"Yes, but, Dwight, where has she gone? Where could she go? Where--"
"You are a question-box," said Dwight playfully. "A question-box."
Ina had burned her plump wrist on the oven. She lifted her arm and nursed it.
"I"m certainly going to miss her if she stays away very long," she remarked.
"You should be sufficient unto your little self," said Dwight.
"That"s all right," said Ina, "except when you"re getting dinner."
"I want some crust coffee," announced Monona firmly.
"You"ll have nothing of the sort," said Ina. "Drink your milk."
"As I remarked," Dwight went on, "I"m in a tiny wee bit of a hurry."
"Well, why don"t you say what for?" his Ina asked.
She knew that he wanted to be asked, and she was sufficiently willing to play his games, and besides she wanted to know. But she _was_ hot.
"I am going," said Dwight, "to take Grandma Gates out in a wheel-chair, for an hour."
"Where did you get a wheel-chair, for mercy sakes?"
"Borrowed it from the railroad company," said Dwight, with the triumph peculiar to the resourceful man. "Why I never did it before, I can"t imagine. There that chair"s been in the depot ever since I can remember--saw it every time I took the train--and yet I never once thought of grandma."
"My, Dwight," said Ina, "how good you are!"
"Nonsense!" said he.
"Well, you are. Why don"t I send her over a baked apple? Monona, you take Grandma Gates a baked apple--no. You shan"t go till you drink your milk."
"I don"t want it."
"Drink it or mamma won"t let you go."
Monona drank it, made a piteous face, took the baked apple, ran.
"The apple isn"t very good," said Ina, "but it shows my good will."
"Also," said Dwight, "it teaches Monona a life of thoughtfulness for others."
"That"s what I always think," his Ina said.
"Can"t you get mother to come out?" Dwight inquired.
"I had so much to do getting dinner onto the table, I didn"t try," Ina confessed.
"You didn"t have to try," Mrs. Bett"s voice sounded. "I was coming when I got rested up."
She entered, looking vaguely about. "I want Lulie," she said, and the corners of her mouth drew down. She ate her dinner cold, appeased in vague areas by such martyrdom. They were still at table when the front door opened.
"Monona hadn"t ought to use the front door so common," Mrs. Bett complained.
But it was not Monona. It was Lulu and Cornish.
"Well!" said Dwight, tone curving downward.
"Well!" said Ina, in replica.
"Lulie!" said Mrs. Bett, and left her dinner, and went to her daughter and put her hands upon her.
"We wanted to tell you first," Cornish said. "We"ve just got married."
"For _ever_ more!" said Ina.
"What"s this?" Dwight sprang to his feet. "You"re joking!" he cried with hope.
"No," Cornish said soberly. "We"re married--just now. Methodist parsonage. We"ve had our dinner," he added hastily.
"Where"d you have it?" Ina demanded, for no known reason.
"The bakery," Cornish replied, and flushed.
"In the dining-room part," Lulu added.
Dwight"s sole emotion was his indignation.
"What on earth did you do it for?" he put it to them. "Married in a bakery--"
No, no. They explained it again. Neither of them, they said, wanted the fuss of a wedding.
Dwight recovered himself in a measure. "I"m not surprised, after all,"
he said. "Lulu usually marries in this way."
Mrs. Bett patted her daughter"s arm. "Lulie," she said, "why, Lulie. You ain"t been and got married twice, have you? After waitin" so long?"
"Don"t be disturbed, Mother Bett," Dwight cried. "She wasn"t married that first time, if you remember. No marriage about it!"
Ina"s little shriek sounded.
"Dwight!" she cried. "Now everybody"ll have to know that. You"ll have to tell about Ninian now--and his other wife!"
Standing between her mother and Cornish, an arm of each about her, Lulu looked across at Ina and Dwight, and they all saw in her face a horrified realisation.
"Ina!" she said. "Dwight! You _will_ have to tell now, won"t you? Why I never thought of that."