“Now I’m going to pick them up gently, two at a time, tie their feet together with a piece of this string, and hand them to you to put inside the carriage. I’ll catch the cock first, the handsome old sport,” and as Pan spoke, he began to suit his actions to his words with amazing tact and skill. I shall always be glad that the first chicken I ever held in my arms was put into them gently by that woods man, and that it was the Golden Bird himself. “Put him in and shut the door, and he’ll calm the ladies as you bring them to him,” he commanded as he bent down and lifted two of the Bird brides and began to tie their feet together with a piece of cord he had taken from a deep pocket in the gray trousers.
“Oh, thank you,” I said with a depth of gratitude in my voice that I did not know I possessed. “You are the most wonderful man I ever saw—I mean that I ever saw with chickens,” I said, ending the remark in an agony of embarrassment. “I don’t know much about them. I mean chickens,” I hastened to add, and made matters worse.
“Oh, they are easy, when you get to know ’em, chickens—or men,” he said kindly, without a spark in his eyes back of their black bushes. “Are they yours?”
“They are all the property I have got in the world,” I answered as I clasped the last pair of biddies to my breast, for while we had been holding our primitive conversation, I had been obeying his directions and loading the Birds into Grandmother Craddock’s stately equipage. Anxiety shone from my eyes into his sympathetic ones.
“Well, you’ll be an heiress in no time with them to start you, with ’good management.’ I never saw a finer lot,” he said, as he walked to the door of the carriage with me, with the last pair of white Leghorn ladies in his arms.
“But maybe I haven’t got that management,” I faltered, with my anxiety getting tearful in my words.
“Oh, you’ll learn,” he said, with such heavenly soothing in his voice that I almost reached out my hands and clung to him as he settled the fussing poultry in the bottom of the carriage in such a way as to leave room for my feet among them. Mr. G. Bird was perched on the seat at my side and was craning his neck down and soothingly scolding his family. “How are you, Mr. Craddock?” Pan asked of Uncle Cradd’s back, and by his question interrupted an argument that sounded, from the Greek phrases flying, like a battle on the walls of Troy.