like as not, in the mornin' he'll come down, cussin' and swearin' 'cause she wa'n't fixed jest right." He peered into the kettle on the stove. "'Most empty." He filled it from the pail by the sink, and resumed his seat, stretching his great legs comfortably. Juno sprang from the lounge and perched herself on his knee. He tumbled her a little, in rough affection, and rubbed his big fingers in her neck. She purred loudly, kneading her claws with swift strokes in the heavy cloth. He watched her benignly, a kind of detached humor in his eyes. "Wimmen folks is a good deal alike," he remarked dryly. "They like to be comf'tabul."
"Some of them," assented the artist.
The old man looked up with a swift twinkle. "So-o?" he said.
The artist sat up quickly. The locket swayed on its chain and his hand touched it. "What do you mean?" he said.
"Why, nuthin', nuthin'," said Uncle William, soothingly. "Only I thought you was occupied with art and so on--"?
"I am."
Uncle William said nothing.
Presently the artist leaned forward. "Do you want to see her?" he said. He was holding it out.
Uncle William peered at it uncertainly. He rose and took down the spectacles from behind the clock and placed them on his nose. Then he reached out his great hand for the locket. The quizzical humor had gone from his face. It was full of gentleness.
Without a word the artist laid the locket in his hand.
The light swung down from the lamp on it, touching the dark face. The old man studied it thoughtfully. On the stove the kettle had begun to hum. Its gentle sighing filled the room. The artist dreamed.
Uncle William pushed up his spectacles and regarded him with a satisfied look. "You've had a good deal more sense'n I was afraid you'd have," he said dryly.
The artist woke. "You can't tell--from that." He held out his hand.
Uncle William gave it up, slowly. "I can tell more'n you'd think, perhaps. Wimmen and the sea are alike--some ways a good deal alike. I've lived by the sea sixty year, you know, and I've watched all kinds of doings. But what I'm surest of is that it's deeper'n we be." He chuckled softly. "Now, I wouldn't pertend to know all about her,"--he waved his hand,--"but she's big and she's fresh--salt, too--and she makes your heart big just to look at her--the way it ought to, I reckon. There's things about her I don't know," he nodded toward the picture. "She may not go to church and I don't doubt but what she has tantrums, but she's better'n we be, and she-- What did you say her name was?"
"Sergia Lvova."
"Sergia Lvova," repeated the old man, slowly, yet with a certain ease. "That's a cur'us name. I've heard suthin' like it, somewhere--"
"She's Russian."
"Russian--jest so! I might'n' known it! I touched Russia once, ran up to St. Petersburg. Now there's a country that don't hev breathin' space. She don't hev half the sea room she'd o't to. Look at her--all hemmed in and froze up. You hev to squeeze past all the nations of the earth to get to her--half choked afore you fairly get there. Yes, I sailed there once, up through Skager Rack and Cattegat along up the Baltic and the Gulf of Finland, just edging along--" He held out his hand again for the locket, and studied it carefully. "Russian, is she? I might 'a' known it," he said nodding. "She's the sort--same look-- eager and kind o' waitin'." He looked up. "How'd you come to know her? You been there?"
"In Russia? No. She's not there now. She's in New York. She lives there."
"Is that so? Poor thing!" Uncle William looked at the pictured face with compassion.
The artist smiled. "Oh, it's not so bad. She's happy."
"Yes, she's happy. I can see that easy enough. She's the kind that's goin' to be happy." He looked again at the clear, fearless eyes. "You couldn't put her anywheres she wouldn't sing--"
"She /does/ sing. How did you know?"
Uncle William's eyes twinkled to the boyish face. "Well, I didn't /know/ it--not jest that way. I didn't know as she sung songs on a platform, dressed up, like I've heard 'em. What I meant was, her heart kind o' bubbles and sings--"
"Yes"--the artist leaned forward--"that is Sergia. It's the way she is. She doesn't sing in public. But her voice"--his eyes grew dark-- "it makes you want to laugh and cry. It's like the wind and the sun shining--" He broke off, listening.
The old man's eyes dwelt on him kindly. "She's with her folks, is she?"
He roused himself. "She hasn't any. They all died over there--her father and brother in the riots, her mother after that. She has no one. She teaches music--piano and violin--night and day. Sometimes she
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