<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2></div>
<p>The pleasant aromas of coffee and sausages were
mingling in the air when “Guardy Lud” woke
up and looked about the old-fashioned room
with a sense of satisfaction. The very pictures on the
walls rested him, they reminded him so much of the
rooms in his boyhood home. He had a feeling that old-fashioned
things were best, and in spite of the fact
that he owned a house most different from this one
himself and knew that his wife would not for a minute
have tolerated any old-fashioned things about unless
they were so old-fashioned that they had become the
latest rage, he could not help feeling that a woman
brought up amid such simple surroundings would be the
very best kind to mother these orphan children who
had been left on his helpless hands. He would have
loved to take them to his heart and his home; but his
wife was not so minded, and that ended it. But it
rolled a great burden from his shoulders to feel that he
might leave them in such capable hands.</p>
<p>They had a rollicking time at breakfast, for Guardy
Lud was delighted with the crisp brown sausages, fried
potatoes, and buckwheats with real maple-syrup; and
he laughed, and ate, and told stories with the children,
and kept the old dining-room walls ringing with joy as
they had not resounded within the memory of Julia
Cloud. Then suddenly the door opened, and there stood
Ellen Robinson, disapproval and hauteur written in
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_69' name='page_69'></SPAN>69</span>
every line of her unpleasant face! One could hardly
imagine how those two, Julia and Ellen, could possibly
be sisters.</p>
<p>Dismay filled Julia Cloud’s heart for an instant, and
brought a pallor to her cheek. How had she forgotten
Ellen? What a fool she had been to tell Ellen to come
early in the morning! But she had not realized that
Mr. Luddington would be willing to come out to her
humble home and stay all night. She had supposed
that the arrangements would be made in the city. However,
it could not be helped now; and a glance at the
kind, strong face of the white-haired man gave her
courage. Ellen could not really spoil their plans with
him there. He felt that the arrangement was good,
and with him to back her she felt she could stand out
against any arguments her sister might bring forth.</p>
<p>So she rose with a natural ease, and introduced her.
“My sister Mrs. Robinson, Mr. Luddington”; and
Ellen stiffly and still disapprovingly acknowledged the
introduction.</p>
<p>“I won’t interrupt,” she said disagreeably. “I’m
just going up to look over some of my mother’s things.”
And she turned to the back stairway, and went up, closing
the door behind her.</p>
<p>Mr. Luddington gazed after her a second; and
then, taking his glasses off and wiping them energetically,
he remarked:</p>
<p>“Well, well, bless my soul! It must be getting
late! We’ve had such a good time I didn’t realize.
Those certainly were good buckwheats, Miss Cloud.
I shan’t forget them very soon. And now I suppose
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_70' name='page_70'></SPAN>70</span>
we’d better get down to business. Could we just go
into the other room there, and close the door for a few
minutes, not to be interrupted?” and he cast an anxious
glance toward the stair-door again.</p>
<p>Julia Cloud smiled understandingly, and ushered
them into the little parlor ablaze with fall sunshine, its
windows wreathed about with crimsoning woodbine;
and, as she caught the glow and glint from the window,
she remembered the gray evening when she had looked
out across into her future as she supposed it would be.
How beautiful and wonderful that the gray had
changed to glow! As she sat down to enter into the
contract that was to bind her to a new and wonderful
life with great responsibilities and large possibilities,
her heart, accustomed to look upward, sent a whisper
of thanksgiving heavenward.</p>
<p>The details did not take long, after all; for Mr.
Luddington was a keen business man, and he had gone
over the whole proposition, and had the plan in writing
for her to sign, telling just what were her duties and
responsibilities with regard to his wards, just how
much money she would have for housekeeping and servants
and other expenses, and the salary she would
receive herself for accepting this care.</p>
<p>“You’re practically in a position of mother to
them, you know,” he said, beaming at her genially;
“and I declare I never laid eyes on a woman that I
thought could fill the part better!”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud was quite overwhelmed. But the matter
of the salary troubled her.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_71' name='page_71'></SPAN>71</span></div>
<p>“I think it should not be a matter of money,” she
demurred. “I would rather do it for love, you know.”</p>
<p>“Love’s all right!” said the old man, smiling; “but
this thing has got to be on a business basis, or the terms
of the will will not allow me to agree to it. You see
what you are going to undertake means work, and
it means sticking to it; and you deserve pay for it, and
we’re not going to accept several of the best years out
of your life for nothing. Besides, you’ve got to feel
free to give up the job if it proves too burdensome
for you.”</p>
<p>“And you to dismiss me if I do not prove capable
for the position,” suggested Julia Cloud, lifting meek
and honest eyes to meet his gaze.</p>
<p>“Well, well, well, I can see there won’t be any
need of that!” sputtered the old gentleman pleasantly.
“But, however that is, this is the contract I’ve made
out. And I’m quite satisfied. So are the children.
Are you willing to sign it? Of course there’s a clause
in there about reasonable notice if there is dissatisfaction
on either side; that lets you out at any time you
get tired of it. Only give me a chance to look after
these youngsters properly.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud took the pen eagerly, tremblingly, a
sense of wonder in her pounding heart, and signed her
name just as Ellen’s heavy footsteps could be heard
pounding down the back stairs. Leslie seized Julia,
and gave her a great hug as the last letter was finished,
and then threw open the parlor door in the nick of time
to save her Aunt Ellen from seeming to be deserted.</p>
<p>Ellen Robinson appeared on the scene just in time
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_72' name='page_72'></SPAN>72</span>
to witness the hearty hand-shake that Guardy Lud gave
Julia Cloud as he picked up the papers and went up-stairs
for his suitcase while Allison went after the
car to take him to the train.</p>
<p>“Is that man married? Because, if he isn’t, I don’t
think it’s respectable for you to go and live near him!”
declared Ellen in a penetrating voice to the intense distress
of Julia Cloud, who was happily hurrying the
dishes from the breakfast table.</p>
<p>But Leslie came to the rescue.</p>
<p>“Oh, indeed, Aunt Ellen, he’s very much married!
Altogether too much married for comfort. He would
be a dear if it wasn’t for his silly little old bossy wife!
But he doesn’t intend to live anywhere near us. His
home is off in California, and he’s going back next
week. He’s only waiting to see us settled somewhere
before he goes back; so you needn’t worry about Aunt
Jewel’s morals. We’ll take good care of her. But
isn’t he a dear? He was my Grandfather Leslie’s
best friend.”</p>
<p>Leslie chattered on gayly till the visitor’s footsteps
could be heard coming down-stairs again, and Ellen
Robinson could only shut her lips tight and go into
the kitchen, from which her sister beat immediately a
hasty retreat lest more unpleasant remarks should
be forthcoming.</p>
<p>Julia Cloud bade Mr. Luddington good-by, standing
on her own front steps, and then waited a moment,
looking off toward the hills which had shut in her vision
all her life. The two young people had rushed down
to the car, and were pulling their guardian joyously
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_73' name='page_73'></SPAN>73</span>
inside. They seemed to do everything joyously, like two
young creatures let out of prison into the sunshine.
Julia Cloud smiled at the thought of them, but her
soul was not watching them just then. She was looking
off to the hills that had been her strength all the
years through so many trials, and gathering strength
now to go in and meet her sister in final combat. She
knew that there would be a scene; that was inevitable.
That she might maintain her calmness and say nothing
unkind or regrettable she was praying earnestly now
as her eyes sought the hills.</p>
<p>Across the road behind her parlor curtains Mrs.
Perkins was keeping lookout, and remarking to a
neighbor who had run in:</p>
<p>“Yes, I thought as much. There’s always a man
in the case when a woman acts queer! Now, doesn’t
that beat all? Do you suppose he’s a long-lost lover or
something, come back now he knows she’s free? Seems
to me I did hear there was somebody died or something
before we came here to live, but she must have been
awful young.”</p>
<p>The car moved noisily away, and the old gentleman
leaned out with a courteous lift of his hat toward
Julia Cloud. She acknowledged it with a bow and a
smile which Mrs. Perkins pounced on and analyzed
audibly.</p>
<p>“Well, there’s no fool like an old fool, as the saying
is! Just watch her smirk! I’m mighty glad Ellen
Robinson’s there to relieve me of the responsibility.
She’ll be over after a while, and then we’ll know who
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_74' name='page_74'></SPAN>74</span>
he is. There goes Julia in. She watched him out o’
sight! Well, I wonder what her mother would think.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud went slowly back to the dining-room,
where Ellen was seated on the couch, waiting like a
visitor. Julia’s smile was utterly lost on her glum
countenance, which resembled an embattled tower
under siege.</p>
<p>“Well!” she said as Julia began to gather up
more dishes from the breakfast table. “I suppose you
think you’ve done something smart now, don’t you,
getting that old snob here and fixing things all up without
consulting any of your relatives?”</p>
<p>“Really, Ellen, this has all been so sudden that I
had no opportunity,” said Julia gently. “But it did
not seem likely that you would object, for you suggested
yourself that I rent the house, and you said you
did not want me to stay here alone. This seemed
quite providential.”</p>
<p>“Providential!” sniffed Ellen. “Providential to
take you away from your own home and your own
people, and send you out into a world where nobody
really cares for you, and where all they want of you
is to make a drudge of you! You call that providential,
do you? Well, I <i>don’t</i>! And when I object, and try
to save you from yourself, and offer you a good home
where you will be cared for all the rest of your days,
right among your own, where mother would have
wanted to see you, you will probably get high-headed,
and say I am interfering with your rights. But I can’t
help it. I’ve got to speak. I can’t see you put the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_75' name='page_75'></SPAN>75</span>
halter around your neck to hang yourself without doing
everything I can to stop it. My own sister!”</p>
<p>“Why, Ellen, dear!” said Julia Cloud eagerly,
sitting down beside her sister. “You don’t understand.
It isn’t in the least that way. I’m sorry I had to spring
it on you so suddenly and give you such a wrong
impression. You know I couldn’t think of coming to
live on you and Herbert. It was kind of you to suggest
it, and I am grateful and all that; but I know
how it would be to have some one else, even a sister,
come into the home, and I couldn’t think of it. I have
always resolved that I would never be dependent on my
relatives while I had my health.”</p>
<p>Ellen sat up bristling.</p>
<p>“And yet you are willing to go away to some
strange place where nobody knows you, and slave for
a couple of little snobs!”</p>
<p>“O Ellen!” said Julia pleadingly. “You don’t
understand. I am not going to slave. I’m just going
to be a sort of mother to them. And you oughtn’t to
call them snobs. They are your own brother’s children.”</p>
<p>“Own brother’s children, nothing!” sneered Ellen.
“He’s been away so many years he was just like a
stranger when he came back the last time, and as for
the children they are just like his stuck-up wife and
her family. Yet you’ll leave the children that were
born and raised close beside you, and go and slave for
them. Mother! fiddlesticks! You’ll slave all right.
I know you. In six weeks you’ll be a drudge for them
the way you’ve been all your life! I know how it is,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_76' name='page_76'></SPAN>76</span>
and you may not believe it; but I have feelings for
my sister, and I don’t like to see her put upon.”</p>
<p>Ellen fumbled for her handkerchief, and managed
a comely tear or two that quite touched Julia’s heart.
Affection between them even when Ellen was a child
had been quite one-sided; for Ellen had always been a
selfish, spoiled little thing, and Julia had looked in vain
for any signs of tenderness. Now her heart warmed
toward her younger sister in this long-delayed thoughtfulness,
and her tone grew gentler.</p>
<p>“That’s dear of you, Ellen, and I appreciate it; but
I haven’t been able to make you understand yet, I see.
I’m not to be a worker, nor even a housekeeper. I’m
to be just a sort of mother, or aunt, if you please, to
see that the house runs all right, to be with the children
and have a happy time with them and their young
friends, and to see that they are cared for in every
way necessary; just a housemother, you understand. I
am to have servants to do the work, although I’m sure
one servant will be all that I shall want in a little household
like that. But Mr. Luddington quite insisted there
should be servants, and that no work of any sort should
fall upon me. He said that as their nearest relative I
was to be in the position of mother and guardian to
them, and to preside over their home.”</p>
<p>“That’s ridiculous!” put in Ellen. “Why don’t
they go to college and board like any other reasonable
young folks if they must go to college at all? I think
it’s all nonsense for ’em to go. What do they do
it for? They’ve got money, and don’t have to teach
or anything. What do they need of learning? They’ve
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_77' name='page_77'></SPAN>77</span>
got enough now to get along. That girl thinks she’s
too smart to live. I call her impudent, for my part!”</p>
<p>“They want a home,” said Julia, waiving the subject
of higher education; “and they have chosen me,
and I mean to do my best.”</p>
<p>There was a quiet finality in her tone that impressed
her sister. She looked at her angrily.</p>
<p>“Well, if you will, you will, I suppose. Nobody
can stop you. But I see just what will come of it.
You’ll fool away a little while there, and find out how
mistaken you were; and then you’ll come back to
Herbert to be taken care of. And you don’t realize how
offended Herbert is going to be by your actions, and
how he’ll feel about letting you come back after you
have gone away in such high feather. You haven’t
anything to speak of to support yourself, of course, and
how on earth do you expect to live anyway after these
children get through their college and get married or
something? They won’t want you then.”</p>
<p>Julia arose and went to the window to get calmed.
She was more angry than she had been for years. The
thought of Herbert’s having to take care of her ever
was intolerable. But she was able to hold her tongue
until she could get her eyes on those hills out of the
window. “I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from
whence cometh my help.” That had been the verse
which she had read from her little Bible before leaving
her room in the early morning and she was grappling it
close to her heart, for she had known it would be
a hard day.</p>
<p>Ellen was watching her silently. Almost she
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_78' name='page_78'></SPAN>78</span>
thought she had made an impression. Perhaps this was
the time to repeat Herbert’s threat.</p>
<p>“Herbert feels,” she began, “that if you refuse his
offer now he can’t promise to keep it open. He can’t
be responsible for you if you take this step. He said
he wanted you to understand thoroughly.”</p>
<p>Julia Cloud turned and walked with swift step to
the little parlor where lay the paper she and Mr. Luddington
had just signed, and a copy of which he had
taken with him. She returned to her astonished sister
with the paper in her hand.</p>
<p>“Perhaps it would be just as well for you to read
this,” she said with dignity, and put the paper into
Ellen’s hands, going back to her clearing of the table.</p>
<p>There was silence in the dining-room while Ellen
read, Julia moving on quiet feet about the table, putting
things to rights. She had finished her part of the
argument. She was resolutely putting out of her mind
the things her sister had just said, and refusing altogether
to think of Herbert. She knew in her heart just
how Herbert had looked when he had said those things,
even to the snarl at the corner of his nose. She knew,
too, that Ellen had probably not reported the message
even so disagreeably as the original, and she knew that
it would be better to forget.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Ellen, rising after a long perusal, laying
the paper on the table, “that sounds all very well in
writing. The thing is to see how it comes out. The
proof of the pudding is in the eating, and you needn’t
tell me that any man in his senses will pay all that
salary merely for a ‘chaperon,’ as he calls it. If he
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_79' name='page_79'></SPAN>79</span>
does, he’s a fool; that’s all I’ve got to say. But I suppose
nothing short of getting caught in a trap will make
you see it; so I better save my breath. I’m sure I
hope you won’t go to the poorhouse through your
stubbornness. I’ve done all I could to keep you from
it, and it’s pretty hard to have my only sister leave me––so
soo-oo-on after mother’s––death.”</p>
<p>“Well, Ellen,” said Julia Cloud, looking at her
speculatively, “I’m sure I never dreamed you cared
about having me away from here. You’ve never shown
much interest in being with me. But I’m sorry if
you feel it that way, and I’m sure I’ll write to you
and try to do little things for the children often,
now that I shall have something to do with.” But her
kindly feeling was cut short by Ellen interrupting her.</p>
<p>“Oh, you needn’t trouble yourself! We can look
after the children ourselves. You better save what
you get to look after yourself when those two get over
this whim!”</p>
<p>And then to her great relief Julia Cloud heard the
car returning from the station, and the two young
people rushing into the hall.</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_80' name='page_80'></SPAN>80</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_VII' id='CHAPTER_VII'></SPAN>
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