Part 8 (1/2)

”Well--yes, in a way,” Sally admitted, adding indulgently, ”he's SUCH an idiot!”

”How do you mean?” Martie asked sharply. For Sally to flush and dimple and give herself the airs of a happy woman over the calf-like attentions of this clumsy boy of nineteen was more than absurd, it was painful. ”Sally--you couldn't! Why, you oughtn't even to be FRIENDS with Joe Hawkes!” she stammered. ”He gets--I suppose he gets twenty dollars a month.”

”On, no; more than that!” Sally said, brus.h.i.+ng her fine, silky, lifeless hair. ”He gets twenty-five from the express company, and when he meets the trains for Beetman he gets half he makes.”

Martie stood astounded at her manner. That one of the Monroe girls should be talking thus of Joe Hawkes! What mattered it to Sarah Price Monroe how much Joe Hawkes made, or how? Joe Hawkes--Grace's insignificant younger brother! Sally saw her consternation.

”Now listen, Mart, and don't have a fit,” she said, laughing. ”I'm not any crazier over Joe than you are. I know what Pa would say. I'm not likely to marry any one on thirty dollars a month, anyway. But listen, Joe has always liked me terribly--”

”I never knew it!” Martie exclaimed.

”No; well, neither did I. But last year when he broke his leg I used to go in and see him with Grace, and one day she left the room for a while, and he sort of--broke out--”

”The GALL!” e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Martie.

”Oh, no, Mart--he didn't mean it that way. Really he didn't. He just wanted--to hold my hand, you know--and that. And he never thinks of money, or getting married. And, Mart, he's so GRATEFUL, you know, for just a moment's meeting, or if I smile at him, going out of church--”

”I should think he might be!” Martie interpolated in fine scorn.

”Yes, I know how you feel, Martie,” Sally went on eagerly, ”and that's true, of course. I feel that way myself. But you don't know how miserable he makes himself about it. And does it seem wrong to you, Mart, for me just to be kind to him? I tell him--I was telling him this afternoon--that some day he'll meet some nice sweet girl younger than he, and that he'll be making more money then--you know--”

Her voice faltered. She looked wistfully at her sister.

”But I can't see why you let a big dummy like that talk to you at all!”

Martie said impatiently after a short silence. ”What do you care what he thinks? He's got a lot of nerve to DARE to talk to you that way.

I--well, I think Pa would be wild!”

”Oh, of course he would,” Sally agreed in a troubled voice. ”And I know how you feel, Martie, with Joe's aunt working for the Parkers, and all,” she added. ”I'll--I'll stop it. Truly I will. I'm only doing it to be considerate to Joe, anyway!”

”You needn't do anything on my account,” Martie said gruffly. ”But I think you ought to stop it on your own. Joe is only a kid, he doesn't know beans--much less enough to really fall in love!”

She lay awake for a long time that night, in troubled thought. Cold autumn moonlight poured into the room; a restless wind whined about the house. The cuckoo clock struck eleven--struck twelve.

At all events she HAD gone driving with Rodney; she HAD had tea at the Parkers'--

CHAPTER IV

”I honestly think that some of us ought to go down to-night and see Grandma Kelly,” said Lydia at luncheon a week later. November had come in bright and sunny, but with late dawns and early twilights. Rodney Parker's college friend having delayed his promised visit, the agitating question of the Friday Fortnightly had been temporarily laid to rest, but Martie saw him nearly every day, and family and friends alike began to change in their att.i.tude to Martie.

”I'll go,” she and Sally said together--Martie, because she was in a particularly amiable mood; Sally, perhaps because old Mrs. Kelly was Joe Hawkes's grandmother.

”Well, I wish you would, girls,” their mother said in her gentle, complaining voice. ”She's a dear old lady--a perfect saint about getting to church in all weathers! And while Pa doesn't care much about having you so intimate with the Hawkeses, he was saying this morning that Grandma Kelly is different. She was my nurse when all four of you were born, and she certainly was interested and kind.”

”We can go down about seven,” Lydia said, ”and not stay too long. But I suppose 'most every one in Monroe will run in to wish her many happy returns. Tom David's wife will come in from Westlake with Grandma's great-grandchildren, I guess, and all the others will be there.”

”That houseful alone would kill me, let alone having the whole tribe stream in, if _I_ were seventy-eight!” Martie observed. ”But I'd just as soon go. We'll see how we feel after dinner!”

And after dinner, the night being fresh and sweet, and the meal early concluded because Malcolm was delayed in Pittsville and did not return for dinner, the three Monroes pinned on their hats, powdered their noses, and b.u.t.toned on their winter coats. Any excitement added to her present ecstatic mood was enough to give Martie the bloom of a wild rose, and Sally had her own reasons for radiance. Lydia alone, walking between them, was actuated by cool motives of duty and convention and sighed as she thought of the heat and hubbub of the Hawkes's house, and the hour that must elapse before they were back in the cool night again.

The Hawkeses had always lived in one house in Monroe. It was a large, square, cheap house near the bridge, with a bare yard kept shabby by picking chickens, and a fence of struggling pickets. Behind the house, which had not been painted in the memory of man, was a yawning barn which had never been painted at all. In the yard were various odds and ends of broken machinery and old harness; a wagon-seat, on which Grandma sometimes sat sh.e.l.ling beans or peeling potatoes in the summer afternoons; old brooms, old saucepans, and lengths of rope, clotted with mud. Fuchsia and rose-bushes languished in a tipsy wire enclosure near the front door.