“And now that things are more
or less settled, wouldn’t you like to know what
we are going to do?” inquired Francis.
“Haven’t I anything to
do with it?” inquired Marjorie, not crossly,
but as one seeking information.
“Almost everything. But
you don’t know the road to Canada. I thought
we’d take it straight through in the car, but
to-night we will be in more civilized parts in
an hour or so, in fact and you can get
straightened up a little not that you look
as if you needed to, but after a night in the open
one does feel more or less tossed about, I imagine.”
Marjorie considered. Ordinarily
at this hour she would be walking into the office.
She would be speaking with what politeness one can
muster up in the morning to Miss Kaplan, who was quite
as exuberant at five as at seven in the evening; she
would be hoping desperately that she wasn’t
late, and that if she was she would escape Mr. Wildhack,
who glared terrifyingly at such young women who didn’t
get down on schedule time. Marjorie was not
much on schedule time, but she always felt that the
occasions when she got there too late really ought
to be balanced by those when she came too early.
Instead of all this, she was racing north with the
fresh wind blowing against her face, with no duties
and no responsibilities, and something that, but for
the person who shared it with her, promised to be
rather fun. Just then something came to her.
She had an engagement for tea with Bradley Logan.
Suddenly that engagement seemed exceedingly
important, and something that she should on no account
have missed. But at least she could write to
him and explain.
“Have you a fountain-pen?”
she inquired of Francis, “and can I write sitting
here?”
“If you don’t mind writing
on a leaf from my notebook. It’s all I
have.”
She was privately a little doubtful
as to the impression that such a note would make on
Mr. Logan, for she remembered one wild tale she had
heard from him about a man who spent his whole life
in a secluded room somewhere in France, experimenting
on himself as to what sort of perfumes and colors
and gestures made him happiest. None of them
had made him happy at all, to the best of her remembrance;
but the idea Mr. Logan left her with was that he was
that sort of person himself, and that the wrong kind
of letter-paper could make him suffer acutely.
She was amused at it, really, but a bit impressed,
too. One doesn’t want to be thought the
kind of person who does the wrong thing because of
knowing no better. Still, it was that or nothing.
“Dear Mr. Logan,” she
began, more illegibly than she knew because of the
car’s motion, “I am so sorry that I have
not been able to tell you in advance that I couldn’t
take tea with you. But Mr. Ellison has taken
me away rather suddenly. He had to go to Canada
to take a position. We hope we will see you
when we get back.”
She did not know till much later that
owing to the thank-you-ma’am which they reached
simultaneously with the word “suddenly”
that when Mr. Logan got that note he thought it was
“severely,” and that the bad penmanship
and generally disgraceful appearance of the loose-leaf
sheet, the jerky hand, and the rather elderly envelope
which was all Francis could find it had
been living in a pocket with many other things for
some time gave him a wrong idea. Mr.
Logan, to anticipate a little, by this erroneous means,
acquired an idea very near the truth. He thought
that Marjorie Ellison was being kidnapped against
her will, and made it the subject of much meditation.
His nervous ailment prevented him from dashing after
her.
Marjorie fortunately knew nothing
of all this, for she was proud to the core, and she
would rather have died than let any one but Lucille,
of necessity in on it, know anything but that she
was spending the most delightful and willing of honeymoons.
So when they found a little up-state
town with a tavern of exceeding age and stiffness,
and alighted in search of luncheon, the landlord and
landlady thought just what Marjorie wanted them to
think; that all was well and very recent.
She sank into one of the enormous
walnut chairs, covered with immaculate and flaring
tidies which reminded her of Cousin Anna and stuck
into the back of her neck, and viewed the prospect
with pleasure. For the moment she almost forgot
Francis, and the problem of managing just the proper
distance from him. There was a stuffed fish,
glassy-eyed and with cotton showing from parts of him,
over the counter. There were bills of forgotten
railroads framed and hung in different places.
There was a crayon portrait of a graduated row of
children from the seventies hung over the fireplace,
four of them, on the order of another picture, framed
and hanging in another part of the room, and called
“A Yard of Kittens.” Marjorie wondered
with pleasure why they hadn’t added enough children
to bring it up to a yard, and balanced things properly.
The fireplace itself was bricked up, all except a
small place where a Franklin stove sat, with immortelles
sticking out of its top as if they aimed at being fuel.
Marjorie had seen immortelles in fireplaces before,
but in a Franklin they were new to her. She
made up her mind to find out about it before she was
through.
“Why why, I’m
not worrying about being carried off by Francis!”
she remembered suddenly. She had been quite
forgetful of him, and of anything but the funny, old-fashioned
place she was in. She lay back further in the
walnut chair, quite sleepily.
“Would you like to go upstairs
now, ma’am?” the landlord said. She
looked around for Francis, but he was nowhere to be
seen. She picked up the handkerchief which had
slipped from her lap, cast a regretful look at the
yard of kittens, and followed him.
“Here it is, ma’am,”
said the landlord, and set the suitcase he had been
carrying down inside the door. She shut the door
after her, and made for the mirror. Then she
said “Oh!” in a surprised voice, because
Francis was standing before it, brushing his hair much
harder than such straight black hair needed to be
brushed.
He seemed as much surprised as she.
“Good heavens, I beg your pardon,
Marjorie!” he said. “This isn’t
your room. Yours is the next one.”
“I beg your pardon, then,”
said Marjorie, with a certain iciness.
“You can have this one if you
like it better. They’re next door to each
other. You know” Francis colored “we
have to seem more or less friendly. Really I
didn’t know ”
He was moving away into the other
room as he spoke, having laid down his brush on her
bureau as if he had no business with it at all.
“This isn’t my brush,”
she said, standing at the connecting door and holding
it out at arm’s length.
“No,” said Francis.
“I didn’t know I’d left it.
Thank you.”
He took it from her, and went into
his own room. She pushed the door to between
them, and went slowly back and sat down on the bed.
A quite new idea had just come to her.
Francis wasn’t a relentless
Juggernaut, or a tyrant, or a cave-man, or anything
like that really. That is, he probably did have
moments of being all of them. But besides that it
was a totally new idea he was a human being
like herself. Sometimes things embarrassed him;
sometimes they were hard for him; he didn’t always
know what to do next.
She had never had any brothers, and
not very much to do with men until she got old enough
for them to make love to her. The result was
that it had never occurred to her particularly that
men were people. They were just men.
That is, they were people you had nothing in common
with except the fact that you did what they said if
they were fathers, or married them when the time came,
if they weren’t. But she had actually
felt sorry for Francis; not sorry, in a vague, rather
pitying way because she didn’t love him but
sorry for him as if he had been Lucille, when he was
so embarrassed that he walked off forgetting his own
brush. She smiled a little at the remembrance.
She really began to feel that he was a friend.
So when he tapped at her outside door
presently and told her that luncheon was ready, and
that they had better go down and eat it, instead of
the severity for which Francis had braced himself,
she smiled at him in a very friendly fashion, and
they went down together, admiring the wallpaper intensely
on their way, for it consisted of fat scarlet birds
sitting on concentric circles, and except for its age
was almost exactly like some that Lucille and Marjorie
hadn’t bought because it was two dollars a yard.
Luncheon proved to be dinner, but
they were none the less glad of it for that.
And instead of freezing every time the landlord was
tactlessly emotional, Marjorie found that she could
be amused at it, and that her being amused helped
Francis to be amused.
She always looked back tenderly to
that yard of kittens, and to those other many yards
of impossible and scarlet birds. They gave her
the first chance at carrying through her wild flight
with Francis decently and without too much discomfort.
The rest of the trip to Canada was
easier and easier. Once admitting that Francis
and she were friends and you can’t
spend three days traveling with anybody without being
a friend or an enemy she had a nice enough
time. She kept sternly out of her mind the recollection
that he was in love with her. When she thought
of that she couldn’t like him very much.
But then she didn’t have to think of it.
“Here we are,” said Francis
superfluously as they stopped at the door of a big
house that was neither a log cabin nor a regular house.
Marjorie gave a sigh of contentment.
“I admit I’m glad to get here,”
she said.
She slipped out of the car in the
sunset, and stood drooping a minute, waiting for her
bag to be lifted down. She was beginning to feel
tired. She was lonely, too. She missed
everything acutely and all at once New
York, the little apartment, Lucille, being free from
Francis even the black kitten seemed to
her something that she could not live one moment longer
without. She turned and looked at Francis, trim
and alert as ever, just steering the car around the
side of the house, and found herself hating him for
the moment. He was so at home here. And
she hadn’t even carfare to run away if she wanted
to!
“Well, now, you poor lamb!”
said somebody’s rich, motherly voice with a
broad Irish brogue. “You’re tired
enough to die, and no wonder. Come along with
me, darlin’.”
She looked up with a feeling of comfort
into the face of a black-haired, middle-aged Irishwoman,
ample and beaming.
“I’m Mrs. O’Mara,
an’ I know yer husband well. I kep’
house for him an’ the other young gintlemen
when they were workin’ up here before the fightin’
began. So he got me to come an’ stay wid
the two of ye, me an’ Peggy. An’
I don’t deny I’m glad to see ye, for there
does be a ghost in this house!”
The ending was so unexpected and matter-of-fact
that Marjorie forgot to feel lost and estranged, and
even managed to laugh. Even a ghost sounded
rather pleasant and friendly, and it was good to see
a woman’s face. Who or what Peggy might
be she did not know or care. Mrs. O’Mara
picked up the suitcase with one strong arm, and, putting
the other round Marjorie in a motherly way, half led
her into the house.
“Ye’ll excuse me familiarity,
but it’s plain to see ye’re dead, Miss ma’am,
I mean. Come yer ways in to the fire.”
Marjorie had been feeling that life
would be too hard to bear if she had to climb any
stairs now; so it was very gladly that she let Mrs.
O’Mara establish her in a rude chaise-longue
sort of thing, facing a huge fire in a roughly built
fireplace. The housekeeper bent over her, loosening
knots and taking off wraps in a very comforting way.
Then she surrounded her with pillows not
too many, or too much in her way and slipped
from the room to return in a moment with tea.
Marjorie drank it eagerly, and was
revived by it enough to look around and see the place
where she was to dwell. It looked very attractive,
though it was not in the least like anything she had
ever seen.
Where she lay she stared straight
into a fire of great logs that crackled and burned
comfortingly. The mantel over it was roughly
made of wood, and its only adornment was a pipe at
one side, standing up on its end in some mysterious
manner, and a pile of Government reports at the other.
The walls were plastered and left so. Here and
there were tacked photographs and snapshots, and along
one wall she had to screw her neck to see
it some one had fastened up countless sheets
from a Sunday supplement war photographs
entirely. She wondered who had done it, because
what she had seen of returned soldiers had shown her
that the last thing they wanted to see or hear about
was the war.
There were couches around the walls,
the other chairs were lounging chairs also.
There was fishing-tackle in profusion, and a battered
phonograph on a table. It looked as if men had
made themselves comfortable there, without thinking
much about looks. The only thing against this
was one small frilled chair. It was a most absurd
chair, rustic to begin with, with a pink cushion covered
with white net and ruffled, and pink ribbons anchoring
another pink and net cushion at its back. Mrs.
O’Mara, hovering hospitably, saw Marjorie eying
it, and beamed proudly.
“That’s Peggy’s
chair,” she said. “Peggy’s
me little daughter.”
“Oh, that’s nice,” said Marjorie.
“How old is she?”
“Just a young thing,” said Mrs. O’Mara.
“She’ll be in in a minute.”
Marjorie leaned back again, her tea
consumed, and rested. She was not particularly
interested in Peggy, because she was not very used
to children. She liked special ones sometimes,
but as a rule she did not quite know what to do with
them. After a few sentences exchanged, and an
embarrassed embrace in which the children stiffened
themselves, children and Marjorie were apt to melt
apart. She hoped Peggy wouldn’t be the
kind that climbed on you and kicked you.
A wild clattering of feet aroused
her from these half-drowsy meditations.
“Here’s Francis, mother!
Here’s Francis!” called a joyous young
voice, and Marjorie turned to see Francis, his eyes
sparkling and his whole face lighted up, dashing into
the room with an arm around one of the most beautiful
girls she had ever seen, a tall, vivid creature who
might have been any age from seventeen to twenty, and
who brought into the room an atmosphere of excitement
and gaiety like a wind.
“And here’s Peggy!”
said Francis gaily, pausing in his dash only when
he reached Marjorie’s side. “She’s
all grown up since I went away, and isn’t she
the dear of the world?”
“Oh, but so’s your wife,
Francis!” said Peggy naively, slipping her arm
from around his shoulder and dropping on her knees
beside Marjorie. “You don’t mind
if I kiss you, do you, please? And must I call
her Mrs. Ellison, Francis?”
“Peggy, child, where’s
your manners?” said her mother from the background
reprovingly, but with an obvious note of pride in her
voice.
“Where they always were,”
said Peggy boldly, laughing, and staying where she
was.
She was tall and full-formed, with
thick black hair like her mother’s, not fluffy
and waving like Marjorie’s, but curling tight
in rings wherever it had the chance. Her eyes
were black and her cheeks and lips a deep permanent
red. She looked the picture of health and strength,
and Marjorie felt like a toy beside her fragile
to the breaking-point. She seemed much better
educated than her mother, and evidently on a footing
of perfect equality and affection with Francis.
Marjorie was drawn to her, for the
girl had vitality and charm; but she found herself
wondering why Francis had never told her about this
Peggy, and why he had never thought of marrying her.
“You wouldn’t think this
young wretch was only sixteen, would you?” said
Francis, answering her silent question. “Look
at her long dresses and hair done up, and
beaux, I hear, in all directions!”
Of course. If Peggy had been
scarcely past fourteen when Francis saw her last,
he couldn’t have considered marrying her.
Marjorie tried to think that she wished he had, but
found that she did not like to cease owning anything
that she had ever possessed, even such a belonging
as Francis Ellison.
“That’s very nice,”
she said inadequately, smiling at Peggy in as friendly
a manner as so tired a person could manage. “I’m
glad I shall have Peggy to be friends with while I’m
up here.”
“Oh, me dear, ye’ll be
up here forever an’ the day after, be the looks
of the job Mr. Francis has on his hands,” said
Mrs. O’Mara.
“No, I won’t,” she
began to say hurriedly, and then stopped herself.
She had no right to tell any one about her bargain
with Francis. She didn’t want to, anyway.
“The poor child’s tired,”
said Mrs. O’Mara, whom, in spite of her relation
to Peggy, Marjorie was beginning to regard as a guardian
angel. “Come upstairs to yer room, me dear.”
Marjorie rose, with Francis and Peggy
hovering about her, carrying wraps and hats and suitcases;
and Mrs. O’Mara led the way to a room on the
floor above, reached by a stair suspiciously like a
ladder.
“Here ye’ll be comfortable,”
said Mrs. O’Mara, “and rest a little till
we have supper. Peggy will get you anything you
want.”
But Marjorie declined Peggy.
All she wanted was to rest a little longer.
She flung herself on the softly mattressed
cot in one corner of the room; and nearly went to
sleep.
She was awakened it must
have been quite sleep by Francis, on the
threshold. His eyes were blazing, and he was
evidently angry at her to the last degree angrier
even than he had been that time in the city when he
nearly threw the telephone at her.
“Is this the sort of person
you are?” he demanded furiously. “Look
at this telegram!”
Marjorie, frightened, rose from the
couch with her heart beating like a triphammer.
“Let me see,” she asked.
He handed the telegram to her with an effect of wanting
to shake her.
“Am coming up to arrange with
you about Mrs. Ellison,” it said. “Know
all.”
It was signed by Logan.
“Good heavens!” said Marjorie helplessly.
“Knows all!” said Francis
bitterly. “And that’s the sort of
girl you are!”