invited her to have dinner with him at the hotel (he boarded there
   when his wife was away), and that was a great honour.
   When Mandy said someone ought to be with the old lady, Bert and Del
   offered to take turns.  Adelbert went off to rake up the grass they
   had been cutting all morning, and Albert sat down in the play-room.
   It seemed to him his grandmother looked pretty sick.  He watched
   her while Mandy gave her toast-water with whisky in it, and thought
   he would like to make the room look a little nicer.  While Mrs.
   Harris lay with her eyes closed, he hung up the caps and coats
   lying about, and moved away the big rocking-chair that stood by the
   head of Grandma's bed.  There ought to be a table there, he
   believed, but the small tables in the house all had something on
   them.  Upstairs, in the room where he and Adelbert and Ronald
   slept, there was a nice clean wooden cracker-box, on which they sat
   in the morning to put on their shoes and stockings.  He brought
   this down and stood it on end at the head of Grandma's lounge, and
   put a clean napkin over the top of it.
   She opened her eyes and smiled at him.  "Could you git me a tin of
   fresh water, honey?"
   He went to the back porch and pumped till the water ran cold.  He
   gave it to her in a tin cup as she had asked, but he didn't think
   that was the right way.  After she dropped back on the pillow, he
   fetched a glass tumbler from the cupboard, filled it, and set it on
   the table he had just manufactured.  When Grandmother drew a red
   cotton handkerchief from under her pillow and wiped the moisture
   from her face, he ran upstairs again and got one of his Sunday-
   school handkerchiefs, linen ones, that Mrs. Rosen had given him and
   Del for Christmas.  Having put this in Grandmother's hand and taken
   away the crumpled red one, he could think of nothing else to do--
   except to darken the room a little.  The windows had no blinds, but
   flimsy cretonne curtains tied back,--not really tied, but caught
   back over nails driven into the sill.  He loosened them and let
   them hang down over the bright afternoon sunlight.  Then he sat
   down on the low sawed-off chair and gazed about, thinking that now
   it looked quite like a sick-room.
   It was hard for a little boy to keep still.  "Would you like me to
   read Joe's Luck to you, Gram'ma?" he said presently.
   "You might, Bertie."
   He got the "boy's book" she had been reading aloud to them, and
   began where she had left off.  Mrs. Harris liked to hear his voice,
   and she liked to look at him when she opened her eyes from time to
   time.  She did not follow the story.  In her mind she was repeating
   a passage from the second part of Pilgrim's Progress, which she had
   read aloud to the children so many times; the passage where
   Christiana and her band come to the arbour on the Hill of
   Difficulty:  "Then said Mercy, how sweet is rest to them that
   labour."
   At about four o'clock Adelbert came home, hot and sweaty from
   raking.  He said he had got in the grass and taken it to their cow,
   and if Bert was reading, he guessed he'd like to listen.  He
   dragged the wooden rocking-chair up close to Grandma's bed and
   curled up in it.
   Grandmother was perfectly happy.  She and the twins were about the
   same age; they had in common all the realest and truest things.
   The years between them and her, it seemed to Mrs. Harris, were full
   of trouble and unimportant.  The twins and Ronald and Hughie were
   important.  She opened her eyes.
   "Where is Hughie?" she asked.
   "I guess he's asleep.  Mother took him into her bed."
   "And Ronald?"
   "He's upstairs with Mandy.  There ain't nobody in the kitchen now."
   "Then you might git me a fresh drink, Del."
   "Yes'm, Gram'ma."  He tiptoed out to the pump in his brown canvas
   sneakers.
   When Vickie came home at five o'clock, she went to her mother's
   room, but the door was locked--a thing she couldn't remember ever
   happening before.  She went into the playroom,--old Mrs. Harris was
   asleep, with one of the twins on guard, and he held up a warning
   finger.  She went into the kitchen.  Mandy was making biscuits, and
   Ronald was helping her to cut them out.
   "What's the matter, Mandy?  Where is everybody?"
   "You know your papa's away, Miss Vickie; an' your mama's got a
   headache, an' Miz' Harris has had a bad spell.  Maybe I'll just fix
   supper for you an' the boys in the kitchen, so you won't all have
   to be runnin' through her room."
   "Oh, very well," said Vickie bitterly, and she went upstairs.
   Wasn't it just like them all to go and get sick, when she had now
   only two weeks to get ready for school, and no trunk and no clothes
   or anything?  Nobody but Mr. Rosen seemed to take the least
   interest, "when my whole life hangs by a thread," she told herself
   fiercely.  What were families for, anyway?
   After supper Vickie went to her father's office to read; she told
   Mandy to leave the kitchen door open, and when she got home she
   would go to bed without disturbing anybody.  The twins ran out to
   play under the electric light with the neighbour boys for a little
   while, then slipped softly up the back stairs to their room.  Mandy
   came to Mrs. Harris after the house was still.
   "Kin I rub your legs fur you, Miz' Harris?"
   "Thank you, Mandy.  And you might get me a clean nightcap out of
   the press."
   Mandy returned with it.
   "Lawsie me!  But your legs is cold, ma'am!"
   "I expect it's about time, Mandy," murmured the old lady.  Mandy
   knelt on the floor and set to work with a will.  It brought the
   sweat out on her, and at last she sat up and wiped her face with
   the back of her hand.
   "I can't seem to git no heat into 'em, Miz' Harris.  I got a hot
   flat-iron on the stove; I'll wrap it in a piece of old blanket and
   put it to your feet.  Why didn't you have the boys tell me you was
   cold, pore soul?"
   Mrs. Harris did not answer.  She thought it was probably a cold
   that neither Mandy nor the flat-iron could do much with.  She
   hadn't nursed so many people back in Tennessee without coming to
   know certain signs.
   After Mandy was gone, she fell to thinking of her blessings.  Every
   night for years, when she said her prayers, she had prayed that she
   might never have a long sickness or be a burden.  She dreaded the
   heart-ache and humiliation of being helpless on the hands of people
   who would be impatient under such a care.  And now she felt certain
   that she was going to die tonight, without troubling anybody.
   She was glad Mrs. Rosen was in Chicago.  Had she been at home, she
   would certainly have come in, would have seen that her old
   neighbour was very sick, and bustled about.  Her quick eye would
   have found out all Grandmother's little secrets: how hard her bed
   was, that she had no proper place to wash, and kept her comb in her
   pocket; that her nightgowns were patched and darned.  Mrs. Rosen
   would have been indignant, and that would have made Victoria cross.
					     					 			r />
   She didn't have to see Mrs. Rosen again to know that Mrs. Rosen
   thought highly of her and admired her--yes, admired her.  Those
   funny little pats and arch pleasantries had meant a great deal to
   Mrs. Harris.
   It was a blessing that Mr. Templeton was away, too.  Appearances
   had to be kept up when there was a man in the house; and he might
   have taken it into his head to send for the doctor, and stir
   everybody up.  Now everything would be so peaceful.  "The Lord is
   my shepherd" she whispered gratefully.  "Yes, Lord, I always
   spoiled Victoria.  She was so much the prettiest.  But nobody won't
   ever be the worse for it: Mr. Templeton will always humour her, and
   the children love her more than most.  They'll always be good to
   her; she has that way with her."
   Grandma fell to remembering the old place at home: what a dashing,
   high-spirited girl Victoria was, and how proud she had always been
   of her; how she used to hear her laughing and teasing out in the
   lilac arbour when Hillary Templeton was courting her.  Toward
   morning all these pleasant reflections faded out.  Mrs. Harris felt
   that she and her bed were softly sinking, through the darkness to a
   deeper darkness.
   Old Mrs. Harris did not really die that night, but she believed she
   did.  Mandy found her unconscious in the morning.  Then there was a
   great stir and bustle; Victoria, and even Vickie, were startled out
   of their intense self-absorption.  Mrs. Harris was hastily carried
   out of the play-room and laid in Victoria's bed, put into one of
   Victoria's best nightgowns.  Mr. Templeton was sent for, and the
   doctor was sent for.  The inquisitive Mrs. Jackson from next door
   got into the house at last,--installed herself as nurse, and no one
   had the courage to say her nay.  But Grandmother was out of it all,
   never knew that she was the object of so much attention and
   excitement.  She died a little while after Mr. Templeton got home.
   Thus Mrs. Harris slipped out of the Templetons' story; but Victoria
   and Vickie had still to go on, to follow the long road that leads
   through things unguessed at and unforeseeable.  When they are old,
   they will come closer and closer to Grandma Harris.  They will
   think a great deal about her, and remember things they never
   noticed; and their lot will be more or less like hers.  They will
   regret that they heeded her so little; but they, too, will look
   into the eager, unseeing eyes of young people and feel themselves
   alone.  They will say to themselves:  "I was heartless, because I
   was young and strong and wanted things so much.  But now I know."
   New Brunswick, 1931
   TWO FRIENDS
   I
   Even in early youth, when the mind is so eager for the new and
   untried, while it is still a stranger to faltering and fear, we yet
   like to think that there are certain unalterable realities,
   somewhere at the bottom of things.  These anchors may be ideas; but
   more often they are merely pictures, vivid memories, which in some
   unaccountable and very personal way give us courage.  The sea-
   gulls, that seem so much creatures of the free wind and waves, that
   are as homeless as the sea (able to rest upon the tides and ride
   the storm, needing nothing but water and sky), at certain seasons
   even they go back to something they have known before; to remote
   islands and lonely ledges that are their breeding-grounds.  The
   restlessness of youth has such retreats, even though it may be
   ashamed of them.
   Long ago, before the invention of the motorcar (which has made more
   changes in the world than the War, which indeed produced the
   particular kind of war that happened just a hundred years after
   Waterloo), in a little wooden town in a shallow Kansas river
   valley, there lived two friends.  They were "business men," the two
   most prosperous and influential men in our community, the two men
   whose affairs took them out into the world to big cities, who had
   "connections" in St. Joseph and Chicago.  In my childhood they
   represented to me success and power.
   R. E. Dillon was of Irish extraction, one of the dark Irish, with
   glistening jet-black hair and moustache, and thick eyebrows.  His
   skin was very white, bluish on his shaven cheeks and chin.  Shaving
   must have been a difficult process for him, because there were no
   smooth expanses for the razor to glide over.  The bony structure of
   his face was prominent and unusual; high cheek-bones, a bold Roman
   nose, a chin cut by deep lines, with a hard dimple at the tip, a
   jutting ridge over his eyes where his curly black eyebrows grew and
   met.  It was a face in many planes, as if the carver had whittled
   and modelled and indented to see how far he could go.  Yet on
   meeting him what you saw was an imperious head on a rather small,
   wiry man, a head held conspicuously and proudly erect, with a
   carriage unmistakably arrogant and consciously superior.  Dillon
   had a musical, vibrating voice, and the changeable grey eye that is
   peculiarly Irish.  His full name, which he never used, was Robert
   Emmet Dillon, so there must have been a certain feeling somewhere
   back in his family.
   He was the principal banker in our town, and proprietor of the
   large general store next the bank; he owned farms up in the grass
   country, and a fine ranch in the green timbered valley of the Caw.
   He was, according to our standards, a rich man.
   His friend, J. H. Trueman, was what we called a big cattleman.
   Trueman was from Buffalo; his family were old residents there, and
   he had come West as a young man because he was restless and
   unconventional in his tastes.  He was fully ten years older than
   Dillon,--in his early fifties, when I knew him; large, heavy, very
   slow in his movements, not given to exercise.  His countenance was
   as unmistakably American as Dillon's was not,--but American of that
   period, not of this.  He did not belong to the time of efficiency
   and advertising and progressive methods.  For any form of pushing
   or boosting he had a cold, unqualified contempt.  All this was in
   his face,--heavy, immobile, rather melancholy, not remarkable in
   any particular.  But the moment one looked at him one felt
   solidity, an entire absence of anything mean or small, easy
   carelessness, courage, a high sense of honour.
   These two men had been friends for ten years before I knew them,
   and I knew them from the time I was ten until I was thirteen.  I
   saw them as often as I could, because they led more varied lives
   than the other men in our town; one could look up to them.  Dillon,
   I believe, was the more intelligent.  Trueman had, perhaps, a
   better tradition, more background.
   Dillon's bank and general store stood at the corner of Main Street
   and a cross-street, and on this cross-street, two short blocks
   away, my family lived.  On my way to and from school, and going on
   the countless errands that I was sent upon day and night, I always
   passed Dillon's store.  Its long, red brick wall, with no windows
   except high overh 
					     					 			ead, ran possibly a hundred feet along the
   sidewalk of the cross-street.  The front door and show windows were
   on Main Street, and the bank was next door.  The board sidewalk
   along that red brick wall was wider than any other piece of walk in
   town, smoother, better laid, kept in perfect repair; very good to
   walk on in a community where most things were flimsy.  I liked the
   store and the brick wall and the sidewalk because they were solid
   and well built, and possibly I admired Dillon and Trueman for much
   the same reason.  They were secure and established.  So many of our
   citizens were nervous little hopper men, trying to get on.  Dillon
   and Trueman had got on; they stood with easy assurance on a deck
   that was their own.
   In the daytime one did not often see them together--each went about
   his own affairs.  But every evening they were both to be found at
   Dillon's store.  The bank, of course, was locked and dark before
   the sun went down, but the store was always open until ten o'clock;
   the clerks put in a long day.  So did Dillon.  He and his store
   were one.  He never acted as salesman, and he kept a cashier in the
   wire-screened office at the back end of the store; but he was there
   to be called on.  The thrifty Swedes to the north, who were his
   best customers, usually came to town and did their shopping after
   dark--they didn't squander daylight hours in farming season.  In
   these evening visits with his customers, and on his drives in his
   buckboard among the farms, Dillon learned all he needed to know
   about how much money it was safe to advance a farmer who wanted to
   feed cattle, or to buy a steam thrasher or build a new barn.
   Every evening in winter, when I went to the post-office after
   supper, I passed through Dillon's store instead of going round it,--
   for the warmth and cheerfulness, and to catch sight of Mr. Dillon
   and Mr. Trueman playing checkers in the office behind the wire
   screening; both seated on high accountant's stools, with the
   checker-board on the cashier's desk before them.  I knew all
   Dillon's clerks, and if they were not busy, I often lingered about
   to talk to them; sat on one of the grocery counters and watched the
   checker-players from a distance.  I remember Mr. Dillon's hand used
   to linger in the air above the board before he made a move; a well-
   kept hand, white, marked with blue veins and streaks of strong
   black hair.  Trueman's hands rested on his knees under the desk
   while he considered; he took a checker, set it down, then dropped
   his hand on his knee again.  He seldom made an unnecessary movement
   with his hands or feet.  Each of the men wore a ring on his little
   finger.  Mr. Dillon's was a large diamond solitaire set in a gold
   claw, Trueman's the head of a Roman soldier cut in onyx and set in
   pale twisted gold; it had been his father's, I believe.
   Exactly at ten o'clock the store closed.  Mr. Dillon went home to
   his wife and family, to his roomy, comfortable house with a garden
   and orchard and big stables.  Mr. Trueman, who had long been a
   widower, went to his office to begin the day over.  He led a double
   life, and until one or two o'clock in the morning entertained the
   poker-players of our town.  After everything was shut for the
   night, a queer crowd drifted into Trueman's back office.  The
   company was seldom the same on two successive evenings, but there
   were three tireless poker-players who always came: the billiard-
   hall proprietor, with green-gold moustache and eyebrows, and big
   white teeth; the horse-trader, who smelled of horses; the dandified
   cashier of the bank that rivalled Dillon's.  The gamblers met in
   Trueman's place because a game that went on there was respectable,
   was a social game, no matter how much money changed hands.  If the
   horse-trader or the crooked money-lender got over-heated and broke
   loose a little, a look or a remark from Mr. Trueman would freeze
   them up.  And his remark was always the same: