“Let’s go in and get a bite with Father Craddock and the twin, and then we’ll read things to do this afternoon in the book where you got those directions,” said Matthew as he started towards the house in the wake of Rufus’ retiring apron.
I hadn’t broken Pan to Matthew, and I didn’t know exactly why. Perhaps I didn’t quite believe in the red-headed Peckerwood myself just then, and felt unable to incarnate him to Matthew.
Uncle Cradd’s welcome to Matthew was very stately and friendly when we went in and found him and father in their high-back chairs on each side of the table, waging the classic argument that Rufus had reported them to have discontinued at an early hour of the morning. Father was delighted with the package of books that Matthew had brought out with him in his car, because father considered them too valuable to be transported in the wagon which was to bring the rest of the library.
“Just a little of the cream of the collection, Cradd,” he said as he unwrapped a small leather-covered volume which Matthew had transported in the pocket over his heart.
“Just five hundred dollars’ worth of cream,” whispered Matthew to me, with a whimsical look at the small and very ancient specimen of Americana. “It is a good thing that Senator Proctor has only Belle and let her have the six thousand cash for the Chauvenaise, and Bess wanted your little Royal in a hurry, though she got a bargain at that. Still the library is really worth five times what you paid.”
“Sh—hush!” I said as I led the way before the parental twins into the old dining-room. Father hadn’t even questioned how he was to have the library saved for him, and of course Uncle Cradd knew nothing at all about the matter.
After seating me with the same ceremony he had employed since my arrival into the family, though with hostility bristling psychologically for my plebeian intrusion into his traditions of the Craddock ladies, Rufus appalled me by offering me for the third time since my arrival at Elmnest roasted ribs of the hog, muffins and coffee. Only my training in the social customs of a world beyond the ken of Rufus kept me from exclaiming with protest, but I came to myself to discover that