Part 3 (2/2)

As a result of this outbreak of public opinion the man hardened, and a.s.sumed a defiant att.i.tude which he continued to maintain toward the neighbors for some years. In the midst of all this furor, the sister of the departed wife walked calm and still. The power of the silent woman has often been dwelt upon, but I really do not think that half enough has been said, although I am aware of committing an absurdity when I recommend voluble speech on the subject of silence. Jesting and paradoxes aside, however, the silent woman wields a power known only to the man toward whom her silence is directed.

In this particular case the power was all for the best. Erelong the sister-in-law obtained such mastery over the forlorn household that she held not only the fate of the little ones, but that of the father as well, in the hollow of her hand.

Two years slipped by, and then the neighborhood that had dozed off, as it were, awoke to hear that the sister was going to marry that awful man.

At once the vigilance committee arose, and took the case in hand.

”It can't be possible,” it cried to the woman.

”Yes, it is true,” she said.

”Why, don't you know that he killed your sister?”

”I know he did.”

”And you are going to marry him, in face of that?”

”Yes.”

”Well, he'll kill you.”

”Oh, no, he won't kill me”-there was a peculiar light in her eyes that puzzled them.

”What can you want to marry such a man for?” they cried, coming back to the original question.

”To keep the children. If I don't marry him, some one else will, and those children will go out of my hands.”

Her devotion to the motherless brood had been past praise. There was nothing more to be said, and if there had been it would have availed nothing, for the sister had a mind of her own. She was one of those handsome women, who walk this earth like queens, and to whom lesser folk defer.

She married, and lo! the neighborhood was agog once more, for strange stories came floating from out that handsome house, and it appeared for a time that instead of his killing her she was like to kill him.

I remember one tale in particular, which my mother who, by the way, was no gossip, and was as peaceable as a barnyard fowl, was in the habit of rehearsing before a chosen few, occasionally, with a quiet relish that was amusing, considering the fact that ordinarily any comment on her neighbors' affairs was alien to her. It appeared that after a short wedding trip, during which the bridegroom had several times shown the cloven foot, the couple returned to their domicile. Probably the maids who had lived there for some years and were devoted to the new wife, had been warned of what was coming. At all events, they accepted everything as a matter of course.

Upon the evening of the married pair's return, a handsome dinner was served. The train was a trifle behind time; the day had been cold, and several other untoward circ.u.mstances had conspired to let loose the bridegroom's natural depravity. An overdone roast served to touch off this inflammable material.

”-- these servants!” he exclaimed; ”I'll kick every one of them through the front window! Look at that roast!”

The doors being now open, a perfect storm of ugly, evil tempers poured forth.

At such times as these it was the custom of wife number one to s.h.i.+ver, shrink, implore-weep, then take the offending roast from the room, and replace it by something else which most likely was hurled at her, in the end.

The present Mrs. Daemon neither s.h.i.+vered nor shrank. She knew what to expect when she married this man, and she was ready. The guns were loaded and aimed, and they went off, and presto! the enemy lay dead on the dining room floor.

Instead of a roast beef solo, there was a duet, Mrs. Daemon's feminine soprano rising above her husband's masculine roar. She agreed with what he said as to the disposition of the servants, only adding that she intended to hang them all, before he put them through the front window.

”To insult us during our honeymoon with such a roast,” she cried; ”and look at this gravy! It's even worse!”

And with one swift stroke of her hand she sent the gravy bowl flying from off the table on to the handsome carpet.

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