As commencement drew near, and Fairy
began planning momentous things for her graduation,
a little soberness came into the parsonage life.
The girls were certainly growing up. Prudence
had been married a long, long time. Fairy was
being graduated from college, her school-days were
over, and life was just across the threshold its
big black door just slightly ajar waiting for her
to press it back and catch a glimpse of what lay beyond,
yes, there was a rosy tinge showing faintly through
like the light of the early sun shining through the
night-fog, but the door was only a little ajar!
And Fairy was nearly ready to step through. It
disturbed the parsonage family a great deal.
Even the twins were getting along.
They were finishing high school, and beginning to
prate of college and such things, but the twins were
still, well, they were growing up, perhaps, but they
kept jubilantly young along in the process, and their
enthusiasm for diplomas and ice-cream sodas was so
nearly identical that one couldn’t feel seriously
that the twins were tugging at their leashes.
And Connie was a freshman herself, rather
tall, a little awkward, with a sober earnest face,
and with an incongruously humorous droop to the corners
of her lips, and in the sparkle of her eyes.
Mr. Starr looked at them and sighed.
“I tell you, Grace, it’s a thankless job,
rearing a family. Connie told me to-day that my
collars should have straight edges now instead of
turned-back corners. And Lark reminded me that
I got my points mixed up in last Sunday’s lesson.
I’m getting sick of this family business, I’m
about ready to
And just then, as a clear “Father”
came floating down the stairway, he turned his head
alertly. “What do you want?”
“Everybody’s out,”
came Carol’s plaintive voice. “Will
you come and button me up? I can’t ask
auntie to run clear up here, and I can’t come
down because I’m in my stocking feet. My
new slippers pinch so I don’t put them on until
I have to. Oh, thanks, father, you’re a
dear.”
After the excitement of the commencement,
the commotion, the glamour, the gaiety, ordinary parsonage
life seemed smooth and pleasant, and for ten days
there was not a ruffle on the surface of their domestic
waters. It was on the tenth day that the twins,
strolling down Main Street, conversing earnestly together
as was their custom, were accosted by a nicely-rounded,
pompous man with a cordial, “Hello, twins.”
In an instant they were bright with
smiles, for this was Mr. Raider, editor and owner
of the Daily News, the biggest and most popular
of Mount Mark’s three daily papers. Looking
forward, as they did, to a literary career for Lark,
they never failed to show a touching and unnatural
deference to any one connected, even ever so remotely,
with that profession. Indeed, Carol, with the
charm of her smile, had bewitched the small carriers
to the last lad, and in reply to her sister’s
teasing, only answered stoutly, “That’s
all right, you don’t know what they
may turn into one of these days. We’ve got
to look ahead to Lark’s Literary Career.”
So when humble carriers, and some
of them black at that, received such sweet attention,
one can well imagine what the nicely rounded, pompous
editor himself called forth.
They did not resent his nicely-rounded
and therefore pointless jokes. They smiled at
them. They did not call the Daily News
the “Raider Family Organ,” as they yearned
to do. They did not admit that they urged their
father to put Mr. Raider on all church committees to
insure publicity. They swallowed hard, and told
themselves that, after all, Mr. Raider was an editor,
and perhaps he couldn’t help editing his own
family to the exclusion of the rest of Mount Mark.
When, on this occasion, he looked
Lark up and down with his usual rotund complacency,
Carol only gritted her teeth and reminded her heaving
soul that he was an editor.
“What are you going to do this
summer, Lark?” he asked, without preamble.
“Why, just nothing, I suppose.
As usual.”
“Well,” he said, frowning
plumply, “we’re running short of men.
I’ve heard you’re interested in our line,
and I thought maybe you could help us out during vacation.
How about it? The work’ll be easy and it’ll
be fine experience for you. We’ll pay you
five dollars a week. This is a little town, and
we’re called a little publication, but our work
and our aim and methods are identical with those of
the big city papers.” He swelled visibly,
almost alarmingly. “How about it? You’re
the one with the literary longings, aren’t you?”
Lark was utterly speechless.
If the National Bank had opened its coffers to the
always hard-pressed twins, she could not have been
more completely confounded. Carol was in a condition
nearly as serious, but grasping the gravity of the
situation, she rushed into the breach headlong.
“Yes, yes,”
she gasped. “She’s literary.
Oh, she’s very literary.”
Mr. Raider smiled. “Well,
would you like to try your hand out with me?”
Again Carol sprang to her sister’s relief.
“Yes, indeed, she would,”
she cried. “Yes, indeed.” And
then, determined to impress upon him that the Daily
News was the one to profit chiefly from the innovation,
she added, “And it’s a lucky day for the
Daily News, too, I tell you. There aren’t
many Larks in Mount Mark, in a literary way, I mean,
and the Daily News needs some that
is, I think new blood, anyhow,
Lark will be just fine.”
“All right. Come in, Monday
morning at eight, Lark, and I’ll set you to
work. It won’t be anything very important.
You can write up the church news, and parties, and
goings away, and things like that. It’ll
be good training. You can study our papers between
now and then, to catch our style.”
Carol lifted her head a little higher.
If Mr. Raider thought her talented twin would be confined
to the ordinary style of the Daily News, which
Carol considered atrociously lacking in any style at
all, he would be most gloriously mistaken, that’s
certain!
It is a significant fact that after
Mr. Raider went back into the sanctum of the Daily
News, the twins walked along for one full block
without speaking. Such a thing had never happened
before in all the years of their twinship. At
the end of the block, Carol turned her head restlessly.
They were eight blocks from home. But the twins
couldn’t run on the street, it was so undignified.
She looked longingly about for a buggy bound their
way. Even a grocery cart would have been a welcome
though humbling conveyance.
Lark’s starry eyes were lifted
to the skies, and her rapt face was glowing.
Carol looked behind her, looked ahead. Then she
thought again of the eight blocks.
“Lark,” she said, “I’m
afraid we’ll be late for dinner. And auntie
told us to hurry back. Maybe we’d better
run.”
Running is a good expression for emotion,
and Lark promptly struck out at a pace that did full
credit to her lithe young limbs. Down the street
they raced, little tendrils of hair flying about their
flushed and shining faces, faster, faster, breathless,
panting, their gladness fairly overflowing. And
many people turned to look, wondering what in the
world possessed the leisurely, dignified parsonage
twins.
The last block was traversed at a
really alarming rate. The passion for “telling
things” had seized them both, and they whirled
around the corner and across the lawn at a rate that
brought Connie out into the yard to meet them, with
a childish, “What’s the matter? What
happened? Did something bite you?”
Aunt Grace sat up in her hammock to
look, Fairy ran out to the porch, and Mr. Starr laid
down his book. Had the long and dearly desired
war been declared at last?
But when the twins reached the porch,
they paused sheepishly, shyly.
“What’s the matter?” chorused the
family.
“Are are we late
for dinner?” Carol demanded earnestly, as though
their lives depended on the answer.
The family stared in concerted amazement.
When before this had the twins shown anxiety about
their lateness for meals unless a favorite
dessert or salad was all consumed in their absence.
And it was only half past four!
Carol gently shoved Connie off the
cushion upon which she had dropped, and arranged it
tenderly in a chair.
“Sit down and rest, Larkie,”
she said in a soft and loving voice. “Are
you nearly tired to death?”
Lark sank, panting, into the chair,
and gazed about the circle with brilliant eyes.
“Get her a drink, can’t
you, Connie?” said Carol indignantly. “Can’t
you see the poor thing is just tired to death?
She ran the whole way home!”
Still the family stared. The
twins’ devotion to each other was never failing,
but this attentiveness on the part of Carol was extremely
odd. Now she sat down on the step beside her
sister, and gazed up into the flushed face with adoring,
but somewhat patronizing, pride. After all, she
had had a whole lot to do with training Larkie!
“What in the world?” began their father
curiously.
“Had a sunstroke?” queried Fairy, smiling.
“You’re both crazy,”
declared Connie, coming back with the water.
“You’re trying to fool us. I won’t
ask any questions. You don’t catch me this
time.”
“Why don’t you lie down
and let Lark use you for a footstool, Carol?”
suggested their father, with twinkling eyes.
“I would if she wanted a footstool,”
said Carol positively. “I’d love to
do it. I’d be proud to do it. I’d
consider it an honor.”
Lark blushed and lowered her eyes modestly.
“What happened?” urged their father, still
more curiously.
“Did she get you out of a scrape?” mocked
Fairy.
“Oh, just let ’em alone,”
said Connie. “They think it’s smart
to be mysterious. Nothing happened at all.
That’s what they call being funny.”
“Tell it, Lark.”
Carol’s voice was so intense that it impressed
even skeptical Connie and derisive Fairy.
Lark raised the glowing eyes once
more, leaned forward and said thrillingly:
“It’s the Literary Career.”
The silence that followed this bold
announcement was sufficiently dramatic to satisfy
even Carol, and she patted Lark’s knee approvingly.
“Well, go on,” urged Connie,
at last, when the twins continued silent.
“That’s all.”
“She’s going to run the Daily News.”
“Oh, I’ll only be a cub reporter, I guess
that’s what you call them.”
“Reporter nothing,” contradicted
Carol. “There’s nothing literary about
that. You must take the whole paper in hand, and
color it up a bit. And for goodness’ sake,
polish up Mr. Raider’s editorials. I could
write editorials like his myself.”
“And you might tone down the
family notes for him,” suggested Fairy.
“We don’t really care to know when Mrs.
Kelly borrows eggs of the editor’s wife and
how many dolls Betty got for Christmas and Jack’s
grades in high school. We can get along without
those personal touches.”
“Maybe you can give us a little
church write-up now and then, without necessitating
Mr. Raider as chairman of every committee,” interposed
their father, and then retracted quickly. “I
was only joking, of course, I didn’t mean
“No, of course, you didn’t,
father,” said Carol kindly. “We’ll
consider that you didn’t say it. But just
bear it in mind, Larkie.”
Fairy solemnly rose and crossed the
porch, and with a hand on Lark’s shoulder gave
her a solemn shake. “Now, Lark Starr, you
begin at the beginning and tell us. Do you think
we’re all wooden Indians? We can’t
wait until you make a newspaper out of the Daily
News! We want to know. Talk.”
Thus adjured, Lark did talk, and the
little story with many striking embellishments from
Carol was given into the hearing of the family.
“Five dollars a week,” echoed Connie faintly.
“Of course, I’ll divide that with Carol,”
was the generous offer.
“No, I won’t have it.
I haven’t any literary brains, and I can’t
take any of your salary. Thanks just the same.”
Then she added happily: “But I know you’ll
be very generous when I need to borrow, and I do borrow
pretty often, Larkie.”
For the rest of the week Lark’s
literary career was the one topic of conversation
in the Starr family. The Daily News became
a sort of literary center piece, and the whole parsonage
revolved enthusiastically around it. Lark’s
clothes were put in the most immaculate condition,
and her wardrobe greatly enriched by donations pressed
upon her by her admiring sisters. Every evening
the younger girls watched impatiently for the carrier
of the Daily News, and then rushed to meet him.
The paper was read with avid interest, criticized,
commended. They all admitted that Lark would
be an acquisition to the editorial force, indeed,
one sorely needed. They begged her to give Mount
Mark the news while it was news, without waiting to
find what the other Republican papers of the state
thought about it. Why, the instructions and sisterly
advice and editorial improvements poured into the ears
of patient Lark would have made an archangel giddy
with confusion!
During those days, Carol followed
Lark about with a hungry devotion that would have
been observed by her sister on a less momentous occasion.
But now she was so full of the darling Career that
she overlooked the once most-darling Carol. On
Monday morning, Carol did not remain up-stairs with
Lark as she donned her most businesslike dress for
her initiation into the world of literature.
Instead, she sulked grouchily in the dining-room,
and when Lark, radiant, star-eyed, danced into the
room for the family’s approval, she almost glowered
upon her.
“Am I all right? Do I look
literary? Oh, oh,” gurgled Lark, with music
in her voice.
Carol sniffed.
“Oh, isn’t it a glorious
morning?” sang Lark again. “Isn’t
everything wonderful, father?”
“Lark Starr,” cried Carol
passionately, “I should think you’d be
ashamed of yourself. It’s bad enough to
turn your back on your your life-long twin,
and raise barriers between us, but for you to be so
wildly happy about it is perfectly wicked.”
Lark wheeled about abruptly and stared
at her sister, the fire slowly dying out of her eyes.
“Why, Carol,” she began
slowly, in a low voice, without music.
“Oh, that’s all right.
You needn’t try to talk me over. A body’d
think there was nothing in the world but ugly old
newspapers. I don’t like ’em, anyhow.
I think they’re downright nosey! And we’ll
never be the same any more, Larkie, and you’re
the only twin I’ve got, and
Carol’s defiance ended in a
poorly suppressed sob and a rush of tears.
Lark threw her gloves on the table.
“I won’t go at all,”
she said. “I won’t go a step.
If if you think for a minute, Carol, that
any silly old Career is going to be any dearer to
me than you are, and if we aren’t going to be
just as we’ve always been, I won’t go
a step.”
Carol wiped her eyes. “Well,”
she said very affectionately, “if you feel like
that, it’s all right. I just wanted you
to say you liked me better than anything else.
Of course you must go, Lark. I really take all
the credit for you and your talent to myself, and
it’s as much an honor for me as it is for you,
and I want you to go. But don’t you ever
go to liking the crazy old stories any better than
you do me.”
Then she picked up Lark’s gloves,
and the two went out with an arm around each other’s
waist.
It was a dreary morning for Carol,
but none of her sisters knew that most of it was spent
in the closet of her room, sobbing bitterly. “It’s
just the way of the world,” she mourned, in the
tone of one who has lived many years and suffered
untold anguish, “we spend our lives bringing
them up, and loving them, and finding all our joy and
happiness in them, and then they go, and we are left
alone.”
Lark’s morning at the office
was quiet, but none the less thrilling on that account.
Mr. Raider received her cordially, and with a great
deal of unctuous fatherly advice. He took her
into his office, which was one corner of the press
room glassed in by itself, and talked over her duties,
which, as far as Lark could gather from his discourse,
appeared to consist in doing as she was told.
“Now, remember,” he said,
in part, “that running a newspaper is business.
Pure business. We’ve got to give folks what
they want to hear, and they want to hear everything
that happens. Of course, it will hurt some people,
it is not pleasant to have private affairs aired in
public papers, but that’s the newspaper job.
Folks want to hear about the private affairs of other
folks. They pay us to find out, and tell them,
and it’s our duty to do it. So don’t
ever be squeamish about coming right out blunt with
the plain facts; that’s what we are paid for.”
This did not seriously impress Lark.
Theoretically, she realized that he was right.
And he talked so impressively of THE PRESS, and its
mission in the world, and its rights and its pride
and its power, that Lark, looking away with hope-filled
eyes, saw a high and mighty figure, immense, all-powerful,
standing free, majestic, beckoning her to come.
It was her first view of the world’s PRESS.
But on the fourth morning, when she
entered the office, Mr. Raider met her with more excitement
in his manner than she had ever seen before.
As a rule, excitement does not sit well on nicely-rounded,
pink-skinned men.
“Lark,” he began hurriedly,
“do you know the Dalys? On Elm Street?”
“Yes, they are members of our church. I
know them.”
He leaned forward. “Big
piece of news down that way. This morning at
breakfast, Daly shot his daughter Maisie and the little
boy. They are both dead. Daly got away,
and we can’t get at the bottom of it. The
family is shut off alone, and won’t see any one.”
Lark’s face had gone white,
and she clasped her slender hands together, swaying,
quivering, bright lights before her eyes.
“Oh, oh!” she murmured brokenly.
“Oh, how awful!”
Mr. Raider did not observe the white
horror in Lark’s face. “Yes, isn’t
it?” he said. “I want you to go right
down there.”
“Yes, indeed,” said Lark,
though she shivered at the thought. “Of
course, I will.” Lark was a minister’s
daughter. If people were in trouble, she must
go, of course. “Isn’t it awful?
I never knew of such a thing before.
Maisie was in my class at school. I never liked
her very well. I’m so sorry I didn’t, oh,
I’m so sorry. Yes, I’ll go right
away. You’d better call papa up and tell
him to come, too.”
“I will, but you run along.
Being the minister’s daughter, they’ll
let you right up. They’ll tell you all
about it, of course. Don’t talk to any
one on the way back. Come right to the office.
Don’t stay any longer than you can help, but
get everything they will say about it, and er comfort
them as much as you can.”
“Yes, yes.”
Lark’s face was frightened, but firm. “I I’ve
never gone to the houses much when there
was trouble. Prudence and Fairy have always done
that. But of course it’s right, and I’m
going. Oh, I do wish I had been fonder of Maisie.
I’ll go right away.”
And she hurried away, still quivering,
a cold chill upon her. Three hours later she
returned to the office, her eyes dark circled, and
red with weeping. Mr. Raider met her at the door.
“Did you see them?”
“Yes,” she said in a low
voice. “They they took me up-stairs,
and ” She paused pitifully, the memory
strong upon her, for the woman, the mother of five
children, two of whom had been struck down, had lain
in Lark’s strong tender arms, and sobbed out
the ugly story.
“Did they tell you all about it?”
“Yes, they told me. They told me.”
“Come on into my office,”
he said. “You must write it up while it
is fresh in your mind. You’ll do it better
while the feeling is on you.”
Lark gazed at him stupidly, not comprehending.
“Write it up?” she repeated confusedly.
“Yes, for the paper. How
they looked, what they said, how it happened, everything.
We want to scoop on it.”
“But I don’t think they would
want it told,” Lark gasped.
“Oh, probably not, but people
want to know about it. Don’t you remember
what I told you? The PRESS is a powerful task
master. He asks hard duties of us, but we must
obey. We’ve got to give the people what
they want. There’s a reporter down from
Burlington already, but he couldn’t get anything
out of them. We’ve got a clear scoop on
it.”
Lark glanced fearfully over her shoulder.
A huge menacing shadow lowered black behind her.
THE PRESS! She shuddered again.
“I can’t write it up,”
she faltered. “Mrs. Daly she Oh,
I held her in my arms, Mr. Raider, and kissed her,
and we cried all morning, and I can’t write
it up. I I am the minister’s
daughter, you know. I can’t.”
“Nonsense, now, Lark,”
he said, “be sensible. You needn’t
give all the sob part. I’ll touch it up
for you. Just write out what you saw, and what
they said, and I’ll do the rest. Run along
now. Be sensible.”
Lark glanced over her shoulder again.
The PRESS seemed tremendously big, leering at her,
threatening her. Lark gasped, sobbingly.
Then she sat down at Mr. Raider’s
desk, and drew a pad of paper toward her. For
five minutes she sat immovable, body tense, face stern,
breathless, rigid. Mr. Raider after one curious,
satisfied glance, slipped out and closed the door
softly after him. He felt he could trust to the
newspaper instinct to get that story out of her.
Finally Lark, despairingly, clutched a pencil and
wrote
“Terrible Tragedy of
the Early Morning.
Daly Family Crushed with Sorrow.”
Her mind passed rapidly back over
the story she had heard, the father’s occasional
wild bursts of temper, the pitiful efforts of the family
to keep his weakness hidden, the insignificant altercation
at the breakfast table, the cry of the startled baby,
and then the sudden ungovernable fury that lashed
him, the two children ! Lark shuddered!
She glanced over her shoulder again. The fearful
dark shadow was very close, very terrible, ready to
envelope her in its smothering depths. She sprang
to her feet and rushed out of the office. Mr.
Raider was in the doorway. She flung herself
upon him, crushing the paper in his hand.
“I can’t,” she cried,
looking in terror over her shoulder as she spoke,
“I can’t. I don’t want to be
a newspaper woman. I don’t want any literary
career. I am a minister’s daughter, Mr.
Raider, I can’t talk about people’s troubles.
I want to go home.”
Mr. Raider looked searchingly into
the white face, and noted the frightened eyes.
“There now,” he said soothingly, “never
mind the Daly story. I’ll cover it myself.
I guess it was too hard an assignment to begin with,
and you a friend of the family, and all. Let it
go. You stay at home this afternoon. Come
back to-morrow and I’ll start you again.
Maybe I was too hard on you to-day.”
“I don’t want to,”
she cried, looking back at the shadow, which seemed
somehow to have receded a little. “I don’t
want to be a newspaper woman. I think I’ll
be the other kind of writer, not newspapers,
you know, just plain writing. I’m sure
I shall like it better. I wasn’t cut out
for this line, I know. I want to go now.”
“Run along,” he said.
“I’ll see you later on. You go to
bed. You’re nearly sick.”
Dignity? Lark did not remember
that she had ever dreamed of dignity. She just
started for home, for her father, Aunt Grace and the
girls! The shabby old parsonage seemed suddenly
very bright, very sunny, very safe. The dreadful
dark shadow was not pressing so close to her shoulders,
did not feel so smotheringly near.
A startled group sprang up from the
porch to greet her. She flung one arm around
Carol’s shoulder, and drew her twin with her
close to her aunt’s side. “I don’t
want to be a newspaper woman,” she cried, in
a high excited voice. “I don’t like
it. I am awfully afraid of THE PRESS ”
She looked over her shoulder. The shadow was fading
away in the distance. “I couldn’t
do it. I ” And then, crouching,
with Carol, close against her aunt’s side, clutching
one of the soft hands in her own, she told the story.
“I couldn’t, Fairy,”
she declared, looking beseechingly into the strong
kind face of her sister. “I couldn’t.
Mrs. Daly sobbed so, and her hands were
so brown and hard, Fairy, she kept rubbing my shoulder,
and saying, ‘Oh, Lark, oh, Lark, my little children.’
I couldn’t. I don’t like newspapers,
Fairy. Really, I don’t.”
Fairy looked greatly troubled.
“I wish father were at home,” she said
very quietly. “Mr. Raider meant all right,
of course, but it was wrong to send a young girl like
you. Father is there now. It’s very
terrible. You did just exactly right, Larkie.
Father will say so. I guess maybe it’s
not the job for a minister’s girl. Of course,
the story will come out, but we’re not the ones
to tell it.”
“But the Career,” suggested
Carol.
“Why,” said Lark, “I’ll
wait a little and then have a real literary career,
you know, stories, and books, and poems, the kind that
don’t harrow people’s feelings. I
really don’t think it is right. Don’t
you remember Prudence says the parsonage is a place
to hide sorrows, not to hang them on the clothesline
for every one to see.” She looked for a
last time over her shoulder. Dimly she saw a small
dark cloud, all that was left of the shadow
which had seemed so eager to devour her. Her arms
clasped Carol with renewed intensity.
“Oh,” she breathed, “oh,
isn’t the parsonage lovely, Carol? I wish
father would come. You all look so sweet, and
kind, and oh, I love to be at home.”