Part 60 (1/2)

”Mr. Ba.s.set, callin' on Miss Joyce,” was announced formally.

Martha stiffened. ”Please tell Mr. Ba.s.set I am not feeling well to-night--and beg to be excused.

She looked rather defiantly at her guest, as Lucy clattered down the long stairs; then stole to the railing and peered down the narrow well.

She heard the message given with pompous accuracy, and then heard the clear, firm tones of Mr. Ba.s.set:

”Tell Miss Joyce that I will wait.”

Martha returned to her room in three long steps, slipped off her shoes and calmly got into bed. ”Good-night, Mrs. MacAvelly,” she said. ”I'm so sorry, but my head aches and I've gone to bed! Would you be so very good as to tell Lucy so as you're going down.”

Mrs. MacAvelly said she would, and departed, and Martha lay conscientiously quiet till she heard the door shut far below.

She was quiet, but she was not contented.

Yet the discontent of Martha was as nothing to the discontent of Mrs.

Joyce, her mother, in her rural home. Here was a woman of fifty-three, alert, vigorous, nervously active; but an automobile-agitated horse had danced upon her, and her usefulness, as she understood it, was over.

She could not get about without crutches, nor use her hands for needlework, though still able to write after a fas.h.i.+on. Writing was not her _forte,_ however, at the best of times.

She lived with a widowed sister in a little, lean dusty farmhouse by the side of the road; a hill road that went nowhere in particular, and was too steep for those who were going there.

Brisk on her crutches, Mrs. Joyce hopped about the little house, there was nowhere else to hop to. She had talked her sister out long since--Mary never had never much to say. Occasionally they quarreled and then Mrs. Joyce hopped only in her room, a limited process.

She sat at the window one day, staring greedily out at the lumpy rock-ribbed road; silent, perforce, and tapping the arms of her chair with nervous intensity. Suddenly she called out, ”Mary! Mary Ames!

Come here quick! There's somebody coming up the road!”

Mary came in, as fast as she could with eggs in her ap.r.o.n. ”It's Mrs.

Holmes!” she said. ”And a boarder, I guess.”

”No, it ain't,” said Mrs. Joyce, eagerly. ”It's that woman that's visiting the Holmes--she was in church last week, Myra Slater told me about her. Her name's MacDowell, or something.”

”It ain't MacDowell,” said her sister. ”I remember; it's MacAvelly.”

This theory was borne out by Mrs. Holmes' entrance and introduction of her friend.

”Have you any eggs for us, Mrs. Ames?” she said.

”Set down--set down,” said Mrs. Ames cordially. ”I was just getting in my eggs--but here's only about eight yet. How many was you wantin'?”

”I want all you can find,” said Mrs. Holmes. ”Two dozen, three dozen--all I can carry.”

”There's two hens layin' out--I'll go and look them up. And I ain't been in the woodshed chamber yet. I'll go'n hunt. You set right here with my sister.” And Mrs. Ames bustled off.

”Pleasant view you have here,” said Mrs. MacAvelly politely, while Mrs.

Holmes rocked and fanned herself.

”Pleasant! Glad you think so, ma'am. Maybe you city folks wouldn't think so much of views if you had nothing else to look at!”

”What would you like to look at?”