<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_93'></SPAN>93</span>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<p>The great dining-room at Hilcrest, the old
Spencer homestead, was perhaps the
pleasantest room in the house. The
house itself crowned the highest hill that overlooked
the town, and its dining-room windows and the
veranda without, commanded a view of the river
for miles, just where the valley was the greenest
and the most beautiful. On the other side of the
veranda which ran around three sides of the house,
one might see the town with its myriad roofs and
tall chimneys; but although these same tall chimneys
represented the wealth that made possible the
great Spencer estate, yet it was the side of the
veranda overlooking the green valley that was the
most popular with the family. It was said, to be
sure, that old Jacob Spencer, who built the house,
and who laid the foundations for the Spencer
millions, had preferred the side that overlooked the
town; and that he spent long hours gloating over
the visible results of his thrift and enterprise. But
old Jacob was dead now, and his son’s sons reigned
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_94'></SPAN>94</span>
instead; and his son’s sons, no matter how much
they might value the whiz and whir and smoke of
the town, preferred, when at rest, to gaze upon
green hills and far-reaching meadows. This was,
indeed, typical of the Spencer code—the farther
away they could get from the oil that made the
machinery of life run easily and noiselessly, the
better pleased they were.</p>
<p>The dining-room looked particularly pleasant
this July evening. A gentle breeze stirred the
curtains at the open windows, and the setting sun
peeped through the vines outside and glistened
on the old family plate. Three generations of
Spencers looked down from the walls on the two
men and the woman sitting at the great mahogany
table. The two men and the woman, however,
were not looking at the sunlight, the vines, or the
swaying curtains; they were looking at each
other, and their eyes were troubled and questioning.</p>
<p>“You say she is coming next week?” asked
the younger man, glancing at the letter in the
other’s hand.</p>
<p>“Yes. Tuesday afternoon.”</p>
<p>“But, Frank, this is so—sudden,” remonstrated
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_95'></SPAN>95</span>
the young fellow, laughing a little as he uttered
the trite phrase. “How does it happen that I’ve
heard so little of this young lady who is to be
so unceremoniously dropped into our midst next
Tuesday?”</p>
<p>Frank Spencer made an impatient gesture that
showed how great was his perturbation.</p>
<p>“Come, come, Ned, don’t be foolish,” he protested.
“You know very well that your brother’s
stepdaughter has been my ward for a dozen
years.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but that is all I know,” rejoined the
young man, quietly. “I have never seen her,
and scarcely ever heard of her, and yet you
expect me to take as a matter of course this
strange young woman who is none of our kith
nor kin, and yet who is to be one of us from
henceforth forevermore!”</p>
<p>“The boy is right,” interposed the low voice of
the woman across the table. “Ned doesn’t know
anything about her. He was a mere child himself
when it all happened, and he’s been away
from home most of the time since. For that matter,
we don’t know much about her ourselves.”</p>
<p>“We certainly don’t,” sighed Frank Spencer;
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_96'></SPAN>96</span>
then he raised his head and squared his shoulders.
“See here, good people, this will never do
in the world,” he asserted with sudden authority.
“I have offered the hospitality of this house to a
homeless, orphan girl, and she has accepted it.
There is nothing for us to do now but to try to
make her happy. After all, we needn’t worry—it
may turn out that she will make us happy.”</p>
<p>“But what is she? How does she look?” catechized
Ned.</p>
<p>His brother shook his head.</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” he replied simply.</p>
<p>“You don’t know! But, surely you have seen
her!”</p>
<p>“Yes, oh, yes, I have seen her, once or twice,
but Margaret Kendall is not a girl whom to see
is to know; besides, the circumstances were such
that—well, I might as well tell the story from the
beginning, particularly as you know so little of it
yourself.”</p>
<p>Frank paused, and looked at the letter in his
hand. After a minute he laid it gently down.
When he spoke his voice was not quite steady.</p>
<p>“Our brother Harry was a physician, as you
know, Ned. You were twelve years old when he
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_97'></SPAN>97</span>
married a widow by the name of Kendall who
lived in Houghtonsville where he had been practising.
As it chanced, none of us went to the
wedding. You were taken suddenly ill, and
neither Della nor myself would leave you, and
father was in Bermuda that winter for his health.
Mrs. Kendall had a daughter, Margaret, about
ten years old, who was at school somewhere in
the Berkshires. It was to that school that I went
when the terrible news came that Harry and his
new wife had lost their lives in that awful railroad
accident. That was the first time that I saw
Margaret.</p>
<p>“The poor child was, of course, heartbroken
and inconsolable; but her grief took a peculiar
turn. The mere sight of me drove her almost
into hysterics. She would have nothing whatever
to do with me, or with any of her stepfather’s
people. She reasoned that if her mother had not
married, there would have been no wedding journey;
and if there had been no wedding journey
there would have been no accident, and that her
mother would then have been alive, and well.</p>
<p>“Arguments, pleadings, and entreaties were in
vain. She would not listen to me, or even see
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_98'></SPAN>98</span>
me. She held her hands before her face and
screamed if I so much as came into the room.
She was nothing but a child, of course, and not
even a normal one at that, for she had had a very
strange life. At five she was lost in New York
City, and for four years she lived on the streets
and in the sweat shops, enduring almost unbelievable
poverty and hardships.”</p>
<p>“By Jove!” exclaimed Ned under his breath.</p>
<p>“It was only seven or eight months before the
wedding that she was found,” went on Frank,
“and of course the influence of the wild life she
had led was still with her more or less, and made
her not easily subject to control. There was
nothing for me to do but to leave the poor little
thing where she was, particularly as there seemed
to be no other place for her. She would not
come with me, and she had no people of her
own to whom she could turn for love and sympathy.</p>
<p>“As you know, poor Harry was conscious for
some hours after the accident, long enough to
make his will and dictate the letter to me, leaving
Margaret to my care—boy though I was. I was
only twenty, you see; but, really, there was no
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_99'></SPAN>99</span>
one else to whom he could leave her. That was
something over thirteen years ago. Margaret
must be about twenty-three now.”</p>
<p>“And you’ve not seen her since?” There was
keen reproach in Ned’s voice.</p>
<p>Frank smiled.</p>
<p>“Yes, I’ve seen her twice,” he replied. “And
of course I’ve written to her many times, and have
always kept in touch with those she was with.
She stayed at the Berkshire school five years;
then—with some fear and trembling, I own—I
went to see her. I found a grave-eyed little miss
who answered my questions with studied politeness,
and who agreed without comment to the
proposition that I place her in a school where she
might remain until she was ready for college—should
she elect to go to college.”</p>
<p>“But her vacations—did she never come then?”
questioned Ned.</p>
<p>“No. At first I did not ask her, of course. It
was out of the question, as she was feeling. Some
one of her teachers always looked out for her.
They all pitied her, and naturally did everything
they could for her, as did her mates at school.
Later, when I did dare to ask her to come here,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_100'></SPAN>100</span>
she always refused. She wrote me stiff little notes
in which she informed me that she was to spend
the holidays with some Blanche or Dorothy or
Mabel of her acquaintance.</p>
<p>“She was nineteen when I saw her again. I
found now a charming, graceful girl, with peculiarly
haunting blue eyes, and heavy coils of
bronze-gold hair that kinked and curled about
her little pink ears in a most distracting fashion.
Even now, though, she would not come to my
home. She was going abroad with friends. The
party included an irreproachable chaperon, so of
course I had nothing to say; while as for money—she
had all of her mother’s not inconsiderable
fortune besides everything that had been her stepfather’s;
so of course there was no question on
that score.</p>
<p>“In the fall she entered college, and there she
has been ever since, spending her vacations as
usual with friends, generally traveling. When
she came of age she specially requested me to
make no change in her affairs, but to regard herself
as my ward for the present, just as she had
been. So I still call myself her guardian. This
June was her graduation. I had forgotten the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_101'></SPAN>101</span>
fact until I received the little engraved invitation
a week or two ago. I thought of running down
for it, but I couldn’t get away very well, and—well,
I didn’t go, that’s all. But I did write and
ask her to make this house her home, and here is
her reply. She thanks me, and will come next
Tuesday. There! now you have it. You know
all that I do.” And Frank Spencer leaned back
in his chair with a long sigh.</p>
<p>“But I don’t know yet what she’s like,” objected
Ned.</p>
<p>“Neither do I.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but you’ve seen her.”</p>
<p>“Yes; and how? Do you suppose that those
two or three meetings were very illuminating?
No. I’ve been told this, however,” he added.
“It seems that immediately after her return to
her mother’s home she had the most absurd
quixotic notions about sharing all she had with
every ragamuffin in New York. She even carried
her distress over their condition to such an
extent that her mother really feared for her reason.
All her teachers, therefore, were instructed to keep
from her all further knowledge of poverty and
trouble; and particularly to instil into her mind
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_102'></SPAN>102</span>
the fact that there was really in the world a great
deal of pleasure and happiness.”</p>
<p>Over across the table Mrs. Merideth shivered a
little.</p>
<p>“Dear me!” she sighed. “I do hope the child
is well over those notions. I shouldn’t want her
to mix up here with the mill people. I never did
quite like those settlement women, anyway, and
only think what might happen with one in one’s
own family!”</p>
<p>“I don’t think I should worry, sister sweet,”
laughed Frank. “I haven’t seen much of the
young lady, but I think I have seen enough for
that. I fancy the teachers succeeded in their mission.
As near as I can judge, Miss Margaret
Kendall does not resemble your dreaded ‘settlement
worker’ in the least. However, we’ll wait
and see.”</p>
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