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"Even Di," Lulu said.
"Lulu," said Dwight, "on Di's account will you promise us to let this thing rest with us three?"
"I s'pose so," said Lulu quietly.
"You will?"
"I s'pose so."
Ina sobbed: "Thank you, thank you, Lulu. This makes up for everything."
Lulu was thinking: "Di has a hard enough time as it is." Aloud she said: "I told Mr. Cornish, but he won't tell."
"I'll see to that," Dwight graciously offered.
"Goodness," Ina said, "so he knows. Well, that settles----" She said no more.
"You'll be happy to think you've done this for us, Lulu," said Dwight.
"I s'pose so," said Lulu.
Ina, pink from her little gust of sobbing, went to her, kissed her, her trim tan tailor suit against Lulu's blue cotton.
"My sweet, self-sacrificing sister," she murmured.
"Oh stop that!" Lulu said.
Dwight took her hand, lying limply in his. "I can now," he said, "overlook the matter of the letter."
Lulu drew back. She put her hair behind her ears, swallowed, and cried out.
"Don't you go around pitying me! I'll have you know I'm glad the whole thing happened!"
Cornish had ordered six new copies of a popular song. He knew that it was popular because it was called so in a Chicago paper. When the six copies arrived with a danseuse on the covers he read the "words," looked wistfully at the symbols which shut him out, and felt well pleased.
"Got up quite attractive," he thought, and fastened the six copies in the window of his music store.
It was not yet nine o'clock of a vivid morning. Cornish had his floor and sidewalk sprinkled, his red and blue plush piano spreads dusted.
He sat at a folding table well back in the store, and opened a law book.
For half an hour he read. Then he found himself looking off the page, stabbed by a reflection which always stabbed him anew: Was he really getting anywhere with his law? And where did he really hope to get? Of late when he awoke at night this question had stood by the cot, waiting.
The cot had appeared there in the back of the music-store, behind a dark sateen curtain with too few rings on the wire. How little else was in there, n.o.body knew. But those pa.s.sing in the late evening saw the blur of his kerosene lamp behind that curtain and were smitten by a realistic illusion of personal loneliness.
It was behind that curtain that these unreasoning questions usually attacked him, when his giant, wavering shadow had died upon the wall and the faint smell of the extinguished lamp went with him to his bed; or when he waked before any sign of dawn. In the mornings all was cheerful and wonted--the question had not before attacked him among his red and blue plush spreads, his golden oak and ebony cases, of a sunshiny morning.
A step at his door set him flying. He wanted pa.s.sionately to sell a piano.
"Well!" he cried, when he saw his visitor.
It was Lulu, in her dark red suit and her tilted hat.
"Well!" she also said, and seemed to have no idea of saying anything else. Her excitement was so obscure that he did not discern it.
"You're out early," said he, partic.i.p.ating in the village chorus of this bright challenge at this hour.
"Oh, no," said Lulu.
He looked out the window, pretending to be caught by something pa.s.sing, leaned to see it the better.
"Oh, how'd you get along last night?" he asked, and wondered why he had not thought to say it before.
"All right, thank you," said Lulu.
"Was he--about the letter, you know?"
"Yes," she said, "but that didn't matter. You'll be sure," she added, "not to say anything about what was in the letter?"
"Why, not till you tell me I can," said Cornish, "but won't everybody know now?"
"No," Lulu said.
At this he had no more to say, and feeling his speculation in his eyes, dropped them to a piano scarf from which he began flicking invisible specks.
"I came to tell you good-bye," Lulu said.
"_Good-bye!_"
"Yes. I'm going off--for a while. My satchel's in the bakery--I had my breakfast in the bakery."
"Say!" Cornish cried warmly, "then everything _wasn't_ all right last night?"
"As right as it can ever be with me," she told him. "Oh, yes. Dwight forgave me."
"Forgave you!"
She smiled, and trembled.
"Look here," said Cornish, "you come here and sit down and tell me about this."
He led her to the folding table, as the only social spot in that vast area of his, seated her in the one chair, and for himself brought up a piano stool. But after all she told him nothing. She merely took the comfort of his kindly indignation.
"It came out all right," she said only. "But I won't stay there any more. I can't do that."
"Then what are you going to do?"
"In Millton yesterday," she said, "I saw an advertis.e.m.e.nt in the hotel--they wanted a chambermaid."