and he liked being ugly.
   He began telling the boys that it was too hot to hunt now, but
   later he meant to steal down to the marsh, where the ducks came at
   sundown, and bag a few.  "I can make off across the corn fields
   before the old Cap sees me.  He's not much on the run."
   "He'll complain to your father."
   "A whoop my father cares!"  The speaker's restless eyes were
   looking up through the branches.  "See that woodpecker tapping;
   don't mind us a bit.  That's nerve!"
   "They are protected here, so they're not afraid," said precise
   George.
   "Hump!  They'll spoil the old man's grove for him.  That tree's
   full of holes already.  Wouldn't he come down easy, now!"
   Niel and George Adams sat up.  "Don't you dare shoot here, you'll
   get us all into trouble."
   "She'd come right down from the house," cried Ed Elliott.
   "Let her come, stuck-up piece!  Who's talking about shooting,
   anyway?  There's more ways of killing dogs than choking them with
   butter."
   At this effrontery the boys shot amazed glances at one another, and
   the brown Weaver twins broke simultaneously into giggles and rolled
   over on the turf.
   But Ivy seemed unaware that he was regarded as being especially
   resourceful where dogs were concerned.  He drew from his pocket a
   metal sling-shot and some round bits of gravel.  "I won't kill it.
   I'll just surprise it, so we can have a look at it."
   "Bet you won't hit it!"
   "Bet I will!"  He fitted the stone to the leather, squinted, and
   let fly.  Sure enough, the woodpecker dropped at his feet.  He
   threw his heavy black felt hat over it.  Ivy never wore a straw
   hat, even in the hottest weather.  "Now wait.  He'll come to.
   You'll hear him flutter in a minute."
   "It ain't a he, anyhow.  It's a female.  Anybody would know that,"
   said Niel contemptuously, annoyed that this unpopular boy should
   come along and spoil their afternoon.  He held the fate of his
   uncle's spaniel against Ivy Peters.
   "All right, Miss Female," said Ivy carelessly, intent upon a
   project of his own.  He took from his pocket a little red leather
   box, and when he opened it the boys saw that it contained curious
   little instruments: tiny sharp knife blades, hooks, curved needles,
   a saw, a blow-pipe, and scissors.  "Some of these I got with a
   taxidermy outfit from the Youth's Companion, and some I made
   myself."  He got stiffly down on his knees,--his joints seemed
   disinclined to bend at all,--and listened beside his hat.  "She's
   as lively as a cricket," he announced.  Thrusting his hand suddenly
   under the brim, he brought out the startled bird.  It was not
   bleeding, and did not seem to be crippled.
   "Now, you watch, and I'll show you something," said Ivy.  He held
   the woodpecker's head in a vice made of his thumb and forefinger,
   enclosing its panting body with his palm.  Quick as a flash, as if
   it were a practised trick, with one of those tiny blades he slit
   both the eyes that glared in the bird's stupid little head, and
   instantly released it.
   The woodpecker rose in the air with a whirling, corkscrew motion,
   darted to the right, struck a tree-trunk,--to the left, and struck
   another.  Up and down, backward and forward among the tangle of
   branches it flew, raking its feathers, falling and recovering
   itself.  The boys stood watching it, indignant and uncomfortable,
   not knowing what to do.  They were not especially sensitive; Thad
   was always on hand when there was anything doing at the slaughter
   house, and the Blum boys lived by killing things.  They wouldn't
   have believed they could be so upset by a hurt woodpecker.  There
   was something wild and desperate about the way the darkened
   creature beat its wings in the branches, whirling in the sunlight
   and never seeing it, always thrusting its head up and shaking it,
   as a bird does when it is drinking.  Presently it managed to get
   its feet on the same limb where it had been struck, and seemed to
   recognize that perch.  As if it had learned something by its
   bruises, it pecked and crept its way along the branch and
   disappeared into its own hole.
   "There," Niel Herbert exclaimed between his teeth, "if I can get it
   now, I can kill it and put it out of its misery.  Let me on your
   back, Rhein."
   Rheinhold was the tallest, and he obediently bent his bony back.
   The trunk of a cottonwood tree is hard to climb; the bark is rough,
   and the branches begin a long way up.  Niel tore his trousers and
   scratched his bare legs smartly before he got to the first fork.
   After recovering breath, he wound his way up toward the woodpecker's
   hole, which was inconveniently high.  He was almost there, his
   companions below thought him quite safe, when he suddenly lost his
   balance, turned a somersault in the air, and bumped down on the
   grass at their feet.  There he lay without moving.
   "Run for water!"
   "Run for Mrs. Forrester!  Ask her for whiskey."
   "No," said George Adams, "let's carry him up to the house.  She
   will know what to do."
   "That's sense," said Ivy Peters.  As he was much bigger and
   stronger than any of the others, he lifted Niel's limp body and
   started up the hill.  It had occurred to him that this would be a
   fine chance to get inside the Forresters' house and see what it was
   like, and this he had always wanted to do.
   Mary, the cook, saw them coming from the kitchen window, and ran
   for her mistress.  Captain Forrester was in Kansas City that day.
   Mrs. Forrester came to the back door.  "What's happened?  It's
   Niel, too!  Bring him in this way, please."
   Ivy Peters followed her, keeping his eyes open, and the rest
   trooped after him,--all but the Blum boys, who knew that their
   place was outside the kitchen door.  Mrs. Forrester led the way
   through the butler's pantry, the dining-room, the back parlour, to
   her own bedroom.  She threw down the white counterpane, and Ivy
   laid Niel upon the sheets.  Mrs. Forrester was concerned, but not
   frightened.
   "Mary, will you bring the brandy from the sideboard.  George,
   telephone Dr. Dennison to come over at once.  Now you other boys
   run out on the front porch and wait quietly.  There are too many of
   you in here."  She knelt by the bed, putting brandy between Niel's
   white lips with a teaspoon.  The little boys withdrew, only Ivy
   Peters remained standing in the back parlour, just outside the
   bedroom door, his arms folded across his chest, taking in his
   surroundings with bold, unblinking eyes.
   Mrs. Forrester glanced at him over her shoulder.  "Will you wait on
   the porch, please?  You are older than the others, and if anything
   is needed I can call on you."
   Ivy cursed himself, but he had to go.  There was something final
   about her imperious courtesy,--high-and-mighty, he called it.  He
   had intended to sit down in the biggest leather chair and cross his
   legs and make himself at home; but he found himself on the front
   porch, put out by that delicately modulated 
					     					 			 voice as effectually as
   if he had been kicked out by the brawniest tough in town.
   Niel opened his eyes and looked wonderingly about the big, half-
   darkened room, full of heavy, old-fashioned walnut furniture.  He
   was lying on a white bed with ruffled pillow shams, and Mrs.
   Forrester was kneeling beside him, bathing his forehead with
   cologne.  Bohemian Mary stood behind her, with a basin of water.
   "Ouch, my arm!" he muttered, and the perspiration broke out on his
   face.
   "Yes, dear, I'm afraid it's broken.  Don't move.  Dr. Dennison will
   be here in a few minutes.  It doesn't hurt very much, does it?"
   "No'm," he said faintly.  He was in pain, but he felt weak and
   contented.  The room was cool and dusky and quiet.  At his house
   everything was horrid when one was sick. . . .  What soft fingers
   Mrs. Forrester had, and what a lovely lady she was.  Inside the
   lace ruffle of her dress he saw her white throat rising and falling
   so quickly.  Suddenly she got up to take off her glittering rings,--
   she had not thought of them before,--shed them off her fingers
   with a quick motion as if she were washing her hands, and dropped
   them into Mary's broad palm.  The little boy was thinking that he
   would probably never be in so nice a place again.  The windows went
   almost down to the baseboard, like doors, and the closed green
   shutters let in streaks of sunlight that quivered on the polished
   floor and the silver things on the dresser.  The heavy curtains
   were looped back with thick cords, like ropes.  The marble-topped
   wash-stand was as big as a sideboard.  The massive walnut furniture
   was all inlaid with pale-coloured woods.  Niel had a scroll-saw,
   and this inlay interested him.
   "There, he looks better now, doesn't he, Mary?"  Mrs. Forrester ran
   her fingers through his black hair and lightly kissed him on the
   forehead.  Oh, how sweet, how sweet she smelled!
   "Wheels on the bridge; it's Doctor Dennison.  Go and show him in,
   Mary."
   Dr. Dennison set Niel's arm and took him home in his buggy.  Home
   was not a pleasant place to go to; a frail egg-shell house, set off
   on the edge of the prairie where people of no consequence lived.
   Except for the fact that he was Judge Pommeroy's nephew, Niel would
   have been one of the boys to whom Mrs. Forrester merely nodded
   brightly as she passed.  His father was a widower.  A poor relation,
   a spinster from Kentucky, kept house for them, and Niel thought she
   was probably the worst housekeeper in the world.  Their house was
   usually full of washing in various stages of incompletion,--tubs
   sitting about with linen soaking,--and the beds were "aired" until
   any hour in the afternoon when Cousin Sadie happened to think of
   making them up.  She liked to sit down after breakfast and read
   murder trials, or peruse a well-worn copy of "St. Elmo."   Sadie was
   a good-natured thing and was always running off to help a neighbour,
   but Niel hated to have anyone come to see them.  His father was at
   home very little, spent all his time at his office.  He kept the
   county abstract books and made farm loans. Having lost his own
   property, he invested other people's money for them.  He was a
   gentle, agreeable man, young, good-looking, with nice manners, but
   Niel felt there was an air of failure and defeat about his family.
   He clung to his maternal uncle, Judge Pommeroy, white-whiskered and
   portly, who was Captain Forrester's lawyer and a friend of all the
   great men who visited the Forresters.  Niel was proud, like his
   mother; she died when he was five years old.  She had hated the
   West, and used haughtily to tell her neighbours that she would never
   think of living anywhere but in Fayette county, Kentucky; that they
   had only come to Sweet Water to make investments and to "turn the
   crown into the pound."  By that phrase she was still remembered,
   poor lady.
   THREE
   For the next few years Niel saw very little of Mrs. Forrester.  She
   was an excitement that came and went with summer.  She and her
   husband always spent the winter in Denver and Colorado Springs,--
   left Sweet Water soon after Thanksgiving and did not return until
   the first of May.  He knew that Mrs. Forrester liked him, but she
   hadn't much time for growing boys.  When she had friends staying
   with her, and gave a picnic supper for them, or a dance in the
   grove on a moonlit night, Niel was always invited.  Coming and
   going along the road to the marsh with the Blum boys, he sometimes
   met the Captain driving visitors over in the democrat wagon, and he
   heard about these people from Black Tom, Judge Pommeroy's faithful
   negro servant, who went over to wait on the table for Mrs.
   Forrester when she had a dinner party.
   Then came the accident which cut short the Captain's career as a
   roadbuilder.  After that fall with his horse, he lay ill at the
   Antlers, in Colorado Springs, all winter.  In the summer, when Mrs.
   Forrester brought him home to Sweet Water, he still walked with a
   cane.  He had grown much heavier, seemed encumbered by his own
   bulk, and never suggested taking a contract for the railroad again.
   He was able to work in his garden, trimmed his snowball bushes and
   lilac hedges, devoted a great deal of time to growing roses.  He
   and his wife still went away for the winter, but each year the
   period of their absence grew shorter.
   All this while the town of Sweet Water was changing.  Its future no
   longer looked bright.  Successive crop failures had broken the
   spirit of the farmers.  George Adams and his family had gone back
   to Massachusetts, disillusioned about the West.  One by one the
   other gentlemen ranchers followed their example.  The Forresters
   now had fewer visitors.  The Burlington was "drawing in its horns,"
   as people said, and the railroad officials were not stopping off at
   Sweet Water so often,--were more inclined to hurry past a town
   where they had sunk money that would never come back.
   Niel Herbert's father was one of the first failures to be crowded
   to the wall.  He closed his little house, sent his cousin Sadie
   back to Kentucky, and went to Denver to accept an office position.
   He left Niel behind to read law in the office with his uncle.  Not
   that Niel had any taste for the law, but he liked being with Judge
   Pommeroy, and he might as well stay there as anywhere, for the
   present.  The few thousand dollars his mother had left him would
   not be his until he was twenty-one.
   Niel fitted up a room for himself behind the suite which the Judge
   retained for his law offices, on the second floor of the most
   pretentious brick block in town.  There he lived with monastic
   cleanliness and severity, glad to be rid of his cousin and her
   inconsequential housewifery, and resolved to remain a bachelor,
   like his uncle.  He took care of the offices, which meant that he
   did the janitor work, and arranged them exactly to suit his taste,
   making the rooms so attractive that all the Judge's friends, and
   especially Captain Forrester, dropped i 
					     					 			n there to talk oftener than
   ever.
   The Judge was proud of his nephew.  Niel was now nineteen, a tall,
   straight, deliberate boy.  His features were clear-cut, his grey
   eyes, so dark that they looked black under his long lashes, were
   rather moody and challenging.  The world did not seem over-bright
   to young people just then.  His reserve, which did not come from
   embarrassment or vanity, but from a critical habit of mind, made
   him seem older than he was, and a little cold.
   One winter afternoon, only a few days before Christmas, Niel sat
   writing in the back office, at the long table where he usually
   worked or trifled, surrounded by the Judge's fine law library and
   solemn steel engravings of statesmen and jurists.  His uncle was at
   his desk in the front office, engaged in a friendly consultation
   with one of his country clients.  Niel, greatly bored with the
   notes he was copying, was trying to invent an excuse for getting
   out on the street, when he became aware of light footsteps coming
   rapidly down the outside corridor.  The door of the front office
   opened, he heard his uncle rise quickly to his feet, and, at the
   same moment, heard a woman's laugh,--a soft, musical laugh which
   rose and descended like a suave scale.  He turned in his screw
   chair so that he could look over his shoulder through the double
   doors into the front room.  Mrs. Forrester stood there, shaking her
   muff at the Judge and the bewildered Swede farmer.  Her quick eye
   lighted upon a bottle of Bourbon and two glasses on the desk among
   the papers.
   "Is that the way you prepare your cases, Judge?  What an example
   for Niel!"  She peeped through the door and nodded to the boy as he
   rose.
   He remained in the back room, however, watching her while she
   declined the chair the Judge pushed toward her and made a sign of
   refusal when he politely pointed to the Bourbon.  She stood beside
   his desk in her long sealskin coat and cap, a crimson scarf showing
   above the collar, a little brown veil with spots tied over her
   eyes.  The veil did not in the least obscure those beautiful eyes,
   dark and full of light, set under a low white forehead and arching
   eyebrows.  The frosty air had brought no colour to her cheeks,--her
   skin had always the fragrant, crystalline whiteness of white
   lilacs.  Mrs. Forrester looked at one, and one knew that she was
   bewitching.  It was instantaneous, and it pierced the thickest
   hide.  The Swede farmer was now grinning from ear to ear, and he,
   too, had shuffled to his feet.  There could be no negative
   encounter, however slight, with Mrs. Forrester.  If she merely
   bowed to you, merely looked at you, it constituted a personal
   relation.  Something about her took hold of one in a flash; one
   became acutely conscious of her, of her fragility and grace, of her
   mouth which could say so much without words; of her eyes, lively,
   laughing, intimate, nearly always a little mocking.
   "Will you and Niel dine with us tomorrow evening, Judge?  And will
   you lend me Tom?  We've just had a wire.  The Ogdens are stopping
   over with us.  They've been East to bring the girl home from
   school,--she's had mumps or something.  They want to get home for
   Christmas, but they will stop off for two days.  Probably Frank
   Ellinger will come on from Denver."
   "No prospect can afford me such pleasure as that of dining with
   Mrs. Forrester," said the Judge ponderously.
   "Thank you!" she bowed playfully and turned toward the double
   doors.  "Niel, could you leave your work long enough to drive me
   home?  Mr. Forrester has been detained at the bank."
   Niel put on his wolfskin coat.  Mrs. Forrester took him by his
   shaggy sleeve and went with him quickly down the long corridor and
   the narrow stairs to the street.
   At the hitch-bar stood her cutter, looking like a painted toy among
   the country sleds and wagons.  Niel tucked the buffalo robes about