“I, Bertram, take thee, Billy,”
chanted the white-robed clergyman.
“‘I, Bertram, take thee,
Billy,’” echoed the tall young bridegroom,
his eyes gravely tender.
“To my wedded wife.”
“‘To my wedded wife.’” The
bridegroom’s voice shook a little.
“To have and to hold from this day forward.”
“‘To have and to hold
from this day forward.’” Now the young
voice rang with triumph. It had grown strong
and steady.
“For better for worse.”
“‘For better for worse.’”
“For richer for poorer,”
droned the clergyman, with the weariness of uncounted
repetitions.
“‘For richer for poorer,’”
avowed the bridegroom, with the decisive emphasis
of one to whom the words are new and significant.
“In sickness and in health.”
“‘In sickness and in health.’”
“To love and to cherish.”
“‘To love and to cherish.’”
The younger voice carried infinite tenderness now.
“Till death us do part.”
“‘Till death us do part,’”
repeated the bridegroom’s lips; but everybody
knew that what his heart said was: “Now,
and through all eternity.”
“According to God’s holy ordinance.”
“‘According to God’s holy ordinance.’”
“And thereto I plight thee my troth.”
“‘And thereto I plight thee my troth.’”
There was a faint stir in the room.
In one corner a white-haired woman blinked tear-wet
eyes and pulled a fleecy white shawl more closely about
her shoulders. Then the minister’s voice
sounded again.
“I, Billy, take thee, Bertram.”
“‘I, Billy, take thee, Bertram.’”
This time the echoing voice was a
feminine one, low and sweet, but clearly distinct,
and vibrant with joyous confidence, on through one
after another of the ever familiar, but ever impressive
phrases of the service that gives into the hands of
one man and of one woman the future happiness, each
of the other.
The wedding was at noon. That
evening Mrs. Kate Hartwell, sister of the bridegroom,
wrote the following letter:
Boston, July 15th.
“My dear husband: Well,
it’s all over with, and they’re married.
I couldn’t do one thing to prevent it.
Much as ever as they would even listen to what I had
to say and when they knew how I had hurried
East to say it, too, with only two hours’ notice!
“But then, what can you expect?
From time immemorial lovers never did have any sense;
and when those lovers are such irresponsible flutterbudgets
as Billy and Bertram !
“And such a wedding! I
couldn’t do anything with that, either,
though I tried hard. They had it in Billy’s
living-room at noon, with nothing but the sun for
light. There was no maid of honor, no bridesmaids,
no wedding cake, no wedding veil, no presents (except
from the family, and from that ridiculous Chinese
cook of brother William’s, Ding Dong, or whatever
his name is. He tore in just before the wedding
ceremony, and insisted upon seeing Billy to give her
a wretched little green stone idol, which he declared
would bring her ‘heap plenty velly good luckee’
if she received it before she ‘got married.’
I wouldn’t have the hideous, grinning thing
around, but William says it’s real jade, and
very valuable, and of course Billy was crazy over it or
pretended to be). There was no trousseau, either,
and no reception. There was no anything but the
bridegroom; and when I tell you that Billy actually
declared that was all she wanted, you will understand
how absurdly in love she is in spite of
all those weeks and weeks of broken engagement when
I, at least, supposed she had come to her senses, until
I got that crazy note from Bertram a week ago saying
they were to be married today.
“I can’t say that I’ve
got any really satisfactory explanation of the matter.
Everything has been in such a hubbub, and those two
ridiculous children have been so afraid they wouldn’t
be together every minute possible, that any really
rational conversation with either of them was out
of the question. When Billy broke the engagement
last spring none of us knew why she had done it, as
you know; and I fancy we shall be almost as much in
the dark as to why she has er mended
it now, as you might say. As near as I can make
out, however, she thought he didn’t want her,
and he thought she didn’t want him. I believe
matters were still further complicated by a girl Bertram
was painting, and a young fellow that used to sing
with Billy a Mr. Arkwright.
“Anyhow, things came to a head
last spring, Billy broke the engagement and fled to
parts unknown with Aunt Hannah, leaving Bertram here
in Boston to alternate between stony despair and reckless
gayety, according to William; and it was while he
was in the latter mood that he had that awful automobile
accident and broke his arm and almost his
neck. He was wildly delirious, and called continually
for Billy.
“Well, it seems Billy didn’t
know all this; but a week ago she came home, and in
some way found out about it, I think through Pete William’s
old butler, you know. Just exactly what happened
I can’t say, but I do know that she dragged
poor old Aunt Hannah down to Bertram’s at some
unearthly hour, and in the rain; and Aunt Hannah couldn’t
do a thing with her. All Billy would say, was,
’Bertram wants me.’ And Aunt Hannah
told me that if I could have seen Billy’s face
I’d have known that she’d have gone to
Bertram then if he’d been at the top of the
Himalaya Mountains, or at the bottom of the China Sea.
So perhaps it’s just as well for
Aunt Hannah’s sake, at least that
he was in no worse place than on his own couch at
home. Anyhow, she went, and in half an hour they
blandly informed Aunt Hannah that they were going to
be married to-day.
“Aunt Hannah said she tried
to stop that, and get them to put it off till October
(the original date, you know), but Bertram was obdurate.
And when he declared he’d marry her the next
day if it wasn’t for the new license law, Aunt
Hannah said she gave up for fear he’d get a
special dispensation, or go to the Governor or the
President, or do some other dreadful thing. (What
a funny old soul Aunt Hannah is!) Bertram told me
that he should never feel safe till Billy was really
his; that she’d read something, or hear something,
or think something, or get a letter from me (as if
anything I could say would do any good-or harm!),
and so break the engagement again.
“Well, she’s his now,
so I suppose he’s satisfied; though, for my part,
I haven’t changed my mind at all. I still
say that they are not one bit suited to each other,
and that matrimony will simply ruin his career.
Bertram never has loved and never will love any girl
long except to paint. But if he simply
would get married, why couldn’t he have
taken a nice, sensible domestic girl that would have
kept him fed and mended?
“Not but that I’m very
fond of Billy, as you know, dear; but imagine Billy
as a wife worse yet, a mother! Billy’s
a dear girl, but she knows about as much of real life
and its problems as as our little Kate.
A more impulsive, irresponsible, regardless-of-consequences
young woman I never saw. She can play divinely,
and write delightful songs, I’ll acknowledge;
but what is that when a man is hungry, or has lost
a button?
“Billy has had her own way,
and had everything she wanted for years now a
rather dangerous preparation for marriage, especially
marriage to a fellow like Bertram who has had his
own way and everything he’s wanted for
years. Pray, what’s going to happen when
those ways conflict, and neither one gets the thing
wanted?
“And think of her ignorance
of cooking but, there! What’s
the use? They’re married now, and it can’t
be helped.
“Mercy, what a letter I’ve
written! But I, had to talk to some one; besides,
I’d promised I to let you know how matters stood
as soon as I could. As you see, though, my trip
East has been practically useless. I saw the
wedding, to be sure, but I didn’t prevent it,
or even postpone it though I meant to do
one or the other, else I should never have made that
tiresome journey half across the continent at two hours’
notice.
“However, we shall see what
we shall see. As for me, I’m dead tired.
Good night.
“Affectionately yours,
“Kate.”
Quite naturally, Mrs. Kate Hartwell
was not the only one who was thinking that evening
of the wedding. In the home of Bertram’s
brother Cyril, Cyril himself was at the piano, but
where his thoughts were was plain to be seen or
rather, heard; for from under his fingers there came
the Lohengrin wedding march until all the room seemed
filled with the scent of orange blossoms, the mistiness
of floating veils, and the echoing peals of far-away
organs heralding the “Fair Bride and Groom.”
Over by the table in the glowing circle
of the shaded lamp, sat Marie, Cyril’s wife,
a dainty sewing-basket by her side. Her hands,
however, lay idly across the stocking in her lap.
As the music ceased, she drew a long sigh.
What a perfectly beautiful wedding that was! she breathed.
Cyril whirled about on the piano stool.
“It was a very sensible wedding,” he said
with emphasis.
“They looked so happy both
of them,” went on Marie, dreamily; “so so
sort of above and beyond everything about them, as
if nothing ever, ever could trouble them now.”
Cyril lifted his eyebrows.
“Humph! Well, as I said
before, it was a very sensible wedding,”
he declared.
This time Marie noticed the emphasis.
She laughed, though her eyes looked a little troubled.
“I know, dear, of course, what
you mean. I thought our wedding was beautiful;
but I would have made it simpler if I’d realized
in time how you you ”
“How I abhorred pink teas and
purple pageants,” he finished for her, with
a frowning smile. “Oh, well, I stood it for
the sake of what it brought me.” His face
showed now only the smile; the frown had vanished.
For a man known for years to his friends as a “hater
of women and all other confusion,” Cyril Henshaw
was looking remarkably well-pleased with himself.
His wife of less than a year colored
as she met his gaze. Hurriedly she picked up
her needle.
The man laughed happily at her confusion.
“What are you doing? Is that my stocking?”
he demanded.
A look, half pain, half reproach, crossed her face.
“Why, Cyril, of course not!
You you told me not to, long ago. You
said my darns made bunches.
“Ho! I meant I didn’t
want to wear them,” retorted the man,
upon whom the tragic wretchedness of that half-sobbed
“bunches” had been quite lost. “I
love to see you mending them,” he finished,
with an approving glance at the pretty little picture
of domesticity before him.
A peculiar expression came to Marie’s eyes.
“Why, Cyril, you mean you like
to have me mend them just for for the sake
of seeing me do it, when you know you won’t
ever wear them?”
“Sure!” nodded the man,
imperturbably. Then, with a sudden laugh, he
asked: “I wonder now, does Billy love to
mend socks?”
Marie smiled, but she sighed, too, and shook her head.
“I’m afraid not, Cyril.”
“Nor cook?”
Marie laughed outright this time.
The vaguely troubled look had fled from her eyes
“Oh, Billy’s helped me
beat eggs and butter sometimes, but I never knew her
to cook a thing or want to cook a thing, but once;
then she spent nearly two weeks trying to learn to
make puddings for you.”
“For me!”
Marie puckered her lips queerly.
“Well, I supposed they were
for you at the time. At all events she was trying
to make them for some one of you boys; probably it
was really for Bertram, though.”
“Humph!” grunted Cyril.
Then, after a minute, he observed: “I judge
Kate thinks Billy’ll never make them for
anybody. I’m afraid Sister Kate isn’t
pleased.”
“Oh, but Mrs. Hartwell was was
disappointed in the wedding,” apologized Marie,
quickly. “You know she wanted it put off
anyway, and she didn’t like such a simple one.
“Hm-m; as usual Sister
Kate forgot it wasn’t her funeral I
mean, her wedding,” retorted Cyril, dryly.
“Kate is never happy, you know, unless she’s
managing things.”
“Yes, I know,” nodded
Marie, with a frowning smile of recollection at certain
features of her own wedding.
“She doesn’t approve of
Billy’s taste in guests, either,” remarked
Cyril, after a moment’s silence.
“I thought her guests were lovely,”
spoke up Marie, in quick defense. “Of course,
most of her social friends are away in July;
but Billy is never a society girl, you know, in spite
of the way Society is always trying to lionize her
and Bertram.”
“Oh, of course Kate knows that;
but she says it seems as if Billy needn’t have
gone out and gathered in the lame and the halt and
the blind.”
“Nonsense!” cried Marie,
with unusual sharpness for her. “I suppose
she said that just because of Mrs. Greggory’s
and Tommy Dunn’s crutches.”
“Well, they didn’t make
a real festive-looking wedding party, you must admit,”
laughed Cyril; “what with the bridegroom’s
own arm in a sling, too! But who were they all,
anyway?”
“Why, you knew Mrs. Greggory
and Alice, of course and Pete,” smiled
Marie. “And wasn’t Pete happy?
Billy says she’d have had Pete if she had no
one else; that there wouldn’t have been any wedding,
anyway, if it hadn’t been for his telephoning
Aunt Hannah that night.”
“Yes; Will told me.”
“As for Tommy and the others most
of them were those people that Billy had at her home
last summer for a two weeks’ vacation people,
you know, too poor to give themselves one, and too
proud to accept one from ordinary charity. Billy’s
been following them up and doing little things for
them ever since sugarplums and frosting
on their cake, she calls it; and they adore her, of
course. I think it was lovely of her to have
them, and they did have such a good time! You
should have seen Tommy when you played that wedding
march for Billy to enter the room. His poor little
face was so transfigured with joy that I almost cried,
just to look at him. Billy says he loves music poor
little fellow!”
“Well, I hope they’ll
be happy, in spite of Kate’s doleful prophecies.
Certainly they looked happy enough to-day,” declared
Cyril, patting a yawn as he rose to his feet.
“I fancy Will and Aunt Hannah are lonesome,
though, about now,” he added.
“Yes,” smiled Marie, mistily,
as she gathered up her work. “I know what
Aunt Hannah’s doing. She’s helping
Rosa put the house to rights, and she’s stopping
to cry over every slipper and handkerchief of Billy’s
she finds. And she’ll do that until that
funny clock of hers strikes twelve, then she’ll
say ‘Oh, my grief and conscience midnight!’
But the next minute she’ll remember that it’s
only half-past eleven, after all, and she’ll
send Rosa to bed and sit patting Billy’s slipper
in her lap till it really is midnight by all the other
clocks.”
Cyril laughed appreciatively.
“Well, I know what Will is doing,” he
declared.
“Will is in Bertram’s
den dozing before the fireplace with Spunkie curled
up in his lap.”
As it happened, both these surmises
were not far from right. In the Strata, the Henshaws’
old Beacon Street home, William was sitting before
the fireplace with the cat in his lap, but he was not
dozing. He was talking.
“Spunkie,” he was saying,
“your master, Bertram, got married to-day and
to Miss Billy. He’ll be bringing her home
one of these days your new mistress.
And such a mistress! Never did cat or house have
a better!
“Just think; for the first time
in years this old place is to know the touch of a
woman’s hand and that’s what
it hasn’t known for almost twenty years, except
for those few short months six years ago when a dark-eyed
girl and a little gray kitten (that was Spunk, your
predecessor, you know) blew in and blew out again before
we scarcely knew they were here. That girl was
Miss Billy, and she was a dear then, just as she is
now, only now she’s coming here to stay.
She’s coming home, Spunkie; and she’ll
make it a home for you, for me, and for all of us.
Up to now, you know, it hasn’t really been a
home, for years just us men, so. It’ll
be very different, Spunkie, as you’ll soon find
out. Now mind, madam! We must show that
we appreciate all this: no tempers, no tantrums,
no showing of claws, no leaving our coats either
yours or mine on the drawing-room chairs,
no tracking in of mud on clean rugs and floors!
For we’re going to have a home, Spunkie a
home!”
At Hillside, Aunt Hannah was, indeed,
helping Rosa to put the house to rights, as Marie
had said. She was crying, too, over a glove she
had found on Billy’s piano; but she was crying
over something else, also. Not only had she lost
Billy, but she had lost her home.
To be sure, nothing had been said
during that nightmare of a week of hurry and confusion
about Aunt Hannah’s future; but Aunt Hannah knew
very well how it must be. This dear little house
on the side of Corey Hill was Billy’s home,
and Billy would not need it any longer. It would
be sold, of course; and she, Aunt Hannah, would go
back to a “second-story front” and loneliness
in some Back Bay boarding-house; and a second story
front and loneliness would not be easy now, after these
years of home and Billy.
No wonder, indeed, that Aunt Hannah
sat crying and patting the little white glove in her
hand. No wonder, too, that being Aunt
Hannah she reached for the shawl near by
and put it on, shiveringly. Even July, to-night,
was cold to Aunt Hannah.
In yet another home that evening was
the wedding of Billy Neilson and Bertram Henshaw uppermost
in thought and speech. In a certain little South-End
flat where, in two rented rooms, lived Alice Greggory
and her crippled mother, Alice was talking to Mr.
M. J. Arkwright, commonly known to his friends as
“Mary Jane,” owing to the mystery in which
he had for so long shrouded his name.
Arkwright to-night was plainly moody and ill at ease.
“You’re not listening.
You’re not listening at all,” complained
Alice Greggory at last, reproachfully.
With a visible effort the man roused himself.
“Indeed I am,” he maintained.
“I thought you’d be interested
in the wedding. You used to be friends you
and Billy.” The girl’s voice still
vibrated with reproach.
There was a moment’s silence; then, a little
harshly, the man said:
“Perhaps because
I wanted to be more than a friend is
why you’re not satisfied with my interest now.”
A look that was almost terror came
to Alice Greggory’s eyes. She flushed painfully,
then grew very white.
“You mean ”
“Yes,” he nodded dully,
without looking up. “I cared too much for
her. I supposed Henshaw was just a friend till
too late.”
There was a breathless hush before,
a little unsteadily, the girl stammered:
“Oh, I’m so sorry so very sorry!
I I didn’t know.”
“No, of course you didn’t.
I’ve almost told you, though, lots of times;
you’ve been so good to me all these weeks.”
He raised his head now, and looked at her, frank comradeship
in his eyes.
The girl stirred restlessly.
Her eyes swerved a little under his level gaze.
“Oh, but I’ve done nothing n-nothing,”
she stammered. Then, at the light tap of crutches
on a bare floor she turned in obvious relief.
“Oh, here’s mother. She’s been
in visiting with Mrs. Delano, our landlady. Mother,
Mr. Arkwright is here.”
Meanwhile, speeding north as fast
as steam could carry them, were the bride and groom.
The wondrousness of the first hour of their journey
side by side had become a joyous certitude that always
it was to be like this now.
“Bertram,” began the bride,
after a long minute of eloquent silence.
“Yes, love.”
“You know our wedding was very different from
most weddings.”
“Of course it was!”
“Yes, but really it was.
Now listen.” The bride’s voice grew
tenderly earnest. “I think our marriage
is going to be different, too.”
“Different?”
“Yes.” Billy’s
tone was emphatic. “There are so many common,
everyday marriages where where Why,
Bertram, as if you could ever be to me like like
Mr. Carleton is, for instance!”
“Like Mr. Carleton is to you?”
Bertram’s voice was frankly puzzled.
“No, no! As Mr. Carleton is to Mrs. Carleton,
I mean.”
“Oh!” Bertram subsided in relief.
“And the Grahams and Whartons,
and the Freddie Agnews, and and a lot of
others. Why, Bertram, I’ve seen the Grahams
and the Whartons not even speak to each other a whole
evening, when they’ve been at a dinner, or something;
and I’ve seen Mrs. Carleton not even seem to
know her husband came into the room. I don’t
mean quarrel, dear. Of course we’d never
quarrel! But I mean I’m sure we shall
never get used to to you being you, and
I being I.”
“Indeed we sha’n’t,” agreed
Bertram, rapturously.
“Ours is going to be such a beautiful marriage!”
“Of course it will be.”
“And we’ll be so happy!”
“I shall be, and I shall try to make you so.”
“As if I could be anything else,”
sighed Billy, blissfully. “And now we can’t
have any misunderstandings, you see.”
“Of course not. Er what’s
that?”
“Why, I mean that that
we can’t ever repeat hose miserable weeks of
misunderstanding. Everything is all explained
up. I know, now, that you don’t
love Miss Winthrop, or just girls any girl to
paint. You love me. Not the tilt of my chin,
nor the turn of my head; but me.”
“I do just you.”
Bertram’s eyes gave the caress his lips would
have given had it not been for the presence of the
man in the seat across the aisle of the sleeping-car.
“And you you know now that I love
you just you?”
“Not even Arkwright?”
“Not even Arkwright,” smiled Billy.
There was the briefest of hesitations;
then, a little constrainedly, Bertram asked:
“And you said you you never had
cared for Arkwright, didn’t you?”
For the second time in her life Billy
was thankful that Bertram’s question had turned
upon her love for Arkwright, not Arkwright’s
love for her. In Billy’s opinion, a man’s
unrequited love for a girl was his secret, not hers,
and was certainly one that the girl had no right to
tell. Once before Bertram had asked her if she
had ever cared for Arkwright, and then she had answered
emphatically, as she did now:
“Never, dear.”
“I thought you said so,” murmured Bertram,
relaxing a little.
“I did; besides, didn’t
I tell you?” she went on airily, “I think
he’ll marry Alice Greggory. Alice wrote
me all the time I was away, and oh, she
didn’t say anything definite, I’ll admit,”
confessed Billy, with an arch smile; “but she
spoke of his being there lots, and they used to know
each other years ago, you see. There was almost
a romance there, I think, before the Greggorys lost
their money and moved away from all their friends.”
“Well, he may have her.
She’s a nice girl a mighty nice girl,”
answered Bertram, with the unmistakably satisfied
air of the man who knows he himself possesses the
nicest girl of them all.
Billy, reading unerringly the triumph
in his voice, grew suddenly grave. She regarded
her husband with a thoughtful frown; then she drew
a profound sigh.
“Whew!” laughed Bertram, whimsically.
“So soon as this?”
“Bertram!” Billy’s voice was tragic.
“Yes, my love.” The
bridegroom pulled his face into sobriety; then Billy
spoke, with solemn impressiveness.
“Bertram, I don’t know
a thing about cooking except
what I’ve been learning in Rosa’s cook-book
this last week.”
Bertram laughed so loud that the man
across the aisle glanced over the top of his paper
surreptitiously.
“Rosa’s cook-book!
Is that what you were doing all this week?”
“Yes; that is I tried
so hard to learn something,” stammered Billy.
“But I’m afraid I didn’t much;
there were so many things for me to think of, you
know, with only a week. I believe I could
make peach fritters, though. They were the last
thing I studied.”
Bertram laughed again, uproariously;
but, at Billy’s unchangingly tragic face, he
grew suddenly very grave and tender.
“Billy, dear, I didn’t
marry you to to get a cook,” he said
gently.
Billy shook her head.
“I know; but Aunt Hannah said
that even if I never expected to cook, myself, I ought
to know how it was done, so to properly oversee it.
She said that that no woman, who didn’t
know how to cook and keep house properly, had any
business to be a wife. And, Bertram, I did try,
honestly, all this week. I tried so hard to remember
when you sponged bread and when you kneaded it.”
“I don’t ever need yours,”
cut in Bertram, shamelessly; but he got only a deservedly
stern glance in return.
“And I repeated over and over
again how many cupfuls of flour and pinches of salt
and spoonfuls of baking-powder went into things; but,
Bertram, I simply could not keep my mind on it.
Everything, everywhere was singing to me. And
how do you suppose I could remember how many pinches
of flour and spoonfuls of salt and cupfuls of baking-powder
went into a loaf of cake when all the while the very
teakettle on the stove was singing: ’It’s
all right Bertram loves me I’m
going to marry Bertram!’?”
“You darling!” (In spite
of the man across the aisle Bertram did almost kiss
her this time.) “As if anybody cared how many
cupfuls of baking-powder went anywhere with
that in your heart!”
“Aunt Hannah says you will when
you’re hungry. And Kate said ”
Bertram uttered a sharp word behind his teeth.
“Billy, for heaven’s sake
don’t tell me what Kate said, if you want me
to stay sane, and not attempt to fight somebody broken
arm, and all. Kate thinks she’s
kind, and I suppose she means well; but well,
she’s made trouble enough between us already.
I’ve got you now, sweetheart. You’re
mine all mine ” his voice
shook, and dropped to a tender whisper “‘till
death us do part.’”
“Yes; ‘till death us do part,’”
breathed Billy.
And then, for a time, they fell silent.
“‘I, Bertram, take thee,
Billy,’” sang the whirring wheels beneath
them, to one.
“‘I, Billy, take thee,
Bertram,’” sang the whirring wheels beneath
them, to the other. While straight ahead before
them both, stretched fair and beautiful in their eyes,
the wondrous path of life which they were to tread
together.