heiress, had not been asked for the first dance, but had stood
   against the wall in her tight, high-heeled shoes, nervously
   fingering a lace handkerchief.  She was soon out of breath, so Nils
   led her, pleased and panting, to her seat, and went over to the
   piano, from which Clara had been watching his gallantry.  "Ask
   Olena Yenson," she whispered.  "She waltzes beautifully."
   Olena, too, was rather inconveniently plump, handsome in a smooth,
   heavy way, with a fine colour and good-natured, sleepy eyes.  She
   was redolent of violet sachet powder, and had warm, soft, white
   hands, but she danced divinely, moving as smoothly as the tide
   coming in. "There, that's something like," Nils said as he released
   her.  "You'll give me the next waltz, won't you?  Now I must go and
   dance with my little cousin."
   Hilda was greatly excited when Nils went up to her stall and
   held out his arm.  Her little eyes sparkled, but she declared that
   she could not leave her lemonade.  Old Mrs. Ericson, who happened
   along at this moment, said she would attend to that, and Hilda came
   out, as pink as her pink dress.  The dance was a schottische, and
   in a moment her yellow braids were fairly standing on end. 
   "Bravo!" Nils cried encouragingly.  "Where did you learn to dance
   so nicely?"
   "My Cousin Clara taught me," the little girl panted.
   Nils found Eric sitting with a group of boys who were too
   awkward or too shy to dance, and told him that he must dance the
   next waltz with Hilda.
   The boy screwed up his shoulders.  "Aw, Nils, I can't dance. 
   My feet are too big; I look silly."
   "Don't be thinking about yourself.  It doesn't matter how boys
   look."
   Nils had never spoken to him so sharply before, and Eric made
   haste to scramble out of his corner and brush the straw from his
   coat.
   Clara nodded approvingly.  "Good for you, Nils.  I've been
   trying to get hold of him.  They dance very nicely together; I
   sometimes play for them."
   "I'm obliged to you for teaching him.  There's no reason why he
   should grow up to be a lout."
   "He'll never be that.  He's more like you than any of them. 
   Only he hasn't your courage."  From her slanting eyes Clara shot
   forth one of those keen glances, admiring and at the same time
   challenging, which she seldom bestowed on any one, and which seemed
   to say, "Yes, I admire you, but I am your equal."
   Clara was proving a much better host than Olaf, who, once the
   supper was over, seemed to feel no interest in anything but the
   lanterns.  He had brought a locomotive headlight from
   town to light the revels, and he kept skulking about as if he
   feared the mere light from it might set his new barn on fire.
   His wife, on the contrary, was cordial to every one, was
   animated and even gay.  The deep salmon colour in her cheeks burned
   vividly, and her eyes were full of life.  She gave the piano over
   to the fat Swedish heiress, pulled her father away from the corner
   where he sat gossiping with his cronies, and made him dance a
   Bohemian dance with her.  In his youth Joe had been a famous
   dancer, and his daughter got him so limbered up that every one sat
   around and applauded them.  The old ladies were particularly
   delighted, and made them go through the dance again.  From their
   corner where they watched and commented, the old women kept time
   with their feet and hands, and whenever the fiddles struck up a new
   air old Mrs. Svendsen's white cap would begin to bob.
   Clara was waltzing with little Eric when Nils came up to them,
   brushed his brother aside, and swung her out among the dancers. 
   "Remember how we used to waltz on rollers at the old skating rink
   in town?  I suppose people don't do that any more.  We used to keep
   it up for hours.  You know, we never did moon around as other boys
   and girls did.  It was dead serious with us from the beginning. 
   When we were most in love with each other, we used to fight.  You
   were always pinching people; your fingers were like little nippers.
   A regular snapping turtle, you were.  Lord, how you'd like
   Stockholm!  Sit out in the streets in front of cafes and talk all
   night in summer. just like a reception--officers and ladies and
   funny English people.  Jolliest people in the world, the Swedes,
   once you get them going.  Always drinking things--champagne and
   stout mixed, half-and-half, serve it out of big pitchers, and serve
   plenty.  Slow pulse, you know; they can stand a lot.  Once they
   light up, they're glowworms, I can tell you."
   "All the same, you don't really like gay people."
   "I don't?"
   "No; I could tell that when you were looking at the old women
   there this afternoon.  They're the kind you really admire, after
   all; women like your mother.  And that's the kind you'll marry."
   "Is it, Miss Wisdom?  You'll see who I'll marry, and she
   won't have a domestic virtue to bless herself with.  She'll be a
   snapping turtle, and she'll be a match for me.  All the same,
   they're a fine bunch of old dames over there.  You admire them
   yourself
   "No, I don't; I detest them."
   "You won't, when you look back on them from Stockholm or
   Budapest.  Freedom settles all that.  Oh, but you're the real
   Bohemian Girl, Clara Vavrika!"  Nils laughed down at her sullen
   frown and began mockingly to sing:
          "Oh, how could a poor gypsy maiden like me
          Expect the proud bride of a baron to be?"
   Clara clutched his shoulder.  "Hush, Nils; every one is looking at
   you."
   "I don't care.  They can't gossip.  It's all in the family, as
   the Ericsons say when they divide up little Hilda's patrimony
   amongst them.  Besides, we'll give them something to talk about
   when we hit the trail.  Lord, it will be a godsend to them!  They
   haven't had anything so interesting to chatter about since the
   grasshopper year.  It'll give them a new lease of life.  And Olaf
   won't lose the Bohemian vote, either.  They'll have the laugh on
   him so that they'll vote two apiece.  They'll send him to Congress.
   They'll never forget his barn party, or us.  They'll always
   remember us as we're dancing together now.  We're making a legend. 
   Where's my waltz, boys?" he called as they whirled past the
   fiddlers.
   The musicians grinned, looked at each other, hesitated, and
   began a new air; and Nils sang with them, as the couples fell from
   a quick waltz to a long, slow glide:
              "When other lips and other hearts
               Their tale of love shall tell,
               In language whose excess imparts
               The power they feel so well."
   The old women applauded vigorously.  "What a gay one he is,
   that Nils!"  And old Mrs. Svendsen's cap lurched dreamily
   from side to side to the flowing measure of the dance.
             Of days that have as ha-a-p-py been,
             And you'll remember me."
                             VII
   The moonlight flooded that great, silent land.  The reaped 
					     					 			
   fields lay yellow in it.  The straw stacks and poplar windbreaks
   threw sharp black shadows.  The roads were white rivers of dust. 
   The sky was a deep, crystalline blue, and the stars were few and
   faint.  Everything seemed to have succumbed, to have sunk to sleep,
   under the great, golden, tender, midsummer moon.  The splendour of
   it seemed to transcend human life and human fate.  The senses were
   too feeble to take it in, and every time one looked up at the sky
   one felt unequal to it, as if one were sitting deaf under the waves
   of a great river of melody.  Near the road, Nils Ericson was lying
   against a straw stack in Olaf's wheat field.  His own life seemed
   strange and unfamiliar to him, as if it were something he had read
   about, or dreamed, and forgotten.  He lay very still, watching the
   white road that ran in front of him, lost itself among the fields,
   and then, at a distance, reappeared over a little hill.  At last,
   against this white band he saw something moving rapidly, and he got
   up and walked to the edge of the field.  "She is passing the row of
   poplars now," he thought.  He heard the padded beat of hoofs along
   the dusty road, and as she came into sight he stepped out and waved
   his arms.  Then, for fear of frightening the horse, he drew back
   and waited.  Clara had seen him, and she came up at a walk.  Nils
   took the horse by the bit and stroked his neck.
   "What are you doing out so late, Clara Vavrika?  I went to the
   house, but Johanna told me you had gone to your father's."
   "Who can stay in the house on a night like this?  Aren't you
   out yourself?"
   "Ah, but that's another matter."
   Nils turned the horse into the field.
   "What are you doing?  Where are you taking Norman?"
   "Not far, but I want to talk to you tonight; I have something to
   say to you.  I can't talk to you at the house, with Olaf sitting
   there on the porch, weighing a thousand tons."
   Clara laughed.  "He won't be sitting there now.  He's in bed
   by this time, and asleep--weighing a thousand tons."
   Nils plodded on across the stubble.  "Are you really going
   to spend the rest of your life like this, night after night,
   summer after summer?  Haven't you anything better to do on a night
   like this than to wear yourself and Norman out tearing across the
   country to your father's and back?  Besides, your father won't
   live forever, you know.  His little place will be shut up or
   sold, and then you'll have nobody but the Ericsons.  You'll have
   to fasten down the hatches for the winter then."
   Clara moved her head restlessly.  "Don't talk about that.  I
   try never to think of it.  If I lost Father I'd lose everything,
   even my hold over the Ericsons."
   "Bah!  You'd lose a good deal more than that.  You'd lose
   your race, everything that makes you yourself.  You've lost a
   good deal of it now."
   "Of what?"
   "Of your love of life, your capacity for delight."
   Clara put her hands up to her face.  "I haven't, Nils
   Ericson, I haven't!  Say anything to me but that.  I won't have
   it!" she declared vehemently.
   Nils led the horse up to a straw stack, and turned to Clara,
   looking at her intently, as he had looked at her that Sunday
   afternoon at Vavrika's.  "But why do you fight for that so?  What
   good is the power to enjoy, if you never enjoy?  Your hands are
   cold again; what are you afraid of all the time?  Ah, you're
   afraid of losing it; that's what's the matter with you!  And you
   will, Clara Vavrika, you will!  When I  used to know you--listen;
   you've caught a wild bird in your hand, haven't you, and felt its
   heart beat so hard that you were afraid it would shatter its
   little body to pieces?  Well, you used to be just like that, a
   slender, eager thing with a wild delight inside you.  That is how
   I remembered you.  And I come back and find you--a bitter
   woman.  This is a perfect ferret fight here; you live by biting
   and being bitten.  Can't you remember what life used to be?  Can't
   you remember that old delight?  I've never forgotten it, or known
   its like, on land or sea."
   He drew the horse under the shadow of the straw stack. 
   Clara felt him take her foot out of the stirrup, and she slid
   softly down into his arms.  He kissed her slowly.  He was a
   deliberate man, but his nerves were steel when he wanted
   anything.  Something flashed out from him like a knife out of a
   sheath.  Clara felt everything slipping away from her; she was
   flooded by the summer night.  He thrust his hand into his pocket,
   and then held it out at arm's length.  "Look," he said.  The
   shadow of the straw stack fell sharp across his wrist, and in the
   palm of his hand she saw a silver dollar shining.  "That's my
   pile," he muttered; "will you go with me?"
   Clara nodded, and dropped her forehead on his shoulder.
   Nils took a deep breath.  "Will you go with me tonight?"
   "Where?" she whispered softly.
   "To town, to catch the midnight flyer."
   Clara lifted her head and pulled herself together.  "Are you
   crazy, Nils?  We couldn't go away like that."
   "That's the only way we ever will go.  You can't sit on the
   bank and think about it.  You have to plunge.  That's the way
   I've always done, and it's the right way for people like you and
   me.  There's nothing so dangerous as sitting still.  You've only
   got one life, one youth, and you can let it slip through your
   fingers if you want to; nothing easier.  Most people do that. 
   You'd be better off tramping the roads with me than you are
   here."  Nils held back her head and looked into her eyes.  "But
   I'm not that kind of a tramp, Clara.  You won't have to take in
   sewing.  I'm with a Norwegian shipping line; came over on
   business with the New York offices, but now I'm going straight
   back to Bergen.  I expect I've got as much money as the Ericsons. 
   Father sent me a little to get started.  They never knew about
   that.  There, I hadn't meant to tell you; I wanted you to come on
   your own nerve."
   Clara looked off across the fields.  "It isn't that, Nils,
   but something seems to hold me.  I'm afraid to pull against it.
   It comes out of the ground, I think."
   "I know all about that.  One has to tear loose.  You're not
   needed here.  Your father will understand; he's made like us.  As
   for Olaf, Johanna will take better care of him than ever you
   could.  It's now or never, Clara Vavrika.  My bag's at the
   station; I smuggled it there yesterday."
   Clara clung to him and hid her face against his shoulder. 
   "Not tonight," she whispered.  "Sit here and talk to me tonight. 
   I don't want to go anywhere tonight.  I may never love you like
   this again."
   Nils laughed through his teeth.  "You can't come that on me. 
   That's not my way, Clara Vavrika.  Eric's mare is over there
   behind the stacks, and I'm off on the midnight.  It's goodbye, or
   off across the world with me.  My carriage won't wait.  I've
   written a letter to Olaf, I'll mail it in town.  
					     					 			 When he reads it
   he won't bother us--not if I know him.  He'd rather have the
   land.  Besides, I could demand an investigation of his
   administration of Cousin Henrik's estate, and that would be bad
   for a public man.  You've no clothes, I know; but you can sit up
   tonight, and we can get everything on the way.  Where's your old
   dash, Clara Vavrika?  What's become of your Bohemian blood?  I used
   to think you had courage enough for anything.  Where's your
   nerve--what are you waiting for?"
   Clara drew back her head, and he saw the slumberous fire in
   her eyes.  "For you to say one thing, Nils Ericson."
   "I never say that thing to any woman, Clara Vavrika."  He
   leaned back, lifted her gently from the ground, and whispered
   through his teeth: "But I'll never, never let you go, not to any
   man on earth but me!  Do you understand me?  Now, wait here."
   Clara sank down on a sheaf of wheat and covered her face
   with her hands.  She did not know what she was going to do--
   whether she would go or stay.  The great, silent country seemed
   to lay a spell upon her.  The ground seemed to hold her as if by
   roots.  Her knees were soft under her.  She felt as if she could
   not bear separation from her old sorrows, from her old discontent.
   They were dear to her, they had kept her alive, they were
   a part of her.  There would be nothing left of her if she were
   wrenched away from them.  Never could she pass beyond that skyline
   against which her restlessness had beat so many times.  She felt
   as if her soul had built itself a nest there on that horizon at
   which she looked every morning and every evening, and it was dear
   to her, inexpressibly dear.  She pressed her fingers against her
   eyeballs to shut it out.  Beside her she heard the tramping of
   horses in the soft earth.  Nils said nothing to her.  He put his
   hands under her arms and lifted her lightly to her saddle.  Then
   he swung himself into his own.
   "We shall have to ride fast to catch the midnight train.  A
   last gallop, Clara Vavrika.  Forward!"
   There was a start, a thud of hoofs along the moonlit road, two
   dark shadows going over the hill; and then the great, still land
   stretched untroubled under the azure night.  Two shadows had
   passed.
                             VII
   A year after the flight of Olaf Ericson's wife, the night
   train was steaming across the plains of Iowa.  The conductor was
   hurrying through one of the day coaches, his lantern on his arm,
   when a lank, fair-haired boy sat up in one of the plush seats and
   tweaked him by the coat.
   "What is the next stop, please, sir?"
   "Red Oak, Iowa.  But you go through to Chicago, don't you?"
   He looked down, and noticed that the boy's eyes were red and his
   face was drawn, as if he were in trouble.
   "Yes.  But I was wondering whether I could get off at the
   next place and get a train back to Omaha."
   "Well, I suppose you could.  Live in Omaha?"
   "No.  In the western part of the State.  How soon do we get
   to Red Oak?"
   "Forty minutes.  You'd better make up your mind, so I can
   tell the baggageman to put your trunk off."
   "Oh, never mind about that!  I mean, I haven't got any," the
   boy added, blushing.
   "Run away," the conductor thought, as he slammed the coach
   door behind him.
   Eric Ericson crumpled down in his seat and put his brown hand
   to his forehead.  He had been crying, and he had had no supper, and
   his head was aching violently.  "Oh, what shall I do?" he thought,
   as he looked dully down at his big shoes.  "Nils will be ashamed of
   me; I haven't got any spunk."
   Ever since Nils had run away with his brother's wife, life at
   home had been hard for little Eric.  His mother and Olaf both
   suspected him of complicity.  Mrs. Ericson was harsh and
   faultfinding, constantly wounding the boy's pride; and Olaf was
   always setting her against him.