A new mood was on him; he was smiling now.
“Yes, a guest. It is Thanksgiving Day, Miss Jocelyn. Will you and your father forget old quarrels – and perhaps forgive?”
Again she rested her slender hands on his dogs’ heads, looking out over the valley.
“Will you forgive?” he asked, in a low voice.
“I? Yes,” she said, startled.
“Then,” he went on, smiling, “you must invite me to be your guest. When I look at that partridge, Miss Jocelyn, hunger makes me shameless. I want a second-joint – indeed I do!”
Her sensitive lips trembled into a smile, but she could not meet his eyes yet.
“Our Thanksgiving dinner would horrify you,” she said – “a pickerel taken on a gang-hook, woodcock shot in Brier Brook swales, and this partridge – ” She hesitated.
“And that partridge a victim to his own rash passion for winter grapes,” added Gordon, laughing.
The laugh did them both good.
“I could make a chestnut stuffing,” she said, timidly.
“Splendid! Splendid!” murmured Gordon.
“Are you really coming?” she asked.
Something in her eyes held his, then he answered with heightened color, “I am very serious, Miss Jocelyn. May I come?”
She said “Yes” under her breath. There was color enough in her lips and cheeks now.
So young Gordon went away across the hills, whistling his dogs cheerily on, the sunlight glimmering on the slanting barrels of his gun. They looked back twice. The third time she looked he was gone beyond the brown hill’s crest.
She came to her own door all of a tremble. Old man Jocelyn sat sunning his gray head on the south porch, lean hands folded over his stomach, pipe between his teeth.
“Daddy,” she said, “look!” and she held up the partridge. Jocelyn smiled.
All the afternoon she was busy in the kitchen, and when the early evening shadows lengthened across the purple hills she stood at the door, brown eyes searching the northern slope.
The early dusk fell over the alder swales; the brawling brook was sheeted with vapor.
Up-stairs she heard her father dressing in his ancient suit of rusty black and pulling on his obsolete boots. She stole into the dining-room and looked at the table. Three covers were laid.
She had dressed in her graduating gown – a fluffy bit of white and ribbon. Her dark soft hair was gathered simply; a bunch of blue gentian glimmered at her belt.
Suddenly, as she lingered over the table, she heard Gordon’s step on the porch, and the next instant her father came down the dark stairway into the dining-room just as Gordon entered.
The old man halted, eyes ablaze. But Gordon came forward gravely, saying, “I asked Miss Jocelyn if I might come as your guest to-night. It would have been a lonely Thanksgiving at home.”
Jocelyn turned to his daughter in silence. Then the three places laid at table and the three chairs caught his eye.
“I hope,” said Gordon, “that old quarrels will be forgotten and old scores wiped out. I am sorry I spoke as I did this morning. You are quite right, Mr. Jocelyn; the land is yours and has always been yours. It is from you I must ask permission to shoot.”
Jocelyn eyed him grimly.
“Don’t make it hard for me,” said Gordon. “The land is yours, and that also which you lost with it will be returned. It is what my father wishes – now.”
He held out his hand. Jocelyn took it as though stunned.
Gordon, still holding his hard hand, drew him outside to the porch.
“How much did you have in the Sagamore & Wyandotte Railway before our system bought it?” asked Gordon.
“All I had – seven thousand dollars – ” Suddenly the old man’s hand began to tremble. He raised his gray head and looked up at the stars.
“That is yours still,” said Gordon, gently, “with interest. My father wishes it.”
Old man Jocelyn looked up at the stars. They seemed to swim in silver streaks through the darkness.
“Come,” said Gordon, gayly, “we are brother sportsmen now – and that sky means a black frost and a flight. Will you invite me to shoot over Brier Brook swales to-morrow?”
As he spoke, high in the starlight a dark shadow passed, coming in from the north, beating the still air with rapid wings. It was a woodcock, the first flight bird from the north.
“Come to dinner, young man,” said Jocelyn, excited; “the flight is on and we must be on Brier Brook by daybreak.”
In the blaze of a kerosene-lamp they sat down at table. Gordon looked across at Jocelyn’s daughter; her eyes met his, and they smiled.
Then old man Jocelyn bent his head on his hard clasped hands.
“Lord,” he said, tremulously, “it being Thanksgiving, I gave Thee extry thanks this A.M. It being now P.M., I do hereby double them extry thanks” – his mind wandered a little – “with interest to date. Amen.”
THE PATH-MASTER
“The bankrupt can always pay one debt, but neither God nor man can credit him with the payment.”
I
WHEN Dingman, the fate game-warden, came panting over the mountain from Spencers to confer with young Byram, road-master at Foxville, he found that youthful official reshingling his barn.
The two men observed each other warily for a moment; Byram jingled the shingle-nails in his apron-pocket; Dingman, the game-warden, took a brief but intelligent survey of the premises, which included an unpainted house, a hen-yard, and the newly shingled barn.
“Hello, Byram,” he said, at length.
“Is that you?” replied Byram, coldly.
He was a law-abiding young man; he had not shot a bird out of season for three years.
After a pause the game-warden said, “Ain’t you a-comin’ down off’n that ridge-pole?”
“I’m a-comin’ down when I quit shinglin’,” replied the road-master, cautiously. Dingman waited; Byram fitted a shingle, fished out a nail from his apron-pocket, and drove it with unnecessary noise.