Now that the twins had attained to
the dignity of eighteen years, and were respectable
students at the thoroughly respectable Presbyterian
college, they had dates very frequently. And it
was along about this time that Mr. Starr developed
a sudden interest in the evening callers at his home.
He bobbed up unannounced in most unexpected places
and at most unexpected hours. He walked about
the house with a sharp sly look in his eyes, in a
way that could only be described as Carol said, by
“downright nosiness.” The girls discussed
this new phase of his character when they were alone,
but decided not to mention it to him, for fear of
hurting his feelings. “Maybe he’s
got a new kind of a sermon up his brain,” said
Carol. “Maybe he’s beginning to realize
that his clothes are wearing out again,” suggested
Lark. “He’s too young for second
childhood,” Connie thought. So they watched
him curiously.
Aunt Grace, too, observed this queer
devotion on the part of the minister, and finally
her curiosity overcame her habit of keeping silent.
“William,” she said gently,
“what’s the matter with you lately?
Is there anything on your mind?”
Mr. Starr started nervously.
“My mind? Of course not. Why?”
“You seem to be looking for
something. You watch the girls so closely, you’re
always hanging around, and
He smiled broadly. “Thanks
for that. ‘Hanging around,’ in my
own parsonage. That is the gratitude of a loving
family!”
Aunt Grace smiled. “Well,
I see there’s nothing much the matter with you.
I was seriously worried. I thought there was something
wrong, and
“Sort of mentally unbalanced,
is that it? Oh, no, I’m just watching my
family.”
She looked up quickly. “Watching the family!
You mean
“Carol,” he said briefly.
“Carol! You’re watching
“Oh, only in the most honorable
way, of course. You see,” he gave his explanation
with an air of relief, “Prudence always says
I must keep an eye on Carol. She’s so pretty,
and the boys get stuck on her, and that’s
what Prudence says. I forgot all about it for
a while. But lately I have begun to notice that
the boys are older, and we don’t
want Carol falling in love with the wrong man.
I got uneasy. I decided to watch out. I’m
the head of this family, you know.”
“Such an idea!” scoffed
Aunt Grace, who was not at all of a scoffing nature.
“Carol was born for lovers,
Prudence says so. And these men’s girls
have to be watched, or the wrong fellow will get ahead,
and
“Carol doesn’t need watching not
any more at least.”
“I’m not really watching her, you know.
I’m just keeping my eyes open.”
“But Carol’s all right.
That’s one time Prudence was away off.”
She smiled as she recognized a bit of Carol’s
slang upon her lips. “Don’t worry
about her. You needn’t keep an eye on her
any more. She’s coming, all right.”
“You don’t think there’s
any danger of her falling in love with the wrong man?”
“No.”
“There aren’t many worth-having fellows
in Mount Mark, you know.”
“Carol won’t fall in love with a Mount
Mark fellow.”
“You seem very positive.”
“Yes, I’m positive.”
He looked thoughtful for a while.
“Well, Prudence always told me to watch Carol,
so I could help her if she needed it.”
“Girls always need their fathers,”
came the quick reply. “But Carol does not
need you particularly. There’s only one
of them who will require especial attention.”
“That’s what Prudence says.”
“Yes, just one not Carol.”
“Not Carol!” He looked
at her in astonishment. “Why, Fairy and
Lark are different. They’re
all right. They don’t need attention.”
“No. It’s the other one.”
“The other one! That’s all.”
“There’s Connie.”
“Connie?”
“Yes.”
“Connie?”
“Yes.”
“You don’t mean Connie.”
Aunt Grace smiled.
“Why, Grace, you’re you’re
off. Excuse me for saying it, but you’re
crazy. Connie why, Connie has never
been any trouble in her life. Connie!”
“You’ve never had any
friction with Connie, she’s always been right
so far. One of these days she’s pretty
likely to be wrong, and Connie doesn’t yield
very easily.”
“But Connie’s so sober and straight, and
“That’s the kind.”
“She’s so conscientious.”
“Yes, conscientious.”
“She’s look here, Grace, there’s
nothing the matter with Connie.”
“Of course not, William.
That isn’t what I mean. But you ought to
be getting very, very close to Connie right now, for
one of these days she’s going to need a lot
of that extra companionship Prudence told you about.
Connie wants to know everything. She wants to
see everything. None of the other girls ever
yearned for city life. Connie does. She
says when she is through school she’s going to
the city.”
“What city?”
“Any city.”
“What for?”
“For experience.”
Mr. Starr looked about him helplessly.
“There’s experience right here,”
he protested feebly. “Lots of it. Entirely
too much of it.”
“Well, that’s Connie.
She wants to know, to see, to feel. She wants
to live. Get close to her, get chummy. She
may not need it, and then again she may. She’s
very young yet.”
“All right, I will. It
is well I have some one to steer me along the proper
road.” He looked regretfully out of the
window. “I ought to be able to see these
things for myself, but the girls seem perfectly all
right to me. They always have. I suppose
it’s because they’re mine.”
Aunt Grace looked at him affectionately.
“It’s because they’re the finest
girls on earth,” she declared. “That’s
why. But we want to be ready to help them if
they need it, just because they are so fine. They
will every one be splendid, if we give them the right
kind of a chance.”
He sat silent a moment. “I’ve
always wanted one of them to marry a preacher,”
he said, laughing apologetically. “It is
very narrow-minded, of course, but a man does make
a hobby of his own profession. I always hoped
Prudence would. I thought she was born for it.
Then I looked to Fairy, and she turned me down.
I guess I’ll have to give up the notion now.”
She looked at him queerly. “Maybe not.”
“Connie might, I suppose.”
“Connie,” she contradicted
promptly, “will probably marry a genius, or a
rascal, or a millionaire.”
He looked dazed at that.
She leaned forward a little. “Carol might.”
“Carol
“She might.” She watched him narrowly,
a smile in her eyes.
“Carol’s too worldly.”
“You don’t believe that.”
“No, not really. Carol she why,
you know when I think of it, Carol wouldn’t
be half bad for a minister’s wife. She has
a sense of humor, that is very important. She’s
generous, she’s patient, she’s unselfish,
a good mixer, some of the ladies might think
her complexion wasn’t real, but Grace,
Carol wouldn’t be half bad!”
“Oh, William,” she sighed,
“can’t you remember that you are a Methodist
minister, and a grandfather, and grow up
a little?”
After that Mr. Starr returned to normal
again, only many times he and Connie had little outings
together, and talked a great deal. And Aunt Grace,
seeing it, smiled with satisfaction. But the twins
and Fairy settled it in their own minds by saying,
“Father was just a little jealous of all the
beaux. He was looking for a pal, and he’s
found Connie.”
But in spite of his new devotion to
Connie, Mr. Starr also spent a great deal of time
with Fairy. “We must get fast chums, Fairy,”
he often said to her. “This is our last
chance. We have to get cemented for a lifetime,
you know.”
And Fairy, when he said so, caught
his hand and laughed a little tremulously.
Indeed, he was right when he said
it was his last chance with Fairy in the parsonage.
Two weeks before her commencement she had slipped into
the library and closed the door cautiously behind her.
“Father,” she said, “would
you be very sorry if I didn’t teach school after
all?”
“Not a bit,” came the ready answer.
“I mean if I you
see, father, since you sent me to college I feel as
if I ought to work and help out.”
“That’s nonsense,”
he said, drawing the tall girl down to his knees.
“I can take care of my own family, thanks.
Are you trying to run me out of my job? If you
want to work, all right, do it, but for yourself, and
not for us. Or if you want to do anything else,”
he did not meet her eyes, “if you want to stay
at home a year or so before you get married, it would
please us better than anything else. And when
you want to marry Gene, we’re expecting it,
you know.”
“Yes, I know,” she fingered
the lapel of his coat uneasily. “Do you
care how soon I get married?”
“Are you still sure it is Gene?”
“Yes, I’m sure.”
“Then I think you should choose
your own time. I am in no hurry. But any
time, it’s for you, and Gene, to decide.”
“Then you haven’t set your heart on my
teaching?”
“I set my heart on giving you
the best chance possible. And I have done it.
For the rest, it depends on you. You may work,
or you may stay at home a while. I only want
you to be happy, Fairy.”
“But doesn’t it seem foolish
to go clear through college, and spend the money,
and then marry without using the education?”
“I do not think so. They’ve
been fine years, and you are finer because of them.
There’s just as much opportunity to use your
fineness in a home of your own as in a public school.
That’s the way I look at it.”
“You don’t think I’m too young?”
“You’re pretty young,”
he said slowly. “I can hardly say, Fairy.
You’ve always been capable and self-possessed.
When you and Gene get so crazy about each other you
can’t bear to be apart any longer, it’s
all right here.”
She put her arm around his neck and
rubbed her fingers over his cheek lovingly.
“You understand, don’t
you, father, that I’m just going to be plain
married when the time comes? Not a wedding like
Prudence’s. Gene, and the girls, and Prue
and Jerry, and you, father, that is all.”
“Yes, all right. It’s your day, you
know.”
“And we won’t talk much
about it beforehand. We all know how we feel
about things. It would be silly for me to try
to tell you what a grand sweet father you’ve
been to us. I can’t tell you, if
I tried I’d only cry. You know what I think.”
His face was against hers, and his
eyes were away from her, so Fairy did not see the
moisture in his eyes when he said in a low voice:
“Yes, I know Fairy. And
I don’t need to say what fine girls you are,
and how proud I am of you. You know it already.
But sometimes,” he added slowly, “I wonder
that I haven’t been a bigger man, and haven’t
done finer work, with a houseful of girls like mine.”
Her arm pressed more closely about
his neck. “Father,” she whispered,
“don’t say that. We think you are
wonderfully splendid, just as you are. It isn’t
what you’ve said, not what you’ve done
for us, it’s just because you have always made
us so sure of you. We never had to wonder about
father, or ask ourselves we were sure.
We’ve always had you.” She leaned
over and kissed him again. “There never
was such a father, they all say so, Prudence and Connie,
and the twins, too! There couldn’t be another
like you! Now we understand each other, don’t
we?”
“I guess so. Anyhow, I
understand that there’ll only be three daughters
in the parsonage pretty soon. All right, Fairy.
I know you will be happy.” He paused a
moment. “So will I.”
But the months passed, and Fairy seemed
content to stay quietly at home, embroidering as Prudence
had done, laughing at the twins as they tripped gaily,
riotously through college. And then in the early
spring, she sent an urgent note to Prudence.
“You must come home for a few
days, Prue, you and Jerry. It’s just because
I want you and I need you, and I know you won’t
go back on me. I want you to get here on the
early afternoon train Tuesday, and stay till the last
of the week. Just wire that you are coming the
three of you. I know you’ll be here, since
it is I who ask it.”
It followed naturally that Prudence’s
answer was satisfactory. “Of course we’ll
come.”
Fairy’s plans were very simple.
“We’ll have a nice family dinner Tuesday
evening, we’ll get Mrs. Green to come
and cook and have her niece to serve it, that’ll
leave us free to visit every minute. I’ll
plan the dinner. Then we’ll all be together,
nice and quiet, just our own little bunch. Don’t
have dates, twins, of course Gene will be
here, but he’s part of the family, and we don’t
want outsiders this time. His parents will be
in town, and I’ve asked them to come up.
I want a real family reunion just for once, and it’s
my party, for I started it. So you must let me
have it my own way.”
Fairy was generally willing to leave
the initiative to the eager twins, but when she made
a plan it was generally worth adopting, and the other
members of the family agreed to her arrangements without
demur.
After the first confusion of welcoming
Prudence home, and making fun of “daddy Jerry,”
and testing the weight and length of little Fairy,
they all settled down to a parsonage home-gathering.
Just a few minutes before the dinner hour, Fairy took
her father’s hand.
“Come into the lime-light,”
she said softly, “I want you.” He
passed little Fairy over to the outstretched arms
of the nearest auntie, and allowed himself to be led
into the center of the room.
“Gene,” said Fairy, and
he came to her quickly, holding out a slender roll
of paper. “It’s our license,”
said Fairy. “We think we’d like to
be married now, father, if you will.”
He looked at her questioningly, but
understandingly. The girls clustered about them
with eager outcries, half protest, half encouragement.
“It’s my day, you know,”
cried Fairy, “and this is my way.”
She held out her hand, and Gene took
it very tenderly in his. Mr. Starr looked at
them gravely for a moment, and then in the gentle voice
that the parsonage girls insisted was his most valuable
ministerial asset, he gave his second girl in marriage.
It surely was Fairy’s way, plain
and sweet, without formality. And the dinner
that followed was just a happy family dinner.
Fairy’s face was so glowing with content, and
Gene’s attitude was so tender, and so ludicrously
proud, that the twins at last were convinced that this
was right, and all was well.
But that evening, when Gene’s
parents had gone away, and after Fairy and Gene themselves
had taken the carriage to the station for their little
vacation together, and Jerry and Prudence were putting
little Fairy to bed, the three girls left in the home
sat drearily in their bedroom and talked it over.
“We’re thinning out,” said Connie.
“Who next?”
“We’ll stick around as
long as we like, Miss Connie, you needn’t try
to shuffle us off,” said Lark indignantly.
“Prudence, and Fairy, it
was pretty cute of Fairy, wasn’t it?”
“Let’s go to bed,”
said Carol, rising. “I suppose we’ll
feel better in the morning. A good sleep is almost
as filling as a big meal after a blow like this.
Well, that’s the end of Fairy. We have to
make the best of us. Come on, Larkie. You’ve
still got us to boss you, Con, so you needn’t
feel too forlorn. My, but the house is still!
In some ways I think this family is positively sickening.
Good night, Connie. And, after this, when you
want to eat candy in bed, please use your own.
I got chocolate all over my foot last night.
Good night, Connie. Well, it’s the end
of Fairy. The family is going to pieces, sure
enough.”