Marjorie froze in consternation.
She had forgotten to allow for Francis’s gusts
of anger; indeed, there had been no need, for since
his one flare-up over the telephone he had been perfectly
gentle and courteous to her.
She stared at him, amazed.
“But I didn’t do anything
to make that happen!” she protested. “I
never dreamed why, I’d have too much
pride ”
“Pride!” thundered Francis.
“It’s plain cause and effect. You
write to that pup in New York, and I give you the
envelope and paper help you straight through
it, good heavens! and you use my decency
to appeal to him for help, after you’ve agreed
to try it out and see it through!”
Marjorie stiffened with anger.
“I was going to try it
out and see it through,” she countered with
dignity. “But if you treat me this way
I see no reason why I should. Even this housekeeper
of yours would give me money to escape with.”
“Escape! You act as if
you were in a melodrama!” said Francis angrily.
“We made a bargain, that’s all there is
to it; and the first chance you get, you smash it.
I suppose that’s the way women act. . . .
I don’t know much about women, I admit.”
“You don’t know much about
me,” said Marjorie icily, “if you jump
to conclusions like that about me. Whatever
that Logan man knows he doesn’t know from me.
Have you forgotten Lucille?”
“Lucille wouldn’t ”
began Francis, and stopped.
“And why wouldn’t she?
Didn’t she tell me that I was a poor little
pet, and that men could always take care of themselves
and, then turn around and help you carry me away?
And it was carrying me away it was stealing
me, as if I were one of those poor Sabine women in
the history book.”
They were fronting each other across
the threshold all this time, Francis with his face
rigid and pale with anger, his wife flushed and quivering.
“I admit I hadn’t thought
of that,” said Francis, referring presumably
to Lucille’s possibilities as an informer, and
not to Marjorie’s being a Sabine woman.
Marjorie moved back wearily and sat on the bed.
“And you were just getting to
be such a nice friend,” she mourned. “I
was getting so I liked you. There never
was anybody pleasanter than you while we were coming
up from New York. Why, you weren’t like
a person one was married to, at all!”
“More like a friend nor a ’usband,”
quoted Francis unexpectedly.
Marjorie looked at him in surprise.
Any one who could stop in the middle of a very fine
quarrel to see the funny side of things that way wasn’t
so bad, her mind remarked to itself before she could
stop it.
“What do you mean?” she
asked, mitigating her wrath a little.
“Why, you know the story; the
cockney woman who had a black eye, and when the settlement
worker asked her if her husband had given it to her
said, ’Bless you, no, miss ’e’s
more like a friend nor a ‘usband!’”
“Oh,” said Marjorie, smiling
a little. Then she remembered, her eyes falling
on the yellow paper Francis still held. There
was still much to be settled between them.
“But, as you were saying about Mr. Logan ”
“I was saying a lot I hadn’t
any business to about Mr. Logan,” said Francis
frankly.
“Then it’s all right?”
said Marjorie. “At least as far as you’re
concerned?”
He nodded.
“Well,” said she most
unfairly, “it isn’t, as far as I am.
Francis, I don’t think we’d better think
any more of ever trying to be married to each other.
It’s too hard on the nervous system.”
Francis colored deeply.
“What do you want to do?” he demanded.
Marjorie paused a minute before she
answered. The truth was, she didn’t know.
She had definitely given up her New York position.
She liked it up here, very much indeed. She
liked the O’Maras and the house, and she was
wild to get outdoors and explore the woods. Leaving
Francis out of the question, she was freer than she
had been for years. Altogether it was a bit hard
to be entirely moved by lofty considerations.
She wanted to stay; she knew that.
“Canada’s a nice place,”
she began, dimpling a little and looking up at Francis
from under her eyelashes.
“Oh, then ” he began
eagerly.
“And I want to stay, for perfectly
selfish reasons,” she went on serenely.
“But if my staying makes you think that there
is any hope of of eventualities I
think I’d better go. In other words, I
like the idea of a vacation here. That’s
all. If you are willing to have me as selfish
as all that, why, it’s up to you. I think
myself I’m a pig.”
“You will stay, but not with
any idea of learning to like me better is
that it?”
“That’s it,” she
said. “And, as I said, I feel colossally
selfish a regular Hun or something.”
“That’s because you used
the word ‘colossal,’” he said absently.
“They did, a lot. All right, my dear.
That’s fair enough. Yes, I’m willing.”
“But no tempers, mind, and no
expectations!” said Marjorie firmly, making
hay while the sun shone.
“No,” said Francis.
He looked at her appraisingly. “You know,”
he remarked, “the gamble isn’t all one
way. It’s just possible that I may be
as glad as you not to see the thing through when we’ve
seen something of each other. I don’t
feel that way now, but there’s no telling.”
She sprang to her feet, angry as he
had been. But he had turned, after he said that,
and gone quietly downstairs.
The idea was new to her, and correspondingly
annoying. Francis Francis, who had
been spending all his time since he got back trying
to win her Francis suggesting that he might
tire of her! Why, people didn’t do
such things! And if he expected to tire of her
what did he want her for at all?
She sprang up and surveyed herself
in the glass that hung against the rough wall, over
a draped dressing-table which had apparently once been
boxes. Yes, she did look tired and draggled.
Her wild-rose color was nearly gone, and there were
big circles under her eyes. And there was a
smudge on her face that nobody had told her a thing
about. And her hair was mussed too much to be
becoming, even to her, who looked best with it tossed
a little. And there was not a sign of water to
wash in anywhere, and the room had no furniture except
the cot and the dressing-table
Another knock stopped her here, and
she turned to see young Peggy, immaculate and blooming,
at the door.
“I just came to bring you towels,
and to see that everything was all right, and show
you the way to the bathroom,” she said most
opportunely. “We have a bathtub, you know,
even up here in the wilds!”
Marjorie forgot everything; home,
husband, problems, life in general what
were they all to the chance at a real bathtub?
She followed Peggy down the hall as a kitten follows
a friend with a bowl of milk.
“O-o! a bathtub!” she said rapturously.
Peggy threw open a door where, among
wooden floor and side-wall and ceiling and everything
else of the most primitive, a real and most enticingly
porcelain bathtub sat proudly awaiting guests.
“It’ll not be so good
as you’ve been used to,” she said with
more suggestion of Irishry than Marjorie had yet heard,
“but I guess you’ll be glad of it.”
“Glad!” said Marjorie.
And she almost shut the door in Peggy’s face.
She lingered over it and over the
manicuring and hairdressing and everything else that
she could linger over, and dressed herself in the
best of her gowns, a sophisticated taupe satin with
slippers and stockings to match. She’d
show Francis what he was perhaps going to be willing
to part with! So when Mrs. O’Mara’s
stentorian voice called “Supper!” up the
stair, she had not quite finished herself off.
The sophisticated Lucille had tucked in it
was a real tribute of affection her own
best rouge box; and Marjorie was on the point of adding
the final touch to beauty, as the advertisement on
the box said, when she heard the supper call.
She was too genuinely hungry to stop. She raced
down the stairs in a most unsophisticated manner, nearly
falling over Francis and Peggy, who were also racing
for the dining-room.
They caught her to them in a most
unceremonious way, each with an arm around her, and
sped her steps on. She found herself breathless
and laughing, dropped into a big wooden chair with
Francis facing her and Peggy and her mother at the
other two sides. It was a small table, wooden
as to leg under its coarse white cloth; but, oh, the
beauty of the sight to Marjorie! There were
such things as pork and beans, and chops, and baked
potatoes, and apple sauce, and various vegetables,
and on another table evidently a concession
to manners was to be seen a noble pudding
with whipped cream thick above it.
“The food looks good, now, doesn’t
it?” beamed Mrs. O’Mara. “I’ll
bet ye’re hungry enough to eat the side o’
the house. Pass me yer plate to fill up, me
dear.”
Marjorie ate she remembered
it vaguely afterwards, in her sleep a great
deal of everything on the table. It did not seem
possible, when she remembered, also vaguely, all the
things there had been; but the facts were against
her. She finished with a large cup of coffee,
which should have kept her awake till midnight; and
lay back smiling drowsily in her chair.
The last thing she remembered was
somebody picking her up like a small baby and carrying
her out of the dining-room and up the stairs to her
own bed, and laying her down on it; and a heavy tread
behind her carrier, which must have been Mrs. O’Mara’s,
for a rich voice that belonged to it had said, “Shure
it’s a lovely sight, yer carryin’ her
around like a child. It’s the lovely pair
yez make, Mr. Francis!” And then she remembered
a tightening of arms around her for an instant, before
she was laid carefully on her own cot and left alone.
Mrs. O’Mara undressed her and
put her to bed, she told her next morning; but Marjorie
remembered nothing at all of that. All she knew
was that the lady’s voice, raised to say that
it was time to get up, wakened her about eight next
day.
It is always harder to face any situation
in the morning. And theoretically Marjorie’s
situation was a great deal to face. Here she
was alone, penniless, at the mercy of a determined
young man and his devoted myrmidons whatever
myrmidons were. Marjorie had always heard
of them in connections like these, and rather liked
the name. Mr. Logan was imminent at any moment,
and a great deal of disagreeableness might be looked
for when he turned up and had it out with Francis.
Altogether the Sabine lady felt that she ought to be
in a state of panic terror. But she had slept
well, it was an excellent cot the
air was heavenly bracing, Mrs. O’Mara was a joy
to think of, with her brogue and her affectionate
nature, and altogether Marjorie Ellison found herself
wondering hungrily what there would be for breakfast,
and dressing in a hurry so that she could go down
and eat it.
Peggy, rosy and exuberant, rushed
at her and kissed her when she got to the foot of
the stairs.
“Oh, isn’t it lovely to
think you’re here, and I’ve got somebody
to have fun with, and Francis has to be out a lot
of the time? Do you like to dance? There’s
a French-Canadian family down the road, two girls
and three boys, and seven or eight other men out working
with Francis, and under him, and if you only say you
like to dance I’ll telephone them to-night.
Mother said I was too young to dance and
me three years learning at the convent! but
with you here sure she can’t say a word.
Oh, do say you’ll have a little dance to-night!
Francis dances, too, if you haven’t stopped
it in him.”
She stopped for a minute to take breath,
and Marjorie clapped her hands.
“I love to dance! Do have
them up! Never mind whether Francis likes it
or not!”
“Sure you have to mind what
your own wedded husband likes,” said the Irish
girl, shocked a little. “But unless he’s
been more sobered than’s likely by the big war,
he’ll be as crazy over it all as we are.
There’s a dozen grand dance records on the phonograph,
and sure a bit of rosin on the floor and it’ll
be as fine as silk. Let’s try them now.”
She made for the phonograph and had
a dance-record on it before Marjorie could answer,
and in another minute had picked the smaller girl
up and was dancing over the rough floor with her.
And so Francis, coming in a little apprehensively,
found them flushed and laughing, and whirling wildly
around to the music of a record played much too fast.
Peggy, in an effort to show off heavily before Francis,
came a cropper over a stool at his feet, pulling Marjorie
down in her fall; both of them laughing like children
as they fell, so that they could scarcely disentangle
themselves, and had to be unknotted by Francis.
“Come on to breakfast now, you
young wild animals,” said he, his thin, dark
face sparkling all over with laughter as Marjorie had
never seen it.
“I’m killed entirely,” said Peggy.
“I have to be taken.”
She made herself as limp and heavy
as possible, and it ended in a free-for-all scuffle
which was finally shepherded into the dining-room
by Mrs. O’Mara, who was laughing so herself that
she had to stop and catch her breath.
So there was little time to think
of one’s sad lot at breakfast, either.
And Peggy was so keen on the dance proposition that
it took all breakfast time to discuss it.
“I’m taking the motor-cycle
over to the clearing, and I don’t think I’ll
be back till night,” said Francis unexpectedly
when breakfast was over.
Peggy made a loud outcry.
“Is this your idea of a honeymoon?
Well, when my time comes may I have a kinder man
than you! And poor Marjorie sitting home darning
your socks, I suppose!”
“No. Not at all.
I have to go over first to take some things.
When I come back I’ll take her, too, if she’d
like to go. Think you’d enjoy it, Marjorie?”
“What is it?” she asked
cautiously, not particularly willing to implicate
herself.
“Well, it’s a little cabin or
two little cabins, rather, and a lean-to several
miles away. A motor-cycle can go there by taking
its life in its hands. It’s in the middle
of a clearing, so to speak; but it’s also in
the middle of a pretty thick patch of woods around
the clearing. There’s a spring, and a
kettle, and we make open fires. There are provisions
in the lean-to, locked up so the deer can’t get
them yes, deer like things to eat.
We go there to stay when there’s such work
to do that it isn’t convenient to come back and
forth at night. There are lots of rabbits and
birds, and once in a while a harmless little green
snake do you mind harmless snakes, my dear? comes
and looks affectionately at you, finds you’re
a human being, and goes away again rather disappointed.
Once in a long while an old bear comes and sniffs
through the cracks of the lean-to in hopes of lunch,
and goes away again disconsolately like the snake.
But only once since I can remember. I tell
you, Marjorie, I don’t ever remember having
a better time than when I’d built a fire out
there in an open spot near the trees, and just lay
on the ground with my hands behind my head, all alone,
and everything in the whole world so far away that
there wasn’t a chance of its bothering me!
Just trees and sky and wood-smoke and the ground
underneath there’s nothing like it
in the world!”
He had flushed up with enthusiasm.
Marjorie looked at him admiringly. This was
a new Francis, one she had never met. She had
not realized that any one could love that sort of
thing indeed, no one had ever told her
that such things existed. Her life had been spent
between Cousin Anna’s little prim house with
a pavement in front of it and a pocket-handkerchief
of lawn behind, and the tiny New York flat she had
occupied with Lucille. She had never really been
out-of-doors in her life.
“Oh, please do take me!” she cried.
He seemed extremely pleased at her asking.
“I can’t this first trip;
the side-car will be full of junk that I have to get
over there. But I would like to take you
on my second trip, about noon to-day. Or it
may be later when I get back it’s
quite a distance.”
“That will be all right,”
said Marjorie sedately. “I’d like
to rest a little this morning, anyway.”
So Francis, with a light in his eyes,
and whistling happily, fussed about for a while assembling
a mysterious collection of tools and curious bundles,
and rode blithely off in the general direction of what
looked like virgin forest.
“And now we’ll plan all
about the dance,” said Peggy gaily.
“You will not, Miss! You’ll
plan how to help me clean the back cellar this beautiful
sunny morning that was just made for it,” said
her mother sternly, appearing on the scene, and carrying
off a protesting Peggy.
Marjorie, left alone, addressed herself
to resting up in preparation for the afternoon’s
trip. There was a big hammock on the porch, and
thither, wrapped in her heavy coat, she went to lie.
She tried to think out some plans for her future
life without Francis; but the plans were hard to make.
There were so many wild things to watch; even the
clouds and sky seemed different up here. And
presently when Peggy, no more than healthfully excited
by her hard morning’s work on the cellar, came
prancingly out to enjoy more of her guest’s society,
she found her curled up, asleep, one hand under her
cheek, looking about ten years old and very peaceful.
“Isn’t she the darling!” she breathed
to her mother.
“She is that!” said Mrs.
O’Mara heartily. “But they’ve
both got fine young tempers of their own, for all
they’re so gay and friendly. Somebody’s
going to learn who’s rulin’ the roost,
when the first edge of the honeymoon’s off.
And it’s in me mind that the under-dog won’t
be Mr. Francis.”
“Oh, mother! How can you
talk so horridly?” remonstrated Peggy.
“As if they ever had any chance of quarreling!”
“There’s none,”
said Mrs. O’Mara wisely, “but has the chancet
of quarrelin’ when they’re man an’
wife. An’ why not? Sure it brightens
life a bit! ’Tis fine when it’s over,
as the dentist said to me whin he pulled out the big
tooth in me back jaw.”
“Well, I know I’m
never going to quarrel,” said Peggy vehemently.
“Then ye’d be a reformed
character itself, an’ why not start to curb
yer temper now?” said her mother. “I
can mind a certain day ”
But Peggy engulfed her mother in a
violent embrace, holding her mouth shut as she did
so, and as Peggy was even taller than Mrs. O’Mara
and quite as strong, the ensuing struggle and laughter
woke Marjorie.
“Now, see that! An’
take shame to yerself!” said Mrs. O’Mara
apologetically. “‘Twas me angel girl here,
Mrs. Ellison, explainin’ by fine arguments how
peaceful-minded she is. Now let me away, Peggy,
for there’s the meal to make.”
Peggy, laughing as usual, sat down
unceremoniously by Marjorie.
“I was just saying that I didn’t
see why married people should quarrel,” she
explained, “and mother says that they all have
to do some of it, just to keep life amusing. I
think you and Francis get along like kittens in a
basket.”
“And does she think we quarrel?”
inquired Marjorie sleepily, yet with suspicion.
Peggy shook her head with indubitable honesty.
“No, she only says you will
sooner or later. But that’s because she’s
Irish, I think; you know Irish people do like a bit
of a shindy once in awhile. I admit I don’t
mind it myself. But you Americans born are quieter.
When you quarrel you seem to take no pleasure whatever
in it, for all I can see!”
Marjorie laughed irrepressibly.
“Oh, Peggy, I do love you!”
she said. “It’s true, I don’t
like quarreling a bit. It always makes me unhappy.
It’s my Puritan ancestry, I suppose.”
“Well, you can’t help your forebears,”
said Peggy sagely.
“And now shall I call up the folks for the dance
to-night?”
“Oh, yes, do!” begged
Marjorie, who had slept as much as she wanted to and
felt ready for anything in the world.
She lay on in the khaki hammock in
a happy drowsiness. The wind and sunshine alone
were enough to make her happy. And there was
going to be a dance to-night, and she could wear a
little pink dress she remembered . . . and pretty
soon there would be luncheon, and after that she was
going off on a gorgeous expedition with Francis, where
there was a fire, and rabbits and maybe a nice but
perfectly harmless little green snake that would look
at her affectionately . . . but everybody looked at
you affectionately, once you were married . . . it
was very warming and comforting. . . .
She was asleep again before she knew
it. It was only Francis’s quick step on
the porch that woke her Francis, very alert
and flushed, and exceedingly hungry.
“Yes, yes, Mr. Francis, the
food’s been waitin’ you this long time,”
said Mrs. O’Mara, evidently in answer to a soul-cry
of Francis’s, for he had not had time to say
anything aloud. “Bring yer wife an’
come along an’ eat.”
So they went in without further word
spoken, and after all Marjorie found herself the possessor
of as good an appetite as she’d had for breakfast.
“Be sure to get back in time
to dress for the dance,” Peggy warned them as
they started off in the motor-cycle. “It’s
to be a really fine dance, with the girls in muslin
dresses, not brogans and shirtwaists!”
“The girls?” asked Marjorie of Francis
wonderingly.
“I think she means that the
men aren’t to wear brogans, or the girls shirtwaists,”
he explained, as they whizzed down what seemed invisible
tracks in a trackless forest. “Smell the
pines aren’t they good?”
Marjorie looked up, beaming.
“Stunning!” she said.
“I don’t see how you ever wanted to come
to New York, after you’d had this.”
“After a long time of this New
York is pleasant again,” he said. “But
I hope you won’t tire of this, my dear.”
“Oh, no!” she said fervently.
“I’m crazy to go on, and see the cabins
you told me about. I can amuse myself there the
whole afternoon, if you have other things you want
to do.”
“You dear!” said Francis.
After that they were quiet, and rode
on together, enjoying the glorious afternoon.
“Here we are,” said Francis
after about two hours on the motor-cycle. He
slipped off and held the machine for her to get out.
“Oh,” said Marjorie, “it’s
like something out of a fairy-book!”