Once within the cool shadows of the livingroom, Mrs. Herndon again

bethought herself to kiss her niece in a fresh glow of welcome, while

the latter sank into a convenient rocker and began enthusiastically

expressing her unbounded enjoyment of the West, and of the impressions

gathered during her journey. Suddenly the elder woman glanced about

and exclaimed, laughingly, "Why, I had completely forgotten. You have

not yet met your room-mate. Come out here, Naida; this is my niece,

Phoebe Spencer."

The girl thus addressed advanced, a slender, graceful figure dressed in

white, and extended her hand shyly. Miss Spencer clasped it warmly,

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her eyes upon the flushed, winsome face.

"And is this Naida Gillis!" she cried. "I am so delighted that you are

still here, and that we are to be together. Aunt Lydia has written so

much about you that I feel as If we must have known each other for

years. Why, how pretty you are!"

Naida's cheeks were burning, and her eyes fell, but she had never yet

succeeded in conquering the blunt independence of her speech. "Nobody

else ever says so," she said, uneasily. "Perhaps it's the light."

Miss Spencer turned her about so as to face the window. "Well, you

are," she announced, decisively. "I guess I know; you 've got

magnificent hair, and your eyes are perfectly wonderful. You just

don't fix yourself up right; Aunt Lydia never did have any taste in

such things, but I 'll make a new girl out of you. Let's go upstairs;

I 'm simply dying to see our room, and get some of my dresses unpacked.

They must look perfect frights by this time."

They came down perhaps an hour later, hand in hand, and chattering like

old friends. The shades of early evening were already falling across

the valley. Herndon had returned home from his day's work, and had

brought with him the Rev. Howard Wynkoop for supper. Miss Spencer

viewed the young man with approval, and immediately became more than

usually vivacious in recounting the incidents of her long journey,

together with her early impressions of the Western country. Mr.

Wynkoop responded with an interest far from being assumed.

"I have found it all so strange, so unique, Mr. Wynkoop," she

explained. "The country is like a new world to me, and the people do

not seem at all like those of the East. They lead such a wild,

untrammelled life. Everything about seems to exhale the spirit of

romance; don't you find it so?"

He smiled at her enthusiasm, his glance of undisguised admiration on

her face. "I certainly recall some such earlier conception," he

admitted. "Those just arriving from the environment of an older

civilization perceive merely the picturesque elements; but my later

experiences have been decidedly prosaic."




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