<SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER X </h3>
<h3> JOHN JARDINE'S COURTSHIP </h3>
<p>THE following morning they breakfasted together under the branches of
the big maple tree in a beautiful world. Mrs. Jardine was so happy she
could only taste a bite now and then, when urged to. Kate was trying to
keep her head level, and be natural. John Jardine wanted to think of
everything, and succeeded fairly well. It seemed to Kate that he could
invent more ways to spend money, and spend it with freer hand, than any
man she ever had heard of, but she had to confess that the men she had
heard about were concerned with keeping their money, not scattering it.</p>
<p>"Did you hear unusual sounds when John came to bid me good-night?"
asked Mrs. Jardine of Kate.</p>
<p>"Yes," laughed Kate, "I did. And I'm sure I made a fairly accurate
guess as to the cause."</p>
<p>"What did you think?" asked Mrs. Jardine.</p>
<p>"I thought Mr. Jardine had missed Susette, and you'd had to tell him,"
said Kate.</p>
<p>"You're quite right. It's a good thing she went on and lost herself in
New York. I'm not at all sure that he doesn't contemplate starting out
to find her yet."</p>
<p>"Let Susette go!" said Kate. "We're interested in forgetting her.
There's a little country school-teacher here, who wants to take her
place, and it will be the very thing for your mother and for her, too.
She's the one serving us; notice her in particular."</p>
<p>"If she's a teacher, how does she come to be serving us?" he asked.</p>
<p>"I'm a teacher; how do I come to be dining with you?" said Kate. "This
is such a queer world, when you go adventuring in it. Jennie had a
small school in an out county, a widowed mother and a big family to
help support; so she figured that the only way she could come here to
try to prepare herself for a better school was to work for her room and
board. She serves the table two hours, three times a day, and studies
between times. She tells me that almost every waiter in the dining
hall is a teacher. Please watch her movements and manner and see if
you think her suitable. Goodness knows she isn't intended for a
teacher."</p>
<p>"I like her very much," said John Jardine. "I'll engage her as soon as
we finish."</p>
<p>Kate smiled, but when she saw the ease and dexterity with which he
ended Jennie Weeks' work as a waiter and installed her as his mother's
maid, making the least detail all right with his mother, with Jennie,
with the manager, she realized that there had been nothing for her to
smile about. Jennie was delighted, and began her new undertaking
earnestly, with sincere desire to please. Kate helped her all she
could, while Mrs. Jardine developed a fund of patience commensurate
with the need of it. She would have endured more inconvenience than
resulted from Jennie's inexperienced hands because of the realization
that her son and the girl she had so quickly learned to admire were on
the lake, rambling the woods, or hearing lectures together.</p>
<p>When she asked him how long he could remain, he said as long as she
did. When she explained that she was enjoying herself thoroughly and
had no idea how long she would want to stay, he said that was all
right; he had only had one vacation in his life; it was time he was
having another. When she marvelled at this he said: "Now, look here,
Mother, let's get this business straight, right at the start. I told
you when I came I'd seen the woman I wanted. If you want me to go back
to business, the way to do it is to help me win her."</p>
<p>"But I don't want you 'to go back to business'; I want you to have a
long vacation, and learn all you can from the educational advantages
here."</p>
<p>"It's too late for me to learn more than I get every day by knocking
around and meeting people. I've tried books two or three times, and
I've given them up; I can't do it. I've waited too long, I've no way
to get down to it, I can't remember to save my soul."</p>
<p>"But you can remember anything on earth about a business deal," she
urged.</p>
<p>"Of course I can. I was born with a business head. It was remember,
or starve, and see you starve. If I'd had the books at the time they
would have helped; now it's too late, and I'll never try it again,
that's settled. Much as I want to marry Miss Bates, she'll have to
take me or leave me as I am. I can't make myself over for her or for
you. I would if I could, but that's one of the things I can't do, and
I admit it. If I'm not good enough for her as I am, she'll have the
chance to tell me so the very first minute I think it's proper to ask
her."</p>
<p>"John, you are good enough for the best woman on earth. There never
was a better lad, it isn't that, and you know it. I am so anxious that
I can scarcely wait; but you must wait. You must give her time and go
slowly, and you must be careful, oh, so very careful! She's a teacher
and a student; she came here to study."</p>
<p>"I'll fix that. I can rush things so that there'll be no time to
study."</p>
<p>"You'll make a mistake if you try it. You'd far better let her go her
own way and only appear when she has time for you," she advised.</p>
<p>"That's a fine idea!" he cried. "A lot of ice I'd cut, sitting back
waiting for a signal to run after a girl, like a poodle. The way to do
is the same as with any business deal. See what you want, overcome
anything in your way, and get it. I'd go crazy hanging around like
that. You've always told me I couldn't do the things in business I
said I would; and I've always proved to you that I could, by doing
them. Now watch me do this."</p>
<p>"You know I'll do anything to help you, John. You know how proud I am
of you, how I love you! I realize now that I've talked volumes to Kate
about you. I've told her everything from the time you were a little
boy and I slaved for you, until now, when you slave for me."</p>
<p>"Including how many terms I'd gone to school?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I even told her that," she said.</p>
<p>"Well, what did she seem to think about it?" he asked.</p>
<p>"I don't know what she thought, she didn't say anything. There was
nothing to say. It was a bare-handed fight with the wolf in those
days. I'm sure I made her understand that," she said.</p>
<p>"Well, I'll undertake to make her understand this," he said. "Are you
sure that Jennie Weeks is taking good care of you?"</p>
<p>"Jennie is well enough and is growing better each day, now be off to
your courting, but if you love me, remember, and be careful," she said.</p>
<p>"Remember—one particular thing—you mean?" he asked.</p>
<p>She nodded, her lips closed.</p>
<p>"You bet I will!" he said. "All there is of me goes into this. Isn't
she a wonder, Mother?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Jardine looked closely at the big man who was all the world to
her, so like her in mentality, so like his father with his dark hair
and eyes and big, well-rounded frame; looked at him with the eyes of
love, then as he left her to seek the girl she had learned to love, she
shut her eyes and frankly and earnestly asked the Lord to help her son
to marry Kate Bates.</p>
<p>One morning as Kate helped Mrs. Jardine into her coat and gloves,
preparing for one of their delightful morning drives, she said to her:
"Mrs. Jardine, may I ask you a REAL question?"</p>
<p>"Of course you may," said Mrs. Jardine, "and I shall give you a 'real'
answer if it lies in my power."</p>
<p>"You'll be shocked," warned Kate.</p>
<p>"Shock away," laughed Mrs. Jardine. "By now I flatter myself that I am
so accustomed to you that you will have to try yourself to shock me."</p>
<p>"It's only this," said Kate: "If you were a perfect stranger, standing
back and looking on, not acquainted with any of the parties, merely
seeing things as they happen each day, would it be your honest
opinion—would you say that I am being COURTED?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Jardine laughed until she was weak. When she could talk, she
said: "Yes, my dear, under the conditions, and in the circumstances
you mention, I would cheerfully go on oath and testify that you are
being courted more openly, more vigorously, and as tenderly as I ever
have seen woman courted in all my life. I always thought that John's
father was a master hand at courting, but John has him beaten in many
ways. Yes, my dear, you certainly are being courted assiduously."</p>
<p>"Now, then, on that basis," said Kate, "just one more question and
we'll proceed with our drive. From the same standpoint: would you say
from your observation and experience that the mother of the man had any
insurmountable objection to the proceedings?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Jardine laughed again. Finally she said: "No, my dear. It's my
firm conviction that the mother of the man in the case would be so
delighted if you should love and marry her son that she would probably
have a final attack of heart trouble and pass away from sheer joy."</p>
<p>"Thank you," said Kate. "I wasn't perfectly sure, having had no
experience whatever, and I didn't want to make a mistake."</p>
<p>That drive was wonderful, over beautiful country roads, through dells,
and across streams and hills. They stopped where they pleased,
gathering flowers and early apples, visiting with people they met,
lunching wherever they happened to be.</p>
<p>"If it weren't for wishing to hear John A. Logan to-night," said Kate,
"I'd move that we drive on all day. I certainly am having the grandest
time."</p>
<p>She sat with her sailor hat filled with Early Harvest apples, a big
bunch of Canadian anemones in her belt, a little stream at her feet,
July drowsy fullness all around her, congenial companions; taking the
"wings of morning" paid, after all.</p>
<p>"Why do you want to hear him so much?" asked John.</p>
<p>Kate looked up at him in wonder.</p>
<p>"Don't you want to see and hear him?" she asked.</p>
<p>He hesitated, a thoughtful expression on his face. Finally he said:
"I can't say that I do. Will you tell me why I should?"</p>
<p>"You should because he was one of the men who did much to preserve our
Union, he may tell us interesting things about the war. Where were you
when it was the proper time for you to be studying the speech of
Logan's ancestor in McGuffey's Fourth?"</p>
<p>"That must have been the year I figured out the improved coupling pin
in the C. N. W. shops, wouldn't you think, Mother?"</p>
<p>"Somewhere near, my dear," she said.</p>
<p>So they drove back as happily as they had set out, made themselves
fresh, and while awaiting the lecture hour, Kate again wrote to Robert
and Nancy Ellen, telling plainly and simply all that had occurred. She
even wrote "John Jardine's mother is of the opinion that he is courting
me. I am so lacking in experience myself that I scarcely dare venture
an opinion, but it has at times appealed to me that if he isn't really,
he certainly must be going through the motions."</p>
<p>Nancy Ellen wrote: I have read over what you say about John Jardine
several times. Then I had Robert write Bradstreet's and look him up.
He is rated so high that if he hasn't a million right now, he soon will
have. You be careful, and do your level best. Are your clothes good
enough? Shall I send more of my things? You know I'll do anything to
help you. Oh, yes, that George Holt from your boarding place was here
the other day hunting you. He seemed determined to know where you were
and when you would be back, and asked for your address. I didn't think
you had any time for him and I couldn't endure him or his foolish talk
about a new medical theory; so I said you'd no time for writing and
were going about so much I had no idea if you'd get a letter if he sent
one, and I didn't give him what he wanted. He'll probably try general
delivery, but you can drop it in the lake. I want you to be sure to
change your boarding place this winter, if you teach; but I haven't an
idea you will. Hadn't you better bring matters to a close if you can,
and let the Director know? Love from us both, NANCY ELLEN.</p>
<p>Kate sat very still, holding this letter in her hand, when John Jardine
came up and sat beside her. She looked at him closely. He was quite as
good looking as his mother thought him, in a brawny masculine way; but
Kate was not seeking the last word in mental or physical refinement.
She was rather brawny herself, and perfectly aware of the fact. She
wanted intensely to learn all she could, she disliked the idea that any
woman should have more stored in her head than she, but she had no time
to study minute social graces and customs. She wanted to be kind, to
be polite, but she told Mrs. Jardine flatly the "she didn't give a flip
about being overly nice," which was the exact truth. That required
subtleties beyond Kate's depth, for she was at times alarmingly casual.
So she held her letter and thought about John Jardine. As she thought,
she decided that she did not know whether she was in love with him or
not; she thought she was. She liked being with him, she liked all he
did for her, she would miss him if he went away, she would be proud to
be his wife, but she did wish that he were interested in land, instead
of inventions and stocks and bonds. Stocks and bonds were almost as
evanescent as rainbows to Kate. Land was something she could
understand and handle. Maybe she could interest him in land; if she
could, that would be ideal. What a place his wealth would buy and fit
up. She wondered as she studied John Jardine, what was in his head; if
he truly intended to ask her to be his wife, and since reading Nancy
Ellen's letter, when? She should let the Trustee know if she were not
going to teach the school again; but someway, she rather wanted to
teach the school. When she started anything she did not know how to
stop until she finished. She had so much she wanted to teach her
pupils the coming winter.</p>
<p>Suddenly John asked: "Kate, if you could have anything you wanted,
what would you have?"</p>
<p>"Two hundred acres of land," she said.</p>
<p>"How easy!" laughed John, rising to find a seat for his mother who was
approaching them. "What do you think of that, Mother? A girl who
wants two hundred acres of land more than anything else in the world."</p>
<p>"What is better?" asked Mrs. Jardine.</p>
<p>"I never heard you say anything about land before."</p>
<p>"Certainly not," said his mother, "and I'm not saying anything about it
now, for myself; but I can see why it means so much to Kate, why it's
her natural element."</p>
<p>"Well, I can't," he said. "I meet many men in business who started on
land, and most of them were mighty glad to get away from it. What's
the attraction?"</p>
<p>Kate waved her hand toward the distance.</p>
<p>"Oh, merely sky, and land, and water, and trees, and birds, and
flowers, and fruit, and crops, and a few other things scarcely worth
mentioning," she said, lightly. "I'm not in the mood to talk bushels,
seed, and fertilization just now; but I understand them, they are in my
blood. I think possibly the reason I want two hundred acres of land
for myself is because I've been hard on the job of getting them for
other people ever since I began to work, at about the age of four."</p>
<p>"But if you want land personally, why didn't you work to get it for
yourself?" asked John Jardine.</p>
<p>"Because I happened to be the omega of my father's system," answered
Kate.</p>
<p>Mrs. Jardine looked at her interestedly. She had never mentioned her
home or parents before. The older woman did not intend to ask a word,
but if Kate was going to talk, she did not want to miss one. Kate
evidently was going to talk, for she continued: "You see my father is
land mad, and son crazy. He thinks a BOY of all the importance in the
world; a GIRL of none whatever. He has the biggest family of any one
we know. From birth each girl is worked like a man, or a slave, from
four in the morning until nine at night. Each boy is worked exactly
the same way; the difference lies in the fact that the girls get plain
food and plainer clothes out of it; the boys each get two hundred acres
of land, buildings and stock, that the girls have been worked to the
limit to help pay for; they get nothing personally, worth mentioning.
I think I have two hundred acres of land on the brain, and I think this
is the explanation of it. It's a pre-natal influence at our house;
while we nurse, eat, sleep, and above all, WORK it, afterward."</p>
<p>She paused and looked toward John Jardine calmly: "I think," she said,
"that there's not a task ever performed on a farm that I haven't had my
share in. I have plowed, hoed, seeded, driven reapers and bound wheat,
pitched hay and hauled manure, chopped wood and sheared sheep, and
boiled sap; if you can mention anything else, go ahead, I bet a dollar
I've done it."</p>
<p>"Well, what do you think of that?" he muttered, looking at her
wonderingly.</p>
<p>"If you ask me, and want the answer in plain words, I think it's a
shame!" said Kate. "If it were ONE HUNDRED acres of land, and the
girls had as much, and were as willing to work it as the boys are, well
and good. But to drive us like cattle, and turn all we earn into land
for the boys, is another matter. I rebelled last summer, borrowed the
money and went to Normal and taught last winter. I'm going to teach
again this winter; but last summer and this are the first of my life
that I haven't been in the harvest fields, at this time. Women in the
harvest fields of Land King Bates are common as men, and wagons, and
horses, but not nearly so much considered. The women always walk on
Sunday, to save the horses, and often on week days."</p>
<p>"Mother has it hammered into me that it isn't polite to ask questions,"
said John, "but I'd like to ask one."</p>
<p>"Go ahead," said Kate. "Ask fifty! What do I care?"</p>
<p>"How many boys are there in your family?"</p>
<p>"There are seven," said Kate, "and if you want to use them as a basis
for a land estimate add two hundred and fifty for the home place.
Sixteen hundred and fifty is what Father pays tax on, besides the
numerous mortgages and investments. He's the richest man in the county
we live in; at least he pays the most taxes."</p>
<p>Mother and son looked at each other in silence. They had been thinking
her so poor that she would be bewildered by what they had to offer.
But if two hundred acres of land were her desire, there was a
possibility that she was a women who was not asking either ease or
luxury of life, and would refuse it if it were proffered.</p>
<p>"I hope you will take me home with you, and let me see all that land,
and how it is handled," said John Jardine. "I don't own an acre. I
never even have thought of it, but there is no reason why I, or any
member of my family shouldn't have all the land they want. Mother, do
you feel a wild desire for two hundred acres of land? Same kind of a
desire that took you to come here?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't," said Mrs. Jardine. "All I know about land is that I
know it when I see it, and I know if I think it's pretty; but I can see
why Kate feels that she would like that amount for herself, after
having helped earn all those farms for her brothers. If it's land she
wants, I hope she speedily gets all she desires in whatever location
she wants it; and then I hope she lets me come to visit her and watch
her do as she likes with it."</p>
<p>"Surely," said Kate, "you are invited right now; as soon as I ever get
the land, I'll give you another invitation. And of course you may go
home with me, Mr. Jardine, and I'll show you each of what Father calls
'those little parcels of land of mine.' But the one he lives on we
shall have to gaze at from afar, because I'm a Prodigal Daughter. When
I would leave home in spite of him for the gay and riotous life of a
school-marm, he ordered me to take all my possessions with me, which I
did in one small telescope. I was not to enter his house again while
he lived. I was glad to go, he was glad to have me, while I don't
think either of us has changed our mind since. Teaching school isn't
exactly gay, but I'll fill my tummy with quite a lot of symbolical
husks before he'll kill the fatted calf for me. They'll be glad to see
you at my brother Adam's, and my sister, Nancy Ellen, would greatly
enjoy meeting you. Surely you may go home with me, if you'd like."</p>
<p>"I can think of only one thing I'd like better," he said. "We've been
such good friends here and had such a good time, it would be the thing
I'd like best to take you home with us, and show you where and how we
live. Mother, did you ever invite Kate to visit us?"</p>
<p>"I have, often, and she has said that she would," replied Mrs. Jardine.
"I think it would be nice for her to go from here with us; and then you
can take her home whenever she fails to find us interesting. How would
that suit you for a plan, my dear?"</p>
<p>"I think that would be a perfect ending to a perfect summer," said
Kate. "I can't see an objection in any way. Thank you very much."</p>
<p>"Then we'll call that settled," said John Jardine.</p>
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