He kept his eyes on the yellow head, this unfortunate bungler, who had been in love with Norah since he had worn knickerbockers, and Norah held her own head higher in the air. And she let Mr. Williamson, the new book-keeper at Conner’s (he who would have mortgaged two farms for her), take her to the ice-cream table, leaving the bungling lover (christened Patrick Maurice, his surname being Barnes), to jostle dismally over to the apron table, where Freda was.
Norah laughed at Mr. Williamson’s jokes, and asked him questions about the business college from which he had recently been graduated, and was the picture of soft animation and pleasure; and the while her heart was like lead, and she hated Freda Berglund. Sitting at the table she heard snatches of talk, all tinctured by the strong excitement of the evening. “I can’t help it if they do quarrel,” she thought, angrily, answering her own accusation; not even to herself did she say that she hated Freda.
Her eyes wandered a second over the hall; they saw the Vicar-General’s pale, handsome face, a half-head taller than Father Kelly’s good gray head; they saw a square-jawed, black-haired, determined, smiling young man behind the ballot-box turning his eyes from Pat Barnes to an elderly man who held up his hand, waving a roll of bills.
“Ah, I see Berglund has arrived,” said Williamson. “You are going to do a lot to build the church, Miss Norah.”
Berglund was rather a short man; his hair was gray; he limped from the old wound received at Shiloh. Something clutched at Norah’s heart as she looked at him. Williamson made some trivial joke; she did not hear it; she was hearing over again the words of the German woman to Mrs. O’Brien that afternoon. Impulsively she sprang to her feet. “Will you excuse me, Mr. Williamson?” she exclaimed. “I have to go to the voting-booth one moment.” She went so swiftly that Williamson had much ado to keep pace with her, besides overpaying the waitress in his hurry. Father Kelly swallowed a groan of dismay at the fresh strain on his faith when he perceived her beckoning a ring-laden hand at the custodian of votes; and the Vicar-General involuntarily frowned. They both with one accord pushed up to the table—to the visible relief of the young man behind it. “I don’t know what to do,” he confided to Father Kelly, before the latter could ask the question quivering on his tongue—“I don’t know what to do. Miss Murray wants me not to take in any more money ’til I hear from her again. She’ll be back. And here’s old Berglund wants three hundred and fifty dollars’ worth for Miss Freda, and here’s Barnes with a big bunch for Miss Murray, trying to scare off the old man. What’ll I do, Father?”
“I guess you better not do anything,” said Father Kelly, with a twinkle in his eye. “Norah Murray is apt to have a good reason for her asking. Shut the booth down, and I’ll take charge while you go off for a cup of coffee.”
The Vicar-General nodded approval.
“Well, just’s you say, Father,” said the young man; “it’s kind of unprecedented.”
“What do you suppose it means?” puzzled the Vicar-General, in an undertone, as the vote-taker disappeared; and the crowd fell back a little on Father Kelly’s bland announcement that Mr. Duffy had been called off for a few minutes, and there would be a recess in voting.
“’Tis beyond me,” said Father Kelly, “but watch the girl; she’s gone straight to Freda Berglund. There, they’re talking; they’re going off together with Mrs. Orendorf. I can’t give a guess, but she’s a good girl. I’m hopeful.”