort.
The Harvester felt the reassuring pressure of the Girl's
hand.

``Please, Ruth,'' he said, ``go turn on the light so that
I can see to help grandmother.''

A foot stamped before the front seat.  ``Madam
Herron, if you please!'' cried an acrid voice.

`` `Madam Herron,' '' said the Harvester gently, as he
set a foot on the step, reached in and bodily picked up a
little old lady and started up the walk with her in his arms.

``Careful there, sir!'' roared a voice after him.

The Harvester could feel the quake of the laughing
woman and he smiled broadly as he entered the cabin,
and placed her in a large chair before the fire.  Then
he wheeled and ran back to the car, reaching it as the man
was making an effort to descend.  It could be seen
that he had been tall, before time and sorrow had bent
him, and keen eyes gleamed below shaggy white brows
from under his hat brim.  He had a white moustache, and
his hair was snowy.

``Allow me,'' said the Harvester reaching a hand.

``If you touch me I will cane you,'' said Mr. Alexander
Herron.

There was nothing to do but step back.  The cane,
wheel, and a long coat skirt interfering, the old man fell
headlong, and only quick hands saved him a severe jolt
and bruises.  He stood glaring in the moonlight while
his hat was restored.

``If you run your car to the curve you can back toward
the south and turn easily,'' said the Harvester to the
driver.  As the automobile passed them he offered his
arm.  ``May I show you to the fire?  These spring nights
are chilly.''

`` `Chilly!'  Demnition cold is what they are!  I'm
frozen to the bone!  This will be the end of us both!
Dragging people of our age around at this hour of night.
Of all the accursed stubbornness!''

``There are three low steps,'' said the Harvester, ``now
a straight stretch of walk, now two steps; there you are
on the level.  Here is an easy chair.  It would be better
to leave on your coat, until I light the fire.''

He knelt and scratched a match, and almost instantly
a flame sprang from the heap of dry kindling, and began
to wrap around the big logs.

``How pretty!'' exclaimed a soft voice.

``Kind of a hunting lodge in the wilds, is it?'' growled
a rough one.  ``Marcella, you will take your death
here!''

``I'm sure I feel no exposure.  Really, Alexander,
if I had passed away every time you have prophesied
that I would in the past twenty years you'd have the
largest private cemetery in existence.  If you would not
be so pessimistic I could quite enjoy the trip.  It's so
long since I've ridden in the cars.''

``Of all the abandoned places!  And for you to be
here, after your years in bed!''

``But I'm not nearly so tired as I am at home,
Alexander, truly.''

``Let me help you, grandfather,'' offered the Girl.

She went to him and took his hat and stick.

``Leave me my cane,'' he cried.  ``Any instant that
beast may attack some of us.''

The Girl laughed merrily.

``Why grandfather!'' she chided, ``Bel is the finest
dog you ever knew, he is my best friend here.  By the
hour he has protected me, and he is gentle as a kitten.
He's crazy over my coming home.''

She knelt on the floor, put her arms around the dog's
neck, and the delighted brute quivered with the joy of
her caress and the sound of her loved voice.

``Ruthie!'' cautioned the gentle lady.

``Put that cur out of doors, where animals belong,''
roared the old man, lifting his stick.

``Careful!'' warned the grave voice of the Harvester.

``I thought you said he was gentle as a kitten!''

``Grandfather, I said that,'' cried the Girl.

``Well wasn't it the truth?''

``You can see how he loves me.  Didn't I ever tell
you that Bel made the first friendly overture I ever
received in this part of the country?  He's watched me
by the day, even while I slept.''

``Then what's all this infernal fuss about?''

``Try striking him if you want to find out,'' explained
the Harvester gently.  ``You see, Belshazzar and I are
accustomed to living here alone and very quietly.  He
is excited over the Girl's return, because she is his friend,
and he has not forgotten her.  Then this is the first time
in his life he ever heard an irritable voice from a visitor
or saw a cane, and it angers him.  He is perfectly safe
to guard a baby, if he is gently treated, but he is a sure
throat hold to a stranger who bespeaks him roughly or
attempts to strike.  He would be of no use as a guard
to valuable property while I sleep if he were otherwise.
Bel, come here!  Lie still.''

The dog sank to the floor beside the Harvester, but his
sharp eyes followed the Girl, and the hair arose on his
neck at every rasping note of the old man's voice.

``I wouldn't give such a creature house room for a
minute,'' insisted the guest.

``Wait until you see him work and become acquainted
with him, and you will change that verdict,'' prophesied
the Harvester.

``I never was known to change an opinion.  Never,
sir!  Never!'' cried the testy voice.

``How unfortunate!'' remarked the Harvester suavely.

``Explain yourself!  Explain yourself, sir!''

``There never has been, there never will be, a man
on this earth,'' said the Harvester, ``wholly free from
mistakes.  Are you warm now?''  He turned to the
little lady, cutting off a reply with his question.

``Nice and warm and quite sleepy,'' she said.

``What may I bring you for a light lunch before you
go to bed?''

``Oh, could I have a bite of something?''

``If only I am fortunate enough to have anything you
will care for.  What about a bowl of hot milk and a
slice of toast?''

``Why I think that would be just the thing!''

``Excuse me,'' said the Harvester rising.

He went to the kitchen and they could hear him
moving around.

``I wish the big brute would take his beast along,''
growled Mr. Alexander Herron.

``Come, Bel,'' ordered the Girl.  ``Let's go to the
kitchen.''

The dog instantly arose and followed her.

``What can I do to help?'' she asked as they reached
the door.

``Remain where you won't dazzle my eyes,'' said the
Harvester, ``until I help the gentle lady and the gentle
man to bed.''

Presently he came with a white cloth, two spoons, and
a plate of bread.  He spread the cloth on the table, laid
the spoons on it, and opening the little cupboard, took
out a long toasting fork, and sticking it into a slice of
bread, he held it over the coals.  When it grew golden
brown he lifted the table beside the chair, and brought
a bowl of scalded milk.

``Marcella, that stuff will be too smoky for you!
Your stomach will rebel at it.''

``Grandfather, there will not be a suspicion of odour,''
said the Girl.  ``I have had it that way often.''

``Then no wonder you came from this place looking
like a picked crane, if that is a sample of what you were
fed on!''

The face of the Harvester grew redder than the heat
of the fire necessitated, but at the ringing laugh of the
Girl he set his teeth and went on toasting bread.  Grandmother
crumbled some in the milk and picking up the
spoon tested the combination.  She was very hungry,
and it was good.  She began eating with relish.

``Alexander, you will be the loser if you don't have
some of this,'' she said.  ``It's just delicious!''

``Maybe smoked spoon victuals are proper for invalid
women,'' he retorted, ``but they are mighty thin diet
for a hardy man.''

``What about a couple of eggs and some beef extract?''
suggested the cook.

``Sounds more sensible by a long shot.''

``Ruth, you make this toast,'' said the Harvester and
disappeared.

Presently he placed before his guest a couple of eggs
poached in milk, a steaming bowl of beef juice, and a
plate of toast.  For one instant the Harvester thought
this was going into the fire, the next a slice was picked
up and smelled testily.  The Girl sat on her grandfather's
chair arm, and breaking a morsel of toast dipped it into
the broth and tasted it.

``Oh but that is good!'' she cried.  ``Why haven't
I some also?  Am I supposed to have no `tummy'?''

``Your turn next,'' said the Harvester, as he again gave
her the fork and went to the kitchen.

When he returned and served the Girl he found her
grandfather eating heartily.

``Why I think this is fun,'' said the gentle lady.  ``I
haven't had such a fine time in ages.  I love the heat of
the flame on my body and things taste so good.  I could
go to sleep without any narcotic, right now.''

Close her knee the Harvester knelt on the hearth with
his toasting fork.  She leaned forward and ran her fingers
through his hair.

``You're a braw laddie,'' she said.  ``Now I see why
Ruthie WOULD come.''

The Harvester took the frail hand and kissed it.
``Thank you!'' he returned.

``Mush!'' exploded the grizzled man in the rear.

When no one wanted more food the Harvester stacked
and carried away the dishes, swept the hearth, and
replaced the toaster.

``Ruth and I often lunched this way last fall,'' he said.
``We liked it for a change.''

``Alexander, have you noticed?'' asked the little
woman as she lifted wet eyes to a beautiful portrait of
her daughter beside the chimney.

``D'ye think I'm blind?  Saw it as I entered the door.
Poor taste!  Very!  Brown may match the rug and
wood-work, but it's a wretched colour for a young girl
in her gay time.  Should be pink and white with a gold
frame.''

``That would be beautiful,'' agreed the Harvester.
``We must have one that way.  This is not an expensive
picture.  It is only an enlargement from an old
photograph.''

``We have a number of very handsome likenesses.
Which one can you spare Ruth, Marcella?''

``The one she likes best,'' said the lady promptly.

``And the other is your mother, no doubt.  What a
girlish, beautiful face!''

``Wonderfully fine!'' growled a gruff old voice
tinctured with tears, and the Harvester began to see light.

The old man arose.  ``Ruthie, help your grandmother
to bed,'' he said.  ``And you, sir, have the goodness to
walk a few steps with me.''

The Harvester sprang up and brought Mr. Herron his
coat and hat and held the door.  The Girl brushed past
him.

``To the oak,'' she whispered.

They went into the night, and without a word the
Harvester took his guest's arm and guided him up the
hill.  When they reached the two mounds the moon
shining between the branches touched the lily faces with
with holy whiteness.

``She sleeps there,'' said the Harvester, indicating the
place.

Then he turned and went down the path a little
distance and waited until he feared the night air would
chill the broken old man.

``You can see better to-morrow,'' he said as he touched
the shaking figure and assisted it to arise.

``Your work?'' Mr. Alexander Herron touched the
lilies with his walking stick.

The Harvester assented.

``Do you mind if I carry one to Marcella?''

The Harvester trembled as he stooped to select the
largest and whitest, and with sudden illumination, he
fully understood.  He helped the tottering old man to
the cabin, where he sat silently before the fireplace
softly touching the lily face with his lips.

``I have put grandmother in my bed, tucked her in
warmly, and she says it is soft and fine,'' laughed the
Girl, coming to them.  ``Now you go before she falls
asleep, and I hope you will rest well.''

She bent and kissed him.

The Harvester held the door.

``Can I be of any service?'' he inquired.

``No, I'm no helpless child.''

``Then to my best wishes for sound sleep the remainder
of the night, I will add this,'' said the Harvester----
``You may rest in peace concerning your dear girl.  I
sympathize with your anxiety.  Good night!''

Alexander Herron threw out his hands in protest.

``I wouldn't mind admitting that you are a gentleman
in a month or two,'' he said, ``but it's a demnation
humiliation to have it literally wrung from me
to-night!''

He banged the door in the face of the amazed
Harvester, who turned to the Girl as she leaned against the
mantel.  He stood absorbing the glowing picture of
beauty and health that she made.  She had removed her
travelling dress and shoes, and was draped in a fleecy
white wool kimono and wearing night slippers.  Her hair
hung in two big braids as it had during her illness.  She
was his sick girl again in costume, but radiant health
glowed on her lovely face.  The Harvester touched a
match to a few candles and turned out the acetylene
lights.  Then he stood before her.

``Now, bluebird,'' he said gently.  ``Ruth, you always
know where to find me, if you will look at your feet.
I thought I loved you all in my power when you went,
but absence has taught its lessons.  One is that I can
grow to love you more every day I live, and the other
that I probably trifled with the highest gift you had to
offer, when I sent you away.  I may have been right;
Granny and Doc think I was wrong.  You know the
answer.  You said there was another kiss for me.  Ruth,
is it the same or a different one?''

``It is different.  Quite, quite different!''

``And when?''  The Harvester stretched out longing
arms.  The Girl stepped back.

``I don't know,'' she said.  ``I had it when I started,
but I lost it on the way.''

The Harvester staggered under the disappointment.

``Ruth, this has gone far enough that you wouldn't
play with me, merely for the sake of seeing me suffer,
would you?''

``No!'' cried the Girl.  ``No!  I mean it!  I knew
just what I wanted to say when I started; but we had to
take grandmother out of bed.  She wouldn't allow me to
leave her, and I wouldn't stay away from you any
longer.  She fainted when we put her on the car and
grandfather went wild.  He almost killed the porters,
and he raved at me.  He said my mother had ruined
their lives, and now I would be their death.  I got so
frightened I had a nervous chill and I'm so afraid she will
grow worse----''

``You poor child!'' shuddered the Harvester.  ``I
see!  I understand!  What you need is quiet and a
good rest.''

He placed her in a big easy chair and sitting on the
hearth rug he leaned against her knee and said, ``Now
tell me, unless you are so tired that you should go to bed.''

``I couldn't possibly sleep until I have told you,''
said the Girl.

``If you're merciful, cut it short!'' implored the
Harvester.

``I think it begins,'' she said slowly, ``when I went
because you sent me and I didn't want to go.  Of course,
as soon as I saw grandfather and grandmother, heard
them talk, and understood what their lives had been, and
what might have been, why there was only one thing to
do, as I could see it, and that was to compensate their
agony the best I could.  I think I have, David.  I really
think I have made them almost happy.  But I told them
all any one could tell about you in the start, and from the
first grandmother would have been on your side; but you
see how grandfather is, and he was absolutely determined
that I should live with them, in their home, all
their lives.  He thought the best way to accomplish
that would be to separate me from you and marry me
to the son of his partner.

``There are rooms packed with the lovely things they
bought me, David, and everything was as I wrote you.
Some of the people who came were wonderful, so gracious
and beautiful, I loved almost all of them.  They took
me places where there were pictures, plays, and lovely
parties, and I studied hard to learn some music, to dance,
ride and all the things they wanted me to do, and to read
good books, and to learn to meet people with graciousness
to equal theirs, and all of it.  Every day I grew stronger
and met more people, and there were different places
to go, and always, when anything was to be done, up
popped Mr. Herbert Kennedy and said and did exactly
the right thing, and he could be extremely nice,
David.''

``I haven't a doubt!'' said the Harvester, laying hold
of her kimono.

``And he popped up so much that at last I saw he was
either pretending or else he really was growing very fond
of me, so one day when we were alone I told him all
about you, to make him see that he must not.  He
laughed at me, and said exactly what you did, that I
didn't love you at all, that it was gratitude, that it was
the affection of a child.  He talked for hours about how
grandfather and grandmother had suffered, how it was my
duty to live with them and give you up, even if I cared
greatly for you; but he said what I felt was not love at all.
Then he tried to tell me what he thought love was, and I
could see very clearly that if it was like that, I didn't
love you, but I came a whole world closer it than loving
him, and I told him so.  He laughed again and
said I was mistaken, and that he was going to teach
me what real love was, and then I could not be driven
back to you.  After that, everybody and everything
just pushed me toward him with both hands, except
one person.  She was a young married woman and
I met her at the very first.  She was the only real friend
I ever had, and at last, the latter part of February, when
things were the very worst, I told her.  I told her every
single thing.  She was on your side.  She said you were
twice the man Herbert Kennedy was, and as soon as I
found I could talk to her about you, I began going there
and staying as long as I could, just to talk and to play
with her baby.

``Her husband was a splendid young fellow, and I
grew very fond of him.  I knew she had told him, because
he suddenly began talking to me in the kindest way, and
everything he said seemed to be what I most wanted to
hear.  I got along fairly well until hints of spring began
to come, and then I would wonder about my hedge, and
my gold garden, and if the ice was off the lake, and
about my boat and horse, and I wanted my room, and
oh, David, most of all I wanted you!  Just you!  Not
because you could give me anything to compare in
richness with what they could, not because this home was
the best I'd ever known except theirs, not for any reason
at all only just that I wanted to see your face, hear your
voice, and have you pick me up and take me in your arms
when I was tired.  That was when I almost quit writing.
I couldn't say what I wanted to, and I wouldn't write
trivial things, so I went on day after day just groping.''

``And you killed me alive,'' said the Harvester.

``I was afraid of that, but I couldn't write.  I just
couldn't!  It was ten days ago that I thought of the
bluebird's coming this year and what it would mean to
you, and THAT killed me, Man!  It just hurt my heart
until it ached, to know that you were out here alone;
and that night I couldn't sleep, because I was thinking
of you, and it came to me that if I had your lips then I
could give you a much, much better kiss than the last,
and when it was light I wrote that line.

``Nearly a week later I got your answer early in the
morning, and it almost drove me wild.  I took it and went
for the day with May, and I told her.  She took me
upstairs, and we talked it over, and before I left she made
me promise that I would write you and explain how I
felt, and ask you what you thought.  She wanted you
to come there and see if you couldn't make them at least
respect you.  I know I was crying, and she was bathing
the baby.  She went to bring something she had forgotten,
and she gave him to me to hold, just his little
naked body.  He stood on my lap and mauled my face,
and pulled my hair, and hugged me with his stout little
arms and kissed me big, soft, wet kisses, and something
sprang to life in my heart that never before had been
there.  I just cried all over him and held him fast, and
I couldn't give him up when she came back.  I saw why
I'd wanted a big doll all my life, right then; and oh,
dear! the doll you sent was beautiful, but, David, did
you ever hold a little, living child in your arms like that?''

``I never did,'' said the Harvester huskily.

He looked at her face and saw the tears rolling, but
he could say no more, so he leaned his head against her
knee, and finding one of her hands he drew it to his lips.

``It is wonderful,'' said the Girl softly.  ``It awakens
something in your heart that makes it all soft and tender,
and you feel an awful responsibility, too.  Grandmother
had them telephone at last, and May helped me bathe
my face and fix my hat.  When we went to the carriage
Mr. Kennedy was there to take me home.  We went
past grandmother's florist to get her some violets----
David, she is sleeping under yours, with just a few
touching her lips.  Oh it was lovely of you to get them; your
fairies must have told you!  She has them every day,
and one of the objections she made to coming here was
that she couldn't do without them in winter, and she
found some on her pillow the very first thing.  David,
you are wonderful!  And grandfather with his lily!
I know where he found that!  I knew instantly.  Ah,
there are fairies who tell you, because you deserve to
know.''

The Girl bent and slipping her arm around his neck
hugged him tight an instant, and then she continued
unsteadily:  ``While he was in the shop----Harvester,
this is like your wildest dream, but it's truest truth----a
boy came down the walk crying papers, and as I live,
he called your name.  I knew it had to be you because
he said, ``First drug farm in America!  Wonderful
medicine contributed to the cause of science!  David
Langston honoured by National Medical Association!''
I just stood in the carriage and screamed, `Boy!  Boy!'
until the coachman thought I had lost my senses.  He
whistled and got me the paper.  I was shaking so I
asked him how to find anything you wanted quickly,
and he pointed the column where events are listed;
and when I found the third page there was your face so
splendidly reproduced, and you seemed so fine and noble
to me I forgot about the dress suit and the badge in
your buttonhole, or to wonder when or how or why it
could have happened.  I just sat there shouting in my
soul, `David!  David!  Medicine Man!  Harvester Man!'
again and again.

``I don't know what I said to Mr. Kennedy or how I
got to my room.  I scanned it by the column, at last
I got to paragraphs, and finally I read all the sentences.
David, I kissed that newspaper face a hundred times,
and if you could have had those, Man, I think you
would have said they were right.  David, there is
nothing to cry over!''

``I'm not!'' said the Harvester, wiping the splashes
from her hand.  ``But, Ruth, forget what I said about
being brief.  I didn't realize what was coming.  I should
have said, if you've any mercy at all, go slowly!  This is
the greatest thing that ever happened or ever will happen
to me.  See that you don't leave out one word of it.''

``I told you I had to tell you first,'' said the Girl.

``I understand now,'' said the Harvester, his head
against her knee while he pressed her hand to his lips.
``I see!  Your coming couldn't be perfect without knowing
this first.  Go on, dear heart, and slowly!  You
owe me every word.''

``When I had it all absorbed, I carried the paper to
the library and said, `Grandfather, such a wonderful
thing has happened.  A man has had a new idea, and he
has done a unique work that the whole world is going to
recognize.  He has stood before men and made a speech
that few, oh so few, could make honestly, and he has
advocated right living, oh so nobly, and he has given
a wonderful gift to science without price, because through
it he first saved the life he loved best.  Isn't that
marvellous, grandfather?'  And he said, `Very marvellous,
Ruth.  Won't you sit down and read to me about it?'
And I said, `I can't, dear grandfather, because I have
been away from grandmother all day, and she is fretting
for me, and to-night is a great ball, and she has spent
millions on my dress, I think, and there is an especial
reason why I must go, and so I have to see her now; but
I want to show you the man's face, and then you can
read the story.'

``You see, I knew if I started to read it he would stop
me; but if I left him alone with it he would be so curious
he would finish.  So I turned your name under and
held the paper and said, `What do you think of that
face, grandfather?  Study it carefully,' and, Man, only
guess what he said!  He said, `I think it is the face of
one of nature's noblemen.'  I just kissed him time and
again and then I said, `So it is grandfather, so it is; for it
is the face of the man who twice saved my life, and lifted
my mother from almost a pauper grave and laid her to
rest in state, and the man who found you, and sent
me to you when I was determined not to come.'  And I
just stood and kissed that paper before him and cried,
again and again, `He is one of nature's noblemen, and he
is my husband, my dear, dear husband and to-morrow I
am going home to him.'  Then I laid the paper on his
lap and ran away.  I went to grandmother and did everything
she wanted, then I dressed for the ball.  I went
to say good-bye to her and show my dress and grandfather
was there, and he followed me out and said, `Ruth,
you didn't mean it?' I said, `Did you read the paper,
grandfather?' and he said 'Yes'; and I said, `Then I
should think you would know I mean it, and glory
in my wonderful luck.  Think of a man like that,
grandfather!'

``I went to the ball, and I danced and had a lovely
time with every one, because I knew it was going to be
the very last, and to-morrow I must start to you.

``On the way home I told Mr. Kennedy what paper
to get and to read it.  I said good-bye to him, and I
really think he cared, but I was too happy to be very
sorry.  When I reached my room there was a packet for
me and, Man, like David of old, you are a wonderful
poet!  Oh Harvester! why didn't you send them to me
instead of the cold, hard things you wrote?''

``What do you mean, Ruth?''

``Those letters!  Those wonderful outpourings of love
and passion and poetry and song and broken-heartedness.
Oh Man, how could you write such things and throw
them in the fire?  Granny Moreland found them when
she came to bring you a pie, and she carried them to
Doctor Carey, and he sent them to me, and, David,
they finished me.  Everything came in a heap.  I would
have come without them, but never, never with quite
the understanding, for as I read them the deeps opened
up, and the flood broke, and there did a warm tide go
through all my being, like you said it would; and now,
David, I know what you mean by love.  I called the
maids and they packed my trunk and grandmother's,
and I had grandfather's valet pack his, and go and secure
berths and tickets, and learn about trains, and I got
everything ready, even to the ambulance and doctor;
but I waited until morning to tell them.  I knew they
would not let me come alone, so I brought them along.
David, what in the world are we going to do with them?''

The Harvester drew a deep breath and looked at the
flushed face of the Girl.

``With no time to mature a plan, I would say that we
are going to love them, care for them, gradually teach
them our work, and interest them in our plans here;
and so soon as they become reconciled we will build them
such a house as they want on the hill facing us, just across
Singing Water, and there they may have every luxury
they can provide for themselves, or we can offer, and the
pleasure of your presence, and both of them can grow
strong and happy.  I'll have grandmother on her feet in
ten days, and the edge off grandfather's tongue in three.
That bluster of his is to drown tears, Ruth; I saw it to-
night.  And when they pass over we will carry them up
and lay them beside her under the oak, and we can take
the house we build for them, if you like it better, and use
this for a store-room.''

``Never!'' said the Girl.  ``Never!  My sunshine
room and gold garden so long as I live.  Never again
will I leave them.  If this cabin grows too small, we will
build all over the hillside; but my room and garden and
this and the dining-room and your den there must remain
as they are now.''

The Harvester arose and drew the davenport before
the fireplace, and heaped pillows.  ``You are so tired you
are trembling, and your voice is quivering,'' he said.  He
lifted the Girl, laid her down and arranged the coverlet.

``Go to sleep!'' he ordered gently.  ``You have made
me so wildly happy that I could run and shout like a
madman.  Try to rest, and maybe the fairies who aid
me will put my kiss back on your lips.  I am going to
the hill top to tell mother and my God.''

He knelt and gathered her in his arms a second, then
called Belshazzar to guard, and went into the sweet
spring night, to jubilate with that wild surge of passion
that sweeps the heart of a strong man when he is most
nearly primal.  He climbed the hill at a rush, and standing
beneath the oak on the summit, he faced the lake,
and stretching his arms widely, he waved them, merely
to satisfy the demand for action.  When urgency for
expression came upon him, he laughed a deep rumble
of exultation.

The night wind swept the lake and lifted his hair,
the odour of spring was intoxicating in his nostrils,
small creatures of earth stirred around him, here and there
a bird, restless in the delirium of mating fever, lifted
its head and piped a few notes on the moon-whitened
air.  The frogs sang uninterruptedly at the water's
edge.  The Harvester stood rejoicing.  Beating on his
brain came a rush of love words uttered in the Girl's
dear voice.  ``I wanted you!  Just you!  He is my husband!
My dear, dear husband!  To-morrow I am going
home!  Now, David, I know what you mean by love!''
The Harvester laughed again and sounds around him
ceased for a second, then swelled in fuller volume than
before.  He added his voice.  ``Thank God!  Oh, thank
God!'' he cried.  ``And may the Author of the Universe,
the spirits of the little mothers who loved us, and all the
good fairies who guide us, unite to bring unbounded joy
to my Dream Girl and to guard her safely.''

The cocks of Medicine Woods began their second
salute to dawn.  At this sound and with the mention of
her name, the Harvester turned down the hill, and striding
forcefully approached the cabin.  As he passed the
Girl's room he stepped softly, smiling as he wondered if
its unexpected occupants were resting.  He followed
Singing Water, and stood looking at the hillside, studying
the exact location most suitable for a home for the old
people he was so delighted to welcome.  That they would
remain he never doubted.  His faith in the call of the
wild had been verified in the Girl; it would reach them
also.  The hill top would bind them.  Their love for the
Girl would compel them.  They would be company for
her and a new interest in life.

``Couldn't be better, not possibly!'' commented the
delighted Harvester.

He followed the path down Singing Water until he
reached the bridge where it turned into the marsh.
There he paused, looking straight ahead.

``Wonder if I would frighten her?'' he mused.  ``I
believe I'll risk it.''

He walked on rapidly, vaulted the fence enclosing
his land, crossed the road, and unlatched the gate.  As
he did so, the door opened, and Granny Moreland stood
on the sill, waiting with keen eyes.

``Well I don't need neither specs nor noonday sun
to see that you're steppin' like the blue ribbon colt at
the County Fair, and lookin' like you owned Kingdom
Come,'' she said.  ``What's up, David?''

``You are right, dear,'' said the Harvester.  ``I have
entered my kingdom.  The Girl has come and crowned
me with her love.  She had decided to return, but the
letters you sent made her happier about it.  I wanted
you to know.''

Granny leaned against the casing, and began to sob
unrestrainedly.

The Harvester supported her tenderly.

``Why don't do that, dear.  Don't cry,'' he begged.
``The Girl is home for always, Granny, and I'm so happy
I am out to-night trying to keep from losing my mind
with joy.  She will come to you to-morrow, I know.''

Granny tremulously dried her eyes.

``What an old sap-head I am!'' she commented.  ``I
stole your letters from your fireplace, pitched a willer
plate into the lake----you got to fish that out, come day,
David----fooled you into that trip to Doc Carey to get
him to mail them to Ruth, and never turned a hair.
But after I got home I commenced thinkin' 'twas a pretty
ticklish job to stick your nose into other people's business,
an' every hour it got worse, until I ain't had a fairly
decent sleep since.  If you hadn't come soon, boy, I'd
'a' been sick a-bed.  Oh, David!  Are you sure she's over
there, and loves you to suit you now?''

``Yes dear, I am absolutely certain,'' said the
Harvester.  ``She was so determined to come that she
brought the invalid grandmother she couldn't leave and
her grandfather.  They arrived at midnight.  We are all
going to live together now.''

``Well bless my stars!  Fetched you a family!  David,
I do hope to all that's peaceful I hain't put my foot in it.
The moon is the deceivingest thing on earth I know,
but does her family 'pear to be an a-gre'-able family,
by its light?''

The Harvester's laugh boomed a half mile down the
road.

``Finest people on earth, next to you, dear.  I'm
mighty glad to have them.  I'm going to build them a
house on my best location, and we are all going to be
happy from now on.  Go to bed!  This night air may
chill you.  I can't sleep.  I wanted you to know first----
so I came over.  In mother's stead, will you kiss me, and
wish me happiness, dear friend?''

Granny Moreland laid an eager, withered hand on
each shoulder, and bent to the radiant young face.

``God bless you, lad, and grant you as great happiness
as life ort to fetch every clean, honest man,'' she prayed
fervently, with closed eyes and her lined old face turned
skyward.  ``And, O God, bless Ruth, and help her as
You never helped mortal woman before to know her own
mind without `variableness, neither shadow of turnin'.' ''

The Harvester was on Singing Water bridge before he
gave way.  There he laughed as never before in his life.
Finally he controlled himself and started toward the
cabin; but he was chuckling as he passed the driveway,
and walked down the broad cement floor leading to his
bathing pool, where the moonlight bridged the lake,
and fell as a benediction all around him.

He stood a long time, when he recognized the familiar
crash of a breaking backlog falling together, and heard
the customary leap of the frightened dog.  He walked
to his door and listened intently, but there was no sound;
so he decided the Girl had not been awakened.  In the
midst of a whitening sheet of gold the Harvester dropped
to his stoop and leaned his head against the broad casing.
He broke a twig from a hawthorn bush beside him, and
sat twisting it in his fingers as he stared down the line
of the gold bridge.  Never had it seemed so material,
so like a path that might be trodden by mortal feet and
lead them straight to Heaven.  As on the hill top, night
again surrounded him and the Harvester's soul drank
deep wild draughts of a new joy.  Sleep was out of
the question.  He was too intensely alive to know that
he ever again could be weary.  He sat there in the moonlight,
and with unbridled heart gloried in the joy that
had come to him.

He turned his face from the bridge as he heard the
click of Belshazzar's nails on the floor of the bathing
pool.  Then his heart and breath stopped an instant.
Beside the dog walked the Girl, one hand on his head
the other holding the flowing white robe around her and
grasping one of the Harvester's lilies.  His first thought
was sheer amazement that she was not afraid, for it was
evident now that the backlog had awakened her, and
she had taken the dog and gone to her mother.  Then
she had followed the path leading down the hill, around
the cabin, and into the sheet of moonlight gilding the
shore.  She stood there gazing over the lake, oblivious
to all things save the entrancing allurement of a perfect
spring night beside undulant water.  Screened from her
with bushes and trees the Harvester scarcely breathed
lest he startle her.  Then his head swam, and his still
heart leaped wildly.  She was coming toward him.  On
her left lay the path to the hill top.  A few steps farther
she could turn to the right and follow the driveway to
the front of the cabin.  He leaned forward watching in
an agony of suspense.  Her beautiful face was transfigured
with joy, aflame with love, radiant with smiles,
and her tall figure fleecy white, rimmed in gold.  Up
the shining path of light she steadily advanced toward
his door.  Then the Harvester understood, and from
his exultant heart burst the wordless petition:

``LORD GOD ALMIGHTY, HELP ME TO BE A MAN!''

With outstretched arms he arose to meet her.

``My Dream Girl!'' he cried hoarsely.  ``My Dream
Girl!''

``Coming, Harvester!'' she answered in tones of joy,
as she dropped the white flower and lifted her hands to
draw his face toward her.

``Is that the kiss you wanted?'' she questioned.

``Yes, Ruth,'' breathed the Harvester.

``Then I am ready to be your wife,'' she said.  ``May
I share all the remainder of life's joys and sorrows with
you?''

The Harvester gathered her in his arms and carried
her to the bench on the lake shore.  He wrapped the white
robe around her and clasped her tenderly as behooved a
lover, yet with arms that she knew could have crushed
her had they willed.  The minutes slipped away, and still
he held her to his heart, the reality far surpassing his
dream; for he knew that he was awake, and he realized
this as the supreme hour that comes to the strongman
who knows his love requited.

When the first banner of red light arose above Medicine
Woods and Singing Water the cocks on the hillside
announced the dawn.  As the gold faded to gray,
a burst of bubbling notes swelled from a branch almost
over their heads where stood a bark-enclosed little house.

``Ruth, do you hear that?'' asked the Harvester softly.

``Yes,'' she answered, ``and I see it.  A wonderful
bird, with Heaven's deepest blue on its back and a breast
like a russet autumn leaf, came straight up the lake from
the south, and before it touched the limb that song
seemed to gush from its throat.''

``And for that reason, the greatest nature lover who
ever lived says that it `deserves preeminence.'  It always
settles from its long voyage through the air in an ecstasy
of melody.  Do you know what it is, Ruth?''

The Girl laid a hand on his cheek and turned his eyes
from the bird to her face as she answered, ``Yes, Harvester-
man, I know.  It is your first bluebird----but it
is far too late, and Belshazzar has lost high office.
I have usurped both their positions.  You remain in the
woods and reap their harvest, you enter the laboratory
and make wonderful, life-giving medicines, you face the
world and tell men of the high and holy life they may
live if they will, and then----always and forever, you
come back to Medicine Woods and to me, Harvester.''





THE END

of

The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Harvester, by Gene Stratton Porter



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