THE PLANS
This is not a fairy tale, although
you will find some old friends here. There is,
for example, a witch, a horrid old creature who tricks
the best and wisest of us: Circumstance is one
of her many names, and a horde of grisly goblins follow
in her train. For crabbed beldame an aunt, who
meant well but was rich and used to having her own
way, will do fairly well. Good fairies there
are, quite a number; you must decide for yourself
which one is the best. But the tale has chiefly
to do with a youth to whom the witch had made one
gift, well knowing that one would not be enough.
Together with a girl a sunflower who did
not thrive in the shade, as Jim Blaisdell has said he
undertook to build, among other things, a house of
love wherein she should dwell and reign. But
when it was built he met another girl, who was say,
an iris. There are white irises, and very beautiful
flowers they are. From her
But that is the story.
He was, then, tall, as well favored
as is good for a young man, with straight-gazing though
at times rather dreamy gray-green eyes, kinky brown
hair and a frank friendly manner that was very engaging.
Since his tenth year he had been alone in the world,
with a guardian trust company for sole relative.
But he tried to make up for that by having many friends.
He did not have to try very hard.
Men liked him, which was much to his
credit. Those near his own age often made him
a confidant in such matters as their ambitions and
loves. His elders saw to it that he was asked
not only to the things their wives and sisters gave
but to week-ends in the family bosom as well.
And women liked him, which was not
so much to his credit, since we judge our own sex
far more wisely than the other. Old ladies praised
his manners and visited his rooms, taking an active
interest in his intimate wardrobe. Younger women
flirted with him ad libitum and used him unconscionably,
sure that he would take no advantage. Girls of
sixteen or thereabouts secretly held him in awe and
spun romances around him. In return he gave
them all a sort of reverence, thinking them superfine
creatures who could do no meanness or wrong.
He envied his men friends who had mothers or sisters
or wives to be served; in the life of a young man
alone in the world there are gaps that even pleasant
friendships can not fill. He had a dream over
which he used to burn much tobacco: of a day
when he should not be alone. He awaited impatiently
the coming of that splendid day.
Therefore he dabbled recklessly in
the tender passion. About twice a year on an
average he fell experimentally in love. It made
him very sad that after a brief captivity his heart
was always set free.
Moreover, there was something about
him that made his friends, men as well as women, say
to one another, “Some of these days that Davy
Quentin is going to do big things.” You
have known young men like that; as often as not they
continue through life a promise unfulfilled.
In David’s case the faith survived
stubbornly on scanty nourishment. He had been
left a little patrimony sufficient to carry him beyond
college, where he smoked the usual number of cigarettes,
drank a limited quantity of beer and managed to pass
his examinations respectably though not even cum
laude. After that he studied architecture,
with more distinction because he had a real enthusiasm
for the work, especially the ecclesiastical branch.
And it happened that soon after he hung out his shingle
he won a prize offered by a magazine for plans for
a three-thousand-dollar bungalow. This, when
they heard of it, fortified the faith of his friends,
who carelessly supposed the prize to have been much
bigger than it was and a brilliant career thus to have
been safely launched. Oddly enough, however,
it never occurred to them to lend a hand at the launching.
They took its success for granted and saved their
help and their business for young men, such as the
energetic but otherwise untalented Dick Holden, of
whom less was expected. It is so hard to make
friends understand that even a brilliant career needs
support at first.
It was not wholly their fault; a very
creditable pride kept David from hinting that he was
in need of help, which indeed became the fact.
The little patrimony had dwindled to a cipher.
Clients were few and commissions small. But
David, less from design than from habit and taste,
maintained the front of prosperity. He had the
trick of wearing clothes well, lived in nice rooms,
played golf at the country club and was always his
jolly, cheerful self.
His good cheer was not a pretense,
for he was never made to feel a pinch. This was
a misfortune and the blame must be laid to his own
engaging qualities. He found that he could borrow
as easily as, when in funds, he had lent. Even
Jim Blaisdell who, in his cashier’s office, was
held a skinflint and a keen judge of men, was cordiality
itself when David went to him with a note for discount.
“Gladly,” he said.
“But you’ll have to have an indorser,
you know.”
“I didn’t know,”
laughed David. “You see, I never tried
this before. Am I an innocent?”
“It’ll be all right, though,”
Blaisdell answered. “I’ll indorse
for you.”
Something made David hesitate.
“It’s fair to say I mightn’t be
able to meet it promptly.”
“Then we’ll carry you.
Your face is collateral enough for me. Beat
it now I’m busy. And come out
for dinner to-night, Davy.”
Sometimes David would feel a qualm
of discomfort as he found himself gradually getting
behind and sometimes he would wonder, a little sensitively,
at the slowness of recognition. But such moments
were brief. Unconsciously he had imbibed his
friends’ vague confidence in his future.
Some day he would win a big commission which, brilliantly
executed, would make him forever secure. In the
meantime, because he was an honest workman, he gave
to his few clients the best he had, a really fine
best, worthy of wider notice. And because he
grew daily more in love with his art and proposed
to be found ready when his great chance came, he put
in his spare hours studying hard, making sketches he
had a pretty knack for that and might have become
a third-rate painter of the numberless
ideas that floated to him out of tobacco clouds or
down from a moonlit sky or across a music-filled room.
Sometimes he would tear the sketches to bits.
But sometimes, lingering lovingly over one, he would
know a deep thrill.
“Why, this,” he would
exclaim, “this is good. Oh!” hugging
himself, “they’ll have to come to me yet.”
On the strength of this conclusion
he would allow himself some special extravagance.
When he was twenty-seven he was making
about nine hundred a year, spending it all as it came,
and owed more than five hundred dollars.
Then he met Shirley Lord.
It was at a dinner given by the Jim
Blaisdells, whose guest she was. Mrs. Jim introduced
them.
“Shirley dear, this is our Davy
Quentin. As a special favor to each
of you I’m putting you together to-night.
You have just a minute now to get acquainted.”
And Mrs. Jim fluttered away.
David spent most of that minute looking
with a thrill much the sort he felt when
he was pleased with his sketches into a
pair of blue eyes that smiled at him out of the prettiest,
sweetest, kindest face he thought he had ever seen.
And it was very pretty and sweet and kind just then,
as she looked at him with the friendliness he always
inspired. Framing the face was a lot of wavy
brown hair with golden lights dancing in it, her neck
and shoulders were slender but softly rounded, the
figure hinted at by the soft clinging gown was trim
and girlish. But those were details that he
drank in later.
He heaved a sigh, so patently one
of content with his lot that she laughed outright.
To laugh well is a gift from the gods.
“You’re not a bit as I thought you would
be.”
“How did you think I should
be?” stammered David, trying to grasp the fact
that this dainty creature had been thinking of him
at all.
“Why, grim and haughty and altogether
overwhelming. You know, you’re supposed
to be rather wonderful.”
David felt anxiously for his head.
“Does it expand so easily?”
“I just wanted to be sure it
was still there. I can see it would be easy
to lose it.”
She laughed again.
It is probable that they talked a
polite amount with their respective neighbors.
But if so, they regarded it as untimely interruption
of the real business of the evening. It was
amazing the number of things they found to discuss
and they discussed them so earnestly and withal, as
it seemed to them, so wittily and wisely that they
were blissfully unaware of the significant smiles
going around the table. When the coffee was
served, David surveyed his cup stupidly.
“Does it strike you,”
he inquired, “that they’ve hurried this
dinner out of all reason?”
“It has been the usual length, I believe.”
“Funny I’ve
a hazy recollection of fish and of an ice
just now but entree and salad and the rest
are a total blank.”
“Very funny!” she agreed.
“But the queerest of all ”
He broke off, with a laugh that did not quite reach
his eyes.
“Yes?” she queried provocatively,
knowing that one of his daring bits was coming.
“The queerest of all,”
he repeated, “is that you should turn out to
be you.”
“No queerer than ”
Then she broke off, with a laugh that did reach her
eyes.
The next afternoon they played golf.
It was at the fifth tee that they abandoned the last
pretense of formality. She topped her drive
wretchedly; the ball rolled a scant ten feet.
“Oh, David!” she cried.
“Did you ever see anything so awful?”
“Many times,” answered
David, who was looking at her, not at the ball.
“I’ve often wondered,” he mused raptly,
“how ‘David’ would sound, set to
music.”
He was rewarded by her rippling, musical
laugh. “You say the absurdest things and
the nicest.”
They pursued her recalcitrant ball
until it led them, by many zigzags, to an old
elm that had upset more than one good game. But
they did not swear at it. They sat down under
its generous shade, David lighted a cigarette and
they gave themselves to a more agreeable exercise.
They pretended to define it.
“I suppose,” Shirley broke
a brief intimate silence, “people think we’re
having a violent flirtation. But we’re
not, are we?”
“Certainly not,” said David with emphasis.
“They couldn’t understand.
We’re just naturally meant to be good friends
and it didn’t take us an age to find that out.”
“Yes,” said David slowly.
“Tell me about yourself.”
He tried to make it interesting but
when he came to the point there was really little
to tell.
“But that isn’t all.
You haven’t told me why people are so confident
of your future.”
“I don’t know that.
Sometimes I wonder whether they’ve the right
to be confident.”
“You’ve been very successful, haven’t
you?”
He shook his head. “I’m
still poor so poor you’d probably
call it indecent with my way to make.
It seems a very slow way, too.”
There was a hint of disappointment
in the quick glance she turned upon him.
“Have I lost caste?”
“No. I was just wondering
But you’re going to be successful, aren’t
you? Everybody can’t be mistaken in you.
Tell me what you want to do.”
So he told her of his love for his
work, of his studies and sketches, of the beautiful
churches that he hoped he should some day build.
It was early October; which is not
unimportant. Before them opened a vista of wooded
hills, tinted by the first frosts dull yellows and
maroons, here and there a flash of rich crimson.
A thin haze lay over the land, violet in the distance,
about them an almost imperceptible golden. The
voices of other players came softly to them, subdued
and lazy as an echo. Fading hillsides, dying
leaves, blue horizons autumn, too, has
its wistful charm, as potent as spring to bring young
hearts together.
“Everybody can’t be mistaken,”
she repeated. “All those things you will
do. I feel it, too. It’s something
you can’t explain. You know a man
is big, just as you know a woman is good
And you couldn’t lose caste with me.
I’m poor, too.”
He swept her with an incredulous glance
that took in the beautiful, soft, hand-knit sweater
jacket, the white flannel skirt with its air of having
been fashioned by an expensive tailor, the white buckskins
and bit of white silk stocking. He knew girls,
daughters of rich fathers, who did not wear silk stockings
for golfing.
She caught his glance. “Mostly
presents,” she answered it, “from an aunt
who has more money than she knows what to do with.
The rest is just splurge. It’s quite
true about my poverty. Ever since we were left
alone Maizie and I have had to work. We could
have gone to live with my aunt, but we wanted to be
independent, to make our own living. And we’ve
made it, though,” laughingly, “we’ve
been pretty hard up sometimes. So you see, I’m
not a butterfly but just a working girl on her vacation.
Have I lost caste?”
Needless question! As she asked
it, her chin her prettiest feature, cleanly
molded, curving gently back to the soft throat went
up spiritedly. He caught a picture of a struggle
far more cruel than her light words implied.
A wave of protest swept over him, of tender protectiveness.
He had to fight down an impulse to catch her close,
to cry out that thenceforth he would assume her burden.
He rejoiced intensely that he had found so rare a
spirit, fragile yet brave and equal to all the hard
emergencies life had put upon her.
Then he took thought of his income
and the brevity of their acquaintance and was abashed.
The Jim Blaisdells met them at the
club for a dinner at which David was host. It
was a nicely appointed dinner, the best the chef could
contrive. Also it was distinctly an extravagance.
But David did not care. His spirits ran high,
in a gaiety that was infectious. It was a very
successful party.
After that came two short hours on
the veranda, while a three-quarters moon rose to shower
the world with silver, gaiety dwindled and a solemn
tender happiness mounted. Then they drove homeward,
by a roundabout way, in Jim’s car. David
and Shirley had the back seat, for the most part in
a free intimate silence that was delicious indeed.
Later Mrs. Jim found her guest dreamily
braiding her hair for the night.
“Shirley,” she began directly,
“this is going too fast. David’s
too nice a boy to be hurt. He’s taking
your flirtation seriously.”
“I’m not flirting with
him. At least I don’t think I am,”
Shirley amended slowly.
“I thought you were interested only in rich
men?”
“I did think so. But now
It might be fun to be poor with him for
a while. It wouldn’t be for long.
You said yourself he’ll have a brilliant future.”
“I think so. But it might
be long coming. A professional career is so
uncertain at the start. And it’s never
fun to be poor unless you’re equipped.
Married life is more than parties and golf and dinners
at the club. Shirley, dear,” she concluded
pleadingly, “do be sensible.”
“Of course, I will be.
You forget I know all about poverty from experience.”
Shirley looked up suddenly, keenly. “Why
do you warn me? Is there any reason why you’re
afraid to entrust me to David Quentin?”
“No-o,” said Mrs. Jim.
How could she voice the question in
her mind? It was, could she entrust David Quentin
to Shirley?
Still later, “Jim,” she
said to her almost sleeping husband, “I’m
worried. I’m afraid David and Shirley will
get themselves engaged.”
“Won’t hurt ’em,” grunted
Jim.
“But they might get married.”
“People do it sometimes.
Be good for him. Life’s been too easy
for Davy.”
“I feel responsible. Couldn’t you
speak to Davy and warn him to go slow?”
“I thought,” mumbled Jim,
“you were a wise woman,” and dropped off
to sleep.
At the same late hour David was sitting
at the window of his darkened room, smoking pipe after
pipe, gazing raptly up at the moon-lit sky. “By
George!” he would breathe ecstatically, “By
George!” as though he had been seeing something
wonderful in ecclesiastical architecture. In
fact he was planning that wondrous house of love,
none the less entrancing for that many other young
lovers had designed it before.
Every day during Shirley’s two
weeks’ visit she and David were together, sometimes,
through Mrs. Jim’s contrivance, with others and
often, by grace of their own ingenuity, alone, drifting
carelessly down the most traveled stream of life.
If Mrs. Jim’s warning had awakened any doubts
in Shirley’s mind and it had the
doubts were quickly laid by David’s presence.
She let herself drift; this in spite of certain very
definite and very different plans which she had made
for her future. (In her home city was one Sam Hardy,
a money-maker, very attractive, very devoted.) People
saw it and were charmed; a young woman simply, daringly,
unquestioningly yielding to love is a picture from
whose wonder neither time nor repetition can subtract.
Only to Mrs. Jim did it occur to ponder whether the
impulse to surrender sprang from deeps or shallows.
And only Dick Holden, who was then
David’s chief chum, ventured to hang out a danger
signal.
“My son,” he said one
day when he managed to find David alone, “I’m
afraid you’re growing susceptible to women.”
“Always was. Any great harm in that?”
“Huh! If you’d had
sisters,” grunted the ungallant Dick, “you
wouldn’t ask that. You don’t know
’em. You think they’re nice, fluffy
little angels, don’t you? Well, they’re
not. They they say catty things.
And they’ve claws in their white, soft little
paws, and they’d rather scratch than eat.
And they don’t understand men.”
“Whoopee!” said David. “Do
it some more.”
“Huh! You think they’re
kind and sympathetic, don’t you? You think
because they look soulfully up at you when you’re
gabbling about ecclesiastical architecture they’re
taking it all in. Well, they’re not.
They’re thinking, ‘He has nice eyes too
bad he hasn’t money!’ I know. I’ve
heard ’em talking behind the scenes. They
don’t understand the game of things.
They only want a husband for a provider and they soon
let him know it. Then he might as well go lie
down and die. Take it from me. Few men,”
Dick concluded sagely, “survive matrimony.”
David laughed uproariously at this counsel.
“You blooming old cynic!
You poor old he-Cassandra! Where did you get
all your wisdom? Just wait until you find some
one ”
“Huh! I have found her.
Or rather she’s found me. I could let
her make a fool of me. But I won’t.
A long life and my own life for me. I’m
wearing a sign, ‘Nothing doing!’ You’d
better get one just like it.”
David roared again.
“All right, laugh!” growled
Dick. “Rope, tie and brand yourself.
And then some of these days when you’re one
woman’s property and you find the other woman
is just around the corner waiting That’s
another thing, Davy.”
But David turned his back on the counselor
and fled. What did Dick know about it?
The dream was being realized, the
lonely gaps filled. He was to have some one
of his own to love and to serve. This time his
heart was a captive for life; any one who had been
in love a baker’s dozen of times could tell
that. He expected great things of love.
He saw it as something exquisitely fine and beautiful
and yet proof against the vandal fingers of familiarity;
a joy always, a light for the dark places, a guide
and comrade in stressful times; and everlasting as
the hills. Just as the poets have always sung
of it. Would any man wear a sign, “Nothing
doing!” in the face of that?
The last afternoon of Shirley’s
visit came, clear and crisp, a strong west wind lifting
the haze from the tinted hills. They pretended
to play golf, but their strokes were perfunctory,
absent-minded. They talked little and that in
strangely low tones, always soberly. After a
while they gave up the pretense, sought a seat on
a secluded sunny slope and fell into a long silence.
“Shirley!” he broke it at length.
“Yes, David?”
“I’ll hate to see you go back.”
“I know. I’ll hate to go, too.”
“It hurts me to think of your going
back to work.”
“Oh, I’m used to it.”
She smiled. A world of sweet courage was in
that smile.
“Shirley dear!”
She raised her eyes to his.
“A poor man I suppose
he’s a coward to ask a woman to share
But it wouldn’t be for always. You believe
that, don’t you?”
“I believe that.”
“I’d try to make up for
the lack of money with other things worth
more than money maybe. Are you willing to be
poor with me for a while?”
“Yes, David.”
He sat very still. His face
went white. A happiness, so intense that it
hurt, flooded his being.
“You really mean that?” he
whispered.
Tears of tenderness stood in her eyes.
She had the sense of having found a rare treasure,
worth any sacrifice. She was a little awed by
it and lifted to a plane she had never reached before.
“Of course, I do.”
She laughed tremulously. “We’ll
wait six months, to give you a chance to get ready.
Then I’ll come to you. We’ll start
very small at first and live on what we have, whatever
it is. If it’s only seventy-five dollars
a month, we’ll hold our heads as high as if we
had millions. We’ll make the fight together.
I used to think I never could do that. But
now I want to. And then when your success comes
it will be partly mine.”
Her head was lifted in the pretty
brave gesture. The glow of a crimson sunset
was about her. In her eyes was the glow of the
flame he had lighted.
If only the spirit of sunset might
abide with us always! . . . .
The witch often turns herself into
an old cat and plays with us poor mice before she
rends us.
Almost from the beginning of the engagement
David’s clients increased in number. During
the six months which Shirley had set as the term of
their waiting his income was almost as big as that
of the whole year before; partly because he was taken
in by Dick Holden who had the knack of
getting business on a commission to which
that energetic young cynic felt himself unequal.
The fee thus shared was a substantial one.
“Our love,” David wrote
to Shirley, “was born under a lucky star.
I believe we are going to have more than we expected.
That makes me very happy on your account.”
Nevertheless, when the six months
were at an end, he was not out of debt.
“David, dear,” Shirley
wrote, when she had been scarce a month gone, “couldn’t
you manage to come on for a few days? Maizie
thinks I’m crazy, and I want her to see you
and be convinced that I’m not. And I want
to show off my wonderful lover to my friends.”
David, nothing loath, went a
night’s journey into the West, to a city where
hotels mounted high in the air and rates mounted with
them. This journey became a monthly event.
And when they were together, thought of the exchequer
took wings. There were theater parties, at which
tired Maizie was a happy though protestant third.
There were boxes of candy and flowers, seeing which
Shirley would cry, “Oh, you extravagant boy!”
in a tone that made David very glad of his extravagance.
They loved; therefore they were rich. What
had they to do with caution and economy?
“We can be engaged only once,”
they said. “Let us make it beautiful.
Let us have something to remember.”
Money, it seemed, was necessary to
a memorable engagement.
Maizie at sight of him opened her
heart. Shirley’s friends hugged and kissed
her and declared her lover to be all she had promised.
The rich aunt regarded him with a disfavor she was
at some pains to voice.
“Shirley tells me,” she
informed him, with the arrogant assurance of the very
rich, “that you’re poor. Then I think
you’re foolish to get married to
Shirley, at least. I wanted her to take Sam
Hardy. I hope you understand my checks will
stop when she’s married.”
“But you’ll still give her your love,
won’t you?”
“Of course, but what’s that got to do
with it?”
“Having that,” said David,
with the arrogant assurance of young men in love,
“Shirley will be content.”
The rich aunt stared. “Humph!” she
sniffed, “You’re not even grown up.
On your own head be it!”
Shirley took some risks in inviting
these visits. The picture David had got had
her and Maizie living in dingy rooms, marks of hardship
and privation thick around them. In fact, he
found her a charming hostess in a cozy little apartment,
comfortably furnished, with pretty dishes on the table
and even a few pictures on the walls. And clearly,
to eyes that saw, it was homely faithful Maizie whose
arduous but well-paid secretaryship financed this
ménage; Maizie who, returning home tired from
her long day, got the dinner; Maizie who washed the
dishes, that Shirley’s hands might not be spoiled,
and did the mending when the weekly wash came back.
Shirley set the table, sewed on jabots and did
yards of tatting. Her “work” consisted
of presiding over the reference room of a public library,
telling shabby uninteresting young men where to find
works on evolution and Assyrian temples and Charlemagne.
This position was hers because her rich aunt’s
husband had political influence and her salary, together
with the checks from Aunt Clara not so big
as the latter would have had David suppose but still
not to be sneezed at generally went to
buy “extras,” little luxuries working girls
do not often enjoy.
But David was in love; he saw only
the mistress of his heart. And Shirley, who
had the habit of contrasting what she had with what
she wanted to have, did not see any risk incurred.
“It’s been such a grind
to-day,” she sighed, one afternoon when David
went to the library to escort her home. “Fussing
half the day with a long-haired Dutchman who wanted
to know all about the origin of fire worship.
Why should any one want to know about the origin of
fire worship?”
David didn’t know, but thought
it a shame she had to fuss with long-haired Dutchmen.
“It’s so deadly dull,”
she went on in the same plaintive voice. “Oh,
David, you don’t know what a rescuer you are,
taking me away from this. I’ll be so happy
when we’re in our own little home and I’ll
be dependent again.”
David’s emotions were too deep
for words but he gave her a look more eloquent than
speech.
The experts are in accord as to the
purblindness of love. No scales fell from his
eyes, even when Maizie, on his next to last visit,
made an occasion for a serious chat.
“David,” she suggested
a little timidly, “don’t you think you
and Shirley had better wait a little longer?”
He laughed at the notion. “Do
you think we’re not sure of ourselves?”
“Oh, no! I’ve no
doubts there. Just until you’re a little
better fixed financially.”
He shook his head decidedly.
“Things are going pretty well with me now.
And I’ve got to get Shirley out of this awful
grind at the library.”
Maizie smiled faintly. “It
isn’t hard. Not so very hard, that is,”
she amended hastily. “It wouldn’t
hurt her to stay there a little while longer.
You see,” picking her words very carefully,
“Shirley isn’t she’s
such a dear we’ve all petted her a good deal and
maybe spoiled her a little. She hasn’t
had to give up much that she wanted. People like
to do things for her and give her things and save her
from things. I think she doesn’t quite
realize how much has been done for her.”
“Do you think that is quite
just?” David was very grave. “She
is very appreciative of what you’ve done for
her.”
Maizie flushed under the reproof.
“Oh, yes,” she went bravely on, “she’s
a dear about that. That’s one reason why
every one likes to do things for her. What I
meant was, I don’t think she quite realizes how
important it has been to her. You see, she has
never had to face any real trials. If any came,
they would be very real trials to her.
And I’m not sure just what she just
how she ” Poor Maizie, torn between
loyalty to and fear for her Shirley, floundered miserably
and fell into an ashamed silence.
“You don’t know how brave
Shirley is. Sisters are apt to be that way, I
suppose.” Poor Maizie! She flushed
again and hung her head in shame because she had dared
to suggest, however gently, a latent flaw in Shirley.
“What you forget is, we have something that
makes other things of no account. And besides,
trials are just what you make them. If you look
at them just as an adventure, part of a big splendid
fight you’re making, they become very simple you
can even get fun out of them. And that’s
what we’re going to do.”
Maizie, with a sigh, yielded the point.
But, “David,” she said earnestly, “promise
me one thing, won’t you?”
“Of course, Maizie. Anything but the one.”
“Then, if anything happens and
if you should happen to mislay those spectacles and by
mistake, of course put on another pair,
you won’t judge her too harshly, will you?
Just say, ’It’s all the fault of that
homely old Maizie, who didn’t teach Shirley to
take life so seriously as she ought to have done.’
You’ll say that and think it won’t
you?”
David laughed at the absurd notion.
“That’s easy to promise.”
They were married in May, on a night
when the wind howled and the rain drove fiercely.
The rich aunt gave Shirley the wedding, in the big
house on the hill, and intimated that therewith the
term of her largess had expired. All of Shirley’s
home friends were there, exuberantly gay and festive,
making merry because two lives were to be mated, as
though that were a light matter. The Jim Blaisdells
and Dick Holden, who was to be best man, were there
thinking of David.
In the room reserved for the groom
Dick turned from the mirror where he had been complacently
regarding his gardenia, and caught a glimpse of David’s
face.
“I say, old man, what’s
wrong? Funk? Cheer up. It’ll
soon be over.”
“It isn’t that.”
Over David it had suddenly come that
the mating of lives is not a light matter. Standing
at a window, he had caught from the storm a vague
presage of perils and pitfalls approaching, through
and around which he must be guide for another.
That other was very, very dear to him. The
thought set him to quaking. It was the first
responsibility he had had in all his life.
Then quick upon the thought surged
a wave of deep poignant tenderness for her to whom
he must be guide.
There was a tap at the door, answered by Dick.
“They’re ready. All right, old man?”
“All right,” David said. “I’m
ready.”
A minute later he stood waiting, while
the old music rolled from the organ. A slender
veiled figure appeared in a doorway. The mist
in his eyes cleared away. Very steadily he took
her. . . . .
They entered their machine amid a
shower of rice and old slippers. He caught her
close to him and held her, silent. After a while
he felt a sob shake her.
“Why, dearest, crying!”
“Oh, David, be good to me!
I’m afraid. A girl gives so much.
Be good to me always!”
He drew her closer, if that were possible.
“Of course, Shirley always.
You mustn’t be frightened. It’s
the storm. In the morning the sun will be shining
and things will seem different.”
And sure enough, in the morning the
sun was shining and things seemed different.