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They were in the shadow as Walky drove by and he did not see them.
After that Janice and the teacher hurried on so as not to be overtaken by the noisy party of young folks before they reached the village.
As they came up the hill toward Hopewell Drugg's store they saw a dim light in the storekeeper's back room, and the wailing notes of his violin reached their ears.
"Hopewell is grinding out his usual cla.s.sic," chuckled Nelson Haley.
"I hear him at it morning, noon, and night. Seems to me 'Silver Threads Among the Gold' is kind of _pa.s.se_."
"Hus.h.!.+" said Janice. "There is somebody standing at the side gate, listening. You see, sir, everybody doesn't have the same opinion of poor Mr. Drugg's music----"
"My goodness!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Nelson, under his breath. "It's Miss Scattergood, I do believe!"
The timid little spinster could not escape. They had come upon her so quietly.
"Oh! is it you, Janice dear?" she said, in a startled voice.
"And Mr. Haley. We are walking home from the Hammetts' sugaring."
"Well! I'm glad it ain't anybody else," said Miss 'Rill frankly. "But I _do_ run around here sometimes of an evening, when mother's busy or asleep, just to listen to that old song. Mr. Drugg plays it with so much feelin'--don't you think so, Mr. Haley? And then--I was always very fond of that song."
They left her at the corner of High Street, and the flurried little woman hurried home.
"I do believe there is a romance there," whispered the teacher, when Miss 'Rill was out of earshot.
"So there is. Didn't you know that--years and years ago--she and Mr.
Drugg were engaged?" cried Janice. "Why, yes, they were. But why they did not marry, and why he married the girl he did, and why Miss 'Rill kept on teaching school and never would look at any other man, is all a mystery."
"Romance!" commented Nelson, with a little laugh, yet looking down upon Janice with serious eyes. "The night is full of it--don't you think so, Janice?"
"No, no!" she laughed up at him. "It's only the moonlight," and a little later he left her at the old Day house with a casual handshake.
CHAPTER XXIV
THE SCHOOL DEDICATION
Thereafter there was a somewhat different tone to the friends.h.i.+p between Janice and the schoolteacher. They were confidential. They both a.s.sumed that the other was interested in the matters dear to each.
It was a comradery that had no silly side to it. Nelson Haley was a young man working his way up the first rungs of the ladder of life; Janice was his good friend and staunch partisan.
As neither was possessed of brother or sister, they adopted each other in that stead.
The winter fled away at last and Spring came over the mountain range and down to the lakeside, scattering flowers and gra.s.ses as she pa.s.sed.
Although Janice had enjoyed some of the fun and frolic of the New England winter, she was perfectly delighted to see the season change.
It had been late spring when she reached Poketown the year before. Now she saw the season open, and her first trips over the hillsides and through the wood lot where the snow still lay in sheltered places, searching for the earliest flowers, were days of delight for the girl.
The Shower Bath was released from its icy fetters, and the little mountain stream poured over the lip of granite with a burst of sound like laughter. She visited The Overlook, too; but she did not need to view the landscape o'er to enable her to understand why G.o.d did not immediately answer her prayers for her father.
Great news from the mine in Mexico:
"We haven't made much money yet, it is true," Mr. Day wrote about this time. "But things are going right. The armies--both of them--are now far away and if they leave us in peace for a few months, your Daddy will make so much money that you can have the desire of your heart, my dear."
And the "desire of her heart" just then was--and had been for months--a little automobile in which she might ride over the roads about Poketown. There wasn't a good horse and carriage obtainable in the town; and Janice found the time hanging heavily upon her hands.
"If I just had a car!" she would often say, until Marty got to teasing her about it, and Nelson Haley, whenever he saw her, usually asked very sober questions about her car--if she'd had much tire trouble on her last trip, and so forth!
"You can all just laugh at me," Janice declared. "I know Daddy will send the money some time. And then, if you are not _very_ good, and _very_ polite, you sha'n't ride with me at all."
Aunt 'Mira was so inspired by her niece's talk of an automobile that she studied the mail-order catalogues diligently, and finally sent off for a coat and veil, together with an approved automobile mask, to be worn when she went motoring through the country with Janice!
The spring pa.s.sed and summer came. The cellar walls of the new schoolhouse were laid, and then the framework went up, and finally the handsome edifice was finished upon the outside. Really, Poketown was fairly startled by the appearance of the new building. Some of the very people who had been opposed to the thing were won over by its appearance.
"Hi tunket!" exclaimed Mr. Cross Moore, "barrin' the taxes we'll haf ter pay for the next ten year, I could be glad ter see sech a handsome house in the town. An' they tell me 'at teacher has had more ter do with the plannin' of the school than the architect himself. Too bad Mr. Haley ain't goin' ter be here no longer than this term. He'd ought ter have the bossin' of the new school."
"Who says he won't?" snapped Walky Dexter, who heard the selectman's statement.
"You ax the Elder--or old Bill Jones," chortled Moore.
"Come now! what do you mean by that?" demanded Mr. Ma.s.sey, in whose store the conversation took place.
"Ax 'em," said Mr. Moore again. "They've got it fixed up to fire Mr.
Haley at the end of this term."
"Nothin' like bein' warned in time," said Walky Dexter. "Them old s.h.a.gbarks ain't been _e_-lected themselves for next year, yet. They air takin' too blamed much for granted, that's what's the matter with them. July school meetin' is purty near; but mebbe we kin put a spoke in their wheel."
Forthwith Walkworthy Dexter began to earn his right to the nickname Janice had once given him. He became "Talky" Dexter, and he talked to some purpose. When the school meeting was held in July there was the most astonis.h.i.+ng overturn that had been seen in Poketown for years. An entirely new committee was elected to govern school affairs, and all were men in favor of new methods.
Before this, the school had closed and Nelson Haley had gone to Maine to work in a hotel during the summer. The last half of the school year had been much different from the young man's fall term. Although he gave the boys all the instruction in baseball he had promised, and otherwise had kept up their interest in the school, he had begun to lay out the work differently for the pupils and really try to increase the value of his instruction. Whether he was to be fortunate enough to head the new school in the fall, or not, he began to train the pupils to more modern methods. Whoever took hold of the new school would find the scholars somewhat prepared for the graded system.
Poketown was actually shocked! The good old Elder and his mates had so long governed school matters just as they pleased that many of the people could not realize that a new day had dawned--in school affairs, at least.
Elder Concannon was doomed to see more of his influence wane during this summer. Heretofore he had managed to keep out of the church anything like a young people's society, in spite of Mr. Middler's desire to the contrary. But there were now several earnest young people in the church members.h.i.+p who were anxious to be set to work to some purpose.
The a.s.sociation was a small one at first. Janice was a member. Soon the influence of the organization began to be felt in more ways than one.
"I can see just how things are going, Brother Middler--I can see plainly," old Elder Concannon declared. "Just as soon as they told me that Day girl was a member of the society I knew what would happen. A new carpet for the aisle and the pulpit chairs upholstered! Ha! And them girls and boys themselves cleaning windows and sweeping and dusting the whole church once a month. Ridiculous! Myron Jones has always suited us as s.e.xton before. Oh! we'll have no peace--no peace at all!"
"But, Elder," timidly suggested the pastor, "such things as the young people have asked to do have been helpful things. And I'm sure if you would attend one of their meetings you would find their spiritual growth commendable--surely commendable."
"Ha!" sniffed the old gentleman, wagging his bristling head. "What do those boys and girls know about religion, and the work of the spirit, and----"
"One thing is sure, Elder," interposed Mr. Middler with more courage than was usual with him, "One thing is sure: if our children have no proper appreciation of such things, it is certainly _our_ fault. We older ones have been remiss in our duty."
This seemed to take the Elder aback. He stared at the younger man for a moment; but as he turned away he muttered:
"It's all nonsense! And it's just as I've said. No peace since that Day girl came to town."
Mr. Middler had the courage of his convictions for once. He said nothing more to rasp the old gentleman's feelings and prejudices; but he backed up the young people in their attempt to freshen up the old church. He mingled with them more than ever he had before; and from that contact with their young and hopeful natures he carried into his pulpit a more joyful outlook upon life. Mr. Middler was growing, along with his young people, and he really preached a sermon now and then in which there wasn't a doctrinal argument!