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PAGE 2

The Home-Coming Of Jim Wilkes
by [?]

“Well, if you’re not going on to-night, I’d get off and stop there.”

“I reckon your head’s level, stranger,” said Bill approvingly; “for they’re about chock full at the Springs’ House.”

To descend, the passenger was obliged to pass out by the middle seat and before the young editor. As he did so he cast a shy look on him and, leaning over, said hesitatingly, in a lower voice: “I don’t think you will be able to get in at the Springs Hotel. If–if–you care to come with me to–to–the ranch, I can take care of you.”

The young editor–a man of action–paused for an instant only. Then seizing his bag, he said promptly: “Thank you,” and followed his newly-found friend to the ground. The whip cracked, the coach rolled away.

“You know Wilkes?” he said.

“Ye-ee-s. He’s my father.”

“Ah,” said the editor cheerfully, “then you’re going home?”

“Yes.”

It was quite light in the open, and the stranger, after a moment’s survey of the prospect,–a survey that, however, seemed to be characterized by his previous hesitation,–said: “This way,” crossed the road, and began to follow a quite plain but long disused wagon track along the slope. His manner was still so embarrassed that the young editor, after gayly repeating his thanks for his companion’s thoughtful courtesy, followed him in silence. At the end of ten minutes they had reached some cultivated fields and orchards; the stranger brightened, although still with a preoccupied air, quickened his pace, and then suddenly stopped. When the editor reached his side he was gazing with apparently still greater perplexity upon the level, half obliterated, and blackened foundations of what had been a large farmhouse.

“Why, it’s been burnt down!” he said thoughtfully.

The editor stared at him! Burnt down it certainly had been, but by no means recently. Grasses were already springing up from the charred beams in the cellar, vines were trailing over the fallen chimneys, excavations, already old, had been made among the ruins. “When were you here last?” the editor asked abruptly.

“Five years ago,” said the stranger abstractedly.

“Five years!–and you knew nothing of THIS?”

“No. I was in Tahiti, Australia, Japan, and China all the time.”

“And you never heard from home?”

“No. You see I quo’led with the old man, and ran away.”

“And you didn’t write to tell them you were coming?”

“No.” He hesitated, and then added: “Never thought o’ coming till I saw YOU.”

“Me!”

“Yes; you and–the high water.”

“Do you mean to say,” said the young editor sharply, “that you brought ME–an utter stranger to you–out of that coach to claim the hospitality of a father you had quarreled with–hadn’t seen for five years and didn’t know if he would receive you?”

“Yes,–you see that’s just WHY I did it. You see, I reckoned my chances would be better to see him along with a cheerful, chipper fellow like you. I didn’t, of course, kalkilate on this,” he added, pointing dejectedly to the ruins.

The editor gasped; then a sudden conception of the unrivaled absurdity of the situation flashed upon him,–of his passively following the amiable idiot at his side in order to contemplate, by the falling rain and lonely night, a heap of sodden ruins, while the coach was speeding to Summit Springs and shelter, and, above all, the reason WHY he was invited,–until, putting down his bag, he leaned upon his stick, and laughed until the tears came to his eyes.

At which his companion visibly brightened. “I told you so,” he said cheerfully; “I knew you’d be able to take it–and the old man–in THAT WAY, and that would have fetched him round.”

“For Heaven’s sake! don’t talk any more,” said the editor, wiping his eyes, “but try to remember if you ever had any neighbors about here where we can stay tonight. We can’t walk to Summit Springs, and we can’t camp out on these ruins.”

“There didn’t use to be anybody nearer than the Springs.”

“But that was five years ago, you say,” said the editor impatiently; “and although your father probably moved away after the house burned down, the country’s been thickly settled since then. That field has been lately planted. There must be another house beyond. Let’s follow the trail a little farther.”