<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE LITTLE TOWN OF BAUER</div>
<p><span class="smcap">Mary</span> was the only one to whom the change
of plans made a vital difference. She had built
such lovely dream-castles of their winter in San
Antonio that it was hard to see them destroyed
at one breath.</p>
<p>"Of course it's the only thing to do," she said,
in a mournful aside to Norman, "but did you ever
dream that there was a dish of rare, delicious fruit
set down in front of you, so tempting that you
could hardly wait to taste it, and just as you put
out your hand it was suddenly snatched away?
That's the way I feel about leaving here. And
I've dreamed of getting letters, too; big, fat letters,
that were somehow going to change my whole
life for the better, and then just as I started to
read them I always woke up, and so never found
out the secret that would make such a change in
my fortunes."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Maybe it won't be so bad after all," encouraged
Norman. "Maybe we can have a boat.
There's a creek running through the town and the
Barnaby ranch is only seven miles out in the country.
We'll see them often."</p>
<p>Mary wanted to wail out, "Oh, it isn't boats,
and ranches, and old people I want! It's girls,
and boys, and something doing! Being in the heart
of things, as we would be if we could only stay
here in this beautiful old city!"</p>
<p>The wail found no voice, however, for even in
the midst of her disappointment Mary remembered
Jack, and could not let him feel that this change
in their plans meant any sacrifice for her. Besides,
she had to acknowledge that the creek and the
ranch <i>did</i> hold out some compensations, and she
was deeply grateful to these two kind old people
who had come to their rescue in such cordial, neighborly
fashion. Mr. Barnaby had been called into
the family council also, and had spent the evening
with them discussing prices and prospects.</p>
<p>Even Norman was impressed by their offers of
assistance, and spoke of it as he sat slowly unlacing
his shoes after they had gone. Mary was
in the next room, repacking her trunk, for it had
been decided that she and Norman were to go<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
to Bauer on the early accommodation train when
the Barnabys left for home. The door between
the rooms was still open, and she heard him say,
thoughtfully:</p>
<p>"What do you suppose makes them so rattling
good to us when we're just strangers?"</p>
<p>Jack laughed and quoted, teasingly:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"'What makes the lamb love Mary so?'<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The eager children cry.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">'Oh, Mary loves the lamb, you know,'</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The teacher did reply."</span><br/></div>
<p>"Aw, talk sense!" was Norman's disgusted answer.
"I don't know what you mean by that."</p>
<p>An understanding smile flashed between Jack
and his mother, who had stayed to help him prepare
for the night, and she answered for him.</p>
<p>"Jack only means that we get just what we
give in this world, dear. From the days of Solomon
it's been a proverb that the man who would
have friends 'must show himself friendly.' And
that's what you and Mary did the first night you
met the Barnabys. You made them feel that you
found them genuinely interesting, and that awakened
a liking for you."</p>
<p>"But anybody'd find that old man interesting,"
Norman explained, gravely. "You never heard<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
such Indian stories as he can tell,—true ones that
he's been in himself,—and hunting—Gee! you
ought to hear him! I bid to sit next to him going
up on the train."</p>
<p>"You're welcome to him!" called Mary. "I'll
take Mrs. B." Then she came to the doorway,
a pile of folded garments in her hands. "I declare,
she's just an old dear! She's thought of
so many ways to save us expense since she found
out that we have to economize. She even offered
to have our two extra trunks checked on their
tickets. They only brought suit-cases. So we'll
have no extra baggage to pay for."</p>
<p>The sun was shining next morning, and although
the chill of the Norther was still in the air, the
rain-washed plazas were greener than ever, and
new roses were opening to take the places of the
old ones that the storm had beaten off the day
before. Mary's spirits seemed to have passed
through the same freshening process, for there was
no trace of tears or regrets on the bright face that
greeted her travelling companions.</p>
<p>The only morning train was an accommodation,
which carried much freight and took its own time
for the journey. This happened to be a day when
it was four hours on the road, but none of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
little party felt that time dragged. Ordinarily,
Mary would have enjoyed keeping close to the old
ranchman, as Norman did, hopping off the car
every time they stopped on a side-track, to investigate
everything along the way,—the lime works,
the rock quarry, the station where the mail was
put off for the soldiers who were camped at
the Government reservation for target practise.
Even the little oil-burning engine would have
been of as much interest to her as it was to Norman,
had she not been so busily occupied otherwise.</p>
<p>As they wound higher and higher into the hills
she looked out now and then with a quick exclamation
of pleasure at the view, but for the most part
she was "visiting" with Mrs. Barnaby, as that
good soul expressed it. Their acquaintance took
long strides forward that morning. Part of the
time Mary chattered along just as if her listener
had been one of the Warwick Hall girls, and part
of the time she listened to elderly views and confidences
with the seeming sympathy of middle age.
A bit of personal history from one called out a
corresponding scrap from the other, and they had
exchanged views on many subjects, ranging from
young turkeys to unhappy marriages, when the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
porter passed through the train calling, "Bauer!
All out for Bauer!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Barnaby glanced out the window, saying
in surprise, "I had no idea we were so near home!"
Then she gave Mary's sleeve an affectionate little
pat with her plump hand, exclaiming cordially, "I
declare, it's been a real treat to have you along."
And Mary, as she helped Mrs. Barnaby struggle
into her coat, responded, "Well, I've enjoyed every
inch of the way. Somehow you make me feel that
you're just my age or I'm just yours,—I don't
know which. You can't imagine how 'little and
lorn' I feel at the thought of leaving you."</p>
<p>"Oh, but I'm not going to leave you until you're
safely settled," was the comforting assurance.
"James has some business at the court-house that
will keep him in town for an hour or so. As
soon as we drop him there I'll drive around with
you to make arrangements about the cottage.
There's Pedro now."</p>
<p>They were on the platform by this time, and she
indicated by a nod the slim young Mexican who
had driven the carriage from the ranch to meet
them. It was a roomy, old-fashioned carriage
drawn by two big gray mules, with much shining
nickel-plating on their stout black harness. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
station was half a mile away from the village,
and as they swung down the sunny white road
towards it, at a rapid gait, both Norman and Mary
looked out eagerly at the place that was to be their
home for a whole long winter, and maybe more.</p>
<p>From a distance it looked almost like a toy village,
with its red roofs, blue barns and flashing
windmills nestled against the background of misty
hills. Low mountain peaks rose here and there
on the far horizon beyond.</p>
<p>"This is distinctly a German village, you know,"
explained Mrs. Barnaby, as they passed a group
of little flaxen-haired Teutons on the roadside,
who were calling to each other and their dog in
a tongue which Mary could not understand.</p>
<p>"Bauer was settled by an old German count and
a baron or two, who came over here with their
families and followers. They made it as much
like a corner of the Fatherland as they could, and
their descendants still cling to their language and
customs. They don't want any disturbing, aggressive
Americans in their midst, so they never
call on new-comers, and never return their visits
if any of them try to make the advances. They
will welcome you to their shops, but not to their
homes. Even the English and Scotch people who<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
have owned the out-lying ranches as long as they
have owned the town are looked upon as aliens
and strangers, in a way."</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/i002.jpg" width-obs="375" height-obs="500" alt="A dashing girl in khaki and a cowboy hat astride of a fiery little mustang" /></div>
<p>Mary gave an exclamation of dismay. "Texas
certainly is full of surprises," she said, in a disappointed
tone. "One thinks of it as being young
and crude, and with the proverbial hospitality of
a new country. I've always thought of it as having
the latch-string out for everybody."</p>
<p>"Oh, <i>Texas</i> has," Mrs. Barnaby hastened to
assure her. "Its doors are wide open, and its
welcome corresponds to its size, the biggest in the
Union. But Bauer is different. It has a few
families who will not look on you with suspicion.
The old couple who own the cottage which I hope
to get for you will be good neighbors, and if you
were to live here a long time there are others who
would be friendly. Then there are several American
families who have found a foothold in the
town, and as I said, English-speaking people on
the ranches hereabout. They are cultured, refined
people, interesting to know, but strangers coming
here rarely make their acquaintance. You see we
have so many transients coming for their health,
staying just a few weeks or months and going
on again—it's hardly to be expected we'd—"</p>
<p>Her sentence was interrupted by a dashing girl
in khaki and a cowboy hat, astride a fiery little
mustang. She rode past the carriage, calling out
a greeting as she passed. Norman turned around
exclaiming, "Did you see that? A cartridge belt
around her waist and a six-shooter in her holster!
That's the wild West for you."</p>
<p>"That's the sheriff's daughter," explained Mrs.
Barnaby. "She's his deputy, and meets the trains
when it's necessary and he's out of town."</p>
<p>"I'd like to know her," said Mary. "I'm glad
that there's something to give one the kind of a
thrill you naturally expect to have out here. I
was beginning to have such a foreign, far-away
feeling, seeing all these picturesque little German
gardens with old women weeding in them. We
can imagine we are abroad this winter in Cologne
or Pottsdam or Bingen on the Rhine. Oh, <i>oh!</i>
How quaint and dear!"</p>
<p>The exclamation escaped her as the gray mules
stopped at the gate of an old garden, over whose
stone walls arched a row of great pecan trees. A
straight path ran from the gate to the kitchen door,
stiffly bordered by coxcombs and princes' feather,
while on each side chrysanthemums and roses and a
host of old-fashioned autumn flowers made the little<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
plot a tangle of colors and sweet smells. There
were some bee-hives under the bare peach trees,
and at one side beyond them, a small vineyard
where the mockingbirds still sang noisily although
the grapes had all been gathered and pressed into
wine. An old man with a flowing white beard
and a high black hat sat on a bench by the kitchen
door placidly smoking a long pipe.</p>
<p>"That's Mr. Metz," said Mrs. Barnaby, preparing
to alight. "Come in with me."</p>
<p>"It's all just like one of the pictures in Joyce's
studio," commented Mary, as they followed the
straight walk to the door, "and this is just like
one of those lovely old-master, Dutch interiors," she
added, in a whisper, as Mr. Metz ushered them into
the big, clean kitchen, where his wife sat knitting.</p>
<p>On the deep window-sill a cat lay asleep in the
sun beside a pot of glowing red geraniums, and
there was such an air of cleanliness and thrift
and repose about the room that Mary could not
help exclaiming aloud over it. As she glanced
around with admiring glances her bright face
showed its appreciation also, and Mrs. Metz
watched it shrewdly while she talked with Mrs.
Barnaby, in English so broken as to be almost
unintelligible.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>What the old woman saw must have satisfied
her, for she accepted Mrs. Barnaby's offer after
a very short parley with her husband in German,
and when they rose to go she bade them wait
while she made a stiff little nosegay for each of
them, culled from her garden borders and edged
with strong-smelling mint. In the center of Mary's
was one of her handsomest coxcombs. Mrs. Barnaby
smiled meaningly when she saw it, and when
they had climbed back into the carriage, said in
a pleased tone, "That shows that she has weighed
you in the balance and is satisfied with the result.
You'll get along famously with her, I'm sure, and
we'll soon have you settled now, in fine shape."</p>
<p>An hour later Mary stood on the threshold of
the cottage she had rented, with the keys of possession
in her hand. Thanks to Mrs. Barnaby and
the rapid gait of the gray mules, much had been
accomplished in that time. The groceries they had
ordered were already piled on the table in the
kitchen. A load of wood was on its way. The
new mattresses they had bought at the furniture
shop (kept by the undertaker of the village) were
promised for delivery early in the afternoon, and
they had been introduced at each place as friends
of the Barnabys, who were to be charged home<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
prices, and not the ones usually asked of strangers.
Mrs. Barnaby was what she called plain-spoken,
and although she made a jest of her demands they
carried weight.</p>
<p>Their trunks, three of which contained bedclothes
and dishes, stood on the front gallery waiting
to be unpacked. Inside, the house looked as
clean as soapsuds and fresh paint could make it.
Mrs. Metz herself had attended to the scrubbing
after the last tenant left. But Mary decided that
she would feel more comfortable, moving in after
strangers, if she should give the furniture a personal
washing before they began to use it. While
Norman built a fire in the kitchen stove, she unlocked
one of the trunks and changed her travelling
suit for a gingham dress and apron.</p>
<p>"Let's eat picnic fashion," called Norman, "and
unpack afterward. It's nearly one o'clock, and
I'm too hungry to wait. I've found a cup I can
boil some eggs in, and if we don't use any dishes
we won't have any to wash afterwards."</p>
<p>"That's a bright suggestion," Mary called back.
"We haven't any time to lose if we are to get
everything ready for mamma and Jack by to-morrow
afternoon."</p>
<p>When she came dancing out into the kitchen a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
few minutes later Norman had already begun his
luncheon, and was walking around with a cheese
sandwich in one hand and a pickle in the other,
investigating the premises while he ate. Mary
followed his example, and wandered from the open
doorway to the open windows, looking at the view
from each, and exclaiming over each new discovery.
The house was on a slight knoll with a
wide cotton-field stretching down between it and
the little village. From this distance it looked
more than ever like a toy village, against the background
of low hills.</p>
<p>"You ought to see it from the top of the windmill,"
said Norman. "I climbed up while you
and Mrs. Barnaby were talking so long at the
gate. I'm glad we've got a windmill. It'll save
me a lot of pumping, and it makes such a fine
watch-tower. You ought to see how far you can
look across the country. You can see the creek.
It's just a little way back of our place."</p>
<p>"I'm going up this minute!" answered Mary.
Slipping her unfinished sandwiches into her apron
pocket, she ran out to the windmill and began to
swing herself from one cross-piece of the tower
to another, as lightly as Norman had done.</p>
<p>"It's perfectly lovely!" she called back from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
the top. "I'd like to perch up here all afternoon
if there wasn't so much to do. I'm going to come
up here often. It gives you such a high-up-above-all-your-earthly-ills
feeling! There's St. Peter's,"
she called, "over at the south end of town. I
recognize the little stone belfry. What do you
suppose that square tower is at the other end
of town?"</p>
<p>Norman came out and climbed half-way up the
windmill, swinging there below her by one arm,
as he slowly munched a ginger-snap.</p>
<p>"Oh, that," he said, as he looked in the direction
which she pointed. "That's the Sisters'
school. I asked Pedro this morning. It's the
Academy of the Holy Angels."</p>
<p>Mary's face glowed as she shook back the hair
which the wind kept blowing into her eyes.
"That's perfectly fascinating!" she declared.
"There's something beautiful to me in the thought
that the little town we've come to lies between
two such guardians. It's a good omen, and I'm
not sorry now that we had to come."</p>
<p>She stayed perched on the windmill, enjoying
the view and eating her sandwiches until Norman
called her that the wash-water was boiling over on
the stove. Then she climbed nimbly down and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
started towards the kitchen door. The kitchen
was in an ell of the house, and from its front
window she could see the road which ran in front
of the house. Just across it, half hidden by a
row of bushy umbrella trees, stood two little blue
cottages. They were within easy calling distance,
and the voices of half a dozen children at play
came cheerfully across to her. Although they
spoke in a foreign tongue the chatter gave her a
sense of companionship.</p>
<p>"Norman," she suddenly suggested, "let's stay
here to-night, instead of going to the boarding-house
as mamma and Mrs. Barnaby arranged. I'm not
afraid with neighbors so near, and I'm sure mamma
wouldn't care if she could see how quiet and peaceful
it is here. We'd be saving considerable—a
night's lodging for two, and we can make this
real comfortable and homey by bedtime."</p>
<p>With the promise of hot biscuit and honey for
supper Norman agreed to her plan. He was to
call at the boarding-house and cancel the arrangements
Mrs. Barnaby had made for them, when
he went for the milk which Mr. Metz had promised
to sell them. It was from the Metz bee-hives
they were to have the honey, too. She had engaged
it as a special treat for Jack.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Under her direction Norman fell to work making
a kitchen cabinet out of two old boxes, while she
scrubbed away at the chairs and tables.</p>
<p>"Isn't it funny the way history repeats itself?"
she remarked. "This makes me think of the time
that Joyce and Jack had getting settled in the
Wigwam. I felt so defrauded then because I
couldn't have a hand in it, and this seems a sort
of compensation for what I missed then."</p>
<p>The exercise seemed to loosen her tongue, for
as she worked she went on, "I'm truly glad that
I can enjoy both the top and bottom crusts of
things. Nobody, I am sure, could have squeezed
more pleasure out of this last week than I did.
I fairly revelled in all the luxuries we had as Mr.
Robeson's guests. It comes so easy to be waited
on and to be the fine lady. And on the other
hand, it is a real joy to be working this way,
blacking stoves and filling lamps and making things
look spick and span. I can spend like a lord and
I can skimp like a scrubwoman, and I really don't
know which I enjoy most."</p>
<p>She did not attempt to put any finishing touches
to the house that day, but left such things as
the hanging of curtains and the few pictures they
had brought until next morning. But before she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
stopped everything was shining, her room was
ready for the night, and a cot was made up for
Norman in the room which he was to share with
Jack. Later, while she waited for the biscuits to
bake and for him to come home with the milk
and honey, she wrote a letter to Joyce. She did
not take time to go to the bottom of her trunk
for writing material, but emptying the sugar from
a large paper sack, cut it into several square sheets.
With a big tin pan turned bottom upwards in her
lap for a desk, she hastily scribbled the events of
the day with a lead-pencil, which she sharpened
with the carving-knife.</p>
<p>Joyce has that letter yet. It was scribbled in
the most careless, commonplace way, just as Mary
would have told it had they been together; but
Joyce, who could read her little sister like a book,
read between the lines and divined the disappointments
she had conquered, and saw the courage it
took to make the most of every amusing incident
in such a cheery way, while she touched only
lightly on the serious ones.</p>
<p>"We had a visitor a little while ago," wrote
Mary, in closing. "The Reverend Paul Rochester
came to call, and where, of all awkward impossible
places, do you suppose he found me? Up on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
windmill tower. I had gone up again to watch
the sunset,—for just a minute. The glow on the
roofs of the town and the hills beyond was so
lovely! If Norman had had any sense he would
have ignored my high perch. He was splitting
kindling by the back door, making such a noise
that we could not hear Mr. Rochester's knock at
the front door, so he came around.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Barnaby had stopped at the rectory on
her way home to tell them about our coming to
town, and Mrs. Rochester thought that we were
all here, and that we would be so busy getting settled
that we wouldn't have much time to cook
things for an invalid, and she had sent the most
tempting basketful of good things you ever saw.
There was orange gelatine and charlotte russe, and
some delicious nut sandwiches. The rector had
walked all the way up here and carried the basket
himself. You know I've always stood in awe
of clergymen. At first this one seemed fully as
dignified and reverend as all the others, and I
nearly fell off my perch with <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'embarassment'">embarrassment</ins> when
he looked up and saw me hanging there like a
monkey on a stick. But the next moment we both
laughed, and he seemed almost as young and boyish
as Jack.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I scuttled down in a hurry, I assure you. He
only stayed a minute, just long enough to deliver
the basket and his wife's message, but you've no
idea how that little incident changed the whole
atmosphere. I'd been looking down the white road
that leads from our place into the town, thinking
how lonely and foreign everything was, and how
hard it would be to live all winter in a place where
nobody wanted to be neighborly, and where the
only people we knew were slightly old like the
Barnabys or awfully old like the Metzes, and then
Mr. Rochester appeared, young and so nice-looking
and with a jolly twinkle in his eyes that makes
you forget the clerical cut of his clothes.</p>
<p>"His wife must be young, too, or she couldn't
be married to him, and she must be dear or she
wouldn't have sent such a dainty, altogether charming
basket with her message of greeting. You've
no idea how their cordial welcome changed everything.
Now as I look through the open door at
the same road leading to the town, it doesn't look
lonely and foreign any more. It makes me think
of a verse that dear old Grandmother Ware taught
me once. You remember how she used to take us
up in her lap and make us spell the words out
to her from her big Bible with the terrible pictures.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
'<i>The crooked shall be made straight, and
the rough ways shall be made smooth!</i>'</p>
<p>"Well, grandmother's verse is coming true. It
was all so crooked and uncertain and rough yesterday.
But now everything is being smoothed out
for us so beautifully. I have just looked out to
see if Norman is coming. I can hear him whistling
away down the road.</p>
<p>"I wish you, with your artist's eye for effect,
could see the little town now, spread out below
the hills in the twilight, with the windmills silhouetted
against the sky. At one end is the little
stone belfry of St. Peter's, at the other the square
gray tower of the Academy of the Holy Angels;
and just between, swinging low over the hills in
the faint afterglow, the pale golden crescent of the
new moon. After all, it's a good old world, Joyce,
and I 'feel it in my bones' that little old Bauer
is going to bring us some great good that shall
make us thankful always for having come. In
some way, I am sure, all our '<i>rough ways shall be
made smooth</i>.'"</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />