he
Republican party and the good name of Kansas by any rash promises. It's
dinner time, and I'm hungry. I don't believe I'll ever get enough to eat
again."
Oh, it was good to see them, albeit our separation had amounted to
hardly sixty days. Bud had been waiting for me almost a week; and O'mie,
to Bud's surprise, had come upon him unannounced that morning. The
dining-room was crowded; and as soon as dinner was over we went outside
and sat down together where we could visit our fill unmolested. They
wanted to know about my doings, but I was too eager to hear all the home
news to talk of myself.
"Everybody all right when I left," Bud asserted. "I got off a few dayth
before thith mitherable thon of Erin. Didn't know he'd tag me, or I'd
have gone to Canada." He gave O'mie an affectionate slap on the shoulder
as he spoke.
"Your father and Aunt Candace are well, and glad you came out of the
campaign you've been makin' a record av unfadin' glory in. Judge Baronet
was the last man I saw when I left town," O'mie said.
"Why, where was Uncle Cam?" I asked.
"Oh, pretendin' to be busy somewheres. Awful busy man, that Cam Gentry."
O'mie smiled at the remembrance. He knew why tender-hearted Cam had fled
from a good-bye scene. "Dave Mead's goin' to start to California in a
few days." He rattled on, "The church supper in October was the biggest
they've had yet. Dever's got a boil on the back of his neck, and Jim
Conlow's drivin' stage for him. Jim had a good job in Topeka, but come
back to Springvale. Can't keep the Conlows corralled anywhere else.
Everybody else is doing fine except Grandma Mead. She's failin'. Old
town looked pretty good to me when I looked back at it from the east
bluff of the Neosho."
It had looked good to each one of us at the same place when each started
out to try the West alone. Somehow we did not care to talk, for a few
minutes.
"What brought you out here, Bud?" I asked to break the spell.
"Oh, three or four thingth. I wanted to thee you," Bud answered. "You
never paid me that fifteen thenth you borrowed before you went to
college."
"And then," he continued, "the old town on the Neosho'th too thmall for
me. Our family ith related to the Daniel Boone tribe of Indianth, and
can't have too big a crowd around. Three children of the family are at
home, and I wanted to come out here anyhow. I'd like to live alwayth on
the Plainth and have a quiet grave at the end of the trail where the
wind blow
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