"Good night, Kenny," she said shyly. "I hope you find your star."
"I did," said Kenny. "'Twas hiding in a cabin. Good night, dear."
CHAPTER XII
THRALDOM
Hughie met him at the door.
"He's been askin' for you, Mr. O'Neill," he said. "And he hasn't drank
a drop all evening."
"I shan't go," said Kenny. "Depend upon it, Hughie, it's another
trick."
"I don't know," said Hughie hopelessly. "It may be. It's not for me
to deny, with all you take from him." Hughie looked ashamed of
himself. "I--I'm sorry for him."
Kenny groaned and set his teeth.
"I think," said Hughie, "he wants to apologize. He wrote you a note
this morning and tore it up. And when I put his brandy bottle on his
chair to-night he flung it at my head."
"I'll go this once," said Kenny. "But, so help me Heaven, I'll never
go again!"
He went dully up the stair, cursing the blossom storm. Its monotonous
patter on the roof had inspired Adam Craig to his first plea of
loneliness; it had left Kenny himself with a haunting memory of drab
solitude, pain and melancholy that seeped with a dripping sound into
his very marrow; and it had begun for him the singular thraldom,
inspired by pity, that he could not bring himself to understand.
Hughie had left the door of Adam's room ajar. The invalid sat by the
table in his wheelchair, a book upon his knees, likely one of the
pirate tales in which he reveled. His face was drawn and haggard, his
eyes closed. With the wine of his excitement gone, he seemed but a
huddled heap of skin and bone. A death's-head! Kenny shuddered.
Unspeakable pity made him kind. The old man yonder was off his guard;
he had pride and spirit that compelled respect.
Kenny softly closed the door and rapped.
"Come in!" said Adam Craig. Almost Kenny could see him chirking up
into insolence and the pertness of a bird. It was precisely as he had
expected. When the door swung back, Adam was erect in his wheel-chair,
electric with challenge. His eyes were once more bright and sharp.
"Kenny," he demanded with asperity, "where have you been?"
Kenny glanced at the faded books stacked upon the bookshelves; and with
the cabin uppermost in his mind he swung back dangerously to the
hostile mood of the night before. Adam Craig was a miser, cruel and
selfish. He had driven Joan and Donald to a refuge in the pines.
"I said," repeated Adam in a louder voice, "where have you been?"
"Picking wild flowers,
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