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"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 d.i.c.k Holden, who was to be best man, were there thinking of David.
In the room reserved for the groom d.i.c.k 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 d.i.c.k.
"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.
CHAPTER II
THE WITCH
The perils and pitfalls appeared. But they were not seen for what they were. As a guide David left something to be desired.
Very carefully the lovers had planned the disburs.e.m.e.nt of their income: so much for rent, so much for the household and "extras," so much for David's down-town expenses. A limited amount was set for the furnishing of their home-to-be. With many declarations that love made up for all lacks and with many tiltings of Shirley's pretty chin, they had vowed to adhere rigidly to this budget.
But the choice of the abode of so much love and happiness had been put off until after the brief honeymoon, that Shirley might share the fun of house-hunting. They thought it would be fun.
It was not.
That week, as they inspected an indefinite number of apartments of as many degrees of shabbiness and general undesirableness, Shirley's spirits and chin fell steadily. David's heart, seeing, fell with them.
"Discouraged?" he asked at the end of the last day's hunt.
She nodded wearily. "Landlords are pigs. They want so much for so little. Are you sure there's nothing else we can look at?"
"I'm afraid not. I've gone through the lists thoroughly."
"I wouldn't mind being _shabby_, if it weren't for the neighborhoods."
She was tired. Her lip quivered. His heart misgave him. He tried to be gay.
"Oh, let's forget it for a while. Let's go out to the club and play nine holes and then have a little twosome at dinner out there."
They went. Low spirits rose on the scented May breeze. The dinner was a success. Afterward they met friends, who were regaled with a humorous account of the week's adventures.
The friends, of course, made suggestions. One in particular knew "the very thing you want, and really absurdly cheap." She was enthusiastic in description. Then the rental was named--fifteen dollars a month more than the budget allowed. David made a great show of taking the address and promised to inspect the "find" on the morrow.
"Let's really see it," Shirley suggested, as they rode home on the front seat of a trolley-car.
"We'd better not," said David, clinging desperately to a dwindling remnant of caution.
"Not to take it, of course. Only to remind us that there _are_ pretty places in the world--waiting for us later on." She snuggled closer to him.
In the morning, of course, they saw the apartment. And it was almost uncanny, Shirley declared, how exactly it matched what she had had in mind. She proceeded to place in fancy David's chairs and desk and lamps, the dining-room furniture that was to be Maizie's wedding gift and the mahogany bedroom suite the Jim Blaisdells had given them. She went into ecstasies over the china closet, the dainty bathroom, the clean convenient kitchen.
"David, can't you _see_ it? With a few small rugs and plain inexpensive curtains and the pictures we have it would be a gem. We'd never feel shabby here. And with the hardwood floors and tiled bath and that kitchen the housework would be so easy." She sighed rapturously.
"We'd better get away. My mouth is beginning to water. I'm sorry, dear." He kissed her to prove it. "But we oughtn't even to consider it."