Grant spent his Sunday forenoon in an exhaustive house-cleaning campaign. Bachelor life on the farm is not conducive to domestic delicacy, and although Grant had never abandoned the fundamentals he had allowed his interpretation of essential cleanliness to become somewhat liberal. The result was that the day of rest usually confronted him with a considerable array of unwashed pots and pans and other culinary utensils. To-day, while the tawny autumn hills seemed to fairly heave and sigh with contentment under a splendor of opalescent sunshine, he scoured the contents of his kitchen until they shone; washed the floor; shook the rugs from the living-room and swept the corners, even behind the gramophone; cleared the ashes from the hearth and generally set his house in order, for was not she to call upon him that evening on her way to town, and was not little Wilson—he of the high adventures with teddy-bear and knife and pig—to spend the night with him?
When he was able to view his handiwork with a feeling that even feminine eyes would find nothing to offend, Grant did an unwonted thing. He unlocked the whim-room and opened the windows that the fresh air might play through the silent chamber. To the west the mountains looked down in sombre placidity as they had looked down every bright autumn morning since the dawn of time, their shoulders bathed in purple mist and their snow-crowned summits shining in the sun. For a long time Grant stood drinking in the scene; the fertile valley lying with its square farms like a checker-board of the gods, with its round little lakes beating back the white sunshine like coins from the currency of the Creator; the ruddy copper-colored patches of ripe wheat, and drowsy herds motionless upon the receding hills; the blue-green ribbon of river with its yellow fringes of cottonwood and bluffs of forbidding spruce, and behind and over all the silent, majestic mountains. It was a sight to make the soul of man rise up and say, “I know I stand on the heights of the Eternal!” Then as his eyes followed the course of the river Grant picked out a column of thin blue smoke, and knew that Zen was cooking her Sunday dinner.
The thought turned him to his dusting of the whim-room, and afterwards to his own kitchen. When he had lunched and dressed he took a stroll over the hills, thinking a great deal, but finding no answer. On his return he descried the familiar figure of Linder in a semi-recumbent position on the porch, and Linder’s well-worn car in the yard.
“How goes it, Linder?” he said, cheerily, as he came up. “Is the Big Idea going to fructify?”
“The Big Idea seems to be all right. You planned it well.”
“Thanks. But is it going to be self-supporting—I mean in the matter of motive power. Would it run if you and I and Murdoch were wiped out?”
“Everything must have a head.”
“Democracy must find its own head—must grow it out of the materials supplied. If it doesn’t do that it’s a failure, and the Big Idea will end in being the Big Fizzle. That’s why I’m leaving it so severely alone—I want to see which way it’s headed.”
“I could suggest another reason,” said Linder, pointedly.
“Another reason for what?”
“For your leaving it so severely alone.”
“What are you driving at?” demanded Grant, somewhat petulantly. “You are in a taciturn mood to-day, Linder.”
“Perhaps I am, Grant, and if so it comes from wondering how a man with as much brains as you have can be such a damned fool upon occasion.”
“Drop the riddles, Linder. Let me have it in the face.”
“It’s just like this, Grant, old boy,” said Linder, getting up and putting his hand on his friend’s shoulder, “I feel that I still have an interest in the chap who saved all of me except what this empty sleeve stands for, and it’s that interest which makes me speak about something which you may say is none of my business. I was out here Monday night to see you, and you were not at home. I came out again Wednesday, and you were not at home. I came last night and you were not at home, and had not come back at midnight. Your horses were in the barn; you were not far away.”
“Why didn’t you telephone me?”
“If I hadn’t cared more for you than I do for my job and the Big Idea thrown in I could have settled it that way. But, Grant, I do.”
“I believe you. But why this sudden worry over me? I was merely spending the evening at a neighbor’s.”
“Yes—at Transley’s. Transley was in town, and Mrs. Transley is—not responsible—where you are concerned.”
“Linder!”
“I saw it all that night at dinner there. Some things are plain to everyone—except those most involved. Now it’s not my job to say to you what’s right and wrong, but the way it looks to me is this: what’s the use of setting up a new code of morality about money which concerns, after all, only some of us, if you’re going to knock down those things which concern all of us?”
Grant regarded his foreman for some time without answering. “I appreciate your frankness, Linder,” he said at length. “Your friendship, which I can never question, gives you that privilege. Man to man, I’m going to be equally frank with you. To begin with, I suppose you will admit that Y.D.‘s daughter is a strong character, a woman quite capable of directing her own affairs?”
“The stronger the engine the bigger the smash if there’s a wreck.”
“It’s not a case of wrecking; it’s a case of trying to save something out of the wreck. Convention, Linder, is a torture-monger; it binds men and women to the stake of propriety and bids them smile while it snuffs out all the soul that’s in them. We have pitted ourselves against convention in economic affairs; shall we not—”
“No! It was pure unselfishness which led you into the Big Idea. That isn’t what’s leading you now.”
“Well, let me put it another way. Transley is a clever man of affairs. He knows how to accomplish his ends. He applied the methods—somewhat modified for the occasion—of a landshark in winning his wife. He makes a great appearance of unselfishness, but in reality he is selfish to the core. He lavishes money on her to satisfy his own vanity, but as for her finer nature, the real Zen, her soul if you like—he doesn’t even know she has one. He obtained possession by false pretences. Which is the more moral thing—to leave him in possession, or to throw him out? Didn’t you yourself hear him say that men who are worth their salt take what they want?”
“Since when did you let him set YOUR standards?”
“That’s hardly fair.”
“I think it is. I think, too, that you are arguing against your own convictions. Well, I’ve had my say. I deliberately came out to-day without Murdoch so that I might have it. You would be quite justified in firing me for what I’ve done. But now I’m through, and no matter what may happen, remember, Linder will never have suspected anything.”
“That’s like you, old chap. We’ll drop it at that, but I must explain that Zen is going to town to-night to meet Transley, and is leaving the boy with me. It is an event in my young life, and I have house-cleaned for it appropriately. Come inside and admire my handiwork.”
Linder admired as he was directed, and then the two men fell into a discussion of business matters. Eventually Grant cooked supper, and just as they had finished Mrs. Transley drove up in her motor.
“Here we are!” she cried, cheerily. “Glad to see you, Mr. Linder. Wilson has his teddy-bear and his knife and his pyjamas, and is a little put out, I think, that I wouldn’t let him bring the pig.”
“I shall try and make up the deficiency,” said Grant, smiling broadly, as the boy climbed to his shoulder. “Won’t you come in? Linder, among his other accomplishments learned in France, is an excellent chaperon.”
“Thank you, no; I must get along. I shall call early in the morning, so that you will not be delayed on Wilson’s account.”
“No need of that; he can ride to the field with me on Prince. He is a great help with the plowing.”
“I’m sure.” She stepped up to Grant and drew the boy’s face down to hers. “Good-bye, dear; be a good boy,” she whispered, and Wilson waved kisses to her as the motor sped down the road.
Linder took his departure soon after, and Grant was surprised to find himself almost embarrassed in the presence of his little guest. The embarrassment, however, was all on his side. Wilson was greatly interested in the strange things in the house, and investigated them with the romantic thoroughness of his years. Grant placed a collection of war trophies that had no more fight in them at the child’s disposal, and he played about until it was time to go to bed.
Where to start on the bedtime preparations was a puzzle, but Wilson himself came to Grant’s aid with explicit instructions about buttons and pins. Grant fervently hoped the boy would be able to reverse the process in the morning, otherwise—
Suddenly, with a little dexterous movement, the child divested himself of all his clothing, and rushed into a far corner.
“You have to catch me now,” he shouted in high glee. “One, two—”
Evidently it was a game, and Grant entered into the spirit of it, finally running Wilson to earth on the farthest corner of the kitchen table. To adjust the pyjamas was, as Grant confessed, a bigger job than harnessing a four-horse team, but at length it was completed.
“You must hear my prayer, Uncle Man-on-the-Hill,” said the boy. “You have to sit down in a chair.”
Grant sat down and with a strange mixture of emotions drew the little chap between his knees as he listened to the long-forgotten prattle. He felt his fingers running through Wilson’s hair as other fingers, now long, long turned to dust, had once run through his....
At the third line the boy stopped. “You have to tell me now,” he prompted.
“But I can’t, Willie; I have forgotten.”
“Huh, you don’t know much,” the child commented, and glibly quoted the remaining lines. “And God bless Daddy and Mamma and teddy-bear and Uncle Man-on-the-Hill and the pig. Amen,” he concluded, accompanying the last word with a jump which landed him fairly in Grant’s lap. His little arms went up about his friend’s neck, and his little soft cheek rested against a tanned and weather-beaten one. Slowly Grant’s arms closed about the warm, lithe body and pressed it to his in a new passion, strange and holy. Then he led him to the whim-room, turned down the white sheets in which no form had ever lain and placed the boy between them, snuggled his teddy down by his side and set his knife properly in view upon the dresser. And then he leaned down again and kissed the little face, and whispered, “Good night, little boy; God keep you safe to-night, and always.” And suddenly Grant realized that he had been praying....
He withdrew softly, and only partly closed the door; then he chose a seat where he could see the little figure lying peacefully on the white bed. The last shafts of the setting sun were falling in amber wedges across the room. He picked up a book, thinking to read, but he could not keep his attention on the page; he found his mind wandering back into the long-forgotten chambers of its beginning, conjuring up from the faint recollections of infancy visions of the mother he had hardly known.... After a while he tip-toed to the whim-room door and found that Wilson, with his arms firmly clasped about his teddy-bear, was deep in the sleep of childhood.
“The dear little chap,” he murmured. “I must watch by him to-night. It would be unspeakable if anything should happen him while he is under my care.”
He felt a sense of warmth, almost a smothering sensation, and raised his hand to his forehead. It came down covered with perspiration.
“It’s amazingly close,” he said, and walked to one of the French windows opening to the west. The sun had gone down, and a brooding darkness lay over all the valley, but far up in the sky he could trace the outline of a cloud. Above, the stars shone with an unwonted brightness, but below all was a bank of blue-black darkness. The air was intensely still; in the silence he could hear the wash of the river. Grant reflected that never before had he heard the wash of the river at that distance.
“Looks like a storm,” he commented, casually, and suddenly felt something tighten about his heart. The storms of the foothill country, which occasionally sweep out of the mountains and down the valleys on the shortest notice, had no terror for him; he had sat on horseback under an oilskin slicker through the worst of them; but to-night! Even as he watched, the distant glare of lightning threw the heaving proportions of the thundercloud into sharp relief.
He turned to his chair, but found himself pacing the living-room with an altogether inexplicable nervousness. He had held the line many a bad night at the Front while Death spat out of the darkness on every hand; he had smoked in the faces of his men to cover his own fear and to shame them out of theirs; he had run the whole gamut of the emotion of the trenches, but tonight something more awesome than any engine of man was gathering its forces in the deep valleys. He shook himself to throw off the morbidness that was settling upon him; he laughed, and the echo came back haunting from the silent corners of the house. Then he lit a lamp and set it, burning low, in the whim-room, and noted that the boy slept on, all unconcerned.
“Damn Linder, anyway!” he exclaimed presently. “I believe he shook me up more than I realized. He charged me with insincerity; me, who have always made sincerity my special virtue.... Well, there may be something in it.”
A faint, indistinct growling, as of the grinding of mighty rocks, came down from the distances.
“The storm will be nothing,” he assured himself. “A gust of wind; a spatter of rain; perhaps a dash of hail; then, of a sudden, a sky so calm and peaceful one would wonder how it ever could have been disturbed.” Even as he spoke the house shivered in every timber as the gale struck it and went whining by.
He rushed to the whim-room, but found the boy still sleeping soundly. “I must stay up,” he reasoned with himself; “I must be on hand in case he should be frightened.”
Suddenly it occurred to Grant that, quite apart from his love for Wilson, if anything should happen the child in his house a very difficult situation would be created. Transley would demand explanations—explanations which would be hard to make. Why was Wilson there at all? Why was he not at home with Sarah? Sarah away from home! Why had Zen kept that a secret?... How long had this thing been going on, anyway? Grant feared neither Transley nor any other man, and yet there was something akin to fear in his heart as he thought of these possibilities. He would be held accountable—doubly accountable—if anything happened the child. Even though it were something quite beyond his control; lightning, for example—
The gale subsided as quickly as it had come, and the sudden silence which followed was even more awesome. It lasted only for a moment; a flash of lightning lit up every corner of the house, bursting like white fire from every wall and ceiling. Grant rushed to the whim-room and was standing over the child when the crash of thunder came upon them. The boy stirred gently, smiled, and settled back to his sleep.
Grant drew the blinds in the whim-room, and went out to draw them in the living-room, but the sight across the valley was of a majesty so terrific that it held him fascinated. The play of the lightning was incessant, and with every flash the little lakes shot back their white reflection, and distant farm window-panes seemed heliographing to each other through the night. As yet there was no rain, but a dense wall of cloud pressed down from the west, and the farther hills were hidden even in the brightest flashes.
Turning from the windows, Grant left the blinds open. “Only cowardice would close them,” he muttered to himself, “and surely, in addition to the other qualities Linder has attributed to me, I am not a coward. If it were not for Willie I could stand and enjoy it.”
Presently rain began to fall; a few scattered drops at first, then thicker, harder, until the roof and windows rattled and shook with their force. The wind, which had gone down so suddenly, sprang up again, buffeting the house as it rushed by with the storm. Grant stood in the whim-room, in the dim light of the lamp turned low, and watched the steady breathing of his little guest with as much anxiety as if some dread disease threatened him. For the first time in his life there came into Grant’s consciousness some sense of the price which parents pay in the rearing of little children. He thought of all the hours of sickness, of all the childish hurts and dangers, and suddenly he found himself thinking of his father with a tenderness which was strange and new to him. Doubtless under even that stern veneer of business interest had beat a heart which, many a time, had tightened in the grip of fear for young Dennison.
As the night wore on the storm, instead of spending itself quickly as Grant had expected, continued unabated, but his nervous tension gradually relaxed, and when at length Wilson was awakened by an exceptionally loud clap of thunder he took the boy in his arms and soothed his little fears as a mother might have done. They sat for a long while in a big chair in the living-room, and exchanged such confidences as a man may with a child of five. After the lad had dropped back into sleep Grant still sat with him in his arms, thinking....
And what he thought was this: He was a long while framing the exact thought; he tried to beat it back in a dozen ways, but it circled around him, gradually closed in upon him and forced its acceptance. “Linder called me a fool, and he was right. He might have called me a coward, and again he would have been right. Linder was right.”
Some way it seemed easy to reach that conclusion while this little sleeping form lay in his arms. Perhaps it had quickened into life that ennobling spirit of parenthood which is all sacrifice and love and self-renunciation. The ends which seemed so all-desirable a few hours ago now seemed sordid and mean and unimportant. Reaching out for some means of self-justification Grant turned to the Big Idea; that was his; that was big and generous and noble. But after all, was it his? The idea had come in upon him from some outside source—as perhaps all ideas do; struck him like a bullet; swept him along. He was merely the agency employed in putting it into effect. It had cost him nothing. He was doing that for society. Now was the time to do something that would cost; to lay his hand upon the prize and then relinquish it—for the sake of Wilson Transley!
“And by God I’ll do it!” he exclaimed, springing to his feet. He carried the child back to his bed, and then turned again to watch the storm through the windows. It seemed to be subsiding; the lightning, although still almost continuous, was not so near. The air was cooling off and the rain was falling more steadily, without the gusts and splatters which marked the storm in its early stages. And as he looked out over the black valley, lighted again and again by the glare of heaven’s artillery, Grant became conscious of a deep, mysterious sense of peace. It was as though his soul, like the elements about him, caught in a paroxysm of elemental passion, had been swept clean and pure in the fire of its own upheaval.
“What little incidents turn our lives!” he thought. “That boy; in some strange way he has been the means of bringing me to see things as they are—which not even Linder could do. The mind has to be fertilized for the thought, or it can’t think it. He brought the necessary influence to bear. It was like the night at Murdoch’s house, the night when the Big Idea was born. Surely I owe that to Murdoch, and his wife, and Phyllis Bruce.”
The name of Phyllis Bruce came to him with almost a shock. He had been so occupied with his farm and with Zen that he had thought but little of her of late. As he turned the matter over in his mind now he felt that he had used Phyllis rather shabbily. He recalled having told Murdoch to send for her, but that was purely a business transaction. Yet he felt that he had never entirely forgotten her, and he was surprised to find how tenderly the memory of her welled up within him. Zen’s vision had been clearer than his; she had recognized in Phyllis Bruce a party to his life’s drama. “The second choice may be really the first,” she had said.
Grant lit a cigar and sat down to smoke and think. The matter of Phyllis needed prompt settlement. It afforded a means to burn his bridges behind him, and Grant felt that it would be just as well to cut off all possibility of retreat. Fortunately the situation was one that could be explained—to Phyllis. He had come out West again to be sure of himself; he was sure now; would she be his wife? He had never thought that line out to a conclusion before, but now it proved a subject very delightful to contemplate.
He had told himself, back in those days in the East, that it would not be fair to marry Phyllis Bruce while his heart was another’s. He had believed that then; now he knew the real reason was that he had allowed himself to hope, against all reason, that Zen Transley might yet be his. He had harbored an unworthy desire, and called it a virtue. Well—the die was cast. He had definitely given Zen up. He would tell Phyllis everything.... That is, everything she needed to know.
It would be best to settle it at once—the sooner the better. He went to his desk and took out a telegraph blank. He addressed it to Phyllis, pondered a minute in a great hush in the storm, and wrote,
“I am sure now. May I come? Dennison.”
This done he turned to the telephone, hurrying as one who fears for the duration of his good resolutions. It was a chance if the line was not out of business, but he lifted the receiver and listened to the thump of his heart as he waited.
Presently came a voice as calm and still as though it spoke from another world, “Number?”
He gave the number of Linder’s rooms in town; it was likely Linder had remained in town, but it was a question whether the telephone bell would waken him. He had recollections of Linder as a sound sleeper. But even as this possibility entered his mind he heard Linder’s phlegmatic voice in his ear.
“Oh, Linder! I’m so glad I got you. Rush this message to Phyllis Bruce.... Linder?... Linder!”
There was no answer. Nothing but a hollow, empty sound on the wire, as though it led merely into the universe in general. He tried to call the operator, but without success. The wire was down.
He turned from it with a sense of acute impatience. Was this an omen of obstacles to bar him now from Phyllis Bruce? He had a wild thought of saddling a horse and riding to town, but at that moment the storm came down afresh. Besides, there was the boy.
Suddenly came a quick knock at the door; the handle turned, and a drenched, hatless figure, with disheveled, wet hair, and white, drawn face burst in upon him. It was Zen Transley.
“Zen!”
“How is he—how is Wilson?” she demanded, breathlessly.
“Sound as a bell,” he answered, alarmed by her manner. The self-assured Zen was far from self-assurance now. “Come, see, he is asleep.”
He led her into the whim-room and turned up the lamp. The lad was sleeping soundly, his teddy-bear clasped in his arms, his little pink and white face serene under the magic skies of slumberland. Grant expected that Zen would throw herself upon the child in her agitation, but she did not. She drew her fingers gently across his brow, then, turning to Grant,
“Rather an unceremonious way to break into your house,” she said, with a little laugh. “I hope you will pardon me.... I was uneasy about Wilson.”
“But tell me—how—where did you come from?”
“From town. Let me stand in your kitchen, or somewhere.”
“You’re wet through. I can’t offer you much change.”
“Not as wet as when you first met me, Dennison,” she said, with a smile. “I have a good waterproof, but my hat blew off. It’s somewhere on the road. I couldn’t see through the windshield, so I put my head out, and away it went.”
“The hat?”
Then both laughed, and an atmosphere that had been tense began to settle back to normal. Grant led her out to the living-room, removed her coat, and started a fire.
“So you drove out over those roads?” he said, when the smoke began to curl up around the logs. “You had your courage.”
“It wasn’t courage, Dennison; it was terror. Fear sometimes makes one wonderfully brave. After I saw Frank off I went to the hotel. I had a room on the west side, and instead of going to bed I sat by the window looking out at the storm and at the wet streets. I could see the flashes of lightning striking down as though they were aimed at definite objects, and I began to think of Wilson, and of you. You see, it was the first night I had ever spent away from him, and I began to think....
“After a while I could bear it no longer, and I rushed down and out to the garage. There was just one young man on night duty, and I’m sure he thought me crazy. When he couldn’t dissuade me he wanted to send a driver with me. You know I couldn’t have that.”
She was looking squarely at him, her face strangely calm and emotionless. Grant nodded that he followed her reasoning.
“So here I am,” she continued. “No doubt you think me silly, too. You are not a mother.”
“I think I understand,” he answered, tenderly. “I think I do.”
They sat in silence for some time, and presently they became aware of a grey light displacing the yellow glow from the lamp and the ruddy reflections of the fire. “It is morning,” said Grant. “I believe the storm has cleared.”
He stood beside her chair and took her hand in his. “Let us watch the dawn break on the mountains,” he said, and together they moved to the windows that overlooked the valley and the grim ranges beyond. Already shafts of crimson light were firing the scattered drift of clouds far overhead....
“Dennison,” she said at length, turning her face to his, “I hope you will understand, but—I have thought it all over. I have not hidden my heart from you. For the boy’s sake, and for your sake, and for the sake of ‘a scrap of paper’—that was what the war was over, wasn’t it?—”
“I know,” he whispered. “I know.”
“Then you have been thinking, too?... I am so glad!” In the growing light he could see the moisture in her bright eyes glisten, and it seemed to him this wild, daring daughter of the hills had never been lovelier than in this moment of confession and of high resolve.
“I am so glad,” she repeated, “for your sake—and for my own. Now, again, you are really the Man-on-the-Hill. We have been in the valley of late. You can go ahead now with your high plans, with your Big Idea. You will marry Miss Bruce, and forget.”
“I shall remember with chastened memory, but I shall never forget,” he said at length. “I shall never forget Zen of the Y.D. And you—what will you do?”
“I have the boy. I did not realize how much I had until to-night. Suddenly it came upon me that he was everything. You won’t understand, Dennison, but as we grow older our hearts wrap up around our children with a love quite different from that which expresses itself in marriage. This love gives—gives—gives, lavishly, unselfishly, asking nothing in return.”
“I think I understand,” he said again. “I think I do.”
They turned their eyes to the mountains, and as they looked the first shafts of sunlight fell on the white peaks and set them dazzling like mighty diamond-points against the blue bosom of the West. Slowly the flood of light poured down their mighty sides and melted the mauve shadows of the valley. Suddenly a ray of the morning splendor shot through the little window in the eastern wall of the living-room and fell fairly upon the woman’s head, crowning her like a halo of the Madonna.
“It is morning on the mountains—and on you!” Grant exclaimed. “Zen, you are very, very beautiful.” He raised her hand and pressed her fingers to his lips.
As they stood watching the sunlight pour into the valley a sharp knock sounded on the door. “Come,” said Dennison, and the next moment it swung open and Phyllis Bruce entered, followed immediately by Linder. A question leapt into her eyes at the remarkable situation which greeted them, and she paused in embarrassment.
“Phyllis!” Grant exclaimed. “You here!”
“It would seem that I was not expected.”
“It is all very simple,” Grant explained, with a laugh. “Little Willie Transley was my guest overnight. On account of the storm his mother became alarmed, and drove out from the city early this morning for him. Mrs. Transley, let me introduce Miss Bruce—Phyllis Bruce, of whom I have told you.”
Zen’s cordial handshake did more to reassure Phyllis than any amount of explanations, and Linder’s timely observation that he knew Wilson was there and was wondering about him himself had valuable corroborative effect.
“But now—YOUR explanations?” said Grant. “How comes it, Linder?”
“Simple enough, from our side. When I got back to town last night I found Murdoch highly excited over a telegram from Miss Bruce that she would arrive on the 3 a.m. train. He was determined to wait up, but when the storm came on I persuaded him to go home, as I was sure I could identify her. So I was lounging in my room waiting for three o’clock when I got your telephone call. All I could catch was the fact that you were mighty glad to get me, and had some urgent message for Miss Bruce. Then the connection broke.”
“I see. And you, of course, assured Miss Bruce that I was being murdered, or meeting some such happy and effective ending, out here in the wilderness.”
“Not exactly that, but I reported what I could, and Miss Bruce insisted upon coming out at once. The roads were dreadful, but we had daylight. Also, we have a trophy.”
Linder went out and returned in a moment with a sadly bedraggled hat.
“My poor hat!” Zen exclaimed. “I lost it on the way.”
“It is the best kind of evidence that you had but recently come over the road,” said Linder, significantly.
“I think no more evidence need be called,” said Phyllis. “May I lay off my things?”
“Certainly—certainly,” Grant apologized. “But I must introduce one more exhibit.” He handed her the telegram he had written during the night. “That is the message I wanted Linder to rush to you,” he said, and as she read it he saw the color deepen in her cheeks.
“I’m going to get breakfast, Mr. Grant,” Zen announced with a sudden burst of energy. “Everybody keep out of the kitchen.”
“Guess I’ll feed up for you, this morning, old chap,” said Linder, beating a retreat to the stables.
And when Phyllis had laid aside her coat and hat and had straightened her hair a little in the glass above the mantelpiece she walked straight to Grant and put both her hands in his. “Let me see this boy, Willie Transley,” she said.
Grant led her into the whim-room, where the boy still slept soundly, and drew aside the blinds that the morning light might fall about him. Phyllis bent over the child. “Isn’t he dear?” she said, and stooped and kissed his lips.
Then she stood up and looked for what seemed to Grant a very long time at the panorama of grandeur that stretched away to the westward.
“When may I expect an answer, Phyllis?” he said at length. “You know why my question has been so long delayed. I shall not attempt to excuse myself. I have been very, very foolish. But to-day I am very, very wise. May I also be very, very happy?”
He had taken her hands in his, and as she did not resist he drew her gently to him.
“Little Willie christened me The Man-on-the-Hill,” he whispered. “I have tried to live on the hill, but I need you to keep me from falling off.”
“What about your settlement plan? I thought you wanted me for that.”
“We will give our lives to that, together, Phyllis, to that, and to making this house a home. If God should give us—”
He did not finish the thought, for the form of Phyllis Bruce trembled against his, and her lips had murmured “Yes.”...
“Mr. Grant! Mr. Grant! The telephone is ringing,” called the clear voice of Zen Transley. “Shall I take the message?”
“Please do,” said Dennison, inwardly abjuring the efficiency of the lineman who had already made repairs.
“It’s Mr. Murdoch, and he’s highly excited, and he says have you Phyllis Bruce here.”
“Tell him I have, and I’m going to keep her.”