The barn was our great playhouse on Sundays.It was clean there,we were where we could be called when wanted,and we liked to climb the ladders to the top of the haymows,walk the beams to the granaries,and jump to the hay.One day May came down on a snake that had been brought in with a load.I can hear her yell now,and it made her so frantic she's been killing them ever since.It was only a harmless little garter snake,but she was so surprised.
Miss Amelia held her head very much on one side all the time she walked with Laddie,and she was so birdlike Leon slipped him a brick and told him to have her hold it to keep her down.Seemed as if she might fly any minute.She thought our barn was the nicest she ever had seen and the cleanest.When Laddie opened the doors on the east side,and she could see the big,red,yellow,and green apples thick as leaves on the trees in the orchard,the lane,the woods pasture,and the meadow with scattering trees,two running springs,and the meeting of the creeks,she said it was the loveliest sight she ever saw--I mean beheld.Laddie liked that,so he told her about the beautiful town,and the lake,and the Wabash River,that our creek emptied into,and how people came from other states and big cities and stayed all summer to fish,row,swim,and have good times.
She asked him to take her to the meadow,but he excused himself,because he had an engagement.So she stood in the door,and watched him saddle Flos and start to the house to dress in his riding clothes.After that she didn't care a thing about the meadow,so we went back.
Our house looked as if we had a party.We were all dressed in our best,and every one was out in the yard,garden,or orchard.
Peter and Sally were under the big pearmain apple tree at the foot of the orchard,Shelley and a half dozen beaus were everywhere.May had her spelling book in one hand and was in my big catalpa talking to Billy Stevens,who was going to be her beau as soon as mother said she was old enough.Father was reading a wonderful new book to mother and some of the neighbours.Leon was perfectly happy because no one wanted him,so he could tease all of them by saying things they didn't like to hear.When Laddie came out and mounted,Leon asked him where he was going,and Laddie said he hadn't fully decided:he might ride to Elizabeth's,and not come back until Monday morning.
"You think you're pretty slick,"said Leon."But if we could see north to the cross road we could watch you turn west,and go past Pryors to show yourself off,or try to find the Princess on the road walking or riding.I know something I'm saving to tell next time you get smart,Mr.Laddie."Laddie seemed annoyed and no one was quicker to see it than Leon.
Instantly he jumped on the horse block,pulled down his face long as he could,stretched his hands toward Laddie,and ****** his voice all wavery and tremulous,he began reciting from "Lochiel's Warning,"in tones of agonizing pleading:
"Laddie,Laddie,beware of the day!
For,dark and despairing,my sight,I may seal,But man cannot cover what God would reveal;'Tis the sunset of life gives me mystical lore,And coming events cast their shadows before."That scared me.I begged Leon to tell,but he wouldn't say a word more.He went and talked to Miss Amelia as friendly as you please,and asked her to take a walk in the orchard and get some peaches,and she went flying.He got her all she could carry and guided her to Peter and Sally,introduced her to Peter,and then slipped away and left her.Then he and Sally couldn't talk about their wedding,and Peter couldn't squeeze her hand,and she couldn't fix his tie,and it was awful.Shelley and her boys almost laughed themselves sick over it,and then she cried,"To the rescue!"and started,so they followed.They captured Miss Amelia and brought her back,and left her with father and the wonderful book,but I'm sure she liked the orchard better.
I took Grace Greenwood under my arm,Hezekiah on my shoulder,and with Bobby at my heels went away.I didn't want my hair pulled,or to be teased that day.There was such a hardness around my heart,and such a lump in my throat,that I didn't care what happened to me one minute,and the next I knew I'd slap any one who teased me,if I were sent to bed for it.As I went down the lane Peter called to me to come and see him,but I knew exactly how he looked,and didn't propose to make up.There was not any sense in Sally clawing me all over,when I only tried to help mother and Lucy find out what they wanted to know so badly.I went down the hill,crossed the creek on the stepping-stones,and followed the cowpath into the woods pasture.It ran beside the creek bank through the spice thicket and blackberry patches,under pawpaw groves,and beneath giant oaks and elms.Just where the creek turned at the open pasture,below the church and cemetery,right at the deep bend,stood the biggest white oak father owned.It was about a tree exactly like this that an Englishman wrote a beautiful poem in McGuffey's Sixth,that begins: