Free Air - Page 59/176

She did not often think of Milt; she did not know whether he was ahead

of her, or had again dropped behind. When she did recall him, it was

with respect quite different from the titillation that dancing men had

sometimes aroused, or the impression of manicured agreeableness and

efficiency which Jeff Saxton carried about.

She always supplicated the mythical Milt in moments of tight driving.

Driving, just the actual getting on, was her purpose in life, and the

routine of driving was her order of the day: Morning freshness, rolling

up as many miles as possible before lunch, that she might loaf

afterward. The invariable two P.M. discovery that her eyes ached, and

the donning of huge amber glasses, which gave to her lithe smartness a

counterfeit scholarliness. Toward night, the quarter-hour of level

sun-glare which prevented her seeing the road. Dusk, and the discovery

of how much light there was after all, once she remembered to take off

her glasses. The worst quarter-hour when, though the roads were an

amethyst rich to the artist, they were also a murkiness exasperating to

the driver, yet still too light to be thrown into relief by the lamps.

The mystic moment when night clicked tight, and the lamps made a fan of

gold, and Claire and her father settled down to plodding content--and no

longer had to take the trouble of admiring the scenery!

The morning out of Billings, she wondered why a low cloud so

persistently held its shape, and realized that it was a far-off

mountain, her first sight of the Rockies. Then she cried out, and wished

for Milt to share her exultation. Rather earnestly she said to Mr.

Boltwood: "The mountains must be so wonderful to Mr. Daggett, after spending his

life in a cornfield. Poor Milt! I hope----"

"I don't think you need to worry about that young man. I fancy he's

quite able to run about by himself, as jolly as a sand-dog. And---- Of

course I'm extremely grateful to him for his daily rescue of us from the

jaws of death, but he was right; if he had stayed with us, it would have

been inconvenient to keep considering him. He isn't accustomed to the

comedy of manners----"

"He ought to be. He'd enjoy it so. He's the real American. He has

imagination and adaptability. It's a shame: all the petits fours and

Bach recitals wasted on Jeff Saxton, when a Milt Dag----"

"Yes, yes, quite so!"

"No, honest! The dear honey-lamb, so ingenious, and really, rather

good-looking. But so lonely and gregarious--like a little woolly dog

that begs you to come and play; and I slapped him when he patted his

paws and gamboled---- It was horrible. I'll never forgive myself. Making

him drive on ahead in that nasty, patronizing way---- I feel as if we'd

spoiled his holiday. I wonder if he had intended to make the Yellowstone

Park trip? He didn't----"