Dear Mr. Rider:
Your niece is in grave danger. She must go far away from this place. If she stays, wicked men will kidnap her again. I can say no more. Profit by this warning!
Hollis assured the girl that he did not believe in this danger; she was safe.
After a day or two, when she had been shown the whole long, narrow island, Stacy really relaxed. She threw up her arms; and let the south wind blow through her hair, and said, for the first time in her life that she could ever remember, she felt safe and free. And she and Marjorie began to have those happy times together.
You would see them going about, fair head close to dark head, like two schoolgirls. “Isn’t it marvellous, Hollis, she is not the least bit afraid. But we must not let anything happen.”
“What could?” asked little Mr. Mears shortly. He was perhaps a little hurt, thinking it had been dull for his Marjorie with only a middle-aged scholar.
Stacy looked about wonderingly. The lamps were kerosene, there was no telephone, the grounds were lushly ragged. She had never stayed at any place like this in her life. Instead of a private swimming-pool — here was the Gulf. The simple life. (It was a good deal less simple than before she hit the place, preparations for the Rider heiress having been elaborate!) Stacy loved it. She got into a one piece cotton play suit and beach shoes — all one could support with that dry, hot south wind still blowing — and followed Marjorie to the so-called garden. Three white hollyhocks stood up at uneven intervals, a triumph. These were Exhibit A of the island. To achieve them, Marjorie had fertilized till she all but ran them off the island with the stench. When Stacy took a hoe and dug in, Marjorie was exultant.
But if Marjorie taught Stacy the simple life, Stacy introduced her hostess to standards of luxury. The array of clothes in the guest’s closet, of little treed shoes, of hats, was a marvel to Marjorie. Stacy, quite as a matter of course, insisted upon paying a fabulous sum for the accommodation, and Marjorie’s little Panama handbag had never been so stuffed. The two girls went over to the little town of Clearwater on shopping orgies — Stacy timid, without her bodyguard, off the island.
Hollis would come upstairs, from a day’s tussle with the Civil War, to find Marjorie in a new ice-blue dinner dress with a spray of blue pearl flowers in her hair. (They dressed for dinner even alone, but never like this.) On the bed would be spread out a new white chintz beach costume with waterlily design, a new yellow peasant dirndl, etc., etc.
“You care for all this so much?” he would ask, touching it.
“No. No! Darling, I love
“You are a little materialist, Marjorie, married to a scholar,” rather sadly...
The golden treasure of this halcyon interlude was Yvette. Marjorie was so sick and tired of the slovenly, childlike negro help. This Frenchwoman was quick, deft and sophisticated. They said about the negroes that if you were a northerner, you never did get on with them. You were too easy on them. She tried sporadically to be very severe indeed. But with Yvette, you could completely let down. You did not need to keep her in her place. She kept herself in her place. There was nothing she could not do — and she was so willing to do it. She took over the washing and ironing of Marjorie’s lingerie: ironed a $2.98 nightgown in dozens of tiny pleats, so that it looked like one of Stacy’s fifty dollar Rue de la Paix masterpieces — almost... when Hollis’s new shoes hurt him at the heel, she said: “You give those to me, Mr. Mears. I feex.” She did, too, — hammered out the lining ridge, worked them soft with her hands. “You know what we women do when war come to France?” she asked, returning them. “We turn cobbler, tailor. In
“Resourceful,” supplied Hollis, “Thank you, Yvette.”
“Mos’ welcome,
She even went into the kitchen and whipped out a light, yellow breakfast cake, delicious with jam, which she called