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  CHAPTER V A HEARSE IN THE MOONLIGHT

  Petite Jeanne, too, seemed a bright autumn leaf as, dressed in a filmyorange-colored gown, she drifted down the broad paved walk.

  Passing a great building that gleamed from within as if it were on fire,she marveled at the mystery of light.

  "Why should I find myself intrigued by a mere Oriental dagger and onesmall Chinaman with long ears?" she asked herself, "when a thousandmysteries of science, chemistry, light, heat and sound lie all about me?"

  Finding no answer to this question, she still kept a keen watch for thatlong-eared Chinaman who had snatched the jeweled dagger from her hand andlater had walked the cables of the Sky Ride.

  "It is like a Chinaman to have three blades to his knife where only oneis needed," she assured herself. "But why must one have a dagger in atemple? I'll ask that interesting white man who sold me the book."

  Indeed she would, and many other questions besides. "There is a destinythat shapes our ends, rough hew them though we may." The men we meet andpass, never to meet again, the ones who because of a passing word becomepart of our very lives, all their names are written in a book, and thename of that book is FATE.

  A long, low bus, looking for all the world like a mammoth greyhound,stopped at Jeanne's very feet. Because on the long seat filled withsmiling people there was room for one more, Jeanne paid her fare and tookher place with the rest.

  Where was she going? She did not know nor care. Some time perhaps shewould take this exhibition seriously. Time enough for that. The wholesummer was before her, fifteen glorious weeks. For the moment she wouldwander at will.

  Gliding along in the bus she lost all sense of time until, with a start,she found herself at the far end of that all but endless pageant.

  "_Mon Dieu!_" she exclaimed. "Why did I come all this way? Florence iswaiting. She will never forgive me!"

  Climbing aboard a second bus, she went gliding back the way she had come.

  "Ah, my dear!" she cried as she sighted her good friend seated in a campchair, watching the fading lights. "How can you forgive me?"

  "That is not so hard," the big girl drawled. "I've been sitting here halfasleep, watching the throngs pass by.

  "Do you know, Jeanne," her tone became animated, "people come a longdistance from north, south, east and west, thousands of miles, to viewthe wonders of this place. And who can blame them? But, after all, whenthey are here, throngs and throngs of them, they themselves are moreinteresting than all the marvels they come to see."

  "Ah, yes. It is so.

  "But, Florence!" Jeanne cried suddenly. "I have found such a charm of aplace! And we may dine there if we hurry.

  "Ah, but I fear the buses are stopped. See, all the lights are fading."Her voice dropped.

  It was true. The lights were fading. Here a brightly illuminated towerwent dark, there a fiery fountain became a well of blackness, and therean endless chain of light vanished into the night.

  "It is like the end of the world!" Jeanne said in an awed whisper.

  "But this place you speak of? Is it far?" Florence sprang to her feet.

  "Oh, yes, very far."

  "Then we will go. I am tired of seeing and hearing. A long walk will bejust grand."

  "And, ah! to see this place by moonlight!" Jeanne clasped her hands."That will be so very wonderful!"

  The broad, paved way, where thousands had wandered during the day, wasall but deserted. Here a belated visitor hurried toward a gateway. Therean attendant, his labors over, raced away to catch a home-bound car.

  Down by the shore a score of camp fires were gleaming. For the first timein many years Indians were camping on Chicago's water front. The waveringlight of their fires turned their tepees into ghost-homes of the longago.

  Farther south other fires gleamed about the temporary homes of other wildmen from faraway lands. All these were a part of the great show.

  But it was none of these that had caught and held the little Frenchgirl's attention.

  Before them loomed the Midway. With lights out, its fantastic structures,standing out black against the sky, seemed huge beasts come to life fromthe past and now crouching by the roadway in their sleep.

  As if feeling something of this, Jeanne quickened her pace. But not forlong.

  "Here!" she exclaimed. "Down here it is!"

  She turned sharply to the right, hurried forward twenty steps, thenhalted before a door.

  "If it is closed!" she breathed. "Can it be? Yes, perhaps. See! Theelectric light is out.

  "No, no. There is some one!"

  "Only a scrub woman." Florence pressed close to the glass door.

  Just then the person inside stood up. Florence caught her breath. She hadnot been wrong. The one who stood there had been scrubbing. Her dress waspinned up; her arms were bare to the elbow. But surely she was not aregular scrub woman! Seldom had Florence seen a more beautiful face. Shewas young, too, surely not yet twenty. Cheeks aglow with natural bloom,big eyes shining, brown hair tossed back, she stood there smiling, apicture of natural youth and beauty. Smiling at what? Had she seen them?Yes, she was coming to the door.

  "Would you like to come in?" she whispered.

  Too astonished to answer, the girls found themselves inside.

  The place they had entered was a long, low room. The floor was of roughboards. Massive beams ran from one end to the other of the paneledceiling. At one side was a curious sort of refreshment stand, and to theright of this the broadest fireplace Florence had ever seen.

  Noting the surprised look on Florence's face, the girl said: "Have younever been here before?"

  By her rich, melodious drawl, Florence knew at once that this girl camefrom the southern mountains.

  "This," the girl went on, "is the Rutledge Tavern. It was by thisfireplace that the young man, Abe Lincoln, sat and talked for long hoursto a girl with hair like corn tassels in autumn. Can you see them therenow? She is sewing. He is dreaming of days that are to come."

  "So this is the spot that charmed my little French friend," Florencewhispered to herself. "Little wonder! Coming from the past with itssimple grandeur, it has an appeal all its own."

  "Perhaps," said the stranger, "you'd like to sit here by the fire.I--I'll soon be through with my work."

  "But you," Florence exclaimed, "surely you do not have to scrub floorsall night long!"

  "Oh, no! Not all night long. Only this one. And I love it!" The girl'seyes shone. "I am Jensie Crider. I am from the mountains of Kentucky.This is the Lincoln group. And Abraham Lincoln, our great President, camefrom the mountains where I was born. They--they let me care for thesebuildings because I understand how they should be kept.

  "Come!" Her voice fell to a whisper. "Come back here and you shall seethose other buildings by the moonlight."

  She led the way to the back of that long room, then pointed silently.Standing there, bathed in the golden moonlight, were two small log cabinsand a rough structure built of boards.

  "That little cabin," the girl whispered, "is the one in which the greatPresident was born; no, not quite. It is exactly like it, but for me itis the same.

  "Does it not seem wonderful?" Her low voice was singing now. "No windows,a stick chimney, a clay floor. He was born there, the great President. Hewas one of us, of our poor mountain folk. Do you wonder that I love mywork?"

  "No," Florence whispered.

  "But look!" Jeanne gripped her companion's arm. "What is that strangething over there?"

  "That--" The girl's tone changed. "That is a very old hearse. Perhaps itis the one that carried our martyred President to his grave."

  "A hearse!" Jeanne shrank back. "A hearse in the moonlight."

  "Come!" said Florence. "Let's go and sit by the fireplace and dream."

  "Yes, do!" The mountain girl's voice rang with hospitality. "I have somecorn bread, the sort we make in the mountains, baked in an oven under thecoals. I'll make some tea very soon, and we shall hav
e a bite to eat."

  To sit in the Rutledge Tavern, beside the fireplace where Abe Lincoln andAnn Rutledge had made love long ago! Could anything be more romantic?

  A moment more and they were there, Florence and Jeanne, staring dreamilyat the fire. But try as she might, Jeanne could not quite drive from hermind the image of that ancient hearse standing out there in themoonlight.

  "It seems a sign," she told herself. A sign of what? She could not tell.

  The mountain girl's corn bread baked in a Dutch oven beneath the coalswas delicious. Buried in strained honey which, Jensie Crider assuredthem, came from a bee tree away up on the side of Big Black Mountain, itwas a dish to set before a king.

  "Those other buildings there," Jensie explained in a quiet voice, "one isthe home of Abe Lincoln in Indiana and the other, that one built ofboards, is where Lincoln and Berry kept store, or tried to and failed.

  "I--I'm sort of glad they failed." Her voice trailed into silence. On thebroad hearth the coals glowed. Behind them, down the long room, all wasshrouded in darkness. And still in the golden moonlight the dilapidatedhearse stood. Jeanne thought of this, and shuddered.

  "Why?" It was Florence who spoke at last. "Why are you glad that Lincolnfailed."

  "Because he is my hero," Jensie's tone was deeply serious. "And if myhero never failed, how could I hope to be like him? We all failsometimes.

  "Of all these buildings," she went on after a time, "I have the littlecabin where he was born. I was born in just such a cabin, way up on theside of Big Black Mountain."

  "Oh!" Jeanne's eyes opened wide. "And is that your home now?"

  "No, no! Now we have two rooms and two real glass windows.

  "Of course," Jensie half apologised, "that isn't very much. But there's aporch to sit on all summer long. And oh! it is beautiful in the mountainsin the springtime. When the dogwood blossoms are like drifting snow onthe hillsides, when little streams covered over with mountain ivy comedashing, cool, damp and fragrant, from far up the mountains, oh, then itis a joy to live!

  "Will you come and see me there some time? You two?" Her voice rang witheagerness.

  "Yes, yes!" Jeanne cried impulsively, throwing her arms about the girland kissing her apple-red cheek. "Yes, indeed! We will come in springwhen the dogwood is in bloom."

  Once again silence settled over the room where darkness played hide andseek with little streaks of light among the massive hand-hewn rafters.

  Only an ancient clock in a far corner disturbed the silence with itssolemn _tick-tock, tick-tock_.

  "Listen!" Jeanne gripped Florence's arm. The clock made a curious noiselike a very old man clearing his throat, then struck twice: _Dong! Dong!_

  "Two o'clock!" Jeanne sprang to her feet. "Two o'clock! This is my hourof enchantment! We must be going!

  "Good-bye." Once again she embraced the mountain girl. "We will be back.Many times."

  She led Florence out into the moonlight. But even as she did so she castan apprehensive look behind her. She was thinking still of the hearse inthe moonlight. A fence hid it from her view. With a shudder sheexclaimed, "Come! Let us go fast!"