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PAGE 2

Abel And His Great Adventure
by [?]

We went out to the garden in the scented moist air of a maritime spring evening. Behind the garden was a cloudy pine wood; the house closed it in on the left, while in front and on the right a row of tall Lombardy poplars stood out in stately purple silhouette against the sunset sky.

“Always liked Lombardies,” said Abel, waving a long arm at them. “They are the trees of princesses. When I was a boy they were fashionable. Anyone who had any pretensions to gentility had a row of Lombardies at the foot of his lawn or up his lane, or at any rate one on either side of his front door. They’re out of fashion now. Folks complain they die at the top and get ragged-looking. So they do–so they do, if you don’t risk your neck every spring climbing up a light ladder to trim them out as I do. My neck isn’t worth much to anyone, which, I suppose, is why I’ve never broken it; and my Lombardies never look out-at-elbows. My mother was especially fond of them. She liked their dignity and their stand-offishness. They don’t hobnob with every Tom, Dick and Harry. If it’s pines for company, master, it’s Lombardies for society.”

We stepped from the front doorstone into the garden. There was another entrance–a sagging gate flanked by two branching white lilacs. From it a little dappled path led to a huge apple-tree in the centre, a great swelling cone of rosy blossom with a mossy circular seat around its trunk. But Abel’s favourite seat, so he told me, was lower down the slope, under a little trellis overhung with the delicate emerald of young hop-vines. He led me to it and pointed proudly to the fine view of the harbour visible from it. The early sunset glow of rose and flame had faded out of the sky; the water was silvery and mirror-like; dim sails drifted along by the darkening shore. A bell was ringing in a small Catholic chapel across the harbour. Mellowly and dreamily sweet the chime floated through the dusk, blent with the moan of the sea. The great revolving light at the channel trembled and flashed against the opal sky, and far out, beyond the golden sand-dunes of the bar, was the crinkled gray ribbon of a passing steamer’s smoke.

“There, isn’t that view worth looking at?” said old Abel, with a loving, proprietary pride. “You don’t have to pay anything for it, either. All that sea and sky free–‘without money and without price’. Let’s sit down here in the hop-vine arbour, master. There’ll be a moonrise presently. I’m never tired of finding out what a moonrise sheen can be like over that sea. There’s a surprise in it every time. Now, master, you’re getting your mouth in the proper shape to talk business–but don’t you do it. Nobody should talk business when he’s expecting a moonrise. Not that I like talking business at any time.”

“Unfortunately it has to be talked of sometimes, Mr. Armstrong,” I said.

“Yes, it seems to be a necessary evil, master,” he acknowledged. “But I know what business you’ve come upon, and we can settle it in five minutes after the moon’s well up. I’ll just agree to everything you and the other two trustees want. Lord knows why they ever put me on the school board. Maybe it’s because I’m so ornamental. They wanted one good-looking man, I reckon.”

His low chuckle, so full of mirth and so free from malice, was infectious. I laughed also, as I sat down in the hop-vine arbour.

“Now, you needn’t talk if you don’t want to,” he said. “And I won’t. We’ll just sit here, sociable like, and if we think of anything worth while to say we’ll say it. Otherwise, not. If you can sit in silence with a person for half an hour and feel comfortable, you and that person can be friends. If you can’t, friends you’ll never be, and you needn’t waste time in trying.”