"Yes, I do."
Then I told him my idea. At first he said no, and it couldn"t be, and he was very sure she wouldn"t see him, even if he called. But I said she would if he would do exactly as I said. And I told him my plan.
And after a time and quite a lot of talk, he said he would agree to it.
And this morning we did it.
At exactly ten o"clock he came up the steps of the house here, but he didn"t ring the bell. I had told him not to do that, and I was on the watch for him. I knew that at ten o"clock Grandfather would be gone, Aunt Hattie probably downtown shopping, and Lester out with his governess. I wasn"t so sure of Mother, but I knew it was Sat.u.r.day, and I believed I could manage somehow to keep her here with me, so that everything would be all right there.
And I did. I had a hard time, though. Seems as if she proposed everything to do this morning--shopping, and a walk, and a call on a girl I knew who was sick. But I said I did not feel like doing anything but just to stay at home and rest quietly with her. (Which was the truth--I _didn"t_ feel like doing _anything else_!) But that almost made matters worse than ever, for she said that was so totally unlike me that she was afraid I must be sick; and I had all I could do to keep her from calling a doctor.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THEN I TOLD HIM MY IDEA]
But I did it; and at five minutes before ten she was sitting quietly sewing in her own room. Then I went downstairs to watch for Father.
He came just on the dot, and I let him in and took him into the library. Then I went upstairs and told Mother there was some one downstairs who wanted to see her.
And she said, how funny, and wasn"t there any name, and where was the maid. But I didn"t seem to hear. I had gone into my room in quite a hurry, as if I had forgotten something I wanted to do there. But, of course, I didn"t do a thing--except to make sure that she went downstairs to the library.
They"re there now _together_. And he"s been here a whole hour already.
Seems as if he ought to say _something_ in that length of time!
After I was sure Mother was down, I took out this, and began to write in it. And I"ve been writing ever since. But, oh, I do so wonder what"s going on down there. I"m so excited over--
_One week later_.
At just that minute Mother came into the room. I wish you could have seen her. My stars, but she looked pretty!--with her shining eyes and the lovely pink in her cheeks. And _young_! Honestly, I believe she looked younger than I did that minute.
She just came and put her arms around me and kissed me; and I saw then that her eyes were all misty with tears. She didn"t say a word, hardly, only that Father wanted to see me, and I was to go right down.
And I went.
I thought, of course, that she was coming too. But she didn"t. And when I got down the stairs I found I was all alone; but I went right on into the library, and there was Father waiting for me.
_He_ didn"t say much, either, at first; but just like Mother he put his arms around me and kissed me, and held me there. Then, very soon, he began to talk; and, oh, he said such beautiful things--_such_ tender, lovely, sacred things; too sacred even to write down here.
Then he kissed me again and went away.
But he came back the next day, and he"s been here some part of every day since. And, oh, what a wonderful week it has been!
They"re going to be married. It"s to-morrow. They"d have been married right away at the first, only they had to wait--something about licenses and a five-day notice, Mother said. Father fussed and fumed, and wanted to try for a special dispensation, or something; but Mother laughed, and said certainly not, and that she guessed it was just as well, for she positively _had_ to have a few things; and he needn"t think he could walk right in like that on a body and expect her to get married at a moment"s notice. But she didn"t mean it. I know she didn"t; for when Father reproached her, she laughed softly, and called him an old goose, and said, yes, of course, she"d have married him in two minutes if it hadn"t been for the five-day notice, no matter whether she ever had a new dress or not.
And that"s the way it is with them all the time. They"re too funny and lovely together for anything. (Aunt Hattie says they"re too silly for anything; but n.o.body minds Aunt Hattie.) They just can"t seem to do enough for each other. Father was going next week to a place "way on the other side of the world to view an eclipse of the moon, but he said right off he"d give it up. But Mother said, "No, indeed," she guessed he _wouldn"t_ give it up; that he was going, and that she was going, too--a wedding trip; and that she was sure she didn"t know a better place to go for a wedding trip than the moon! And Father was _so_ pleased. And he said he"d try not to pay all his attention to the stars this time; and Mother laughed and said, "Nonsense," and that she adored stars herself, and that he _must_ pay attention to the stars.
It was his business to. Then she looked very wise and got off something she"d read in the astronomy book. And they both laughed, and looked over to me to see if I was noticing. And I was. And so then we all laughed.
And, as I said before, it is all perfectly lovely and wonderful.
So it"s all settled, and they"re going right away on this trip and call it a wedding trip. And, of course, Grandfather had to get off his joke about how he thought it was a pretty dangerous business; and to see that _this_ honeymoon didn"t go into an eclipse while they were watching the other one. But n.o.body minds Grandfather.
I"m to stay here and finish school. Then, in the spring, when Father and Mother come back, we are all to go to Andersonville and begin to live in the old house again.
Won"t it be lovely? It just seems too good to be true. Why, I don"t care a bit now whether I"m Mary or Marie. But, then, n.o.body else does, either. In fact, both of them call me the whole name now, Mary Marie.
I don"t think they ever _said_ they would. They just began to do it.
That"s all.
Of course, anybody can see why: _now_ each one is calling me the other one"s name along with their own. That is, Mother is calling me Mary along with her pet Marie, and Father is calling me Marie along with his pet Mary.
Funny, isn"t it?
But one thing is sure, anyway. How about this being a love story _now_? Oh, I"m so excited!
CHAPTER IX
WHICH IS THE TEST
ANDERSONVILLE. _Twelve years later_.
_Twelve years_--yes. And I"m twenty-eight years old. Pretty old, little Mary Marie of the long ago would think. And, well, perhaps to-day I feel just as old as she would put it.
I came up into the attic this morning to pack away some things I shall no longer need, now that I am going to leave Jerry. (Jerry is my husband.) And in the bottom of my little trunk I found this ma.n.u.script. I had forgotten that such a thing existed; but with its laboriously written pages before me, it all came back to me; and I began to read; here a sentence; there a paragraph; somewhere else a page. Then, with a little half laugh and half sob, I carried it to an old rocking-chair by the cobwebby dormer window, and settled myself to read it straight through.
And I have read it.
Poor little Mary Marie! Dear little Mary Marie! To meet you like this, to share with you your joys and sorrows, hopes and despairs, of those years long ago, is like sitting hand in hand on a sofa with a childhood"s friend, each listening to an eager "And do you remember?"
falling constantly from delighted lips that cannot seem to talk half fast enough.
But you have taught me much, little Mary Marie. I understand--oh, I understand so many things so much better, now, since reading this little story in your round childish hand. You see, I had almost forgotten that I was a Mary and a Marie--Jerry calls me Mollie--and I had wondered what were those contending forces within me. I know now.
It is the Mary and the Marie trying to settle their old, old quarrel.
It was almost dark when I had finished the ma.n.u.script. The far corners of the attic were peopled with fantastic shadows, and the spiders in the window were swaying, lazy and full-stomached, in the midst of the day"s spoils of gruesome wings and legs. I got up slowly, stiffly, shivering a little. I felt suddenly old and worn and ineffably weary.
It is a long, long journey back to our childhood--sometimes, even though one may be only twenty-eight.
I looked down at the last page of the ma.n.u.script. It was written on the top sheet of a still thick pad of paper, and my fingers fairly tingled suddenly, to go on and cover those unused white sheets--tell what happened next--tell the rest of the story; not for the sake of the story--but for my sake. It might help me. It might make things clearer. It might help to justify myself in my own eyes. Not that I have any doubts, of course (about leaving Jerry, I mean), but that when I saw it in black and white I could be even more convinced that I was doing what was best for him and best for me.
So I brought the ma.n.u.script down to my own room, and this evening I have commenced to write. I can"t finish it to-night, of course. But I have to-morrow, and still to-morrow. (I have so many to-morrows now!
And what do they all amount to?) And so I"ll just keep writing, as I have time, till I bring it to the end.
I"m sorry that it must be so sad and sorry an end. But there"s no other way, of course. There can be but one ending, as I can see. I"m sorry. Mother"ll be sorry, too. She doesn"t know yet. I hate to tell her. n.o.body knows--not even Jerry himself--yet. They all think I"m just making a visit to Mother--and I am--till I write that letter to Jerry. And then--
I believe now that I"ll wait till I"ve finished writing this. I"ll feel better then. My mind will be clearer. I"ll know more what to say.
Just the effort of writing it down--
Of course, if Jerry and I hadn"t--