ing on the brink of bankruptcy; nor the
slightest reference to brave young women going out alone in the cold,
cold world to earn their bread! What were floods, earthquakes, cyclones,
poverty, debt--what was anything that might, could, would or should
happen, compared to the joy of their plighted troth!
CHAPTER XXII
Summer has come: along the banks of the repentant stream the willows are
in full leaf; stretches of grass, braving the coal smoke and dust hide
the ugly red earth. The roads are dry again; the slopes of the "fill"
once more are true; all the arches in the mouth of the tunnel are
finished; the tracks have been laid and the first train has crawled out
on the newly tracked road where it haggled, snorted and stopped, only to
crawl back and be swallowed by The Beast.
And with the first warm day came Miss Felicia. "When your wretched,
abominable roads, my dear, dry up so that a body can walk without
sinking up to their neck in mud--" ran Miss Felicia's letter in answer
to Ruth's invitation,--"I'll come down for the night," and she did,
bringing Ruth half of her laces, now that she was determined to throw
herself away on "that good-for nothing--Yes, Jack, I mean you and nobody
else, and you needn't stand there laughing at me, for every word of it's
true; for what in the world you two babes in the wood are going to live
on no mortal man knows;" Ruth answering with her arm tight around
the dear lady's neck,--a liberty nobody,--not even Peter, ever dared
take--and a whisper in her ear that Jack was the blessedest ever,
and that she loved him so sometimes she was well-nigh distracted--a
statement which the old lady remarked was literally true.
And we may be sure that Peter came too--and we may be equally positive
that no impassable roads could have held him back. Indeed, on the very
afternoon of the very day following the receipt of the joyful telegram,
he had closed his books with a bang, performed the Moses act until he
had put them into the big safe, slipped on his coat, given an extra
brush to his hat and started for the ferry. All that day his face had
been in a broad smile; even the old book-keeper noticed it and so did
Patrick, the night-watchman and sometimes porter; and so did the line
of depositors who inched along to his window and were greeted with a
flash-light play of humor on his face instead of the more sedate, though
equally kindly expression which always rested on his features when
at w
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