“I beg your pardon, but-did you speak--to me?” I asked, turning to him hesitatingly.

The old man met my eyes with an abashed smile.

“I guess I’m the party what had ought to be askin’ pardon, stranger,” he apologized. “I talk to myself so much I kinder furgit sometimes, and do it when folks is round. I was only sayin’ that I wondered why ’twas the good Lord give folks tongues and forgot to give ’em brains to run ’em with. But maybe you didn’t hear what she said,” he hazarded, with a jerk of his thumb toward the young woman in front.

“About Mrs. Whitermore? Yes, I heard.”

His face darkened.

“Then you know. And she heard, too! ‘Ordinary woman,’ indeed! Humph! To think that Betty Tillington should ever live to hear herself called an ‘ordinary woman’! You see, I knew her when she was Betty Tillington.”

“Did you?” I smiled encouragingly. I was getting interested, and I hoped he would keep on talking. On the platform the guest of honor was holding a miniature reception. He was the picture of polite attention and punctilious responsiveness; but I thought I detected a quick glance now and then toward the roped-off section where sat his wife and I wondered again--had he heard that thoughtless comment?

From somewhere had come the rumor that the man who was to introduce the Honorable Jonas Whitermore had been delayed by a washout “down the road,” but was now speeding toward us by automobile. For my part, I fear I wished the absentee a punctured tire so that I might hear more of the heart-history of the faded little woman with the bonnet askew.

“Yes, I knew her,” nodded my neighbor, “and she didn’t look much then like she does now. She was as pretty as a picture and there wa’n’t a chap within sight of her what wa’n’t head over heels in love with her. But there wa’n’t never a chance for but two of us and we knew it: Joe Whitermore and a chap named Fred Farrell. So, after a time, we just sort of stood off and watched the race--as pretty a race as ever you see. Farrell had the money and the good looks, while Whitermore was poor as a church mouse, and he was homely, too. But Whitermore must have had somethin’--maybe somethin’ we didn’t see, for she took him.

“Well, they married and settled down happy as two twitterin’ birds, but poor as Job’s turkey. For a year or so she was as pretty and gay as ever she was and into every good time goin’; then the babies came, one after another, some of ’em livin’ and some dyin’ soon after they came.