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"Oh, haven't I? Look here, Tave, now no more nonsense; Romanzo taught me how two years ago--but we both took care you shouldn't know anything about it. Give me that pail." This demand was peremptory.
Evidently Octavius was weakening, for Champney heard again the rattle of the pails and the stool; then a swish of starched petticoat and a cooing "There, there, Bess."
He opened the gate noiselessly and closing it behind him walked down the lane. The golden light of the June sunset was barred, where it lay upon the brilliant green of the young gra.s.s, with the long shadows of the apple-tree trunks. He looked between the thick foliage of the low-hanging branches to the milking shed. The two were there. Octavius was looking on dubiously; Aileen was coaxing the giant Holstein mother to stand aside at a more convenient angle for milking.
"Hold her tail, Tave," was the next command.
She seated herself on the stool and laid her cheek against the warm, s.h.i.+ning black flank; her hands manipulated the rosy teats; then she began to sing:
"O what are you seeking my pretty colleen, So sadly, tell me now!"-- "O'er mountain and plain I'm searching in vain Kind sir, for my Kerry cow."
The milk, now drumming steadily into the pail, served for a running accompaniment to the next verses.
"Is she black as the night with a star of white Above her bonny brow?
And as clever to clear The d.y.k.es as a deer?"-- "That's just my own Kerry cow."
"Then cast your eye into that field of wheat She's there as large as life."-- "My bitter disgrace!
Howe'er shall I face The farmer and his wife?"
What a voice! And what a picture she made leaning caressingly against the charmed and patient Bess! She was so slight, yet round and supple--strong, too, with the strength of perfect health! The thick fluffed black hair was rolled away from her face and gathered into a low knot in the nape of her neck. Her dress cut low at the throat enhanced the white purity of her face and the slim round grace of her neck which showed to advantage against the ebony flank of the mother of many milky ways. Her lips were red and full; the nose was a saucy stub; the eyes he could not see; they were downcast, intent upon her filling pail and the rising creamy foam; but he knew them to be an Irish blue-gray.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "What a picture she made leaning caressingly against the charmed and patient Bess"]
"Since the farmer's unwed you've no cause to dread From his wife, you must allow.
And for kisses three-- 'Tis myself is he-- The farmer will free your cow."
The song ceased; the singer was giving her undivided attention to her self-imposed task. Octavius took a stool and began work with another cow. Champney, nothing loath to prolong the pleasure of looking at the improvised milkmaid, waited before making his presence known until she should have finished.
And watching her, he could but wonder at the ways of Chance that had cast this little piece of foreign flotsam upon the sh.o.r.es of America, only to sweep it inland to this village in Maine. He could not help comparing her with Alice Van Ostend--what a contrast! What an abyss between the circ.u.mstances of the two lives! Yet this one was decidedly charming, more so than the other; for he was at once aware that Aileen was already in possession of her womanhood's dower of command over all poor mortals of the opposite s.e.x--her manner with Octavius showed him that; and Alice when he saw her last, now nearly six months ago, would have given any one the impression of something still unfledged--a tall, slim, overgrown girl of sixteen, and somewhat spoiled. This was indeed only natural, for her immediate world of father, aunt, and relations had circled ever since her birth in the orbit of her charming wilfulness.
Champney acknowledged to himself that he had done her bidding a little too frequently ever since the first yachting trip, when as a little girl she attached herself to him, or rather him to her as a part of her special goods and chattels. At that time their common ground for conversation was Aileen; the child was never tired of his rehearsing for her delight the serenade scene. But in another year she lost this interest, for many others took its place; nor was it ever renewed.
The Van Ostends, together with Ruth and her husband, had been living the last three winters in Paris, Mr. Van Ostend crossing and recrossing as his business interests demanded or permitted. Champney was much with them, for their home was always open to him who proved an ever welcome guest. He acknowledged to himself, while partic.i.p.ating in the intimacy of their home life, that if the child's partiality to his companions.h.i.+p, so undisguisedly expressed on every occasion, should, in the transition periods of girlhood and young womanhood, deepen into a real attachment, he would cultivate it with a view to asking her in marriage of her father when the time should show itself ripe. In his first youthful arrogance of self-a.s.sertion he had miscalculated with Ruth Van Ostend.
He would make provision that this "undeveloped affair"--so he termed it--with her niece should not miscarry for want of caution. He intended while waiting for Alice to grow up--a feat which her aunt was always deploring as an impossibility except in a physical sense--to make himself necessary in this young life. Thus far he had been successful; her weekly girlish letters conclusively proved it.
While waiting for the milk to cease its vigorous flow, he was conscious of reviewing his att.i.tude towards the "undeveloped affair" in some such train of thought, and finding in it nothing to condemn, rather to commend, in fact; for not for the fractional part of a second did he allow a thought of it to divert his mind from the constant end in view: the making for himself a recognized place of power in the financial world of affairs. He knew that Mr. Van Ostend was aware of this steadfast pursuit of a purpose. He knew, moreover, that the fact that the great financier was taking him into his New York office as treasurer of the Flamsted Quarries, was a tacit recognition not only of his six years' apprentices.h.i.+p in some of the largest banking houses in Europe, but of his ability to acquire that special power which was his goal. In the near future he would handle and practically control millions both in receipt and disburs.e.m.e.nt. Many of the contracts, already signed, were to be filled within the next three years--the sound of the milking suddenly ceased.
"My, how my wrists ache! See, Tave, the pail is almost full; there must be twelve or fourteen quarts in all."
She began to rub her wrists vigorously. Octavius muttered: "I told you so. You might have known you couldn't milk steady like that without getting all tuckered out."
Champney stepped forward quickly. "Right you are, Tave, every time. How are you, dear old chap?" He held out his hand.
"Champ--Champney--why--" he stammered rather than spoke.
"It's I, Tave; the same old sixpence. Have I changed so much?"
"Changed? I should say so! I thought--I thought--" he was wringing Champney's hand; some strange emotion worked in his features--"I thought for a second it was Mr. Louis come to life." He turned to Aileen who had sprung from her stool. "Aileen, this is Mr. Champney Googe; you've forgotten him, I dare say, in all these years."
The rich red mantled her cheeks; the gray eyes smiled up frankly into his; she held out her hand. "Oh, no, I've not forgotten Mr. Champney Googe; how could I?"
"Indeed, I think it is the other way round; if I remember rightly you gave me the opportunity of never forgetting you." He held her hand just a trifle longer than was necessary. The girl smiled and withdrew it.
"Milky hands are not so sticky as spruce gum ones, Mr. Googe, but they are apt to be quite as unpleasant."
Champney was annoyed without in the least knowing why. He was wondering if he should address her as "Aileen" or "Miss Armagh," when Octavius spoke:
"Aileen, just go on ahead up to the house and tell Mrs. Champney Mr.
Googe is here." Aileen went at once, and Octavius explained.
"You see, Champney--Mr. Googe--"
"Have I changed so much, Tave, that you can't use the old name?"
"You've changed a sight; it don't come easy to call you Champ, any more than it did to call Mr. Louis by his Christian name. You look a Champney every inch of you, and you act like one." He spoke emphatically; his small keen eyes dwelt admiringly on the face and figure of the tall man before him. "I thought 't was better to send Aileen on ahead, for Mrs.
Champney's broken a good deal since you saw her; she can't stand much excitement--and you're the living image." He called for the boy who had taken Romanzo's place. "I'll go up as far as the house with you. How long are you going to stay?"
"It depends upon how long it takes me to investigate these quarries, learn the ropes. A week or two possibly. I am to be treasurer of the Company with my office in New York."
"So I heard, so I heard. I'm glad it's come at last--no thanks to _her_," he added, nodding in the direction of the house.
"Do you still hold a grudge, Tave?"
"Yes, and always shall. Right's right and wrong's wrong, and there ain't a carpenter in this world that can dovetail the two. You and your mother have been cheated out of your rights in what should be yours, and it's ten to one if you ever get a penny of it."
Champney smiled at the little man's indignation. "All the more reason to congratulate me on my job, Tave."
"Well, I do; only it don't set well, this other business. She ain't helped you any to it?" He asked half hesitatingly.
"Not a red cent, Tave. I don't owe her anything. Possibly she will leave some of it to this same Miss Aileen Armagh. Stranger things have happened." Octavius shook his head.
"Don't you believe it, Champney. She likes Aileen and well she may, but she don't like her well enough to give her a slice off of this estate; and what's more she don't like any living soul well enough to part with a dollar of it on their account."
"Is there any one Aunt Meda ever did love, Tave? From all I remember to have heard, when I was a boy, she was always bound up pretty thoroughly in herself."
"Did she ever love any one? Well she did; that was her husband, Louis Champney, who loved you as his own son. And it's my belief that's the reason you don't get your rights. She was jealous as the devil of every word he spoke to you."
"You're telling me news--and late in the day."
"Late is better than never, and I'd always meant to tell you when you come to man's estate--but you've been away so long, I've thought sometimes you was never coming home; but I hoped you would for your mother's sake, and for all our sakes."
"I'm going to do what I can, but you mustn't depend too much on me, Tave. I'm glad I'm at home for mother's sake although I always felt she had a good right hand in you, Tave; you've always been a good friend to her, she tells me."
Octavius Buzzby swallowed hard once, twice; but he gave him no reply.
Champney wondered to see his face work again with some emotion he failed to explain satisfactorily to himself.
"There's Mrs. Champney on the terrace; I won't go any farther. Come in when you can, won't you?"
"I shall be pretty apt to run in for a chat almost anytime on my way to the village." He waved his hand in greeting to his aunt and sprang up the steps leading to the terrace.