More of the late winter days snowed past, and there came, by and by, hints of spring—faint suggestions of green in the bare, brown spots, whiffs of spring tonic in the air and clear little bird-calls overhead. New courage was born in Glory's heart and the Other Girl's, and both studied harder and harder with each day that went by. The Crosspatch Conductor took note of the two brown heads bent over the book and wondered behind his grim mask.
“What is it, anyhow?” he asked one day, late in the spring, stopping before them in the aisle.
The two pairs of eyes met his laughingly. “Oh—things. Splendid things!” Glory said. “Certificates and diplomas some day, and sick folks with glad faces, and little boys with twin legs! Isn't that enough to ‘pay’?”
“Umph!” the Crosspatch Conductor muttered in his beard, and strode on down the aisle. But he beckoned Glory aside that night on the home trip and questioned her about the Other Girl. Glory told him the whole story in a few hurried words.
“That's why she's studying so hard,” she wound up, out of breath. “She wants to get it all and some day be a teacher.”
“And you're helping her,” the Crosspatch Conductor said, gruffly.
“Mercy, no! She's helping me. That's why I'm studying so hard! I don't see what you mean—oh! In the very beginning, you mean? That? I'd forgotten there ever was a time when I helped her. I s'pose I might have a little, at first.”
The conductor put his big hand on Glory's shoulder with a touch as light and caressing as that of a woman.
“You're the right kind, both o' you,” he said. “It never comes amiss to help anybody. I've half a mind to try a little of it myself. See here, don't you tell her and go to raising hopes, but it kind of seems to me as though I knew a place where she could teach right away. I know a boy who hasn't any mother that wants to learn things. She'd make a pretty good sort of a teacher for a little feller who can never go outdoors and get the sunshine, and all that, now wouldn't she?”
“Oh, are you sure there is such a boy? Can you get him for Diantha? Would it pay her money—lots of it?”