On the first Sunday after the wedding
Pete came up-stairs to tell his master, William, that
Mrs. Stetson wanted to see him in the drawing-room.
William went down at once.
“Well, Aunt Hannah,” he
began, reaching out a cordial hand. “Why,
what’s the matter?” he broke off concernedly,
as he caught a clearer view of the little old lady’s
drawn face and troubled eyes.
“William, it’s silly,
of course,” cried Aunt Hannah, tremulously, “but
I simply had to go to some one. I I
feel so nervous and unsettled! Did did
Billy say anything to you what she was going
to do?”
“What she was going to do? About what?
What do you mean?”
“About the house selling
it,” faltered Aunt Hannah, sinking wearily back
into her chair.
William frowned thoughtfully.
“Why, no,” he answered.
“It was all so hurried at the last, you know.
There was really very little chance to make plans for
anything except the wedding,” he
finished, with a smile.
“Yes, I know,” sighed
Aunt Hannah. “Everything was in such confusion!
Still, I didn’t know but she might have said
something to you.”
“No, she didn’t.
But I imagine it won’t be hard to guess what
she’ll do. When they get back from their
trip I fancy she won’t lose much time in having
what things she wants brought down here. Then
she’ll sell the rest and put the house on the
market.”
“Yes, of of course,”
stammered Aunt Hannah, pulling herself hastily to
a more erect position. “That’s what
I thought, too. Then don’t you think we’d
better dismiss Rosa and close the house at once?”
“Why yes, perhaps
so. Why not? Then you’d be all settled
here when she comes home. I’m sure, the
sooner you come, the better I’ll be pleased,”
he smiled.
Aunt Hannah turned sharply.
“Here!” she ejaculated.
“William Henshaw, you didn’t suppose I
was coming here to live, did you?”
It was William’s turn to look amazed.
“Why, of course you’re coming here!
Where else should you go, pray?”
“Where I was before before
Billy came to you,” returned Aunt
Hannah a little tremulously, but with a certain dignity.
“I shall take a room in some quiet boarding-house,
of course.”
“Nonsense, Aunt Hannah!
As if Billy would listen to that! You came before;
why not come now?”
Aunt Hannah lifted her chin the fraction of an inch.
“You forget. I was needed
before. Billy is a married woman now. She
needs no chaperon.”
“Nonsense!” scowled William,
again. “Billy will always need you.”
Aunt Hannah shook her head mournfully.
“I like to think she
wants me, William, but I know, in my heart, it isn’t
best.”
“Why not?”
There was a moment’s pause; then, decisively
came the answer.
“Because I think young married
folks should not have outsiders in the home.”
William laughed relievedly.
“Oh, so that’s it!
Well, Aunt Hannah, you’re no outsider. Come,
run right along home and pack your trunk.”
Aunt Hannah was plainly almost crying; but she held
her ground.
“William, I can’t,” she reiterated.
“But Billy is such a child, and ”
For once in her circumspect life Aunt
Hannah was guilty of an interruption.
“Pardon me, William, she is
not a child. She is a woman now, and she has
a woman’s problems to meet.”
“Well, then, why don’t
you help her meet them?” retorted William, still
with a whimsical smile.
But Aunt Hannah did not smile.
For a minute she did not speak; then, with her eyes
studiously averted, she said:
“William, the first four years
of my married life were were spoiled by
an outsider in our home. I don’t mean to
spoil Billy’s.”
William relaxed visibly. The smile fled from
his face.
“Why Aunt Hannah!”
he exclaimed.
The little old lady turned with a weary sigh.
“Yes, I know. You are shocked,
of course. I shouldn’t have told you.
Still, it is all past long ago, and I wanted
to make you understand why I can’t come.
He was my husband’s eldest brother a
bachelor. He was good and kind, and meant well,
I suppose; but he interfered with everything.
I was young, and probably headstrong. At all events,
there was constant friction. He went away once
and stayed two whole months. I shall never forget
the utter freedom and happiness of those months for
us, with the whole house to ourselves. No, William,
I can’t come.” She rose abruptly
and turned toward the door. Her eyes were wistful,
and her face was still drawn with suffering; but her
whole frail little self quivered plainly with high
resolve. “John has Peggy outside. I
must go.”
“But but, Aunt Hannah,” began
William, helplessly.
She lifted a protesting hand.
“No, don’t urge me, please.
I can’t come here. But I believe
I won’t close the house till Billy gets home,
after all,” she declared. The next moment
she was gone, and William, dazedly, from the doorway,
was watching John help her into Billy’s automobile,
called by Billy and half her friends, “Peggy,”
short for “Pegasus.”
Still dazedly William turned back
into the house and dropped himself into the nearest
chair.
What a curious call it had been!
Aunt Hannah had not acted like herself at all.
Not once had she said “Oh, my grief and conscience!”
while the things she had said !
Someway, he had never thought of Aunt Hannah as being
young, and a bride. Still, of course she must
have been once. And the reason she
gave for not coming there to live the pitiful
story of that outsider in her home! But she was
no outsider! She was no interfering brother of
Billy’s
William caught his breath suddenly,
and held it suspended. Then he gave a low ejaculation
and half sprang from his chair.
Spunkie, disturbed from her doze by
the fire, uttered a purring “me-o-ow,”
and looked up inquiringly.
For a long minute William gazed dumbly
into the cat’s yellow, sleepily contented eyes;
then he said with tragic distinctness:
“Spunkie, it’s true:
Aunt Hannah isn’t Billy’s husband’s
brother, but I am! Do you hear?
I am!”
“Pur-r-me-ow!” commented
Spunkie; and curled herself for another nap.
There was no peace for William after
that. In vain he told himself that he was no
“interfering” brother, and that this was
his home and had been all his life; in vain did he
declare emphatically that he could not go, he would
not go; that Billy would not wish him to go: always
before his eyes was the vision of that little bride
of years long gone; always in his ears was the echo
of Aunt Hannah’s “I shall never forget
the utter freedom and happiness of those months for
us, with the whole house to ourselves.”
Nor, turn which way he would, could he find anything
to comfort him. Simply because he was so fearfully
looking for it, he found it the thing that
had for its theme the wretchedness that might be expected
from the presence of a third person in the new home.
Poor William! Everywhere he met
it the hint, the word, the story, the song,
even; and always it added its mite to the woeful whole.
Even the hoariest of mother-in-law jokes had its sting
for him; and, to make his cup quite full, he chanced
to remember one day what Marie had said when he had
suggested that she and Cyril come to the Strata to
live: “No; I think young folks should begin
by themselves.”
Unhappy, indeed, were these days for
William. Like a lost spirit he wandered from
room to room, touching this, fingering that. For
long minutes he would stand before some picture, or
some treasured bit of old mahogany, as if to stamp
indelibly upon his mind a thing that was soon to be
no more. At other times, like a man without a
home, he would go out into the Common or the Public
Garden and sit for hours on some bench thinking.
All this could have but one ending,
of course. Before the middle of August William
summoned Pete to his rooms.
“Oh, Pete, I’m going to
move next week,” he began nonchalantly.
His voice sounded as if moving were a pleasurable
circumstance that occurred in his life regularly once
a month. “I’d like you to begin to
pack up these things, please, to-morrow.”
The old servant’s mouth fell open.
“You’re goin’ to to what,
sir?” he stammered.
“Move move, I said.”
William spoke with unusual harshness.
Pete wet his lips.
“You mean you’ve sold
the old place, sir? that we we
ain’t goin’ to live here no longer?”
“Sold? Of course not! I’m
going to move away; not you.”
If Pete could have known what caused
the sharpness in his master’s voice, he would
not have been so grieved or, rather, he
would have been grieved for a different reason.
As it was he could only falter miserably:
“You are goin’ to move away from
here!”
“Yes, yes, man! Why, Pete,
what ails you? One would think a body never moved
before.”
“They didn’t not you, sir.”
William turned abruptly, so that his
face could not be seen. With stern deliberation
he picked up an elaborately decorated teapot; but the
valuable bit of Lowestoft shook so in his hand that
he set it down at once. It clicked sharply against
its neighbor, betraying his nervous hand.
Pete stirred.
“But, Mr. William,” he
stammered thickly; “how are you what’ll
you do without There doesn’t nobody
but me know so well about your tea, and the two lumps
in your coffee; and there’s your flannels that
you never put on till I get ’em out, and the
woolen socks that you’d wear all summer if I
didn’t hide ’em. And and
who’s goin’ to take care of these?”
he finished, with a glance that encompassed the overflowing
cabinets and shelves of curios all about him.
His master smiled sadly. An affection
that had its inception in his boyhood days shone in
his eyes. The hand in which the Lowestoft had
shaken rested now heavily on an old man’s bent
shoulder a shoulder that straightened itself
in unconscious loyalty under the touch.
“Pete, you have spoiled me,
and no mistake. I don’t expect to find
another like you. But maybe if I wear the woolen
socks too late you’ll come and hunt up the others
for me. Eh?” And, with a smile that was
meant to be quizzical, William turned and began to
shift the teapots about again.
“But, Mr. William, why that
is, what will Mr. Bertram and Miss Billy do without
you?” ventured the old man.
There was a sudden tinkling crash.
On the floor lay the fragments of a silver-luster
teapot.
The servant exclaimed aloud in dismay,
but his master did not even glance toward his once
treasured possession on the floor.
“Nonsense, Pete!” he was
saying in a particularly cheery voice. “Have
you lived all these years and not found out that newly-married
folks don’t need any one else around?
Come, do you suppose we could begin to pack these
teapots to-night?” he added, a little feverishly.
“Aren’t there some boxes down cellar?”
“I’ll see, sir,”
said Pete, respectfully; but the expression on his
face as he turned away showed that he was not thinking
of teapots nor of boxes in which to pack
them.