"They were lovely," answered Mrs. Buchanan. "Now let me show you how to

roll and whip your ruffle, Caroline dear," she added as she bent over

Caroline's completed hem. In a moment they were both immersed in a

scientific discussion of under-and-over stitch.

Phoebe clasped her knees in her arms and gazed into the fire. Her own

involuntary summing up of David Kildare had struck into her inner

consciousness like a blow. And Phoebe could not have explained to even

herself what it was in her that demanded the hewer of wood and drawer of

water in a man--in David. Decidedly Phoebe's demands were for elementals

and she questioned Kildare's right to his leisurely life based on the

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Jeffersonian ideals of his forefathers.

And while they sewed and chatted the hour away, over in the library the

major and David were in interested conclave.

"Now, I leave it to you, Major, if he isn't just the limit," said David

on his return from his mission for the purpose of drawing Andrew from his

lair. "I couldn't budge him. He is writing away like all possessed with a

two-apple-and-a-cracker lunch on the table beside him. He seems to enjoy

a death-starve."

"David," said the major as he laid aside the book he had been buried in

and began to polish his glasses, "you make no allowances whatever for the

artistic temperament. When a man is making connection with his solar

plexus he doesn't consider the consumption of food of paramount

importance. Now in this treatise of Aristotle--"

"Well, anyway, I've made up my mind to fix up something between him and

Caroline Darrah. He's got to get a heart interest of his own and let

mine alone. The child is daffy about his poetry and moons at him all the

time out of the corners of her eyes, dandy eyes at that; but the old

ink-swiller acts as if she wasn't there at all. What'll I do to make him

just see her? Just see her--_see her_--that'll be enough!"

"David," said the major quietly as he looked into the fire with his

shaggy brows bent over his keen eyes, "the combination of a man heart and

a woman heart makes a dangerous explosive at the best, but here are

things that make it fatal. The one you are planning would be deadly."

"Why, why in the world shouldn't I touch them off? Perfectly nice girl,

all right man and--"

"Boy, have you forgotten that I told you of the night Andrew Sevier's

father killed himself; yes, that he had sat the night through at the

poker table with Peters Brown? Brown offered some restoration compromise

to the widow but she refused--you know the struggle that she made and

that it killed her. We both know the grit it took for Andrew to chisel

himself into what he is. The first afternoon he met the girl in here,

right by this table, for an instant I was frightened--only _she_ didn't

know, thank God! The Almighty gardens His women-things well and fends off

influences that shrivel; it behooves men to do the same."