<h2>CHAPTER II</h2></div>
<p>Leslie and Allison!</p>
<p>Julia Cloud stood gazing out into the west,
while the whole sky lightened and sank away
into dusk with a burning ruby on its breast. The gloom
of her spirit glowed into brightness, and joy flooded
her soul.</p>
<p>Leslie and Allison! What round little warm bodies
they had, and what delicate, refined faces! They had
not seemed like Ellen’s blowsy, obstreperous youngsters,
practical and grasping to the last extreme after
the model of their father. They had starry eyes and
hair like tangled sunbeams. Their laughter rippled
like brooks in summer, and their hands were like bands
that bound the heart. Cookies and stories and long
walks and picnics! Those had made up the beautiful
days that they spent with her, roaming the woods and
meadows, picking dandelions and violets, and playing
fairy stories. It had been like a brief return of her old
childish days with her boy comrade. She remembered
the heartache and the empty days after they had gone
back to their Western home, and the little printed
childish letters that came for a few months till she
was forgotten.</p>
<p>But not really forgotten, after all. For some link
of tenderness must still remain that they should think
of her now after all these years of separation, and want
to visit her. They remembered the cookies! She smiled
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_20' name='page_20'></SPAN>20</span>
reminiscently. What a batch of delectable cookies she
would make in the morning! Why, to-morrow would
be Wednesday! They would be here to-morrow night!
And there was a great deal to be done!</p>
<p>She turned from the belated sunset unregretting,
and hastened to begin her preparations. There were
the two front rooms up-stairs to be prepared. She
would open the windows at once, and let the air sweep
through all night. They had been shut up a long time,
for she had brought the invalid down-stairs to the little
sitting-room the last few months to save steps and
be always within hearing. The second story had been
practically unused except when Ellen or the children
were over for a day or two.</p>
<p>She hurried up-stairs, and lit the gas in the two
rooms, throwing wide the windows, hunting out fresh
sheets and counterpanes. She could dust and run the
carpet-sweeper over the rooms right away, and have
them in order; and that would save time for to-morrow.
Oh, it was good to have something cheerful to do once
more. Just supposing she had yielded––as once that
afternoon she almost had––to Ellen’s persistent urgings,
and had gone home with her to-night! Why, the
telegram might not have reached her till after the children
had come, and found the house empty, and
gone again!</p>
<p>Julia bustled around happily, putting the rooms
into charming order, hunting up a little picture of the
child Samuel kneeling in the temple, that Allison used
to like, going to the bottom of an old hair trunk for the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_21' name='page_21'></SPAN>21</span>
rag doll she had made for Leslie to cuddle when she
went to sleep at night.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ambrose Perkins across the way looked uneasily
out of her bedroom window at half-past nine,
and said to her husband:</p>
<p>“Seems like Julia Cloud is staying up awful late to-night.
She’s got a light in both front rooms, too.
There can’t be company. I s’pose Ellen and some of
her children have stayed down after all. Poor Ellen!
She told me she simply couldn’t spare the time away
from home any longer, but Julia was set on staying
there. I never thought Julia was selfish; but I s’pose
she doesn’t realize how hard it is for Ellen, living that
way between two houses. Julia’ll go to live with Ellen
now, of course. It’s real good of Herbert Robinson
to ask her. Julia ought to appreciate having relatives
like that.”</p>
<p>“Relatives nothing!” said Mr. Ambrose, pulling
off his coat and hanging it over a chair. “She’ll be a
fool if she goes! She’s slaved all her life, and she
deserves a little rest now. If she goes out to Herbert
Robinson’s, she won’t be allowed to call her eyelashes
her own; you mark my words!”</p>
<p>“Well, what else can she do?” said his wife. “She
hasn’t any husband or children, and I think she’ll be
mighty well off to get a good home. Men are awful
hard on each other, Ambrose. I always knew that.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud meanwhile, with a last look at the
neat rooms, put out her lights, and went to bed, but not
to sleep. She was so excited that the darkness seemed
luminous about her. She was trying to think how
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_22' name='page_22'></SPAN>22</span>
those two children would look grown up. Allison was
nineteen and Leslie nearly seventeen now. Their
mother had been dead five years, and they had been
in boarding-schools. Their guardian was an old gentleman,
a friend of their mother’s. That was about all
she knew concerning them. Would they seem like
strangers, she wondered, or would there be enough
resemblance to recall the dear girl and boy of the years
that were gone? How she clung to those cookies with
hope! There was some remembrance left, or they
would not have put cookies in a telegram. How impetuous
and just like Allison, the boy, that telegram
had sounded!</p>
<p>It was scarcely daylight when Julia Cloud arose
and went down to the kitchen to bake the cookies;
and the preparations she made for baking pies and
doughnuts and other toothsome dainties would lead
one to suppose that she was expecting to feed a regiment
for a week at least.</p>
<p>She filled the day with hard work, as she had
been wont to do, and never once thought of gray
sunsets or dreary futures. Not even the thought of
her sister Ellen came to trouble her as she put the
house in order, filled her pantry with good things to eat,
and set the table for three with all the best things the
house afforded.</p>
<p>At evening she stood once more beside the front
window, looking out sunsetward. There was nothing
gray about either sky or road or landscape now. There
had been brilliant sunshine all day long, and the sky
lay mellow and yellow behind the orchard, with a clear,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_23' name='page_23'></SPAN>23</span>
transparent greenish-blue above and a hint of rosy
light in the long rays that reached their fingers along
the ground between the apple-trees. In a few minutes
the evening train would be in, and there would be rose
in the sunset. She knew the signs, and the sky would
be glorious to-night. They would see it as they came
from the train. In fifteen minutes it would be time
for her to put on her hat and go down to meet them!
How her heart throbbed with anticipation!</p>
<p>Forebodings came to shadow her brightness. Suppose
they should not come! Suppose they were delayed,
or had changed their minds and should send
another telegram saying so! She drew a deep breath,
and tried to brace herself for the shock of the thought.
She looked fearfully down the road for a possible
Johnny Knox speeding along with another telegram,
and was relieved to see only Ambrose Perkins ambling
home for supper followed by his tall, smiling Airedale.</p>
<p>There was a shadow, too, that stood behind her,
though she ignored it utterly; it was the thought of
the afterwards, when the two bright young things
had been and gone, and she would have to face the
gray in her life again without the rose. But that
would be afterwards, and this was now! Ten minutes
more, and she would go to the station!</p>
<p>At that minute a great blue automobile shot up
to the front gate, and stopped. A big lump flew
into Julia Cloud’s throat, and her hand went to her
heart. Had it then come, that telegram, saying they
had changed their minds? She stood trembling by
the window, unable to move.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_24' name='page_24'></SPAN>24</span></div>
<p>But out from the front seat and the back as if
ejected from a catapult shot two figures, and flew together
up the front walk, a tall boy and a little girl,
just as the sun dropped low and swung a deep red light
into the sky, flooding the front yard with glory, and
staining the heavens far up into the blue.</p>
<p>They had come! They had come before it was yet
train-time!</p>
<p>Julia Cloud got herself to her front door in a
tremor of delight, and instantly four strong young
arms encircled her, and nearly smothered the life out
of her.</p>
<p>“O you dear Cloudy Jewel! You look just the
same. I knew you would. Only your hair is white
and pretty,” Leslie gurgled.</p>
<p>“Sure, she is just the same! What did I tell
you?” cried Allison, lifting them both and carrying
them inside.</p>
<p>“Now, who on earth can that be?” said Mrs.
Ambrose Perkins, flying to her parlor window at the
first sound of the automobile. “It isn’t any of them
folks from the city that were out to the funeral, for
there wasn’t a car like that there, I’m certain! I mean
to run over and borrow a spoonful of soda pretty soon,
just to find out. It couldn’t be any of Tom’s folks
from out West, for they couldn’t come all that way in
a car. It must be some of her father’s relations from
over in Maryland, though I never heard they were that
well off. A chauffeur in livery! The idea of all that
style coming to see Julia Cloud!”</p>
<p>“No, we didn’t come on the train,” explained Leslie
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_25' name='page_25'></SPAN>25</span>
eagerly. “We came in Allison’s new car. Mr.
Luddington––that’s our guardian––was coming East,
and he said we might come with him. We’ve been
dying to come for ages. And he’d been promising
Allison he might get this new car; so we stopped in
the city and bought it, and Allison drove it down. Of
course Mr. Luddington made his man come along.
He wouldn’t let us come alone. He’s gone up to Boston
for three days; and, when he comes back, he’s coming
down here to see you.”</p>
<p>Leslie was talking as fast as an express train, and
Julia Cloud stood and admired her in wonder.</p>
<p>She was slim and delicately pretty as ever, with
the same mop of goldy-brown curls, done up in a knot
now and making her look quaintly like the little five-year-old
on a hot day with her curls twisted on the
top of her head for comfort. She wore a simple little
straight frock of some dark silk stuff, with beaded
pockets and marvellous pleats and belts and straps in
unexpected places, such as one sees in fashion-books,
but not on young girls in the town of Sterling; and her
hat was a queer little cap with a knob of bright beads,
wonderfully becoming, but quite different from anything
that Julia Cloud had ever seen before. Her movements
were darting and quick like a humming-bird’s;
and she wore long soft suède gloves and tiny high
suède boots. The older woman watched her, fascinated.</p>
<p>“And you’re sure we’re not being an inconvenience,
dropping down upon you in this unexpected
way?” asked Allison in a quite grown-up man’s voice,
and looking so tall and handsome and responsible that
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_26' name='page_26'></SPAN>26</span>
Julia Cloud wanted to take him in her arms and hug
him to make sure he was the same little boy she used
to tuck into bed at night.</p>
<p>“So soon after Grandma’s death, too,” put in
Allison. “We didn’t know, of course, till we got
about a mile from Sterling and stopped to ask the way
to the house, and a man told us about the funeral being
Monday. We weren’t sure then but it would be an
intrusion. You see we left California about two weeks
ago, and none of our mail has reached us yet; so we
hadn’t heard. You’re sure we won’t bother you a bit,
you dear?”</p>
<p>Their aunt assured them rapturously that their coming
was the most blessed thing that could have been
just at this time.</p>
<p>“Oh! then I’m relieved,” said Leslie, throwing off
her hat and dropping into the nearest chair. “Allison,
tell that man to put the car somewhere in a garage and
get back to the city. They said there was a train back
about this time. The man who directed us told us so.
No, dear, he doesn’t need any dinner. He’s not used
to it till seven, and he’ll be in the city by that time.
He’s in a hurry to get back. Cookies? Well, yes, you
might give him a cooky or two if you’re sure there’ll
be enough left for us. I’ve just dreamed of those
cookies all these years. I’m so anxious to see if they’ll
taste as they did when I was a child. May I come with
you and see if I remember where the cooky-jar is?
Oh, joy, Allison! Just look! A whole crock and a
platter full! Isn’t this peachy? Allison, do hustle
up and get that man off so we can begin our visit!”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_27' name='page_27'></SPAN>27</span></div>
<p>It was like having a couple of dolls suddenly come
alive and begin to talk.</p>
<p>They talked so fast and they took everything so
delightfully for granted that Julia Cloud was in a
tremble of joy. It seemed the most beautiful thing in
the world that these two strong, handsome, vivid young
things should have dropped into her life and taken her
into their hearts in this way as if she really belonged,
as if they loved her! She was too excited to talk. She
hardly knew what to do first. But they did not wait for
her initiative. Allison was off with his car and his
man, munching cookies as he went, and promising to
return in fifteen minutes hungry as a bear.</p>
<p>“Now let’s go up-stairs, you dear Cloudy Jewel,
and I’ll smooth my hair for dinner. I’m crazy to see
if I remember things. There was a little red chair
that I used to sit in–––”</p>
<p>“It’s here, in your room, dear, and the old rag
doll, Betsey; do you remember her?”</p>
<p>“Well, I should say I did! Is Betsey alive yet?
Dear old Betsey! How ducky of you to have kept
her for me all these years! Oh, isn’t it perfectly peachy
that we could come? That we’re really here at last, and
you want us? You do, don’t you, Cloudy, dear?
You’re sure you do?” Lesley’s tone was anxious, and
her bright brown eyes studied the older woman’s face
eagerly; but what she saw there was fully satisfactory,
for she smiled, and rattled joyfully on in the old
babbling-brook voice that reminded one so of years ago.</p>
<p>“I’m not to tell you what we’ve really come for till
Allison comes, because I’ve promised; and anyway he’s
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_28' name='page_28'></SPAN>28</span>
the man, and he wants to tell you himself; but it’s the
dandiest reason, perfectly peachy! It’s really a plan.
And say, Cloudy, dear, won’t you promise me right
here and now that you will say ‘Yes’ to what he asks
you if you possibly, <i>possibly</i> can?”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud promised in a maze of delight.</p>
<p>She stood in hovering wonder, and watched the
mass of curls come down and go up again with the swift
manipulation of the slim white fingers, remembering
how she used to comb those tangled curls with the
plump little body leaning sturdily against her knee.
It seemed to be the first time since she was a child that
youth and beauty had come to linger before her.
All her experience had been of sickness and suffering
and death, not life and happiness.</p>
<p>There was stewed chicken and little biscuits with
gravy for supper. It was a dish the children used to
love. It was all dished up and everything ready when
Allison came back. He reported that the car was
housed but a block away, and the man had gone to his
train, tickled to death with his cookies. Allison was
so glad to be back that he had to take his aunt in
his arms again and give her a regular bear-hug till
she pleaded for mercy, but there was a happy light in
her eyes and a bright color in her cheeks when he
released her that made her a very good-looking aunt
indeed to sit down at the table with two such handsome
children.</p>
<p>Just at that moment Ellen Robinson in her own
home was pouring her husband’s second cup of coffee.</p>
<p>“Don’t you think I’d better take the car and run
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_29' name='page_29'></SPAN>29</span>
down for Julia before dark?” she said. “I think
she’ll be about ready to come back with me by this time,
and I need her early in the morning if I’m going to
begin cleaning house.”</p>
<p>“Better wait one more night,” said Herbert stolidly.
“Let her get her fill of staying alone nights. It’ll do
her good. We don’t want her to be high and mighty
when she gets here. I’m boss here, and she’s got to
understand that. She’s so mighty independent, you
know, it’s important she should find that out right at
the start. I’m not going to have her get bossy with
these children, either. They aren’t her children.”</p>
<p>Four pairs of keen little Robinson eyes took in this
saying with quick intelligence, and four stolid sets of
shoulders straightened up importantly with four uplifted
saucy chins. They would store these remarks
away for future reference when the aunt in question
arrived on the scene. They would come in well, they
knew, for they had had experience with her in
times past.</p>
<p>“Aunt Jule ain’t goin’ to boss me,” swaggered
the youngest.</p>
<p>“Ner me, neither!”</p>
<p>“Ner me!”</p>
<p>“I guess she wouldn’t <i>dast</i> try it on <i>me</i>!” boasted
the eldest.</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_30' name='page_30'></SPAN>30</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_III' id='CHAPTER_III'></SPAN>
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