Penny of Top Hill Trail

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Penny of Top Hill Trail Page 4

by Maniates, Belle Kanaris


  She smiled faintly at his look of concern.

  “I’m all right,” she said reassuringly, a spark of raillery again showing in her eyes before they closed, and she fell limply against him.

  When she had recovered the consciousness she had lost but momentarily, he was vigorously rubbing her hands.

  “How warm and strong your hands feel,” she said with a little sigh of content. “I never did anything so out of date before. I couldn’t help it.”

  “You are nearly frozen,” he said brusquely. “Why don’t you wear more clothes?”

  “I am wearing all I have,” she said plaintively, with an attempt at a giggle.

  A sudden recollection came to him. From under the seat he brought forth a heavy, gray sweater.

  “I forgot I had this with me. Put it on.”

  “It’s a slip-on. I’ll have to take off my hat and coat to get into it.”

  When she removed her soft, shabby, battered hat which she had worn well down over her eyes even while she slept, her hair, rippling bronze and golden lights, fell about her face and shoulders in semi-curls.

  He helped her into the sweater.

  “It’s sure snug and warm,” she said approvingly, as her head came out of the opening. “I won’t need my coat.”

  “No; there’s no warmth in it,” he said, looking disdainfully at the thin, cheap garment. “Throw it away.”

  “With pleasure,” she replied gaily. “Here’s to my winter garment of repentance.”

  She flung the coat out on the road.

  “What did you say?” he asked perplexedly.

  “Nothing original. Just some words I st-t—I mean, borrowed.”

  She fastened back her hair and picked up her hat.

  “Don’t put that on!” he exclaimed, making another search under the seat and bringing forth a soft cap. She set it jauntily on her curls.

  “How do you feel now? Well enough to ride on?”

  “Yes; I am feeling ‘fair and warmer’ every minute.”

  When the car started, she relapsed into silence. The sunshine was flooding the treeless hills and mellowing the cool, clean air. Up and down, as far as the eye could follow, which was very far in this land of great distances, the trail sought the big dominant hills that broke the sky-line before them. The outlook was restful, hopeful, fortifying.

  “How are you—all right?” he asked presently.

  “Perfectly all right. It’s grand up here in all these high spots.”

  “Wait until we reach the hills around our ranch,” he boasted. Then he laughed shortly. “I say ‘our.’ I’m only the foreman.”

  “What are you going to tell her about me?” she asked curiously, after another silence.

  He slackened the pace and looked at her closely. The sweater and the sunshine had brought a faint tinge of wild-rose color to the transparency of her skin. The flippancy and boldness so prominent in her eyes the day before had disappeared. She looked more as she had when she was asleep in the moonlight. A wave of kindness and brotherliness swept over him.

  “I am going to tell her,” he said gently, “that you are a poor little girl who needs a friend.”

  “Is that all you will tell her?”

  “You may tell her as much or as little of your story as you think you should.”

  “You are a good man, but,” she added thoughtfully, “the best of men don’t understand women’s ways toward each other. If I tell her my sordid little story, she may not want to help me—at least, not want to keep me up here in her home. I’ve not found women very helpful.”

  “She will help you and keep you, because—” he hesitated, and then continued earnestly, “before she was married, she was a settlement worker in a large city and she understood such—”

  “As I,” she finished. “I know the settlement workers. They write you up—or down—in a sort of a Rogue Record, and you are classified, indexed, filed and treated by a system.”

  “She isn’t that kind!” he protested indignantly. “She does her work by her heart, not by system. Have you ever really tried to reform?”

  “Yes,” she exclaimed eagerly. “I left Chicago for that purpose. I couldn’t find work. I was cold and hungry; pawned everything they would take and got shabby like this,” looking down disdainfully at herself, “but I didn’t steal, not even food. I would have starved first. Then I was arrested up here for stealing. I wasn’t guilty. Bender had no case, really; but he wouldn’t give me a square deal or listen to anything in my favor, because my record was against me. You can’t live down a record. There is no use trying.”

  “Yes, there is!” he declared emphatically. “I have always thought a thief incurable, but I believe she could perform the miracle.”

  “How old is she?” demanded Pen suddenly.

  “I don’t know,” he answered vaguely, as if her age had never occurred to him before. “She has been married ten years.”

  “Oh! Did she marry the right man?”

  “She certainly did. Kingdon is a prince.”

  “Any children?”

  “Three; two little fellows as fine as are made, and a girl.”

  “I adore children.”

  “I am glad to hear you say that. Every good woman loves children.”

  “And you really think there’s the makings of a good woman in me?”

  “Yes; I think so,” he answered earnestly, “and if there’s but a spark of goodness in you, she will find it and fan it to a glow.”

  She made a wry little grimace which fortunately he did not see.

  “This goodness is nauseating me,” she thought. “I shall beat it back about to-morrow.”

  “Look!” he cried, as the road made a sharp curve. “There it is!”

  “You can lift your eyes to the hills! What a love of a place—way up on tiptoes. I’ll be the little fish out of water up there!”

  Top Hill Tavern was on a small plateau at the summit of one of the hills. The ranch-house, long, low and fanciful in design, connected by a covered portico with the kitchen, dairies and buildings, was misleading in name, for a succession of higher hills was in sight. A vined pergola, flower gardens, swings, tennis courts and croquet grounds gave the place a most unranch-like appearance.

  As they rode up to the entrance porch, a woman came out of the house, and instantly the big, appraising eyes of the little newcomer felt that here was a type unknown to her. She was slender, not very tall, but with a poise and dignity of manner that compelled attention. Her eyes were gray; her lashes, brows and hair quite dark. There was a serenity and repose of manner about her—the Madonna expression of gentleness—but with an added force.

  “We looked for you last night, Kurt,” she said in a voice, low and winning.

  “Ran out of gasoline and had to spend the night on the road,” he explained. “Mrs. Kingdon, this is a little girl—”

  She didn’t give him the opportunity to finish.

  “Come in out of the sun,” she urged.

  Pen stepped from the car. There was no consciousness in the beautiful eyes of the “best woman in the world” that she was aware of the shabby, tan shoes, the cheap, faded and worn skirt, or the man’s sweater and cap.

  Pen’s eyes had grown dark and thoughtful.

  “Before I go in,” she said turning to Kurt, “you must tell her who I am. Not what you said you were going to tell her, but where you found me and from what you saved me.”

  His face flushed.

  “My dear little girl,” said the woman quickly, “I don’t care to know—yet. It is enough that Kurt brought you.”

  “Mrs. Kingdon,” said Kurt awkwardly but earnestly, “she is a poor girl who needs a friend.”

  “We all need a friend some time or other. Come in with me.”

  She led her up the steps. On the top one, the girl halted.

  “He found me,” she told Mrs. Kingdon, “in the custody of—Bender, for stealing, and he took me away to save me from jail, to bring me up here to the ‘be
st woman in the world,’ he said, and I made light of what he had done all the way up the trail. And he was so kind to me—me, a pickpocket. I think I should go back—to Bender.”

  She spoke with the impetuosity of a child, and turned to go down the steps.

  Kurt looked on helplessly, perplexed by this last mood of his prismatic young prisoner.

  Mrs. Kingdon took the girl’s arm again.

  “You are going to have a bed and bath before you leave, anyway. Come with me. Kurt, you look as if you had best go to cover, too.”

  Pen’s outbreak had evidently spent her last drop of reserve force. She submitted meekly to guidance through a long room with low-set windows. She noted a tiled floor with soft rugs, a fireplace and a certain pervading home-sense before they turned into a little hallway. Again she faintly protested.

  “I am worse than a thief,” she said. “I am a liar. I haven’t told him—all.”

  “Never mind that now,” said Mrs. Kingdon soothingly. “You’ve been ill recently, haven’t you?”

  “Yes; I was just about at the end of—”

  “You’re at the end of the trail now—the trail to Top Hill. You shall have a bath, a long sleep and something to eat before you try to tell me anything more.”

  Pen went on into a sunward room generously supplied with casement windows. A few rugs, a small but billowy bed, a chair and a table comprised the furnishings, but an open door disclosed a bathroom and beyond that a dressing room most adequately equipped.

  “This is clover,” she thought presently, when she slipped into a warm bath.

  “And this is some more clover,” she murmured later, as, robed in a little nainsook gown, she stretched out luxuriously between lavender scented sheets. “I don’t care what may come later. I know that I am going to have a real sleep.”

  It was five o’clock in the afternoon when she awoke. On the chair by her bed was a change of clothing, a pair of white tennis shoes, a dark blue skirt, a white middy and a red tie.

  “Oh!” she thought. “The kind of clothes I love.”

  She hastened to dress partially, then slipped on a little negligee and began to do her hair.

  “I wish it would sometimes go twice in the same place,” she thought ruefully. “I never can fix it as I like. It’s the only thing that ever got the better of me except Kind Kurt. Well!” with an impatient shake of her rebellious locks, “go crop-cut, if you insist. I can’t help it.”

  Mrs. Kingdon smiled when the little girlish figure opened the door in response to her knock.

  “I felt sure that that outfit, which was left here by my fifteen-year-old niece when she last visited us, would fit you, though Kurt insists that you are twenty. You had a nice sleep, didn’t you?”

  “I think I never really slept before. Such a bed, and such heavenly quiet! So different from street-car racket.”

  “My husband and the boys have been away all day, or there wouldn’t have been such quiet. Dinner is ready. Kurt didn’t tell me your name.”

  “Penelope Lamont. My first name is always shortened to Pen or Penny.”

  Down stairs in the long, low-ceiling library she was introduced to Mr. Kingdon, a man of winning personality, a philosopher and a humorist. Ranged beside him were three appalling critics: two boys of nine and seven years respectively, and a little girl of five. They stared at her solemnly and surveyingly while she was presented to their father.

  “Can you skin a weasel?” asked Francis, the oldest lad, when Pen turned to him.

  “Mother said you were a young lady,” said Billy. “You’re just a little girl like Doris was.”

  “And you’ve got on her clothes,” declared Betty sagely.

  “Now you surely should feel at home,” declared Mrs. Kingdon.

  “Margaret,” commented her husband whimsically, “our children seem to be quite insistent on recognition and rather inclined to be personal in their remarks, don’t you think?”

  “We so seldom have visitors up here, you know,” defended the mother, smiling at Pen the while. “We will go into the dining room now.”

  Throughout the meal Pen was subtly conscious of an undercurrent of a most willing welcome to the hospitality of the ranch. Her surmise that the vacant place at the table was reserved for the foreman was verified by Betty who asked with a pout:

  “Why don’t we wait for Uncle Kurt?”

  “He dined an hour ago and rode away,” explained Mrs. Kingdon. “He will be back before your bedtime.”

  Every lull in the conversation was eagerly and instantly utilized by one or more of the children, who found Pen most satisfactorily responsive to their advances.

  “You’ve had your innings, Francis,” the father finally declared. “That will be the last from you.”

  “There’s one thing more I want to know,” he pleaded. “Miss Lamont, do colored people ever have—what was it you said you were afraid Miss Lamont had, mother?”

  “Oh, Francis!” exclaimed his mother. “I said,” looking at Pen, “that I feared you were anemic, and then I had to describe the word minutely.”

  “Are they ever that, Miss Lamont?” insisted the boy.

  “I never thought of it before,” answered Pen after a moment’s reflection, “but I don’t see why they couldn’t be so, same as white people.”

  “Then how could they tell they had it. They wouldn’t look white, would they?”

  “Suppose,” interceded Kingdon, “we try to find a less colorful topic. I move we adjourn to the library for coffee.”

  “We stay up an hour after dinner,” said Billy, when they were gathered about the welcome open fire, “but when we have company, it’s an hour and a half.”

  “I should think that rule would be reversed,” replied Kingdon humorously.

  “Then, aren’t you glad I’m here?” Pen asked Billy.

  “Sure!” came in hearty assurance. “You can stay up a long time, can’t you, because you slept all day?”

  “Play with us,” besought Betty.

  “Yes; play rough,” demanded Billy.

  Mrs. Kingdon interposed. “She’s too tired to do that,” she admonished the children.

  Betty came forward with a box of paper and a pair of scissors.

  “You can cut me some paper dolls. That won’t tire you.”

  “I don’t want dolls!” scoffed Francis.

  Pen was already using the articles Betty had furnished.

  “Not if we call them circus ladies and I cut horses for them to ride on?” she asked him.

  “Can you do that?” he inquired unbelievingly.

  “Certainly. Dashing horses that will stand up,” she boasted, and in another moment a perfectly correct horse was laid before the delighted boys.

  A few more rapid snips and a short-skirted lady was handed to Betty.

  “Now, make a clown, a lion, a tiger, an elephant,” came in quick, short orders which were readily filled.

  “My dear young lady,” exclaimed Kingdon. “You are really talented. It is so seldom an artist can do anything but draw.”

  “I can’t draw. I am just a cutter,” she corrected. “I can’t do anything with a pencil.”

  They were all so absorbed in the paper products that Kurt’s entrance passed unnoted.

  “Betty,” he said imploringly, after waiting a moment without recognition, “you can’t guess what’s in my pocket?”

  Pen looked up unbelievingly. The caressing, winning note had utterly disguised his voice. As he handed the delighted Betty a satisfactorily shaped parcel, his glance rested upon his prisoner, bringing a quick gleam of surprise to his eyes.

  “I am taking out my first papers, you see,” she announced, pointing to the miniature menagerie.

  “Where did you learn to do that?” he asked.

  “A man showed me,” she said noncommittally.

  “What else can you cut?” demanded Francis.

  “I can cut an airship.”

  “Cut me one.”

  “To-morrow,�
� said Mrs. Kingdon. “The time limit is up.”

  “Did you ever go up in an airship?” asked Billy eagerly.

  “No; but I know a man who flies,” she boasted.

  “Come upstairs and tell us about him,” demanded Billy.

  As his mother cordially seconded the invitation, Pen accompanied them to the nursery. When the last “good nights” had been said to the children, Mrs. Kingdon led the way to her room.

  “The moon shouldn’t seem so far away,” declared Pen, looking out of the broad window. “We are up so high.”

  “I haven’t yet ceased to wonder at these hills,” rejoined Mrs. Kingdon. “We bought this ranch merely for a vacation place, but three-fourths of our time is spent up here, as we have become so attached to it. Mr. Kingdon is an artist, so he never tires of watching the hills and the sky. Sometimes we feel selfish with so much happiness—when there isn’t enough to go around.”

  “I know you take but a small percentage of what you give. Shall I tell my story now?”

  “I think I know it—or some of it, at least,” replied Mrs. Kingdon, looking at her intently.

  Pen looked up with a startled gesture.

  “You do! How—”

  “When I was in your room just before dinner, it came to me where I had seen you before. It was about a year ago—in San Francisco—in a police station. I made inquiries; was interested in you and tried to see you, but we were suddenly called home. I should like to hear more about your life and what brought you to these hills.”

  “I wish no one else need know it,” she said entreatingly, when she had told her story in detail.

  “Kurt is surely entitled to know it all,” replied Mrs. Kingdon.

  “I suppose he is; though I wish he didn’t know as much as he already does. It isn’t necessary to tell him to-night, is it? I am still tired in spite of my long rest.”

  “To-morrow will do. If you like, I will tell him, and I wish you and he would leave the entire matter—about Jo and all—in my hands.”

  “Most gladly,” assented Pen. “But where is Jo?”

  “He is on a neighboring ranch—temporarily, only.”

  “There is something else I should like to know. Why is Kurt so different from most men? Doesn’t he ever look pleasant, or was his gloom all on my account?”

 

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