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Uncle William: The Man Who Was Shif'less Part 20

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"Yes, we must go." She rose and brought her hat, a fragile thing of lace and mist, and a little lace mantle with long floating ends. She put them on before the mirror that hung above the table where the copying lay, giving little turns and touches of feminine pleasure.

Uncle William's eyes followed her good-humoredly.

She turned to him, her face glowing, starlike, out of the lace and mist.

"You're laughing at me," she said, reproachfully.

"No, I wa'n't laughing, so to speak," returned Uncle William. "I was thinkin' what a sight o' comfort there is in a bunnit. If men folks wore 'em I reckon they'd take life easier." He placed his hat firmly on the gray tufts. "That's one o' the cur'us things--about 'em." They were going down the long flight of stairs and he had placed his hand protectingly beneath her arm. "That's one o' the cur'us things--how different they be, men and women. I've thought about it a good many times, how it must 'a' tickled the Lord a good deal when he found how different they turned out--made o' the same kind o' stuff, so."

"Don't you suppose he meant it?" She was smiling under the frilling lace.

"Well, like enough," returned Uncle William, thoughtfully. "It's like the rest o' the world--kind o' comical and big. Like enough he did plan it that way."

XVII

The room was filled with the hum of light--faces and flowers and color everywhere. Uncle William walked among them erect, overtopping the crowd, his gaze, for the most part, on the sky-line. Sergia, beside him, seemed a slight figure. Glances followed them as they went, amused or curious or a little admiring. Uncle William, oblivious to the glances and to the crowd that opened before him, and closed silently behind the great figure, beamed upon it all. He was used to making his way through a crowd unhindered. To Sergia the experience was more novel, and she watched the crowd and the pictures and the old man moving serene among them, with amused eyes. Once she called his attention to a celebrated painter in the crowd. Uncle William's eye rested impartially upon him for a moment and returned to its sky-line. "He looks to me kind o'

pindlin'. One o' the best, is he?"

"He's not strong, you mean?"

"Well, not strong, and not much _to_ him--as if the Lord was kind o'

skimped for material. Is that one o' _his_ picters?"

Her eyes followed his hand. "Alan's! Come." They moved quickly to it across the larger room. "They are all here." Her glance had swept the walls. "In the best light, too." She moved eagerly from one to the other. "See how well they are hung."

Uncle William's eye surveyed them. "Middlin' plumb," he a.s.sented. "That fu'ther one looks to me a leetle mite off the level. It's the one o' my house, too." He moved toward it and straightened the frame with careful hand, then he stepped back, gazing at it with pride. "Putty good, ain't it?" he said.

She smiled, quietly. "Perfect. He has never done anything so good."

"It _is_ a putty nice house," said Uncle William. His eye dwelt on it fondly. "I'd a'most forgot how nice it was. You see that little cloud there--that one jest over the edge? That means suthin' 'fore mornin'."

He lifted his hand to it. "I wouldn't trust a sky like that--not without reefin' down good." He drew a breath. "Cur'us how it makes you feel right there!" he said. "I'd a'most forgot." He glanced at the moving crowd a little hostilely and drew another deep breath.

"The atmosphere _is_ fine," said the girl. She was studying it with half-shut eyes, her head thrown a little back. "It is clear and deep.

You can almost breathe it."

"It is a good climate," a.s.sented Uncle William. "You couldn't get sick there if you tried. Can't hardly die." He chuckled a little. "Sam'l Gruchy's been tryin' for six year now. He was ninety-seven last month.

We don't think nuthin' o' roundin' out a hunderd up there--not the cheerful ones. 'Course if you fret, you can die 'most anywhere."

"Yes, if you fret." The girl was looking at him with pleased eyes. "I don't suppose you've ever known what it was to fret?"

"Me? Lord, yes! I ust to fret about everything--fretted for fear it would blow and for fear it wouldn't blow." His eyes were on the s.h.i.+fting green waves. "I never put down a net nor a lobster-pot that I didn't see 'em bein' chewed up or knocked to pieces. I'd see a shark a-swimmin'

right through a big hole--rip-p--tear. I could see it as plain as if I was down there under the water--all kind o' green and cool, and things swimmin' through it. I can see it jest the same now if I shut my eyes, only it's fishes I see swimmin' into my net now--shoals of 'em. The'

ain't a shark in sight." He was looking down at her, smiling.

She nodded. "You're an optimist now."

He stared a little. "No, I don't reckon I'm anything that sounds like that, but I _do_ take life comf'tabul. The' ain't a place anywheres 'round to set and rest, is the'? You look to me kind o' used up."

"I am tired--a little. Come. There won't be any one here." She led the way into a small room beyond. A bench facing the large room was vacant, and they sat down on it. Through the vista of the open door they could see two of Alan's pictures. They sat in silence for a few minutes, watching the crowd come and go in front of the pictures. She turned to him at last with a little smile. "They are making a hit," she said.

"Be they?" He peered at them intently. His face softened. "They'd o't to. They're nice picters."

"Yes." She had started forward a little, her breath coming swiftly. "Do you see that man--the tall one with the gray hair and pointed beard?"

Uncle William adjusted his spectacles. "That kind o' peaked one, you mean, that dips along some like a government lighter?"

She laughed out, her hands moving with little gestures of pleasure.

"That's the one. I know him."

"Do you?" Uncle William looked at him again politely. "He has a good deal o' trimmin' on, but he looks like a nice sort o' man."

"He is--he is--if he's the one I think--"

The man, who wore on his coat the decoration of several orders, had turned a little and was looking back over the crowd.

The girl clasped her hands tightly. "Oh, it _is_," she said under her breath. "It is."

Uncle William looked down almost jealously. "You set a good deal o'

store by seein' him," he said.

"It isn't that. I like him, yes, but he knows good work. If he really takes them in, he'll not let them go."

Uncle William adjusted his spectacles again. "You mean--"

"He will buy them, yes. Hus.h.!.+" She held out her hand.

The man had turned back to the pictures. He lifted a pair of eyegla.s.ses that swung at the end of a long chain and placed them on his nose. He looked again at the picture before him. The gla.s.ses dropped from his nose, and he dipped to the catalogue he held in his hand.

Uncle William's glance followed him a little uneasily. "You mean he'll buy my house?" he asked.

She nodded, her face overflowing with happiness.

Uncle William surveyed it. "I was cal'atin' to have that one myself." He said it almost grudgingly.

"You were? Could you?" she faced him.

"Couldn't I have it as well as him?" He nodded toward the man in the distance intent on his catalogue.

The girl's brow wrinkled a little. "He is rich," she said. "I didn't know--"

"Well, I ain't rich," said Uncle William, "but I reckon I could sc.r.a.pe together enough to pay for a picter."

The girl's face lighted. "Of course, Alan would rather you had it. And he may buy one of the others."

The man had moved on a little, out of sight. The picture remained facing them. For a minute the crowd had parted in front of it and they saw it at the end of a long pathway. Uncle William drew a proud breath. "How much will it cost?" he said.

She took up the catalogue from her lap and opened it, glancing down the page. "It must be here--somewhere. Yes, this is it--'The House on the Rocks,' $2000."

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