Part 10 (1/2)
”I might have found out,” murmured Elizabeth contritely. ”I've just gone on enjoying myself like a child, and--and I'm afraid I've spent too much money. I haven't kept any count.”
Her husband glanced at her pretty worried face with a frown of perplexity and annoyance between his honest eyes. ”The fact is, Betty,”
he burst out, ”a poor man has no business to marry and make a woman uncomfortable and unhappy. You haven't spent but a trifle, dear, and all on the simplest, most innocent pleasures; yet it does count up so confoundedly. I wanted you to have a good time, dear, and I couldn't--bear--” He dropped into a chair and thrust his hands deep into his pockets.
”Then we _have_ been spending too much on--contingencies; why didn't you tell me before?”
He bit his lip. ”We've spent nearly every dollar of our reserve, Betty,”
he said slowly, ”and this month I'm afraid--I don't see how I am going to meet all of the bills.”
”Oh, Sam!” gasped Elizabeth, turning pale.
A voice from the softly opened kitchen door broke in upon, this crucial conversation. ”You'll please to excuse me, Mrs. Brewster, but I've had word that my mother is sick, an' I'll have to be leaving at once. My month's up in the morning anyway, an' I hope you'll not mind paying me my wages to-night.”
Her lip curled scornfully as she glanced at the tradesmen's slips scattered on the table. Miss McMurtry openly despised people who, as she expressed it, were always ”trying to save a copper cent on their meat and groceries.” She herself felt quite above such economies. One could always change one's place, and being somewhat versed in common law, she felt reasonably secure in such small pecadilloes as she had seen fit to commit while in the employ of the Brewsters.
”I should like to ask you a few questions first about these accounts,”
said the inexperienced head of the house sternly. ”How does it happen that you ordered fifteen pounds of sugar, seven pounds of b.u.t.ter and two of coffee last week? Surely Mrs. Brewster and I never consumed such an amount of provisions as I see we have paid for.”
Miss McMurtry's elbows vibrated slightly. ”I only ordered what was needed, sir,” she replied in a high, shrill voice. ”Sure, you told me yourself not to bother the madame.”
”I did tell you that, I know. I thought you were to be trusted, but this doesn't look like it.”
A fearsome change came over the countenance of the respectable young person in the frilled ap.r.o.n. ”Are you meaning to insinooate that _I_ took them groceries?” she demanded fiercely. ”I'll ask you to prove that same. Prove it, I say! It's a lie, an' I'd be willin' to swear to it in a court of justice. That's what comes of me workin' for poor folks that can't pay their bills!” Miss McMurtry swung about on her heels and included Elizabeth in the lightning of her gaze. ”I come here to accomydate her, thinkin' she was a perfec' lady, an' I've slaved night an' day in her kitchen a-tryin' my best to please her, an' this is what I gets for it! But you can't take my character away that easy; I've the best of references; an' I'll trouble you for my wages--if you can pay 'em. If not, there's ways I can collect 'em.”
”Pay her, Sam, and let her go, do!” begged Elizabeth in a frightened whisper.
”I ought not to pay the girl, I'm sure of that; but to save you further annoyance, my dear--” He counted out twenty-two dollars, and pushed the little pile of bills across the table. ”Take it,” he said peremptorily, ”and go.”
The two gazed at each other in silence while the loud trampling footsteps of the erstwhile gentle and noiseless Annita sounded in the rear. Then, when a violent and expressive bang of the kitchen door announced the fact that their domestic had finally shaken off the dust of her departure against them, Elizabeth burst into a relieved laugh.
She came presently and perched on her husband's knee.
”Sam, dear,” she murmured, ”it is all my fault, every bit of it. No; don't contradict me--nor interrupt--please! We can't afford to go on this way, and we're not going to. We'll begin over again, just as we meant to before I--” she paused while a flood of shamed colour swept over her drooped face ”--tried to be fas.h.i.+onable. It isn't really so very much fun to go to card-parties and teas and luncheons, and I don't care a bit about it all, especially if--if it is going to cost us too much; and I--can see that it has already.”
All her little newly acquired graces and affectations dropped away as she spoke, and her husband saw the sweet, womanly soul he had loved and longed for in the beginning looking out of her brown eyes. He kissed her thankfully, almost solemnly. ”Dear Betty,” he whispered.
”Couldn't we--go away from this place?” she went on after a while. ”It isn't very pleasant, is it? and--I'm almost ashamed to say it--but Evelyn Tripp has such a way of making things look different to one. What she says sounds so--so _sensible_ that I can't--at least I haven't done as I intended in hardly anything.”
”There's a little red cottage to let, with a pocket-handkerchief lawn in front and room for a garden behind, not half a mile from where we are working,” Sam told her, ”but I haven't mentioned it because it's a long way to Tremont Street and--Evelyn.” His blue eyes were full of the laughing light she had missed vaguely for more weeks than she cared to remember.
”Let's engage it to-morrow!” exclaimed Elizabeth. ”Why, Sam dear, we could have roses and strawberries and all sorts of fun out there!”
When, after missing her friend for several days, Miss Tripp called at the Brewster apartment she was astonished beyond measure to find her dearest Elizabeth busy packing some last trifles, while several brawny men were engaged in taking away the furniture.
”_My dear!_” she exclaimed. ”What _are_ you doing?”
”We're moving,” said Elizabeth tranquilly. ”You know I never cared particularly for this apartment, the rooms are so dark and unpleasant; besides the rent is too high for us.”