“You may remember a night at my uncle's, Colonel Carvel's, on the occasion of my cousin's birthday?”
“Yes,” said Stephen, in surprise.
“Well,” blurted Clarence, boyishly, “I was rude to you in my uncle's house, and I have since been sorry.”
“He held out his hand, and Stephen took it warmly.
“I was younger then, Mr. Colfax,” he said, “and I didn't understand your point of view as well as I do now. Not that I have changed my ideas,” he added quickly, “but the notion of the girl's going South angered me. I was bidding against the dealer rather than against you. Had I then known Miss Carvel—” he stopped abruptly.
The winning expression died from the face of the other.
He turned away, and leaning across the rail, stared at the high bluffs, red-bronzed by the autumn sun. A score of miles beyond that precipice was a long low building of stone, surrounded by spreading trees,—the school for young ladies, celebrated throughout the West, where our mothers and grandmothers were taught,—Monticello. Hither Miss Virginia Carvel had gone, some thirty days since, for her second winter.
Perhaps Stephen guessed the thought in the mind of his companion, for he stared also. The music in the cabin came to an abrupt pause, and only the tumbling of waters through the planks of the great wheels broke the silence. They were both startled by laughter at their shoulders. There stood Miss Russell, the picture of merriment, her arm locked in Anne Brinsmade's.
“It is the hour when all devout worshippers turn towards the East,” she said. “The goddess is enshrined at Monticello.”
Both young men, as they got to their feet, were crimson. Whereupon Miss Russell laughed again. Anne, however, blushed for them. But this was not the first time Miss Russell had gone too far. Young Mr. Colfax, with the excess of manner which was his at such times, excused himself and left abruptly. This to the further embarrassment of Stephen and Anne, and the keener enjoyment of Miss Russell.