<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XXIX </h2>
<h3> "DON'T FORGET!" </h3>
<p>Up-stairs, Mrs. Baxter moved to the door of her son's room, pretending to
be unconscious of the gaze he maintained upon her. Mustering courage to
hum a little tune and affecting inconsequence, she had nearly crossed the
threshold when he said, sternly:</p>
<p>"And this is all you intend to say to that child?"</p>
<p>"Why, yes, Willie."</p>
<p>"And yet I told you what she said!" he cried. "I told you I HEARD her
stand there and tell that dirty-faced little girl how that idiot boy
that's always walkin' past here four or five times a day, whistling and
looking back, was in 'love of' her! Ye gods! What kind of a person will
she grow up into if you don't punish her for havin' ideas like that at her
age?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter regarded him mildly, not replying, and he went on, with loud
indignation:</p>
<p>"I never heard of such a thing! That Worm walkin' past here four or five
times a day just to look at JANE! And her standing there, calmly tellin'
that sooty-faced little girl, 'He's in love of me'! Why, it's enough to
sicken a man! Honestly, if I had my way, I'd see that both she and that
little Freddie Banks got a first-class whipping!"</p>
<p>"Don't you think, Willie," said Mrs. Baxter—"don't you think that,
considering the rather noncommittal method of Freddie's courtship, you are
suggesting extreme measures?"</p>
<p>"Well, SHE certainly ought to be punished!" he insisted, and then, with a
reversal to agony, he shuddered. "That's the least of it!" he cried. "It's
the insulting things you always allow her to say of one of the noblest
girls in the United States—THAT'S what counts! On the very last day—yes,
almost the last hour—that Miss Pratt's in this town, you let your
only daughter stand there and speak disrespectfully of her—and then
all you do is tell her to 'go and play somewhere else'! I don't understand
your way of bringing up a child," he declared, passionately. "I do NOT!"</p>
<p>"There, there, Willie," Mrs. Baxter said. "You're all wrought up—"</p>
<p>"I am NOT wrought up!" shouted William. "Why should I be charged with—"</p>
<p>"Now, now!" she said. "You'll feel better to-morrow."</p>
<p>"What do you mean by that?" he demanded, breathing deeply.</p>
<p>For reply she only shook her head in an odd little way, and in her parting
look at him there was something at once compassionate, amused, and
reassuring.</p>
<p>"You'll be all right, Willie," she said, softly, and closed the door.</p>
<p>Alone, William lifted clenched hands in a series of tumultuous gestures at
the ceiling; then he moaned and sank into a chair at his writing-table.
Presently a comparative calm was restored to him, and with reverent
fingers he took from a drawer a one-pound box of candy, covered with white
tissue-paper, girdled with blue ribbon. He set the box gently beside him
upon the table; then from beneath a large, green blotter drew forth some
scribbled sheets. These he placed before him, and, taking infinite pains
with his handwriting, slowly copied:</p>
<p>DEAR LOLA—I presume when you are reading these lines it will be this
afternoon and you will be on the train moving rapidly away from this old
place here farther and farther from it all. As I sit here at my old desk
and look back upon it all while I am writing this farewell letter I hope
when you are reading it you also will look back upon it all and think of
one you called (Alias) Little Boy Baxter. As I sit here this morning that
you are going away at last I look back and I cannot rember any summer in
my whole life which has been like this summer, because a great change has
come over me this summer. If you would like to know what this means it was
something like I said when John Watson got there yesterday afternoon and
interrupted what I said. May you enjoy this candy and think of the giver.
I will put something in with this letter. It is something maybe you would
like to have and in exchange I would give all I possess for one of you if
you would send it to me when you get home. Please do this for now my heart
is braking. Yours sincerely, WILLIAM S. BAXTER (ALIAS) LITTLE BOY BAXTER.</p>
<p>William opened the box of candy and placed the letter upon the top layer
of chocolates. Upon the letter he placed a small photograph (wrapped in
tissue-paper) of himself. Then, with a pair of scissors, he trimmed an
oblong of white cardboard to fit into the box. Upon this piece of
cardboard he laboriously wrote, copying from a tortured, inky sheet before
him:</p>
<p>IN DREAM<br/>
BY WILLIAM S. BAXTER<br/>
<br/>
The sunset light<br/>
Fades into night<br/>
But never will I forget<br/>
The smile that haunts me yet<br/>
Through the future four long years<br/>
I hope you will remember with tears<br/>
Whate'er my rank or station<br/>
Whilst receiving my education<br/>
Though far away you seem<br/>
I will see thee in dream.<br/></p>
<p>He placed his poem between the photograph and the letter, closed the box,
and tied the tissue-paper about it again with the blue ribbon. Throughout
these rites (they were rites both in spirit and in manner) he was subject
to little catchings of the breath, half gulp, half sigh. But the dolorous
tokens passed, and he sat with elbows upon the table, his chin upon his
hands, reverie in his eyes. Tragedy had given way to gentler pathos;—beyond
question, something had measurably soothed him. Possibly, even in this
hour preceding the hour of parting, he knew a little of that proud
amazement which any poet is entitled to feel over each new lyric miracle
just wrought.</p>
<p>Perhaps he was helped, too, by wondering what Miss Pratt would think of
him when she read "In Dream," on the train that afternoon. For reasons
purely intuitive, and decidedly without foundation in fact, he was
satisfied that no rival farewell poem would be offered her, and so it may
be that he thought "In Dream" might show her at last, in one blaze of
light, what her eyes had sometimes fleetingly intimated she did perceive
in part—the difference between William and such every-day, rather
well-meaning, fairly good-hearted people as Joe Bullitt, Wallace Banks,
Johnnie Watson, and others. Yes, when she came to read "In Dream," and to
"look back upon it all," she would surely know—at last!</p>
<p>And then, when the future four long years (while receiving his education)
had passed, he would go to her. He would go to her, and she would take him
by the hand, and lead him to her father, and say, "Father, this is
William."</p>
<p>But William would turn to her, and, with the old, dancing light in his
eyes, "No, Lola," he would say, "not William, but Ickle Boy Baxter! Always
and always, just that for you; oh, my dear!"</p>
<p>And then, as in story and film and farce and the pleasanter kinds of
drama, her father would say, with kindly raillery, "Well, when you two
young people get through, you'll find me in the library, where I have a
pretty good BUSINESS proposition to lay before YOU, young man!"</p>
<p>And when the white-waistcoated, white-side-burned old man had, chuckling,
left the room, William would slowly lift his arms; but Lola would move
back from him a step—only a step—and after laying a finger
archly upon her lips to check him, "Wait, sir!" she would say. "I have a
question to ask you, sir!"</p>
<p>"What question, Lola?"</p>
<p>"THIS question, sir!" she would reply. "In all that summer, sir, so long
ago, why did you never tell me what you WERE, until I had gone away and it
was too late to show you what I felt? Ah, Ickle Boy Baxter, I never
understood until I looked back upon it all, after I had read 'In Dream,'
on the train that day! THEN I KNEW!" "And now, Lola?" William would say.
"Do you understand me, NOW?"</p>
<p>Shyly she would advance the one short step she had put between them, while
he, with lifted, yearning arms, this time destined to no disappointment——</p>
<p>At so vital a moment did Mrs. Baxter knock at his door and consoling
reverie cease to minister unto William. Out of the rosy sky he dropped,
falling miles in an instant, landing with a bump. He started, placed the
sacred box out of sight, and spoke gruffly.</p>
<p>"What you want?"</p>
<p>"I'm not coming in, Willie," said his mother. "I just wanted to know—I
thought maybe you were looking out of the window and noticed where those
children went."</p>
<p>"What children?"</p>
<p>"Jane and that little girl from across the street—Kirsted, her name
must be."</p>
<p>"No. I did not."</p>
<p>"I just wondered," Mrs. Baxter said, timidly. "Genesis thinks he heard the
little Kirsted girl telling Jane she had plenty of money for carfare. He
thinks they went somewhere on a street-car. I thought maybe you noticed
wheth—"</p>
<p>"I told you I did not."</p>
<p>"All right," she said, placatively. "I didn't mean to bother you, dear."</p>
<p>Following this there was a silence; but no sound of receding footsteps
indicated Mrs. Baxter's departure from the other side of the closed door.</p>
<p>"Well, what you WANT?" William shouted.</p>
<p>"Nothing—nothing at all," said the compassionate voice. "I just
thought I'd have lunch a little later than usual; not till half past one.
That is if—well, I thought probably you meant to go to the station
to see Miss Pratt off on the one-o'clock train."</p>
<p>Even so friendly an interest as this must have appeared to the quivering
William an intrusion in his affairs, for he demanded, sharply:</p>
<p>"How'd you find out she's going at one o'clock?"</p>
<p>"Why—why, Jane mentioned it," Mrs. Baxter replied, with obvious
timidity. "Jane said—"</p>
<p>She was interrupted by the loud, desperate sound of William's fist smiting
his writing-table, so sensitive was his condition. "This is just
unbearable!" he cried. "Nobody's business is safe from that child!"</p>
<p>"Why, Willie, I don't see how it matters if—"</p>
<p>He uttered a cry. "No! Nothing matters! Nothing matters at all! Do you
s'pose I want that child, with her insults, discussing when Miss Pratt is
or is not going away? Don't you know there are SOME things that have no
business to be talked about by every Tom, Dick, and Harry?"</p>
<p>"Yes, dear," she said. "I understand, of course. Jane only told me she met
Mr. Parcher on the street, and he mentioned that Miss Pratt was going at
one o'clock to-day. That's all I—"</p>
<p>"You say you understand," he wailed, shaking his head drearily at the
closed door, "and yet, even on such a day as this, you keep TALKING! Can't
you see sometimes there's times when a person can't stand to—"</p>
<p>"Yes, Willie," Mrs. Baxter interposed, hurriedly. "Of course! I'm going
now. I have to go hunt up those children, anyway. You try to be back for
lunch at half past one—and don't worry, dear; you really WILL be all
right!"</p>
<p>She departed, a sigh from the abyss following her as she went down the
hall. Her comforting words meant nothing pleasant to her son, who felt
that her optimism was out of place and tactless. He had no intention to be
"all right," and he desired nobody to interfere with his misery.</p>
<p>He went to his mirror, and, gazing long—long and piercingly—at
the William there limned, enacted, almost unconsciously, a little scene of
parting. The look of suffering upon the mirrored face slowly altered; in
its place came one still sorrowful, but tempered with sweet indulgence. He
stretched out his hand, as if he set it upon a head at about the height of
his shoulder.</p>
<p>"Yes, it may mean—it may mean forever!" he said in a low, tremulous
voice. "Little girl, we MUST be brave!"</p>
<p>And the while his eyes gazed into the mirror, they became expressive of a
momentary pleased surprise, as if, even in the arts of sorrow, he found
himself doing better than he knew. But his sorrow was none the less
genuine because of that.</p>
<p>Then he noticed the ink upon his forehead, and went away to wash. When he
returned he did an unusual thing—he brushed his coat thoroughly,
removing it for this special purpose. After that, he earnestly combed and
brushed his hair, and retied his tie. Next, he took from a drawer two
clean handkerchiefs. He placed one in his breast pocket, part of the
colored border of the handkerchief being left on exhibition, and with the
other he carefully wiped his shoes. Finally, he sawed it back and forth
across them, and, with a sigh, languidly dropped it upon the floor, where
it remained.</p>
<p>Returning to the mirror, he again brushed his hair—he went so far,
this time, as to brush his eyebrows, which seemed not much altered by the
operation. Suddenly, he was deeply affected by something seen in the
glass.</p>
<p>"By George!" he exclaimed aloud.</p>
<p>Seizing a small hand-mirror, he placed it in juxtaposition to his right
eye, and closely studied his left profile as exhibited in the larger
mirror. Then he examined his right profile, subjecting it to a like
scrutiny emotional, yet attentive and prolonged.</p>
<p>"By George!" he exclaimed, again. "By George!"</p>
<p>He had made a discovery. There was a downy shadow upon his upper lip. What
he had just found out was that this down could be seen projecting beyond
the line of his lip, like a tiny nimbus. It could be seen in PROFILE.</p>
<p>"By GEORGE!" William exclaimed.</p>
<p>He was still occupied with the two mirrors when his mother again tapped
softly upon his door, rousing him as from a dream (brief but engaging) to
the heavy realities of that day.</p>
<p>"What you want now?"</p>
<p>"I won't come in," said Mrs. Baxter. "I just came to see."</p>
<p>"See what?"</p>
<p>"I wondered—I thought perhaps you needed something. I knew your
watch was out of order—"</p>
<p>"F'r 'evan's sake what if it is?"</p>
<p>She offered a murmur of placative laughter as her apology, and said:
"Well, I just thought I'd tell you—because if you did intend going
to the station, I thought you probably wouldn't want to miss it and get
there too late. I've got your hat here all nicely brushed for you. It's
nearly twenty minutes of one, Willie."</p>
<p>"WHAT?"</p>
<p>"Yes, it is. It's—"</p>
<p>She had no further speech with him.</p>
<p>Breathless, William flung open his door, seized the hat, racketed down the
stairs, and out through the front door, which he left open behind him.
Eight seconds later he returned at a gallop, hurtled up the stairs and
into his room, emerging instantly with something concealed under his coat.
Replying incoherently to his mother's inquiries, he fell down the stairs
as far as the landing, used the impetus thus given as a help to greater
speed for the rest of the descent—and passed out of hearing.</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter sighed, and went to a window in her own room, and looked out.</p>
<p>William was already more than half-way to the next corner, where there was
a car-line that ran to the station; but the distance was not too great for
Mrs. Baxter to comprehend the nature of the symmetrical white parcel now
carried in his right hand. Her face became pensive as she gazed after the
flying slender figure:—there came to her mind the recollection of a
seventeen-year-old boy who had brought a box of candy (a small one, like
William's) to the station, once, long ago, when she had been visiting in
another town. For just a moment she thought of that boy she had known, so
many years ago, and a smile came vaguely upon her lips. She wondered what
kind of a woman he had married, and how many children he had—and
whether he was a widower——</p>
<p>The fleeting recollection passed; she turned from the window and shook her
head, puzzled.</p>
<p>"Now where on earth could Jane and that little Kirsted girl have gone?"
she murmured.</p>
<p>... At the station, William, descending from the street-car, found that he
had six minutes to spare. Reassured of so much by the great clock in the
station tower, he entered the building, and, with calm and dignified
steps, crossed the large waiting-room. Those calm and dignified steps were
taken by feet which little betrayed the tremulousness of the knees above
them. Moreover, though William's face was red, his expression—cold,
and concentrated upon high matters—scorned the stranger, and warned
the lower classes that the mission of this bit of gentry was not to them.</p>
<p>With but one sweeping and repellent glance over the canaille present, he
made sure that the person he sought was not in the waiting-room.
Therefore, he turned to the doors which gave admission to the tracks, but
before he went out he paused for an instant of displeasure. Hard by the
doors stood a telephone-booth, and from inside this booth a little girl of
nine or ten was peering eagerly out at William, her eyes just above the
lower level of the glass window in the door.</p>
<p>Even a prospect thus curtailed revealed her as a smudged and dusty little
girl; and, evidently, her mother must have been preoccupied with some
important affair that day; but to William she suggested nothing familiar.
As his glance happened to encounter hers, the peering eyes grew instantly
brighter with excitement;—she exposed her whole countenance at the
window, and impulsively made a face at him.</p>
<p>William had not the slightest recollection of ever having seen her before.</p>
<p>He gave her one stern look and went on; though he felt that something
ought to be done. The affair was not a personal one—patently, this
was a child who played about the station and amused herself by making
faces at everybody who passed the telephone-booth—still, the
authorities ought not to allow it. People did not come to the station to
be insulted.</p>
<p>Three seconds later the dusty-faced little girl and her moue were sped
utterly from William's mind. For, as the doors swung together behind him,
he saw Miss Pratt. There were no gates nor iron barriers to obscure the
view; there was no train-shed to darken the air. She was at some distance,
perhaps two hundred feet, along the tracks, where the sleeping-cars of the
long train would stop. But there she stood, mistakable for no other on
this wide earth!</p>
<p>There she stood—a glowing little figure in the hazy September
sunlight, her hair an amber mist under the adorable little hat; a small
bunch of violets at her waist; a larger bunch of fragrant but less
expensive sweet peas in her right hand; half a dozen pink roses in her
left; her little dog Flopit in the crook of one arm; and a one-pound box
of candy in the crook of the other—ineffable, radiant, starry, there
she stood!</p>
<p>Near her also stood her young hostess, and Wallace Banks, Johnnie Watson,
and Joe Bullitt—three young gentlemen in a condition of solemn
tensity. Miss Parcher saw William as he emerged from the station building,
and she waved her parasol in greeting, attracting the attention of the
others to him, so that they: all turned and stared.</p>
<p>Seventeen sometimes finds it embarrassing (even in a state of deep
emotion) to walk two hundred feet, or thereabout, toward a group of people
who steadfastly watch the long approach. And when the watching group
contains the lady of all the world before whom one wishes to appear most
debonair, and contains not only her, but several rivals, who, though
FAIRLY good-hearted, might hardly be trusted to neglect such an
opportunity to murmur something jocular about one—No, it cannot be
said that William appeared to be wholly without self-consciousness.</p>
<p>In fancy he had prophesied for this moment something utterly different. He
had seen himself parting from her, the two alone as within a cloud. He had
seen himself gently placing his box of candy in her hands, some of his
fingers just touching some of hers and remaining thus lightly in contact
to the very last. He had seen himself bending toward the sweet blonde head
to murmur the few last words of simple eloquence, while her eyes lifted in
mysterious appeal to his—and he had put no other figures, not even
Miss Parcher's, into this picture.</p>
<p>Parting is the most dramatic moment in young love, and if there is one
time when the lover wishes to present a lofty but graceful appearance it
is at the last. To leave with the loved one, for recollection, a final
picture of manly dignity in sorrow—that, above all things, is the
lover's desire. And yet, even at the beginning of William's
two-hundred-foot advance (later so much discussed) he felt the heat
surging over his ears, and, as he took off his hat, thinking to wave it
jauntily in reply to Miss Parcher, he made but an uncertain gesture of it,
so that he wished he had not tried it. Moreover, he had covered less than
a third of the distance, when he became aware that all of the group were
staring at him with unaccountable eagerness, and had begun to laugh.</p>
<p>William felt certain that his attire was in no way disordered, nor in
itself a cause for laughter;—all of these people had often seen him
dressed as he was to-day, and had preserved their gravity. But, in spite
of himself, he took off his hat again, and looked to see if anything about
it might explain this mirth, which, at his action, increased. Nay, the
laughter began to be shared by strangers; and some set down their
hand-luggage for greater pleasure in what they saw.</p>
<p>William's inward state became chaotic.</p>
<p>He tried to smile carelessly, to prove his composure, but he found that he
had lost almost all control over his features. He had no knowledge of his
actual expression except that it hurt him. In desperation he fell back
upon hauteur; he managed to frown, and walked proudly. At that they
laughed the more, Wallace Banks rudely pointing again and again at
William; and not till the oncoming sufferer reached a spot within twenty
feet of these delighted people did he grasp the significance of Wallace's
repeated gesture of pointing. Even then he understood only when the
gesture was supplemented by half-articulate shouts:</p>
<p>"Behind you! Look BEHIND you!"</p>
<p>The stung youth turned.</p>
<p>There, directly behind him, he beheld an exclusive little procession
consisting of two damsels in single file, the first soiled with
house-moving, the second with apple sauce.</p>
<p>For greater caution they had removed their shoes; and each damsel, as she
paraded, dangled from each far-extended hand a shoe. And both damsels,
whether beneath apple sauce or dust smudge, were suffused with the rapture
of a great mockery.</p>
<p>They were walking with their stummicks out o' joint.</p>
<p>At sight of William's face they squealed. They turned and ran. They got
themselves out of sight.</p>
<p>Simultaneously, the air filled with solid thunder and the pompous train
shook the ground. Ah, woe's the word! This was the thing that meant to
bear away the golden girl and honeysuckle of the world—meant to, and
would, not abating one iron second!</p>
<p>Now a porter had her hand-bag.</p>
<p>Dear Heaven! to be a porter—yes, a colored one! What of that, NOW?
Just to be a simple porter, and journey with her to the far, strange pearl
among cities whence she had come!</p>
<p>The gentle porter bowed her toward the steps of his car; but first she
gave Flopit into the hands of May Parcher, for a moment, and whispered a
word to Wallace Banks; then to Joe Bullitt; then to Johnnie Watson;—then
she ran to William.</p>
<p>She took his hand.</p>
<p>"Don't forget!" she whispered. "Don't forget Lola!"</p>
<p>He stood stock-still. His face was blank, his hand limp. He said nothing.</p>
<p>She enfolded May Parcher, kissed her devotedly; then, with Flopit once
more under her arm, she ran and jumped upon the steps just as the train
began to move. She stood there, on the lowest step, slowly gliding away
from them, and in her eyes there was a sparkle of tears, left, it may be,
from her laughter at poor William's pageant with Jane and Rannie Kirsted—or,
it may be, not.</p>
<p>She could not wave to her friends, in answer to their gestures of
farewell, for her arms were too full of Flopit and roses and candy and
sweet peas; but she kept nodding to them in a way that showed them how
much she thanked them for being sorry she was going—and made it
clear that she was sorry, too, and loved them all.</p>
<p>"Good-by!" she meant.</p>
<p>Faster she glided; the engine passed from sight round a curve beyond a
culvert, but for a moment longer they could see the little figure upon the
steps—and, to the very last glimpse they had of her, the small,
golden head was still nodding "Good-by!" Then those steps whereon she
stood passed in their turn beneath the culvert, and they saw her no more.</p>
<p>Lola Pratt was gone!</p>
<p>Wet-eyed, her young hostess of the long summer turned away, and stumbled
against William. "Why, Willie Baxter!" she cried, blinking at him.</p>
<p>The last car of the train had rounded the curve and disappeared, but
William was still waving farewell—not with his handkerchief, but
with a symmetrical, one-pound parcel, wrapped in white tissue-paper,
girdled with blue ribbon.</p>
<p>"Never mind!" said May Parcher. "Let's all walk Up-town together, and talk
about her on the way, and we'll go by the express-office, and you can send
your candy to her by express, Willie."</p>
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