CONTENTS
[I Ann]
[II Three Men and a Girl]
[III Penniman and Westmore]
[IV But If He Failed Her?]
[V In Colonial Fashion]
[VI Baird Reconnoiters]
[VII The Westmores of Westmore]
[VIII The Colonel Is Suspicious]
[IX A Feminine Procedure]
[X The Infinitely Painful Thing]
[XI Kept in the Dark]
[XII A Vendetta]
[XIII Ineradicably Branded]
[XIV The Misfits]
[XV As with a Child]
[XVI "It Was Born in Her"]
[XVII Complexities]
[XVIII "You're All I Have"]
[XIX A Bargain]
[XX Marry? Yes]
[XXI A Lot of Planning]
[XXII Impressions]
[XXIII Chaotic Uncertainty]
[XXIV A Definition of Love]
[XXV Because She Loved Too Much]
[XXVI The Eternal Attraction]
[XXVII The Thing]
[XXVIII The Hell-Hole of the Westmores]
[XXIX "What's Not Known"]
[XXX Content]
[XXXI The Family Name]
[XXXII The Death-Trap]
[XXXIII From Despair To Hope]
[XXXIV Ben Brokaw Explains]
[XXXV Waiting]
[XXXVI "It Lies with Ann"]
[XXXVII Cold Cash]
[XXXVIII The Revelation]
[XXXIX "Will You Go with Me?"]
[Conclusion]
NOBODY'S CHILD
I
ANN
The quietude of winter still lay on the land, the apathetic dun of field and woodland unstirred as yet by the hint of spring that was tipping with eagerness the wings of the birds and, under their brown frost-dulled blanket, was quickening into fresh green the woody stems of arbutus. The mid-morning sun had struggled out of a gray March chill and was setting a-gleam the drops of moisture on trees and grass, drawing little rivulets from the streaks of snow which hid in the corners of the rail-fences and in the hollows of the creek. Winter was reluctantly saying farewell.
The girl, who a mile back had turned in from the old Fox-Ridge Post-Road and had come up through the pastures to the edge of the woodland, looked with smiling understanding at the slow yielding of winter. Another winter added to her sum of seventeen. Or, rather, as youth always looks forward and counts much upon the future, perhaps a joyous spring to be added to her sum of experience.
As she sat, swaying gently to the jerky motion of the creaking buggy, the reins lax in her hands, her eyes from beneath the shadow of her brown hood traveled over the reaches of pasture, the slopes of reddish soil freshly turned for oats, the trails of the snake-fences strangled by brown undergrowth, the twists and curves of the creek that divided the pasture from the upward slopes of grain-land, and, beyond, against the horizon, the red scars and dull patches of scrubby growth that marked the "Mine Banks," the ancient, worked-out, and now overgrown and abandoned iron-ore bed that a hundred and fifty years before had yielded wealth to its owners.