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The Heart's Kingdom

Page 26

"Heavens, yes, and thank you," called Nell in response to our demand for

her small daughter's company. "If I had another one clean, I'd give it

to you."

"Better go on quick, for Jimmy can wash in a piece of a minute if he

wants to," warned Charlotte, and in a second the parson had sent the

gray car flying out toward Old Harpeth, though I saw him glance back

with a trace of distress in his eyes at the fading vision of a small boy

running, howling, to the front gate of the Morgan residence.

"Now mother'll whip him for crying if she does as she says she would,

but she won't," observed the tender big sister, as she rose to her feet

and waved a maddening farewell to the distressed urchin being left

behind.

"Is she totally depraved?" I asked of the young Charlotte's spiritual

adviser at my side.

"No; perfectly honest," he answered me with a glint in his eyes that was

a laughing challenge.

"There is something awful about honesty," I answered, without appearing

to notice the glint.

"There wouldn't be if it were a universal custom," was the answer I got

as we whirled by a farmer's wood lot and began to climb the first

foothill of Old Harpeth.

All my life I have been going out to Old Harpeth on excursions, but

never had I spent a day like the one I had begun with the Jaguar in his

native fastnesses. The whole old mountain was beginning to bud and I

could almost see it draping on a regal Persian garment of rose and green

threaded with purple and blue woven against the old brown and gray of

the earth color. The wine-colored trillium with its huge spotted leaves,

the slender white dog-tooth violets, the rose-pink arbutus, the blue

star myrtle and the crimson oak buds, were matted into a vast robe that

was gorgeously oriental, while a perfume that was surely more delicious

than any ever wafted from the gardens of Arabia floated past us in gusts

through which the gray car sped without the slightest shortness of

breath. I seemed a million miles away from the great fetid city in which

I had been living--and fast going farther. As we wound up and up into

the great forest which is the crown of Old Harpeth, we could look down

through occasional vistas and see the Harpeth River curling and bending

through pastures in which the chocolate plowed fields were laid off in

huge checks with the green meadows, while the farmhouses and barns

dotted the valley like the crude figures on a hand-woven chintz.

There are very few men who know enough not to talk to a woman when she

has no desire for their conversation, but the Reverend Jaguar seemed to

be one of the variety who comprehend the value of silences, and neither

of us spoke for at least ten miles, though, of course, it was his duty

to make hay while the sun of my nature shone upon him and delicately to

inquire into my spiritual condition. He didn't. He just let the wind

blow into my empty spaces and kept his eyes and thoughts on the road

ahead of him. Charlotte's chatter with father was blown back from me and

I was happy in a kind of aloneness I had never felt before.

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