



Produced by Emmy, Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was
produced from scanned images of public domain material
from the Google Print project.)










AUNT CRETE’S EMANCIPATION

[Illustration: “SHE WATCHED LUELLA’S DISMAYED FACE WITH GROWING
ALARM”]




Aunt Crete’s Emancipation


    BY
    GRACE LIVINGSTON HILL-LUTZ
    Author of “The Girl from Montana,”
    “The Story of a Whim,” Etc.


    ILLUSTRATIONS BY
    CLARA E. ATWOOD


    THE GOLDEN RULE COMPANY
    TREMONT TEMPLE
    BOSTON, MASS.




    _Copyright, 1911_

    BY THE GOLDEN RULE COMPANY




CONTENTS


    CHAPTER                                      PAGE
       I. A TELEGRAM AND A FLIGHT                  11
      II. THE BACKWOODS COUSIN                     25
     III. A WONDERFUL DAY                          39
      IV. AUNT CRETE TRANSFORMED                   61
       V. LUELLA AND HER MOTHER ARE MYSTIFIED      79
      VI. AN EMBARRASSING MEETING                  96
     VII. LUELLA’S HUMILIATION                    117
    VIII. AUNT CRETE’S PARTNERSHIP                132




LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


                                                             PAGE
    “SHE WATCHED LUELLA’S DISMAYED FACE WITH GROWING
            ALARM”        _Frontispiece_
    “HE HELPED WITH VIGOR”                                     31
    “DONALD WATCHED HER WITH SATISFACTION”                     52
    “SHE BEAMED UPON THE WHOLE TRAINFUL OF PEOPLE”             63
    “‘SOMEWHERE I HAVE SEEN THAT WOMAN,’ EXCLAIMED LUELLA’S
            MOTHER”                                            81
    “THEY STOOD FACE TO FACE WITH THE WONDERFUL LADY IN
            THE GRAY GOWN”                                    102
    “‘IT’S A LIE! I SAY IT’S A LIE!’”                         123
    “AUNT CRETE WAS AT LAST EMANCIPATED”                      143




Aunt Crete’s Emancipation




CHAPTER I

A TELEGRAM AND A FLIGHT


“WHO’S at the front door?” asked Luella’s mother, coming in from
the kitchen with a dish-towel in her hand. “I thought I heard the
door-bell.”

“Luella’s gone to the door,” said her sister from her vantage-point at
the crack of the sitting-room door. “It looks to me like a telegraph
boy.”

“It couldn’t be, Crete,” said Luella’s mother impatiently, coming to
see for herself. “Who would telegraph now that Hannah’s dead?”

Lucretia was short and dumpy, with the comfortable, patient look of the
maiden aunt that knows she is indispensable because she will meekly
take all the burdens that no one else wants to bear. Her sister could
easily look over her head into the hall, and her gaze was penetrative
and alert.

“I’m sure I don’t know, Carrie,” said Lucretia apprehensively; “but I’m
all of a tremble. Telegrams are dreadful things.”

“Nonsense, Crete, you always act like such a baby. Hurry up, Luella.
Don’t stop to read it. Your aunt Crete will have a fit. Wasn’t there
anything to pay? Who is it for?”

Luella, a rather stout young woman in stylish attire, with her mother’s
keen features unsoftened by sentiment, advanced, irreverently tearing
open her mother’s telegram and reading it as she came. It was one of
the family grievances that Luella was stout like her aunt instead
of tall and slender like her mother. The aunt always felt secretly
that they somehow blamed her for being of that type. “It makes one so
hard to fit,” Luella’s mother remarked frequently, and adding with a
disparaging glance at her sister’s dumpy form, “So impossible!”

At such times the aunt always wrinkled up her pleasant little
forehead into a V upside down, and trotted off to her kitchen, or her
buttonholes, or whatever was the present task, sighing helplessly. She
tried to be the best that she could always; but one couldn’t help one’s
figure, especially when one was partly dependent on one’s family for
support, and dressmakers and tailors took so much money. It was bad
enough to have one stout figure to fit in the family without two; and
the aunt always felt called upon to have as little dressmaking done
as possible, in order that Luella’s figure might be improved from the
slender treasury. “Clothes do make a big difference,” she reflected.
And sometimes when she was all alone in the twilight, and there was
really nothing that her alert conscience could possibly put her hand to
doing for the moment, she amused herself by thinking what kind of dress
she would buy, and who should make it, if she should suddenly attain a
fortune. But this was a harmless amusement, inasmuch as she never let
it make her discontented with her lot, or ruffle her placid brow for an
instant.

But just now she was “all of a tremble,” and the V in her forehead was
rapidly becoming a double V. She watched Luella’s dismayed face with
growing alarm.

“For goodness’ sake alive!” said Luella, flinging herself into the most
comfortable rocker, and throwing her mother’s telegram on the table.
“That’s not to be tolerated! Something’ll have to be done. We’ll have
to go to the shore at once, mother. I should die of mortification to
have a country cousin come around just now. What would the Grandons
think if they saw him? I can’t afford to ruin all my chances for a
cousin I’ve never seen. Mother, you simply must do something. I won’t
stand it!”

“What in the world are you talking about, Luella?” said her mother
impatiently. “Why didn’t you read the telegram aloud, or why didn’t you
give it to me at once? Where are my glasses?”

The aunt waited meekly while her sister found her glasses, and read the
telegram.

“Well, I declare! That is provoking to have him turn up just now of
all times. Something must be done, of course. We can’t have a gawky
Westerner around in the way. And, as you say, we’ve never seen him. It
can’t make much difference to him whether he sees us or not. We can
hurry off, and be conveniently out of the way. It’s probably only a
‘duty visit’ he’s paying, anyway. Hannah’s been dead ten years, and
I always heard the child was more like his father than his mother.
Besides, Hannah married and went away to live when I was only a little
girl. I really don’t think Donald has much claim on us. What a long
telegram! It must have cost a lot. Was it paid for? It shows he knows
nothing of the world, or he would have put it in a few words. Well,
we’ll have to get away at once.”

She crumpled the telegram into a ball, and flung it to the table
again; but it fell wide of its mark, and dropped to the floor instead.
The aunt patiently stooped and picked it up, smoothing out the crushed
yellow paper.

“Hannah’s boy!” she said gently, and she touched the yellow paper as if
it had been something sacred.

    “Am taking a trip East, and shall make you a little visit if
    convenient. Will be with you sometime on Thursday.

                                                DONALD GRANT.”

She sat down suddenly in the nearest chair. Somehow the relief from
anxiety had made her knees weak. “Hannah’s boy!” she murmured again,
and laid her hand caressingly over the telegram, smoothing down a torn
place in the edge of the paper.

Luella and her mother were discussing plans. They had decided that they
must leave on the early train the next morning, before there was any
chance of the Western visitor’s arriving.

“Goodness! Look at Aunt Crete,” said Luella, laughing. “She looks as if
she had seen a ghost. Her lips are all white.”

“Crete, you oughtn’t to be such a fool. As if a telegram would hurt
you! There’s nobody left to be worried about like that. Why don’t you
use your reason a little?”

“Hannah’s boy is really coming!” beamed Aunt Crete, ignoring their
scorn of herself.

“Upon my word! Aunt Crete, you look as if it were something to be glad
about, instead of a downright calamity.”

“Glad; of course I’m glad, Luella. Wouldn’t you be glad to see your
oldest sister’s child? Hannah was always very dear to me. I can see
her now the way she looked when she went away, so tall and slim and
pretty——”

“Not if she’d been dead for a century or so, and I’d never seen the
child, and he was a gawky, embarrassing creature who would spoil the
prospects of the people I was supposed to love,” retorted Luella. “Aunt
Crete, don’t you care the least bit for my happiness? Do you want it
all spoiled?”

“Why, of course not, dearie,” beamed Aunt Crete, “but I don’t see how
it will spoil your happiness. I should think you’d want to see him
yourself.”

“Aunt Crete! The idea! He’s nothing to me. You know he’s lived away out
in the wild West all his life. He probably never had much schooling,
and doesn’t know how to dress or behave in polite society. I heard
he went away off up in the Klondike somewhere, and worked in a mine.
You can imagine just what a wild, ignorant creature he will be. If
Clarence Grandon should see him, he might imagine my family were all
like that; and then where would I be?”

“Yes, Crete, I’m surprised at you. You’ve been so anxious all along for
Luella to shine in society, and now you talk just as if you didn’t care
in the least what happened,” put in Luella’s mother.

“But what can you do?” asked Aunt Crete. “You can’t tell him not to
come—your own sister’s child!”

“O, how silly you are, Crete!” said her sister. “No, of course we can’t
very well tell him not to come, as he hasn’t given us a chance; for
this telegram is evidently sent on the way. It is dated ‘Chicago,’ and
he hasn’t given us a trace of an address. He doesn’t live in Chicago.
He’s very likely almost here, and may arrive any time to-morrow. Now
you know we’ve simply got to go to the shore next week, for the rooms
are all engaged at the hotel, and paid for; and we might as well hurry
up and get off to-night or early in the morning, and escape him. Luella
would die of mortification if she had to cousin that fellow and give
up her trip to the shore. As you weren’t going anyway, you can receive
him. It will keep him quietly at home, for he won’t expect an old
woman to go out with him, and show him the sights; so nobody will
notice him much, and there won’t be a lot of talk. If he looks very
ridiculous, and that prying Mrs. Brown next door speaks of it, you
might explain he’s the son of an old school friend who went out West to
live years ago——”

“O Carrie!” exclaimed Aunt Crete, “that wouldn’t be true; and, besides,
he can’t be so very bad as that. And even if he is, I shall love
him—for he’s Hannah’s boy.”

“Love him all you want to,” sniffed her sister, “but for pity’s sake
don’t let the neighbors know what relation he is.”

“That’s just like you, Aunt Crete,” said Luella in a hurt tone. “You’ve
known me and pretended to love me all your life. I’m almost like your
own child, and yet you take up with this unknown nephew, and say you’ll
love him in spite of all the trouble he’s making me.”

Aunt Crete doubled the V in her forehead, and wiped away the beads of
perspiration. Somehow it always seemed that she was in the wrong. Would
she be understood in heaven? she wondered.

Luella and her mother went on planning. They told off what Aunt Crete
was to do after they left.

“There’s the raspberries and blackberries not done up yet, Crete, but
I guess you can manage alone. You always do the biggest part of the
canning, anyway. I’m awfully sorry about your sewing, Crete. I meant to
fit your two thin dresses before we went away, but the dressmaker made
Luella’s things so much more elaborate than I expected that we really
haven’t had a minute’s time, what with all the lace insertion she left
for us to sew on. Perhaps you better run down to Miss Mason, and see if
she has time to fit them, if you think you can’t wait till we get back.
You’ll hardly be going out much while we’re gone, you know.”

“O, I’ll be all right,” said Aunt Crete happily. “I guess I can fix up
my gray lawn for while Donald’s here.”

“Donald! Nonsense! It won’t matter what you wear while he’s here. He’ll
never know a calico from a silk. Now look here, Crete, you’ve got to be
awfully careful, or you’ll let out when we went off. There’s no use in
his finding out we didn’t want to see him. You wouldn’t want to hurt
his feelings, you know. Your own sister’s child!”

“No, of course not,” agreed Aunt Crete, though there was a troubled
look in her eyes. She never liked prevarication; and, when she was left
with some polite fabrication to excuse her relatives out of something
they wanted to shirk, she nearly always got it twisted so that it was
either an out-and-out lie, which horrified her, or else let the whole
thing “out of the bag,” as Luella said.

But there was little time for discussion; for Luella and her mother had
a great deal of packing to do, and Aunt Crete had the dinner to get and
the house to set in order, surreptitiously, for the expected guest.

They hurried away the next morning in a whirl of bags and suitcases and
parasols and umbrellas. They had baggage enough for a year in Europe,
although they expected to stay only two or three weeks at the shore
at most. Aunt Crete helped them into the station-cab, ran back to
the house for Luella’s new raincoat, back again for the veil and her
sister’s gloves, and still a third time to bring the new book, which
had been set aside for reading on the journey. Then at last they were
gone, and with one brief sigh of satisfaction Aunt Crete permitted
herself to reflect that she was actually left alone to receive a dear
guest all her own.

Never in all her maiden existence had she had this pleasure before. She
might use the best china, and have three kinds of pie at once, yes, and
plum-cake if she chose. Boys like pie and cake. Donald would be a big,
nice boy.

What did it matter to her if he was awkward and from the West? He was
in a large sense her own. Hannah was gone, and there was no one else to
take a closer place. Who but his mother’s sister should have the right
to mother him for a while? He would be her own as Luella never had
been, because there was always Luella’s mother to take the first place.
Besides, Luella had been a disappointing baby. Even in her infancy
she had developed an independence that scorned kissing and cuddling.
Luella always had too many selfish interests on hand to have time for
breathing out love and baby graces to admiring subjects. Her frown was
always quicker than her smile. But somehow Aunt Crete felt that it
would be different with this boy, and her heart swelled within her as
she hurried into the house to make ready for his coming.

The front hall was littered with rose-leaves. Luella had shaken a
bunch of roses to get rid of the loose leaves, and had found they were
all loose leaves; therefore she flung them down upon the floor. She had
meant to wear them with her new pongee travelling-suit. It looked well
to wear roses on a journey, for it suggested a possible admirer. But
the roses had not held out, and now Aunt Crete must sweep them up.

A glance into the parlor showed peanut-shells scattered over the floor
and on the table. A few of Luella’s friends had come in for a few
minutes the evening before, and they had indulged in peanuts, finishing
up by throwing the shells at one another amid shouts of hilarious
laughter. Aunt Crete went for the broom and dust-pan. If he came early,
the hall and parlor must be in order first.

Luella and her mother had little time to waste, for the tickets were
barely bought and the trunks checked before the train thundered up.
It was a through vestibuled train; and, as Luella struggled up the
steps of one car with her heavy suitcase, a tall young man with dark,
handsome eyes and a distinguished manner swung himself down the steps
of the next car.

“Hello, Luella!” called a voice from a pony-cart by the platform.
“You’re not going away to-day, are you? Thought you said you weren’t
going till next week.”

“Circumstances made it necessary,” called Luella from the top step of
the car while the porter held up the suitcase for her to take. “I’m
running away from a backwoods cousin that’s coming to visit. I’ll write
and tell you all about it. Good-by. Sorry I can’t be at your house
to-morrow night, but it couldn’t be helped.”

Then Luella turned another gaze upon the handsome stranger, who was
standing on the platform just below her, looking about interestedly.
She thought he had looked at her more than casually; and, as
she settled herself in the seat, she glanced down at her pongee
travelling-suit consciously, feeling that he could but have thought she
looked well.

He was still standing on the platform as the train moved out, and
Luella could see the girl in the pony-cart turn her attention to him.
She half wished she were sitting in the pony-cart too. It would be
interesting to find out who he was. Luella preened herself, and settled
her large hat in front of the strip of mirror between the windows,
and then looked around the car that she might see who were her fellow
passengers.

“Well, I’m glad we’re off,” said her mother nervously. “I was afraid as
could be your cousin might come in on that early through train before
we got started. It would have been trying if he’d come just as we were
getting away. I don’t know how we could have explained it.”

“Yes,” said Luella. “I’m glad we’re safely off. He’ll never suspect
now.”

It was just at that moment that the grocery-boy arrived at the back
door with a crate of red raspberries.

“Land alive!” said Miss Crete disappointedly. “I hoped those wouldn’t
come till to-morrow.” She bustled about, taking the boxes out of the
crate so that the boy might take it back; and before she was done the
door-bell rang.

“Land alive!” said Miss Crete again as she wiped her hands on the
kitchen towel and hurried to the front door, taking off her apron as
she went. “I do hope he hasn’t come yet. I haven’t cleared off that
breakfast-table; and, if he should happen to come out, there’s three
plates standing.”

But the thought had come too late. The dining-room door was stretched
wide open, and the table in full view. The front door was guarded only
by the wire screen. The visitor had been able to take full notes, if he
so desired.




CHAPTER II

THE BACKWOODS COUSIN


MISS LUCRETIA opened the screen, and noticed the fine appearance of the
young man standing there. He was not shabby enough for an agent. Some
one had made a mistake, she supposed. She waited pleasantly for him to
tell his errand.

“Is this where Mrs. Carrie Burton lives?” he asked, removing his hat
courteously.

And, when she answered, “Yes,” his whole face broke into dancing
eagerness.

“Is this my Aunt Carrie? I wonder”; and he held out a tentative,
appealing hand for welcome. “I’m Donald Grant.”

“O!” said Miss Lucretia delightedly, “O!” and she took his hand in both
her own. “No, I ain’t your Aunt Carrie, I’m your Aunt Crete; but I’m
just as glad to see you. I didn’t think you’d be so big and handsome.
Your Aunt Carrie isn’t home. They’ve just—why—that is—they are—they had
planned to be at the shore for three weeks, and they’ll be real sorry
when they know——.” This last sentence was added with extra zeal, for
Aunt Crete exulted in the fact that Carrie and Luella would indeed be
sorry if they could look into their home for one instant and see the
guest from whom they had run away. She felt sure that if they had known
how fine-looking a young man he was, they would have stayed and been
proud of him.

“I’m sorry they are away,” said the young man, stooping to kiss Aunt
Crete’s plump, comfortable cheek; “but I’m mighty glad you’re at home,
Aunt Crete,” he said with genuine pleasure. “I’m going to like you for
all I’m worth to make up for the absence of my aunt and cousin. You say
they have gone to the shore. When will they be at home? Is their stay
there almost up?”

“Why, no,” said Aunt Crete, flushing uncomfortably. “They haven’t been
gone long. And they’ve engaged their rooms there for three weeks at
a big hotel. Luella, she’s always been bound to go to one of those
big places where rich people go, the Traymore. It’s advertised in all
the papers. I expect you’ve seen it sometimes. It’s one of the most
expensive places at the shore. I’ve almost a notion to write and tell
them to come home, for I’m sure they’ll be sorry when they hear about
you; but you see it’s this way. There’s a young man been paying Luella
some attention, and he’s going down there soon; I don’t know but he’s
there already; and his mother and sister are spending the whole season
there; so Luella had her heart set on going down and boarding at the
same hotel.”

“Ah, I see,” said the nephew. “Well, it wouldn’t do to spoil my
cousin’s good time. Perhaps we can run down to the shore for a few
days ourselves after we get acquainted. Say, Aunt Crete, am I too late
for a bite of breakfast? I was so tired of the stuff they had on the
dining-car I thought I’d save up my appetite till I got here, for I
made sure you’d have a bite of bread and butter, anyway.”

“Bless your dear heart, yes,” said Aunt Crete, delighted to have the
subject turned; for she had a terrible fear she would yet tell a lie
about the departure of her sister and niece, and a lie was a calamity
not always easily avoided in a position like hers. “You just sit
down here, you dear boy, and wait about two minutes till I set the
coffee-pot over the fire and cut some more bread. It isn’t a mite of
trouble, for I hadn’t cleared off the breakfast-table yet. In fact, I
hadn’t rightly finished my own breakfast, I was so busy getting to
rights. The grocery-boy came, and—well, I never can eat much when folks
are going—I mean when I’m alone,” she finished triumphantly.

She hurried out into the dining-room to get the table cleared off,
but Donald followed her. She tried to scuttle the plates together and
remove all traces of the number of guests at the meal just past, but
she could not be sure whether he noticed the table or not.

“May I help you?” asked the young man, grabbing Luella’s plate and
cup, and following her into the kitchen. “It’s so good to get into a
real home again with somebody who belongs to me. You know father is in
Mexico, and I’ve been in the university for the last four years.”

“The university!” Aunt Crete’s eyes shone. “Do you have universities
out West? My! Won’t Luella be astonished? I guess she thinks out West
is all woods.”

Donald’s eyes danced.

“We have a few good schools out there,” he said quietly.

While they were eating the breakfast that Aunt Crete prepared in an
incredibly short space of time, Donald asked a great many questions.
What did his aunt and cousin look like? Was Aunt Carrie like her, or
like his mother? And Luella, had she been to college? And what did she
look like?

Aunt Crete told him mournfully that Luella was more like herself than
like her mother. “And it seems sometimes as if she blamed me for it,”
said the patient aunt. “It makes it hard, her being a sort of society
girl, and wanting to look so fine. Dumpy figures like mine don’t dress
up pretty, you know. No, Luella never went to college. She didn’t take
much to books. She liked having a good time with young folks better.
She’s been wanting to go down to the shore and be at a real big hotel
for three summers now, but Carrie never felt able to afford it before.
We’ve been saving up all winter for Luella to have this treat, and
I do hope she’ll have a good time. It’s real hard on her, having to
stay right home all the time when all her girl friends go off to the
shore. But you see she’s got in with some real wealthy people who
stay at expensive places, and she isn’t satisfied to go to a common
boarding-house. It must be nice to have money and go to a big hotel.
I’ve never been in one myself; but Luella has, and she’s told all about
it. I should think it would be grand to live that way awhile with not a
thing to do.”

[Illustration: “HE HELPED WITH VIGOR”]

“They ought to have taken you along, Aunt Crete,” said the young man.
“I do hope I didn’t keep you at home to entertain me.”

“O, no, bless your heart,” said the aunt, “I wasn’t going. I never go
anywhere. Why, what kind of a figure would I cut there? It would spoil
all Luella’s good time to have me around, I’m so short-waisted. She
always wants me to wear a coat when I go anywhere with her, so people
won’t see how short-waisted I am.”

“Nonsense,” said Donald. “I think you are lovely, Aunt Crete. You’ve
got such pretty white hair, all wavy like mother’s; and you’ve got a
fine face. Luella ought to be proud to have you.”

Aunt Crete blushed over the compliment, and choking tears of joy
throbbed for a minute in her throat.

“Now hear the boy!” she exclaimed. “Donald, do have another cup of
coffee.”

After breakfast Aunt Crete showed her guest to his room, and then
hurried down to get the stack of dishes out of the way before he came
down again. But he appeared in the kitchen door in a few minutes.

“Give me a dish and some berries,” he demanded. “I’m going to help
you.”

And despite all her protests he helped with such vigor that by twelve
o’clock twenty-one jars of crimson berries stood in a shining row on
the kitchen table, and Aunt Crete was dishing up a savory dinner for
two, with her face shining as brightly as if she had done nothing but
play the whole morning.

“We did well, didn’t we?” said Donald as he ate his dinner. “I haven’t
had such a good time since I went camping in the Klondike. Now after we
get these dishes washed you are going to take a nice long nap. You look
tired and warm.”

Aunt Crete protested that she was not tired, but Donald insisted. “I
want you to get nice and rested up, because to-morrow we’re going
shopping. By the way, I’ve brought you a present.” He sprang up from
the table, and went to his suitcase to get it.

Aunt Crete’s heart beat with anticipation as he handed her a little
white box. What if it should be a breastpin? How she would like that!
She had worn her mother’s, a braid of hair under a glass, with a gold
band under it, ever since she was grown up; and sometimes she felt as
if it was a little old-fashioned. Luella openly scoffed at it, and
laughed at her for wearing it; but no one ever suggested getting her a
new one, and, if she had ventured to buy one for herself, she knew they
would have thought her extravagant.

She opened the box with excited fingers, and there inside was a little
leather case. Donald touched a spring, and it flew open and disclosed a
lovely star made all of seed-pearls, reposing on white velvet. It was a
“breastpin” indeed, and one fit for a queen. Fortunately Aunt Crete did
not know enough about jewelry to realize what it cost, or her breath
might have been taken away. As it was, she was dumb for the moment.
Such a beautiful pin, and for her! She could scarcely believe it. She
gazed and gazed, and then, laying the box on the table, rose up and
took Donald’s face in her two toil-worn hands, and kissed him.

“I’m glad you like it,” he said with a pleased smile. “I wasn’t quite
sure what to get, but the salesman told me these were always nice. Now
let’s get at these dishes.”

In a daze of happiness Aunt Crete washed the dishes while Donald wiped
them, and then despite her protests he made her go up-stairs and lie
down.

When had she ever taken a nap in the daytime before? Not since she was
a little girl and fell from the second-story window. The family had
rushed around her frightened, and put her to bed in the daytime; and
for one whole day she had been waited upon and cared for tenderly. Then
she had been able to get up; and the hard, careless, toilsome world
had rushed on again for her. But the memory of that blessed day of
rest, touched by gentleness, had lingered forever a bright spot in her
memory. She had always been the one that did the hard things in her
family, even when she was quite young.

Aunt Crete lay cautiously down upon her neatly made bed after she
had attired herself in her best gown, a rusty black and white silk
made over from one Luella had grown tired of, and clasped her hands
blissfully on her breast, resting with her eyes wide open and a light
of joy upon her face. She hardly felt it right to relax entirely, lest
Donald might call her; but finally the unaccustomed position in the
middle of the day sent her off into a real doze, and just about that
time the telephone bell rang.

The telephone was in the sitting-room down-stairs. It had been put in
at the time when the telephone company were putting them in free to
introduce them in that suburb. It was ordinarily a source of great
interest to the whole family, though it seldom rang except for Luella.
Luella and her mother were exceedingly proud of its possession.

Donald was in the sitting-room reading. He looked up from his paper,
hesitated a moment, and then took down the receiver. Perhaps his aunt
was asleep already, and he could attend to this without waking her.

“Hello; is this 53 M?”

Donald glanced at the number on the telephone, and answered, “Yes.”

“Here you are, Atlantic. Here is Midvale,” went on the voice of the
operator at central.

“Hello! Is that you Aunt Crete? This is Luella,” came another girl’s
strident voice in hasty impatience. “What in the world were you so
long about answering the ’phone for? I’ve been waiting here an age.
Now, listen, Aunt Crete. For heaven’s sake don’t you tell that crazy
cousin of ours where to find us, or like as not he’ll take a notion
to run down here and see us; and I should simply die of mortification
if he did. This is a very swell hotel, and it would be fierce to have
a backwoods relation appear on the scene. Now be sure you keep dark.
I’ll never forgive you if you don’t. And say, Aunt Crete, won’t you
please sew on the rest of that Val edging down the ruffles of the waist
and on the skirt of my new lavender organdie, and do it up, and send
it by mail? I forgot all about it. It’s on the bed in the spare room,
and the edging is started. You sew it on the way it is begun. You’ll
see. Now don’t you go to sewing it on in that old way because it is
quicker; for it doesn’t look a bit pretty, and you’ve nothing much
else to do, now we’re gone, anyway. And say, Aunt Crete, would you
mind going down to Peters’s to-day, and telling Jennie I forgot all
about getting those aprons to finish for the fair, and tell her you’ll
finish them for her? Do it to-day, because she has to send the box off
by the end of the week. And mother says you better clean the cellar
right away, and she wondered if you’d feel equal to whitewashing it. I
should think you’d like to do that, it’s so cool this warm weather to
be down cellar. And, O, yes, if you get lonesome and want something to
do, I forgot to tell you I left those three flannel shirt-waists all
cut out ready to be made in the upper bureau drawer of the spare room.
Now don’t read your eyes out the way you did the last time we went off
and left you, and have to wear dark glasses for a week, because I have
lots of things planned to do when I get home. I’m going to have Helena
Bates for a week, and there’ll be several lunches and picnics doing.
O, say, Aunt Crete, mother says, if there’s any more pie-cherries to
be had, you better put up some; and be sure and stone them all. I just
hate them with the seeds in. And I guess that’s all; only don’t forget
you promised to have all those buttonholes worked for me in those
underclothes I’m making, before I get back. Are you all right? Let
me see. There was something else. O, yes, mother says you don’t need
to get out the best china and make a great fuss as if you had grand
company; he’s only a country boy, you know. Say, Aunt Crete. Are you
there? Why don’t you answer? Aunt Crete! Hello! For pity’s sake, what
is the matter with this ’phone? Hello, central! O, dear! I suppose
she’s gone away. That’s the way Aunt Crete always does!”

Donald, a strange, amused expression upon his face, stood listening and
hesitating. He did not know exactly what to do. Without any intention
at all he had listened to a conversation not intended for his ears.
Should he answer and tell who he was? No, for that would but embarrass
Luella. Neither would it do to call Aunt Crete now, for they would
be sure to find out he had heard. Perhaps it was better to keep
entirely still. There seemed to be nothing serious at stake. Ruffles,
and shirt-waists, and gingham aprons for a guild, and whitewashing
the cellar! Nobody would die if none of them were done, and his blood
boiled over the tone in which the invisible cousin at the other end
of the wire had ordered Aunt Crete about. He could read the whole
life-story of the patient self-sacrifice on the one hand and imposition
on the other. He felt strongly impelled to do something in the matter.
A rebuke of some sort should be administered. How could it best be done?

Meantime Luella was fuming with the telephone girl, and the girl was
declaring that she could get no answer from Midvale any more. Donald
stood wickedly enjoying their discomfiture, and was at last rewarded by
hearing Luella say: “Well, I guess I’ve said all I want to say, anyway;
so you needn’t ring them up again. I’ve got to go out boating now.” The
receiver at the shore clicked into place, and the connection was cut
off.

Then the young man hung up the receiver at the Midvale end of the line,
and sat down to think. Bit by bit he pieced together the story until
he had very nearly made out the true state of affairs. So they were
ashamed of him, and were trying to get away. Could it be possible that
they had been the people that got on the train as he got off? Was that
girl with the loud voice and the pongee suit his cousin? The voice over
the telephone seemed like the one that had called to the girl in the
pony-cart. And had his eyes deceived him, or were there three plates on
the breakfast-table that morning? Poor Aunt Crete! He would give her
the best time he knew how, and perhaps it was also set for him to give
his cousin a lesson.




CHAPTER III

A WONDERFUL DAY


AUNT CRETE woke up at last from an uncomfortable dream. She thought
Carrie and Luella had come back, and were about to snatch Donald away
from her and bear him off to the shore.

She arose in haste and smoothed her hair, astonished at the freshness
of her own face in the glass. She was afraid she had overslept and
lost some of the precious time with Donald. There was so much to ask
him, and he was so good to look at. She hurried down and was received
warmly. Donald’s meditations had culminated in a plan.

“Sit down, Aunt Crete; are you sure you are rested? Then I want to
talk. Suppose we run down to the shore and surprise the folks. How soon
could you be ready?”

“O dear heart! I couldn’t do that!” exclaimed Aunt Crete, her face
nevertheless alight with pleasure at the very thought.

“Why not? What’s to hinder?”

“O, I never go. I always stay at home and attend to things.”

“But that’s no reason. Why couldn’t things attend to themselves?”

“Why, I couldn’t leave the house alone.”

“Now, what in the world could possibly happen to the house that you
could prevent by staying in it? Be reasonable, dear aunt. You know the
house won’t run away while you are gone, and, if it does, I’ll get you
another one. You don’t mean to tell me you never go off on a vacation.
Then it’s high time you went, and you’ll have to stay the longer to
make up for lost time. Besides, I want your company. I’ve never seen
the Eastern coast, and expect to enjoy it hugely; but I need somebody
to enjoy it with me. I can’t half take things in alone. I want somebody
my very own to go with me. That’s what I came here for. I had thought
of inviting you all to go down for a little trip; but, as the others
are down there, why, we can join them.”

Aunt Crete’s face clouded. What would Luella say at having them appear
on her horizon? The young man was all right, apparently, but there was
no telling how angry Luella might be if her aunt came. She knew that
Luella preferred to keep her in the background.

“I really couldn’t go, dear,” she said wistfully. “I’d like it with
all my heart. And it would be specially nice to go with you, for I
never had anybody to go round with me, not since your mother was a girl
and used to take me with her wherever she went. I missed her dreadfully
after she was married and went West. She was always so good to me.”

The young man’s face softened, and he reached his hand impulsively
across the table, and grasped the toil-worn hand of his aunt.

“Well, you shall have somebody to go round with you now, auntie; that
is, if you’ll let me. I’m not going to take ‘No’ for an answer. You
just must go. We’ll have a vacation all by ourselves, and do just as we
please, and we’ll bring up at the hotel where Aunt Carrie and Luella
are, and surprise them.”

“But, child, I can’t!” said Aunt Crete in dismay, seeing his
determination. “Why, I haven’t any clothes suitable to wear away from
home. We were all so busy getting Luella fixed out that there wasn’t
any time left for mine, and it didn’t really matter about me anyway. I
never go anywhere.”

“But you’re going now, Aunt Lucretia,” said he; “and it does matter,
you see. Clothes are easily bought. We’ll go shopping after breakfast
to-morrow morning.”

“But I really can’t afford it, Donald,” said his aunt with an air of
finality. “You know I’m not rich. If Carrie weren’t good enough to give
me a home here, I shouldn’t know how to make two ends meet.”

“Never mind that, Aunt Crete; this is my layout, and I’m paying for it.
We’ll go shopping to-morrow morning. I’ve got some money in my pocket
I’m just aching to spend. The fact is, Aunt Crete, I struck gold up
there in the Klondike, and I’ve got more money than I know what to do
with.”

“O!” said Aunt Crete with awe in her voice at the thought of having
more money than one knew what to do with. Then shyly, “But——”

“But what, Aunt Lucretia?” asked Donald as she hesitated and flushed
till the double V came into her forehead in the old helpless, worried
way.

“Why, there’s lots of canning and house-cleaning that has got to be
done, and I don’t really think Carrie would like it to have me leave it
all, and run away on a pleasure excursion.”

Righteous indignation filled the heart of the nephew. “Well, I should
like to know why she wouldn’t like it!” he exclaimed impulsively.
“Has she any better right to have a vacation than you? I’m sure you’ve
earned it. You blessed little woman, you’re going to have a vacation
now, in spite of yourself. Just put your conscience away in pink cotton
till we get back—though I don’t know whether I shall let you come back
to stay. I may spirit you off with me somewhere if I don’t like the
looks of my cousin. I’ll take all the responsibility of this trip. If
Aunt Carrie doesn’t like it, she may visit her wrath on me, and I’ll
tell her just what I think of her. Anyhow, to the shore you are going
right speedily; that is, if you want to go. If there’s some other place
you’d rather go besides to the Traymore, speak the word, and there
we’ll go. I want you to have a good time.”

Aunt Crete gasped with joy. The thought of the ocean, the real ocean,
was wonderful. She had dreamed of it many times, but never had seen it,
because she was always the one who could just as well stay at home as
not. She never got run down or nervous or cross, and was ordered to go
away for her health; and she never insisted upon going when the rest
went. Her heart was bounding as it had not bounded since the morning
of the last Sunday-school picnic she had attended when she was a girl.

“Indeed, dear boy, I do want to go with all my heart if I really ought.
I have always wanted to see the ocean, and I can’t imagine any place
I’d rather go than the Traymore, Luella’s talked so much about it.”

“All right. Then it’s settled that we go. How soon can we get ready?
We’ll go shopping to-morrow morning bright and early, and get a
trunkful of new clothes. It’s always nice to have new things when you
go off; you feel like another person, and don’t have to be sewing
on buttons all the time,” laughed Donald, as if he was enjoying the
whole thing as much as his aunt. “I meant to have a good time getting
presents for the whole family; but, as they aren’t here, I’m going to
get them all for you. You’re not to say a word. Have you got a trunk?”

“Trunk? No, child. I haven’t ever had any need for a trunk. The time I
went to Uncle Hiram’s funeral I took Carrie’s old haircloth one, but
I don’t know ’s that’s fit to travel again. Carrie’s got her flannels
packed away in camphor in it now, and I shouldn’t like to disturb it.”

“Then we’ll get a trunk.”

“O, no,” protested Aunt Crete; “that would be a foolish expense.
There’s some pasteboard boxes up-stairs. I can make out with them in a
shawl-strap. I sha’n’t need much for a few days.”

“Enlarge your scale of things, Aunt Crete. You’re going to stay more
than a few days. You’re going to stay till you’re tired, and just want
to come back. As we’re going to a ‘swell’ hotel,”—Donald reflected that
Aunt Crete could not understand his reference to Luella’s description
of the Traymore,—“we can’t think of shawl-straps and boxes. You shall
have a good big trunk. I saw an advertisement of one that has drawers
and a hat-box in it, like a bureau. We’ll see if we can find one to
suit.”

“It sounds just like the fairy tales I used to read to Luella when she
was a little girl,” beamed Aunt Crete. “It doesn’t seem as if it was I.
I can’t make it true.”

“Now let’s write down a list of things you need,” said the eager
planner; “we’ll have to hurry up things, and get off this week if
possible. I’ve been reading the paper, and they say there’s coming
a hot wave. I need to get you to the shore before it arrives, if
possible. Come; what shall I put down first? What have you always
thought you’d like, Aunt Crete? Don’t you need some silk dresses?”

“O dear heart! Hear him! Silk dresses aren’t for me. Of course I’ve
always had a sort of hankering after one, but nothing looks very well
on me. Carrie says my figure is dumpy. I guess, if you’re a mind to,
you can get me a lace collar. It’ll please me as well as anything.
Luella saw some for a quarter that were real pretty. She bought one
for herself. I think it would do to wear with my new pin, and all my
collars are pretty much worn out.”

“Now look here, Aunt Crete! Can’t I make you understand? I mean
business, and no collars for a quarter are going to do. You can have a
few cheap ones for morning if you want them, but we’ll buy some real
lace ones to wear with the pin. And you shall have the silk dress, two
or three of them, and a lot of other things. What kind do you want?”

“O my dear boy! You just take my breath away. I with two or three
silk dresses! The idea! Carrie would think me extravagant, and Luella
wouldn’t like it a bit. She always tells me I’m too gay for my years.”

Donald set his lips, and wished he could have speech for a few minutes
with the absent Luella. He felt that he would like to express his
contempt for her treatment of their aunt.

“I’ve always thought I’d like a gray silk,” mused Aunt Crete with a
dreamy look in her eyes, “but I just know Luella would think it was too
dressy for me. I suppose black would be better. I can’t deny I’d like
black silk, too.”

“We’ll have both,” said Donald decidedly. “I saw a woman in a
silver-gray silk once. She had white hair like yours, and the effect
was beautiful. Then you’ll need some other things. White dresses, I
guess. That’s what my chum’s grandmother used to wear when I went there
visiting in the summer.”

“White for me!” exclaimed the aunt. “O, Luella would be real angry at
me getting white. She says it’s too conspicuous for old women to dress
in light colors.”

“Never mind Luella. We’re doing this, and whatever we want goes. If
Luella doesn’t like it, she needn’t look at it.”

Aunt Crete was all in a flutter that night. She could hardly sleep. She
did not often go to town. Luella did all the shopping. Sometimes she
suggested going, but Carrie always said it was a needless expense,
and, besides, Luella knew how to buy at a better bargain. It was a
great delight to go with Donald. Her face shone, and all the weariness
of the day’s work, and all the toilsome yesterdays, disappeared from
her brow.

She looked over her meagre wardrobe, most of it cast-offs from Carrie’s
or Luella’s half-worn clothing, and wrote down in a cramped hand a few
absolute necessities. The next morning they had an early breakfast, and
started at once on their shopping-expedition. Aunt Crete felt like a
little child being taken to the circus. The idea of getting a lot of
new clothes all for herself seemed too serious a business to be true.
She was dazed when she thought of it; and so, when Donald asked what
they should look at first, she showed plainly that she would be little
help in getting herself fitted out. She was far too happy to bring
her mind down to practical things, and, besides, she could not adjust
herself to the vast scale of expenditure Donald had set.

“Here are some collars,” said Donald. “We might as well begin on those.”

Aunt Crete examined them with enthusiasm, and finally picked out two at
twenty-five cents apiece.

“Are those the best you have?” questioned Donald.

“O, no,” said the saleswoman, quick to identify the purchaser that did
not stop at price; “did you want real or imitation?”

“Real, by all means,” he answered promptly.

“O Donald,” breathed Aunt Crete in a warning whisper, “real lace comes
dreadful high. I’ve heard Luella say so. Besides, I shouldn’t have
anything to wear it with, nor any place to go fixed up like that.”

“Have you forgotten you’re going to the Traymore in a few days?” he
asked her with a twinkle in his eye. “And what about the gray silk?
Won’t it go with that? If not, we’ll get something better.”

Assisted by the saleswoman, they selected two beautiful collars of real
lace, and half a dozen plain ones for commoner wear.

“Couldn’t you go with us?” asked Donald of the saleswoman as the
purchase was concluded. “My aunt wishes to get a good many things, and
neither she nor I is much used to shopping. We’d like to have your
advice.”

“I’m sorry; I’d like to, but I’m not allowed to leave this counter,”
said the woman with a kindly smile. “I’m head of this department, and
they can’t get along without me this morning. But they have buyers in
the office just for that purpose. You go up to the desk over on the
east side just beyond the rotunda, and ask for a buyer to go around
with you. Get Miss Brower if you can, and tell her the head of the lace
department told you to call for her. She’ll tell you just what to get,”
and she smiled again at Aunt Crete’s kindly, beaming face.

They went to the desk, and found Miss Brower, who, when she heard the
message, took them smilingly under her wing. She knew that meant a
good sale had been made, and there would be something in it for her.
Besides, she had a kindly disposition, and did not turn up a haughty
nose at Aunt Crete’s dumpy little figure.

“Now, just what do you want first?” she asked brightly.

“Everything,” said Donald helplessly. “We’ve only bought a lace collar
so far, and now we want all the rest of the things to go with it. The
only things we’ve decided on so far are two silk dresses, a black one
and a silver-gray. How do we go about it to get them? Do they have them
ready-made?”

“Nothing that would be quite suitable, I’m afraid, in silks. But we’ll
go and see what there is in stock,” said the assistant with skilful
eye, taking in Aunt Crete’s smiling, helpless face, lovely white
hair, dumpy, ill-fitted figure, and all. “There might be a gray voile
that would suit her. In fact, I saw one this morning, very simple and
elegant, lined with gray silk, and trimmed with lace dyed to match.
It is a beauty, and just reduced this morning to thirty dollars from
sixty. I believe it will fit her.”

Aunt Crete gasped at the price, and looked at Donald; but he seemed
pleased, and said: “That sounds good. Let’s go and see it. We’ll have a
gray—what was it you called it—voile? Remember that name, Aunt Crete.
You’re going to have a gray voile. But we want the silk too. Do they
make things here? We want to go away in a few days, and would like to
take them with us.”

“O, yes, they’ll make anything to order; and this time of year we’re
not so busy. I guess you could get a ‘hurry-up’ order on it, and have
it done in a couple of days; or it could be forwarded to you if it was
not quite finished when you left.”

They stepped into the elevator, and in a trice were ushered into the
presence of the rare and the imported. Aunt Crete stood in a maze of
delight and wonder. All this was on exhibition just for her benefit,
and she was Alice in Wonderland for the hour. Donald stood back with
his arms folded, and watched her with satisfaction. One thing alone
was wanted to complete it. He would have liked to have Luella up in
the gallery somewhere watching also. But that he held in anticipation.
Luella should be made to understand that she had done wrong in
underrating this sweet, patient soul.

[Illustration: “DONALD WATCHED HER WITH SATISFACTION”]

The gray voile was entirely satisfactory to the two shoppers. Donald
recognized it as the thing many women of his acquaintance wore at
the receptions he had attended in university circles. Aunt Crete
fingered it wistfully, and had her inward doubts whether anything so
frail and lovely, like a delicate veil, would wear; but, looking at
Donald’s happy face, she decided not to mention it. The dress was more
beautiful than anything she had ever dreamed of possessing. “But it
won’t fit me,” she sighed as she and Miss Brower were on the way to the
“trying-on” room, where the garment was to be fitted to her. “I’m so
dumpy, you know, and Luella always says it’s no use to get me anything
ready-made.”

“O, the fitter will make it fit,” said Miss Brower convincingly;
and then, with a glance at the ample waist, whose old-fashioned lines
lay meekly awry as if they were used to being put on that way and were
beyond even discouragement: “Why don’t you wear one of those stiffened
waists? There’s a new one on sale, has soft bones all around, and is
real comfortable. It would make your dresses set a great deal better.
If you like, I’ll go get one, and you can be fitted over it. You don’t
like anything very tight, do you?”

“No,” said Aunt Crete in a deprecatory tone, “I never could bear
anything real tight. That’s what puts Luella out so about me. But, if
you say there’s a waist that’s comfortable, I should be so obliged if
you’d get it. I’d be willing to pay any price not to look so dumpy.”

She felt that if it took the last cent she possessed, and made all her
relatives angry with her, she must have something to fit her once.

Miss Brower, thus commissioned, went away, and returned very soon with
the magical waist that was to transform Miss Lucretia’s “figger.” If
Donald could have seen his aunt’s face when she was finally arrayed in
the soft folds of the gray voile and was being pinned up and pinned
down and pinned in and pinned out, he would have been fully repaid.
Aunt Crete’s ecstasy was marred only by the fact that Luella could
not see her grandeur. Actually being fitted in a department-store to
a “real imported” dress! Could mortal attain higher in this mundane
sphere?

When the fitting was pronounced done and Aunt Crete was about to don
her discouraged shirt-waist once more, Miss Brower appeared in the
doorway with a coat and skirt suit over her arm, made of fine soft
black taffeta.

“Just put this on and let the gentleman see how he likes it,” she
said. She had been out to talk over matters with Donald and have an
understanding as to what was wanted. She had advised the taffeta coat
and skirt for travelling, with an extra cloth coat for cool days. Aunt
Crete, with the new dignity that consciousness of her improved figure
gave her, rustled out to her nephew looking like a new woman, her face
beaming.

That was a wonderful day. Aunt Crete retired again for the black
taffeta to be altered a little, and yet again for a black and white
dotted swiss, and a white linen suit, and a handsome black crêpe
de chine, and then to have the measure taken for the silver-gray
silk, which the head dressmaker promised could be hurried through.
They bought a black chiffon waist and some filmy, dreamy white
shirt-waists, simple and plain in design, with exquisite lace simply
applied, fine hand-made tucks, and finer material. Miss Brower advised
white linen and white lawn for morning wear at the seashore, and gave
Aunt Crete confidence, telling how she had a customer, “a woman about
as old as you, with just such lovely white hair,” who but yesterday
purchased a set of white dresses for morning wear at the seashore. This
silenced the thoughts of her sister’s horror at “White for you, Crete!
What are you thinking of?” Never mind, she was going to have one good
time, even if she had to put all her lovely finery away in a trunk
afterwards, and never bring it out again, or—dreary thought—were made
to cut it over for Luella sometime. Well, it might come to that, but at
least she would enjoy it while it was hers.

Two white linen skirts, a handsome black cloth coat, several pairs of
silk gloves, black and white, some undergarments dainty enough for a
bride, a whole dozen pairs of stockings! How Aunt Crete rejoiced in
those! She had been wearing stockings whose feet were cut out of old
stocking legs for fifteen years. She couldn’t remember when she had had
a whole new pair of stockings all her own. And then two new bonnets.

All these things were acquired little by little. It was while they were
in the millinery department, and Miss Brower had just set a charming
black lace bonnet made on a foundation of white roses on the white
hair, that Donald decided she was one of the most beautiful old ladies
he had ever seen. The drapery was a fine black lace scarf, which swept
around the roses and tied loosely on the breast; and it gave the quiet
little woman a queenly air. She was getting used to seeing her own
face in strange adornments, but it startled her to see that she really
looked handsome in this bonnet. She stood before the transformation in
the mirror almost in awe, and never heard what Miss Brower was saying:

“That’s just the thing for best, and there’s a lovely lace wrap in the
cloak department she ought to have to go with it. It would be charming.”

“Get it,” said Donald with respectful brevity. He was astonished
himself at the difference mere clothes made. Aunt Crete was fairly
impressive in her new bonnet. And the lace wrap proved indeed to be the
very mate to the bonnet, hiding the comfortable figure, and making her
look “just like other people,” as she breathlessly expressed it after
one glance at herself in the lace wrap.

They bought a plain black bonnet, a sweet little gray one, a fine silk
umbrella, a lot of pretty belts and handkerchiefs, some shoes and
rubbers, a hand-bag of cut steel, for which Luella would have bartered
her conscience—what there was left of it; and then they smiled good-by
at Miss Brower, and left her for a little while, and went to lunch.

Such a lunch! Soup, and fish, and spring lamb, and fresh peas, and new
potatoes, and two kinds of ice-cream in little hard sugar cases that
looked like baked snow-balls. Aunt Crete’s hand trembled as she took
the first spoonful. The wonders of the day had been so great that she
was fairly worn out, and two little bright red spots of excitement had
appeared in her cheeks, but she was happy! Happier than she remembered
ever to have been in her life before. Her dear old conscience had a
moment of sighing that Luella could not have been there to have enjoyed
it too, and then her heart bounded in wicked gleefulness that Luella
was not there to stop her nice time.

They went into a great hall in the same store, and sat among the palms
and coolness made by electric fans, while a wonderful organ played
exquisite music, and Aunt Crete felt she certainly was in heaven
without the trouble of dying; and she never dreamed, dear soul, that
she had been dying all her life that others might live, and that it is
to such that the reward is promised.

They went back to Miss Brower later; and behold! the silver-gray
silk had been cut out, and was ready to fit. Aunt Crete felt it was
fairy-work, the whole of it, and she touched the fabric as if it had
been made by magic.

Then they went and bought a trunk and a handsome leather satchel, and
Donald took a notion that his aunt must have a set of silver combs for
her hair such as he saw in the hair of another old lady.

“Now,” said Donald reflectively, “we’ll go home and get rested, and
to-morrow we’ll come down and buy any things we’ve forgotten.”

“And I’m sure I don’t see what more a body could possibly need,” said
Aunt Crete, as, tired and absolutely contented, she climbed into the
train and sat down in the hot plush seat.

The one bitter drop in the cup of bliss came the next morning—or rather
two drops—in the shape of letters. One from Aunt Carrie for Donald was
couched in stiffest terms, in which she professed to have just heard of
his coming, and to be exceedingly sorry that she was not at home, and
was kept from returning only by a sprained ankle, the doctor telling
her that she must not put her foot to the ground for two or three weeks
yet, or she would have to suffer for it.

The other letter was for Aunt Crete, and was a rehash of the telephone
message, with a good sound scolding for having gone away from the
telephone before she finished speaking. Luella had written it herself
because she felt like venting her temper on some one. The young man
that had been so attentive to her in town had promenaded the piazza
with another young woman all the evening before. Luella hoped Aunt
Crete would put up plenty of gooseberry jam. Aunt Crete put on her
double V as she read, and sighed for a full minute before Donald looked
up amused from his letter.

“Now, Aunt Crete, you look as if a mountain had rolled down upon you.
What’s the matter?”

“O, I’m just afraid, Donald, that I’m doing wrong going off this way,
when Carrie expects me to do all this canning and sewing and cleaning.
I’m afraid she’ll never forgive me.”

“Now, Aunt Crete, don’t you love me? Didn’t I tell you I’d stand
between you and the whole world? Please put that letter up, and come
and help me pack your new trunk. Do you want that gray silk put in
first, or shall I put the shoes at the bottom? Don’t you know you and I
are going to have the time of our lives? We’re going to run away from
every care. Do you suppose your own sister would want you to stay here
roasting in the city if she knew you had a nephew just aching to carry
you off to the ocean? Come, forget it. Cut it out, Aunt Crete, and
let’s pack the trunk. I’m longing to be off to smell the briny deep.”
And laughingly he carried her away, and plunged her into thoughts
of her journey, giving her no time the rest of the day to think of
anything else.




CHAPTER IV

AUNT CRETE TRANSFORMED


THEY locked the house early one morning when even the dusty bricks
had a smell of freshness to them before the hot sun baked them for
another day. The closed blinds seemed sullen like a conquered tyrant,
and the front door looked reproachfully at Aunt Crete as she turned
the key carefully and tried it twice to be sure it was locked. The
lonesome look of the house gave the poor old lady a pang as she turned
the corner in her softly rustling silk coat and skirt. She felt it had
hardly been right to put on a new black silk in the morning, and go off
from all the cares of the world, just leave them, boldly ignore them,
like any giddy girl, and take a vacation. She regarded herself with
awe and a rising self-respect in every window she passed. Somehow the
look of dumpiness had passed away mysteriously. It was not her old self
that was passing along the street to the station bearing a cut-steel
hand-bag, while Donald carried her new satchel, and her new trunk
bumped on a square ahead in the expressman’s wagon.

[Illustration: “SHE BEAMED UPON THE WHOLE TRAINFUL OF PEOPLE”]

It was a hot morning, and the great city station seemed close and
stuffy; but Aunt Crete mingled with the steaming crowd blissfully. To
be one with the world, attired irreproachably; to be on her way to a
great hotel by the sea, with new clothes, and escorted devotedly by
some one that was her very own, this indeed was happiness. Could any
one desire more upon the earth?

Donald put her into a cab at the station, and she beamed happily out at
the frightful streets that always made her heart come into her mouth on
the rare occasions when she had to cross them. The ride across the city
seemed a brief and distinguished experience. It was as if everybody
else was walking and they only had the grandeur of a carriage. Then
the ferry-boat was delightful to the new traveller, with its long,
white-ceiled passages, and its smell of wet timbers and tarred ropes.
They had a seat close to the front, where they could look out and watch
their own progress and see the many puffing monsters laboriously plying
back and forth, and the horizon-line of many masts, like fine brown
lines against the sky. Aunt Crete felt that at last she was out in
the world. She could not have felt it more if she had been starting
for Europe.

The seashore train, with its bamboo seats and its excited groups of
children bearing tin pails and shovels and tennis-rackets, filled
her with a fine exhilaration. At last, at last, her soul had escaped
the bounds of red brick walls that she had expected would surround
her as long as she lived. She drew deep breaths, and beamed upon the
whole trainful of people, yelling baby and all. She gazed and gazed
at the fast-flying Jersey scenery, grown so monotonous to some of the
travellers, and admired every little white and green town at which they
paused.

Donald put her into a carriage when they reached the shore. Half an
hour off they had begun to smell the sea, and to catch glimpses of
low-lying marshes and a misty blueness against the sky. Now every
friendly hackman at the station seemed a part of the great day to Aunt
Crete. So pretty a carriage, with low steps and gray cushions and a
fringe all around the canopy, and a white speckled horse, with long,
gentle, white eyelashes. Aunt Crete leaned back self-consciously on
the gray cushions, and enjoyed the creak of her silk jacket as she
settled into place. She felt as if this was a play that would soon be
over; but she would enjoy it to the very end, and then go back to her
dish-washing and cellar-cleaning, and being blamed, and bear them all
in happy remembrance of what she had had for one blissful vacation.

She did not know that Donald had telephoned ahead for the best
apartments in the hotel. She was engaged in watching for the first
blue line of the great mysterious ocean; and, when it came into sight,
billowing suddenly above the line of board walk as they turned a
corner, her heart stood still for one moment, and then bounded onward
set to the time of wonder.

Two obsequious porters jumped to assist Aunt Crete from the carriage.
The hand-baggage drifted up the steps as if by magic, and awaited them
in the apartments to which they arose in a luxurious elevator. Aunt
Crete noticed several old ladies with pink and blue wool knitting,
sitting in a row of large rocking-chairs, as she glided up to the
second floor. It gave her rest on one point, for they all wore white
dresses. She had been a little dubious about those white dresses that
Donald had insisted upon. But now she might enjoy them unashamed. O,
what would Luella say?

She glanced around the room, half-fearfully expecting to find Luella
waiting there. Somehow, now she was here, she wanted to get used to
it and enjoy it all before Luella came. For Luella was an uncertain
quantity. Luella might not like it, after all! Dreadful thought! And
after Donald had taken so much trouble and spent so much money all to
surprise them!

The smiling porter absorbed the goodly tip that Donald handed him, and
went his way. Aunt Crete and Donald were left alone. They looked at
each other and smiled.

“Let’s look around and see where they’ve put us,” said Donald, pushing
the swaying curtains aside; and there before them rolled the blue tide
of the ocean. Aunt Crete sank into a chair, and was silent for a while;
and then she said: “It’s just as big as I thought it would be. I was so
afraid it wouldn’t be. Some folks next door went down to the shore last
year, and they said it didn’t look big enough to what they’d expected;
and I’ve been afraid ever since.”

Donald’s eyes filled with a tender light that was beautiful to see. He
was enjoying the spending of his money, and it was yielding him a rich
reward already.

The apartments that had been assigned to them consisted of a parlor and
two large bedrooms with private baths. Donald discovered a few moments
later, when he went down to the office to investigate, that Luella and
his aunt occupied a single room on the fourth floor back, overlooking
the kitchen court. It was not where he would have placed them, had they
chosen to await his coming and be taken down to the shore in style. But
now that they had run away from him, and were too evidently ashamed
of him, perhaps it was as well to let them remain where they were, he
reflected.

“Aunt Carrie and Luella have gone out with a party in a carriage for an
all-day drive to Pleasure Bay,” announced Donald when he came up. “Aunt
Carrie’s ankle must be better.”

“Well, that’s real nice!” exclaimed Aunt Crete with a smile, turning
from her view of the sea, where she had been ever since he left her.
“I’m glad Luella is having a good time, and we sha’n’t miss her a mite.
You and I’ll have the ocean all to ourselves to-day.”

Donald smiled approvingly. He was not altogether sure he cared to meet
that other aunt and cousin at all. He was not sure but he would like
to run away from them, and carry Aunt Crete with him.

“Very well,” he said, “I’m glad you’re not disappointed. We’ll do just
whatever we want to. Would you like to go in bathing?”

“O, my! Could I? I’ve always thought I’d like to see how it would feel,
but I guess I’m too old. Besides, there’s my figger. It wouldn’t look
nice in a bathing-suit. Luella wouldn’t like it a bit, and I don’t want
to disgrace her, now I’m here. She always makes a lot of fun of old
people going in and sitting right on the edge of the water. I guess it
won’t do.”

“Yes, it will do, if you want to. Didn’t I tell you this was my party,
and Luella isn’t in it? That’s ridiculous. I’ll take you in myself,
Aunt Crete, and we’ll have the best time out; and you sha’n’t be
scared, either. I can swim like a fish. You shall go in every day.
Would you like to begin at once?”

“I should,” said Aunt Crete, rising with a look of resolution in her
face. She felt that Luella would condemn the amusement for her; so, if
she was to dare it, it must be done before her niece appeared.

They went down to the beach, and for a few minutes surveyed the
bathers as they came out to the water. Then with joy and daring in her
face Aunt Crete went into the little bath-house with wildly beating
heart, arrayed herself in the gay blue flannel garb provided for her
use, and came timidly out to meet Donald, tall and smiling in his blue
jerseys.

They had a wonderful time. It was almost better than shopping. Donald
led her down to the water, and very gently accustomed her to it until
he had led her out beyond the roughness, where his strong arms lifted
her well above the swells until she felt as if she was a bird. It was
marvellous that she was not afraid, but she was not. It was as if she
had that morning been transferred back over forty years to her youth
again, and was having the good times that she had longed for, such
as other girls had—the swings, and the rides, and the skatings, and
bicyclings. How many such things she had watched through the years,
with her heart palpitating with daring to do it all herself! Her
petulant sister and the logy Luella never dreamed that Aunt Crete
desired such un-auntly indulgences. If they had, they would have taken
it out of her, scorched it out with scorn.

The white hair with its natural waves fluffed out beautifully, like
a canary’s feathers, after the bath, and Aunt Crete was smiling and
charming at lunch in one of her fine new white dresses. She had hurried
to put it on before Luella appeared, lest they might all be spirited
away from her if Luella discovered them. She reflected with a sigh that
they would likely fit Luella beautifully, and that that would probably
be their final destination, just as Luella’s discarded garments came to
her.

But there was nothing to mar the lunch-time and the beautiful
afternoon, wherein, after a delicious nap to the accompaniment of the
music of the waves, she was taken to drive in the fringed carriage
again, while a bunch of handsome ladies, old and young, sat on the
hotel piazza in more of those abundant rockers, and watched her
approvingly. She felt that she was of some importance in their eyes.
She had suddenly blossomed out of her insignificance, and was worth
looking at. It warmed her heart with humble pleasure. She felt that
she had won approval, not through any merit of her own, but through
Donald’s loving-kindness. It was wonderful what a charm clothes could
work.

“Put on your gray silk for dinner,” said Donald with malice
aforethought in his heart.

“O,” gasped Aunt Crete, “I think I ought to keep that for parties,
don’t you?”

“If ever there was a party, it’s going to be to-night,” said Donald.
“It’s going to be a surprise-party. You want to see if Aunt Carrie and
Luella will know you, you know.”

So with trembling fingers Aunt Crete arrayed herself in her purple
and fine linen, very materially assisted by a quiet maid, whom Donald
had ordered sent to the room, and who persuaded Aunt Crete to let her
arrange the pretty white hair.

It was surprising to see, when the coiffure was complete, that she
looked quite like the other old ladies, who were not old at all, only
playing old.

“I don’t believe they will know me,” whispered Aunt Crete to herself as
she stood before the full-length mirror and surveyed the effect. “And
I didn’t think I could ever look like that!” she murmured after a more
prolonged gaze, during which she made the acquaintance of her new self.
Then she added half wistfully: “I wish I had known it before. I think
perhaps they’d have—liked me—more if I’d looked that way all the time.”
She sighed half regretfully, as if she were bidding good-by to this
new vision, and went out to Donald, who awaited her. She felt that the
picnic part of her vacation was almost over now, for Carrie and Luella
would be sure to manage to spoil it someway.

Donald looked up from his paper with a welcome in his eyes. It was
the first time she had seen him in evening dress, and she thought him
handsome as a king.

“You’re a very beautiful woman, Aunt Crete; do you know it?” said
Donald with satisfaction. He had felt that the French maid would know
how to put just the right touch to Aunt Crete’s pretty hair to take
away her odd, “unused” appearance. Now she was completely in the
fashion, and she looked every inch a lady. She somehow seemed to have
natural intuition for gentle manners. Perhaps her kindly heart dictated
them, for surely there can be no better manners than come wrapped up
with the Golden Rule, and Aunt Crete had lived by that all her life.

They entered the great dining-hall, and made their way among the palms
in a blaze of electric light, with the head waiter bowing obsequiously
before them. They had a table to themselves, and Aunt Crete rejoiced
in the tiny shaded candles and the hothouse roses in the centre, and
lifted the handsome napkins and silver forks with awe. Sometimes it
seemed as if she were still dreaming.

The party from Pleasure Bay had reached home rather late in the
afternoon, after a tedious time in the hot sun at a place full of
peanut-stands and merry-go-rounds and moving-picture shows. Luella had
not had a good time. She had been disappointed that none of the young
men in the party had paid her special attention. In fact, the special
young man for whose sake she had prodded her mother into going had not
accompanied them at all. Luella was thoroughly cross.

“Mercy, how you’ve burned your nose, Luella!” said her mother sharply.
“It’s so unbecoming. The skin is all peeling off. I do wish you’d wear
a veil. You can’t afford to lose your complexion, with such a figure as
you have.”

“O, fiddlesticks! I wish you’d let up on that, ma,” snapped Luella.
“Didn’t you get a letter from Aunt Crete? I wonder what she’s thinking
about not to send that lavender organdie. I wanted to wear it to-night.
There’s to be a hop in the ballroom, and that would be just the
thing. She ought to have got it done; she’s had time enough since I
telephoned. I suppose she’s gone to reading again. I do wish I’d
remembered to lock up the bookcase. She’s crazy for novels.”

All this time Luella was being buttoned into a pink silk muslin heavily
decorated with cheap lace. There were twenty-six tiny elusive buttons,
and Luella’s mother was tired.

“What on earth makes you so long, ma?” snarled Luella, twisting her
neck to try to see her back. “We’ll be so late we won’t get served, and
I’m hungry as a bear.”

They hurried down, arriving at the door just as Aunt Crete and Donald
were being settled into their chairs by the smiling head waiter.

“For goodness’ sake! those must be swells,” said Luella in a low tone.
“Did you see how that waiter bowed and smiled? He never does that to
us. I expect he got a big tip. See, they’re sitting right next our
table. Goodness, ma, your hair is all slipped to one side. Put it up
quick. No, the other side. Say, he’s an awfully handsome young man.
I wonder if we can get introduced. I just know he dances gracefully.
Say, mother, I’d like to get him for a partner to-night. I guess those
stuck-up Grandons would open their eyes then.”

“Hush, Luella; he’ll hear you.”

They settled into their places unassisted by the dilatory waiter, who
came languidly up a moment later to take their order.

Aunt Crete’s back was happily toward her relatives, and so she ate her
dinner in comfort. The palms were all about, and the gentle clink of
silver and glass, and refined voices. The soft strains of an orchestra
hidden in a balcony of ferns and palms drowned Luella’s strident voice
when it was raised in discontented strain, and so Aunt Crete failed
to recognize the sound. But Donald had been on the alert. In the
first place, he had asked a question or two, and knew about where his
relatives usually sat, and had purposely asked to be placed near them.
He studied Luella when she came in, and felt pretty sure she was the
girl he had seen on the platform of the train the morning he arrived in
Midvale; and finally in a break in the music he distinctly caught the
name “Luella” from the lips of the sour woman in the purple satin with
white question-marks all over it and plasters of white lace.

Aunt Carrie was tall and thin, with a discontented droop to her lips,
and premature wrinkles. She wore an affected air of abnormal politeness
and disapproval of everything. She was studying the silver-gray
silk back in front of her and wondering what there was about that
elegant-looking woman with the lovely white waved pompadour and puffs,
and that exquisite real lace collar, to remind her of poor sister
Lucretia. She always coupled the adjective “poor” with her sister’s
name when she thought of all her shortcomings.

Luella’s discontent was somewhat enlivened by the sight of the young
man that had not gone on the drive to Pleasure Bay. He stood in the
doorway, searching the room with keen, interested eyes. Could it be
that he was looking for her? Luella’s heart leaped in a moment’s
triumph. Yes, he seemed to be looking that way as if he had found the
object of his search, and he was surely coming down toward them with a
real smile on his face. Luella’s face broke into preparatory smiles.
She would be very coy, and pretend not to see him; so she began a
voluble and animated conversation with her mother about the charming
time they had had that day, which might have surprised the worthy woman
if she had not been accustomed to her daughter’s wiles. She knew it to
be a warning of the proximity of some one that Luella wished to charm.

The young man came on straight by the solicitous waiters, who waved
him frantically to various tables. Luella cast a rapid side glance, and
talked on gayly with drooping head and averted gaze. Her mother looked
up, wondering, to see what was the cause of Luella’s animation. He was
quite near now, and in a moment more he would speak. The girl felt
excited thrills creeping up her back, and the color rushed into her
cheeks, which were already red enough from the wind and sun of the day.

“Well, well,” said the young man’s voice in a hearty eagerness Luella
had never hoped to hear addressed to herself, “this is too good to be
true. Don, old man, where did you drop from? I saw your name in the
register, and rushed right into the dining-room——”

“Clarence Grandon, as true as I live!” said a pleasant voice behind
Luella. “I thought you were in Europe, bless your heart. This is the
best thing that could have happened. Let me introduce my aunt——”

Some seconds before this Luella’s thrills had changed to chills.
Mortification stole over her face and up to the roots of her hair. Even
the back of her neck, where her bathing-suit was cut low and square,
turned angry-looking. The pink muslin had a round neck, and showed a
half-circle of whiter neck below the bathing-suit square. But Luella
had the presence of mind to smile on to her mother in mild pretence
that she had but just noticed the advent of the young man behind. An
obsequious waiter was bringing an extra chair for Mr. Grandon, and he
was to be seated so that he could look toward their table. Perhaps he
would recognize her yet, and there might be a chance of introduction to
the handsome stranger. Luella dallied with her dinner in fond hope, and
her mother aided and abetted her.

The lovely old lady with the silver-gray silk and the real lace collar
and beautiful hair had her back squarely toward the table where Luella
and her mother sat. They could not see her face. They could only notice
how interested both the young men were in her, and how courteous they
were to her; and they decided she must be some very great personage
indeed. They watched her half enviously, and began to plan some way to
scrape an acquaintance with her. One glimpse they had of her face as
the head waiter rushed to draw back her chair when she had finished her
dinner. It was a fine, handsome face, younger than they had expected to
see, with beautiful sparkling eyes full of mirth and contentment. What
was there in the face that reminded them of something? Had they ever
met that old lady before?

Luella and her mother brought their dallied dessert to a sudden ending,
and followed hard upon the footsteps of the three down the length
of the dining-hall; but the lady in gray and her two attendants had
disappeared already, and disconsolately they lingered about, looking
up and down the length of piazzas in vain hope to see them sitting in
one of the great rows of rockers, watching the many-tinted waves in the
dying evening light; but there was no sign of them anywhere.

As they stood thus leaning over the balcony, a large automobile, gray,
with white cushions, like a great gliding dove, slipped silently up
to the entrance below them in the well-bred silence that an expensive
machine knows how to assume under dignified owners.

Luella twitched her mother’s sleeve. “That’s Grandon’s car,” she
whispered. “P’raps I’ll get asked to go. Let’s sit down here and wait.”

The mother obediently sat down.




CHAPTER V

LUELLA AND HER MOTHER ARE MYSTIFIED


THEY had not long to wait. They heard the elevator door slide softly
open, and then the gentle swish of silken skirts. Luella looked around
just in time to be recognized by young Mr. Grandon if he had not
at that moment been placing a long white broadcloth coat about his
mother’s shoulders. There were four in the party, and Luella’s heart
sank. He would not be likely to ask another one. The young man and the
gray-silk, thread-lace woman from the other dining-table were going
with them, it appeared. Young Mr. Grandon helped the gray-silk lady
down the steps while the handsome stranger walked by Mrs. Grandon. They
did not look around at the people on the piazza at all. Luella bit her
lips in vexation.

“For pity’s sake, Luella, don’t scowl so,” whispered her mother; “they
might look up yet and see you.”

This warning came just in time; for young Mr. Grandon just as he was
about to start the car glanced up, and, catching Luella’s fixed gaze,
gave her a distant bow, which was followed by a courteous lifting of
the stranger’s hat.

[Illustration: “‘SOMEWHERE I HAVE SEEN THAT WOMAN,’ EXCLAIMED LUELLA’S
MOTHER”]

Aunt Crete was seated beside Mrs. Grandon in the back seat and beaming
her joy quietly. She was secretly exulting that Luella and Carrie had
not been in evidence yet. She felt that her joy was being lengthened by
a few minutes more, for she could not get away from the fear that her
sister and niece would spoil it all as soon as they appeared upon the
scene.

“I thought Aunt Carrie and Luella would be tired after their all-day
trip, and we wouldn’t disturb them to-night,” said Donald in a low
tone, looking back to Aunt Crete as the car glided smoothly out from
the shelter of the wide piazza.

Aunt Crete smiled happily back to Donald, and raised her eyes with a
relieved glance toward the rows of people on the piazza. She had been
afraid to look her fill before lest she should see Luella frowning at
her somewhere; but evidently they had not got back yet, or perhaps had
not finished their dinner.

As Aunt Crete raised her eyes, Luella and her mother looked down into
her upturned face enviously, but Aunt Crete’s gaze had but just grazed
them and fallen upon an old lady of stately mien with white, fluffy
hair like her own, and a white crêpe de chine gown trimmed with much
white lace. In deep satisfaction Aunt Crete reflected that, if Luella
had aught to say against her aunt’s wearing modest white morning-gowns,
she would cite this model, who was evidently an old aristocrat if one
might judge by her jewels and her general make-up.

“Somewhere I’ve seen that woman with the gray silk!” exclaimed Luella’s
mother suddenly as Aunt Crete swept by. “There’s something real
familiar about the set of her shoulders. Look at the way she raises her
hand to her face. My land! I believe she reminds me of your Aunt Crete!”

“Now, mother!” scorned Luella. “As if Aunt Crete could ever look like
that! You must be crazy to see anything in such an elegant lady to
remind you of poor old Aunt Crete. Why, ma, this woman is the real
thing! Just see how her hair’s put up. Nobody but a French maid could
get it like that. Imagine Aunt Crete with a French maid. O, I’d die
laughing. She’s probably washing our country cousin’s supper dishes at
this very minute. I wonder if her conscience doesn’t hurt her about my
lavender organdie. Say, ma, did you notice how graceful that handsome
stranger was when he handed the ladies into the car? My, but I’d like
to know him. I think Clarence Grandon is just a stuck-up prig.”

Her mother looked at her sharply.

“Luella, seems to me you change your mind a good deal. If I don’t make
any mistake, you came down here so’s to be near him. What’s made you
change your mind? He doesn’t seem to go with any other girls.”

“No, he just sticks by his mother every living minute,” sighed Luella
unhappily. “I do wish I had that lavender organdie. I look better in
that than anything else I’ve got. I declare I think Aunt Crete is real
mean and selfish not to send it. I’m going in to see if the mail has
come; and, if the organdie isn’t here, nor any word from Aunt Crete,
I’m going to call her up on the telephone again.”

Luella vanished into the hotel office, and her mother sat and rocked
with puckered brows. She very much desired a place in high society for
Luella, but how to attain it was the problem. She had not been born for
social climbing, and took hardly to it.

Meantime the motor-car rolled smoothly over the perfect roads, keeping
always that wonderful gleaming sea in sight; and Aunt Crete, serenely
happy, beamed and nodded to the pleasant chat of Mrs. Grandon, and was
so overpowered by her surroundings that she forgot to be overpowered
by the grand Mrs. Grandon. As in a dream she heard the kindly tone,
and responded mechanically to the questions about her journey and the
weather in the city, and how lovely the sea was to-night; but, as she
spoke the few words with her lips, her soul was singing, and the words
of its song were these:

    “Must I be carried to the skies
       On flowery beds of ease,
     While others fought to win the prize
       And sailed through bloody seas?”

And it seemed to her as they glided along the palace-lined shore,
with the rolling sea on one hand, and the beautiful people in their
beautiful raiment at ease and happy on the other hand, that she was
picked right up out of the hot little brick house in the narrow street,
and put on a wonderfully flowery bed of ease, and was floating right
into a heaven of which her precious Donald was a bright, particular
angel. She forgot all about Luella and what she might say, and just
enjoyed herself.

She even found herself telling the elegant Mrs. Grandon exactly how she
made piccalilli, and her heart warmed to the other woman as she saw
that she was really interested. She had never supposed, from the way
in which Luella spoke of the Grandons, that they would even deign to
eat such a common thing as a pickle, let alone knowing anything about
it. Aunt Crete’s decision was that Mrs. Grandon wasn’t stuck up in the
least, but just a nice, common lady like any one; and, as she went up
in the elevator beside her, and said good-night, she felt as if she had
known her all her life.

It was not until she had turned out her light and crept into the great
hotel bed that it came to her to wonder whether Luella and Carrie could
be meant by the ones in the hymn,

    “While others fought to win the prize
      And sailed through bloody seas.”

She couldn’t help feeling that perhaps she had been selfish in enjoying
her day so much when for aught she knew Luella might not be having a
good time. For Luella not to have a good time meant blame for her aunt
generally. Ever since Luella had been born it had been borne in upon
Aunt Crete that there was a moral obligation upon her to make Luella
have a good time. And now Aunt Crete was having a good time, the
time of her life; and she hugged herself, she was so happy over it,
and thought of the dear stars out there in the deep, dark blue of the
arching sky, and the cool, dark roll of the white-tipped waves, and was
thankful.

Luella and her mother had gloomily watched the dancing through the open
windows of the ballroom; but, as they knew no one inside, they did not
venture in. Luella kept one eye out for the return of the car, but
somehow missed it, and finally retired to the solace of cold-cream and
the comforts of the fourth floor back, where lingered in the atmosphere
a reminder of the dinner past and a hint of the breakfast that was to
come.

As the elevator ascended past the second floor, the door of one of the
special apartments stood wide, revealing a glimpse of the handsome
young stranger standing under the chandelier reading a letter, his face
alive with pleasure. Luella sighed enviously, and in her dreams strove
vainly to enter into the charmed circle where these favored beings
moved, and knew not that of her own free will she had closed the door
to that very special apartment, which might have been hers but for her
own action.

The next morning Luella was twisting her neck in a vain endeavor to
set the string of artificial puffs straight upon the enormous cushion
of her hair, till they looked for all the world like a pan of rolls
just out of the oven. She had jerked them off four separate times, and
pulled the rest of her hair down twice in a vain attempt to get just
the desired effect; and her patience, never very great at any time,
was well-nigh exhausted. Her mother was fretting because the best
pieces of fish and all the hot rolls would be gone before they got
down to breakfast, and Luella was snapping back in most undaughterly
fashion, when a noticeable tap came on the door. It was not the tap of
the chambermaid of the fourth floor back, nor of the elevator boy, who
knew how to modulate his knock for every grade of room from the second
story, ocean front, up and back. It was a knock of rare condescension,
mingled with a call to attention; and it warned these favored occupants
of room 410 to sit up and take notice, not that they were worthy of any
such consideration as was about to fall upon them.

Luella drove the last hairpin into the puffs, and sprang to the door
just as her mother opened it. She felt something was about to happen.
Could it be that she was to be invited to ride in that automobile at
last, or what?

There in the hall, looking very much out of place, and as if he hoped
his condescension would be appreciated, but he doubted it, stood
the uniformed functionary that usually confined his activities to
the second floor front, where the tips were large and the guests of
unquestioned wealth, to say nothing of culture. He held in his hand
a shining silver tray on which lay two cards, and he delivered his
message in a tone that not only showed the deference he felt for the
one who had sent him, but compelled such deference also on the part of
those to whom he spoke.

“De lady and gen’leman says, Will de ladies come down to the private
pahlah as soon aftah breakfus’ as is convenient, room number 2, second
flo’ front?” He bowed to signify that his mission was completed, and
that if it did not carry through, it was entirely beyond his sphere to
do more.

Luella grasped the cards and smothered an exclamation of delight.
“Second floor, front,” gasped her mother. “The private parlor! Did you
hear, Luella?”

But Luella was standing by the one window, frowning over the cards.
One was written and one engraved, a lady’s and a gentleman’s cards.
“Miss Ward.” “Mr. Donald Ward Grant.”

“For the land’s sake, ma! Who in life are they? Do you know any Miss
Ward? You don’t s’pose it’s that lovely gray-silk woman. Miss Ward.
Donald Ward Grant. Who can they be, and what do you suppose they want?
Grant. Donald Grant. Where have I, why—! O, horrors, ma! It can’t be
that dreadful cousin has followed us up, can it? Donald Grant is his
name, of course; yes, Donald Ward Grant. It was the Ward that threw me
off. But who is the other? Miss Ward. Ma! You don’t——!”

“Luella Burton, that’s just what it is! It’s your Aunt Crete and that
dreadful cousin. Crete never did have any sense, if she is my sister.
But just let me get speech of her! If I don’t make her writhe. I think
I’ll find a way to make her understand——”

Luella’s expansive bravery beneath the row of biscuit puffs seemed to
shrink and cringe as she took in the thought.

“O ma!” she groaned. “How could she? And here of all places! To come
here and mortify me! It is just too dreadful. Ma, it can’t be true.
Aunt Crete would never dare. And where would she get the money? She
hasn’t a cent of her own, has she? You didn’t go and leave her money,
did you?”

“No, only a little change in my old pocketbook; it wouldn’t have been
enough to come down here on, unless she bought a day excursion. Wait.
I did leave five dollars to pay the grocer bill with. But Crete surely
wouldn’t take that. Still, there’s no telling. She always was a kind of
a child. O, dear! What shall we do?” The mother sat down on the tumbled
bed beside the tray of Luella’s cheap trunk.

“Well, we must do something, that’s certain, if we have to run away
again. It would never do to have those two appear here now. Mercy!
think of Aunt Crete in her old black and white silk sitting next table
to that lovely lady in gray. I should simply sink through the floor.”

“We can’t run away, Luella,” snapped the practical mother. “We’ve paid
for our room two weeks ahead. I didn’t want to do that; but you thought
if Aunt Crete should get any nonsense into her head about our coming
home, we could tell we’d paid for the room, and that would settle it
with her. So now it’s done, and we can’t afford not to abide by it.
Besides, what good would that do? We couldn’t afford to go anywhere but
home, and that would be as bad as it was in the first place. We’ve got
to think it out. If I just had hold of Crete a minute, I’d make her fix
it up. She’d have to think some way out of it herself without any of my
help, to pay her for her stupidity in coming. I can’t understand how
she’d do it.”

“I didn’t think she’d dare!” glared Luella with no pleasant expression
on her face.

“I’ll tell you what we’ll have to do, Luella,” said her mother. “We’ll
slip down those stairs in the back hall. I went down one day, and they
go right out on the piazza that runs in front of the dining-room. We’ll
just slip in the back door, and get our breakfast right away. It’s
getting pretty late. You better hurry. They’ve likely come up from
town on that very early train, and they’ll sit and wait for us. We’ll
ring for a messenger bell-boy, and send down a note that my ankle is
so much worse I can’t come down-stairs, and you can’t leave me. We’ll
say: ‘Mrs. Burton and Miss Burton regret that they cannot come down as
requested; but Mrs. Burton is confined to her bed by a sprained ankle,
and her daughter cannot leave her. Miss Ward will have to come up.’
You write it on one of your visiting-cards, Luella, and we’ll send it
down as quick as we get back from breakfast. Hurry up. The only thing
about it will be that climb up three flights after breakfast, but it
won’t do for us to risk the elevator. Crete might recognize us, for the
elevator goes right by that second-floor front parlor. What I don’t
understand is how they got in there. It’s only rich people can afford
that. But, land! Crete’s just like a baby; hasn’t been out in the world
ever; and very likely she never asked how much the rooms were, but just
took the best she could lay eyes on. Or more likely it’s a mistake, and
she’s sitting in that little reception-room down on the office floor,
and thinks it the second floor because she came up such a long flight
of steps from the sidewalk. We’ll have to tell the bell-boy to hunt up
the fellow that brought up their cards, and take it to the same folks.
Come on now, Luella, and go slow when you turn corners. There’s no
telling but they might be prowling round trying to hunt us; so keep a
lookout.”

Thus by devious and back ways they descended to a late breakfast, and
scuttled up again without being molested.

Luella wrote the note on her card as her mother dictated, and a small
boy all brass buttons was despatched with careful directions; and then
the two retired behind their ramparts, and waited.

Time went by, until half an hour had elapsed since they came back from
breakfast. They had listened anxiously to every footfall in the hall,
and part of the time Luella kept the door open a crack with her ear to
it. Their nerves were all in a quiver. When the chambermaid arrived,
they were fairly feverish to get her out of the way. If Aunt Crete
should come while she was in the room, it might get all over the hotel
what kind of relatives they had.

Mrs. Burton suggested to the chambermaid that she leave their room
till last, as they wanted to write some letters before going out; but
the maid declared she must do the room at once or not at all. The
elevator slid up and down around the corner in the next hall. They
heard a footfall now and then, but none that sounded like Aunt Crete’s.
They rang again for the office-boy, who declared he had delivered the
message in the second floor, front, and that the lady and gentleman
were both in and said, “All right.” He vanished impudently without
waiting for Luella’s probing questions, and they looked at each other
in anxiety and indignation.

“It is too mean, ma, to lose this whole morning. I wanted to go in
bathing,” complained Luella, “and now no telling how long I’ll have to
stick in this dull room. I wish Aunt Crete was in Halifax. Why couldn’t
I have had some nice relatives like that lovely old gray-silk lady and
her son?”

Just then the elevator clanged open and shut, and steps came down the
hall. It certainly was not Aunt Crete. Luella flew to the door at the
first tap; and there, submerged in a sheaf of American Beauty roses,
stood the functionary from the lower floor, with a less pompous manner
than he had worn before. The roses had caused his respect for the
occupants of the fourth floor, back, to rise several degrees.

Luella stood speechless in wonder, looking first at the roses and then
at the servant. Such roses had never come into her life before. Could
it be—must it be—but a miserable mistake?

Then the servant spoke.

“Miss Ward sends de flowers, an’ is sorry de ladies ain’t well. She
send her regrets, an’ says she can’t come to see de ladies ’count of a
drive she’d promised to take to-day, in which she’d hoped to have de
ladies’ comp’ny. She hopes de ladies be better dis even’n’.”

He was gone, and the mother and daughter faced each other over the
roses, bewilderment and awe in their faces.

“_What_ did he say, Luella? _Who_ sent those roses? Miss _Ward_?
Luella, there’s some mistake. Aunt Crete couldn’t have sent them. She
wouldn’t _dare_! Besides, where would she get the money? It’s perfectly
impossible. It can’t be Aunt Crete, after all. It must be some one
else with the same name. Perhaps Donald has picked up some one here in
the hotel; you can’t tell; or perhaps it isn’t our Donald at all. It’s
likely there’s other Donald Grants in the world. What we ought to have
done was to go down at once and find out, and not skulk in a corner.
But you’re always in such a hurry to do something, Luella. There’s no
telling at all who this is now. It might be those folks you admired
so much, though what on earth they should have sent their cards to us
for—and those lovely roses—I’m sure I don’t know.”

“Now, ma, you needn’t blame me. It was you proposed sending that note
down; you know it was, mother; and of course I had to do what you
said. I was so upset, anyway, I didn’t know what was what. But now, you
see, perhaps you’ve cut me out of a lovely day. We might have gone on a
ride with them.”

“Luella,” her mother broke in sharply, “if you talk another word like
that, I’ll take the next train back home. You don’t know what you are
talking about. It may be Aunt Crete, after all, and a country cousin
for all you know; and, if it is, would you have wanted to go driving in
the face of the whole hotel, with like as not some old shin-and-bones
horse and a broken-down carriage?”

Luella was silenced for the time, and the room settled into gloomy
meditation.




CHAPTER VI

AN EMBARRASSING MEETING


MEANTIME Aunt Crete in the whitest of her white was settling herself
comfortably on the gray cushions of the fringed phaeton again, relief
and joy mingled in her countenance. It was not that she was glad that
Carrie’s ankle was so bad, but that she was to have another short
reprieve before her pleasure was cut off. Soon enough, she thought,
would she be destined to sit in the darkened room and minister to
her fussy sister, while Luella took her place in the carriages and
automobiles with her handsome young cousin, as young folks should do,
of course; but O, it was good, good, that a tired old lady, who had
worked hard all her life, could yet have had this bit of a glimpse of
the brighter side of life before she died.

It would be something to sit and think over as she scraped potatoes
for dinner, or picked over blackberries for jam, or patiently sewed on
Val lace for Luella. It would be an event to date from, and she could
fancy herself mildly saying to Mrs. Judge Waters, when she sat beside
her some time at missionary meeting, if she ever did again, “When my
nephew took me down to the shore,” etc. She never knew just what to
talk about when she sat beside Mrs. Judge Waters, but here was a topic
worth laying before such a great lady.

Well, it was something to be thankful for, and she resolved she just
would not think of poor Carrie and Luella until her beautiful morning
was over. Then she would show such patience and gratitude as would
fully make up to them for her one more day of pleasure.

It was Donald, of course, who had suggested the roses. When the message
came from the fourth floor back, Aunt Crete had turned white about the
mouth, and her eyes had taken on a frightened, hunted look, while the
double V in her forehead flashed into sight for the first time since
they had reached the Atlantic coast. He saw at once in what terror
Aunt Crete held her sister and niece, and his indignation arose in
true Christian fashion. He resolved to place some nice hot coals on
the heads of his unpleasant relatives, and run away with dear Aunt
Crete again; hence the roses and the message, and Aunt Crete was fairly
childish with pleasure over them when he finally persuaded her that it
would be all right to send these in place of going up herself as she
had been bidden.

She listened eagerly as Donald gave careful directions for the message,
and the stately functionary respectfully repeated the words with his
own high-sounding inflection. It made the pink come and go again in
Aunt Crete’s cheeks, and she felt that Luella and Carrie could not be
angry with her after these roses, and especially when everything was
being done up in so nice, stylish a manner.

The drive was one long dream of bliss to Aunt Crete. They went miles up
the coast, and took lunch at a hotel much grander than the one they had
left, so that when they returned in the afternoon Aunt Crete felt much
less awe of the Traymore, her experience in hotels having broadened.
They also met some friends of Donald’s, a professor from his alma
mater, who with his wife was just returning from a trip to Europe.

The bathers were making merry in the waves as they returned, and Aunt
Crete’s wistful look made Donald ask whether she felt too tired to take
another dip, but she declared she was not one bit tired.

She came from her bath with shining eyes and triumphant mien. Whatever
happened now, she had been in bathing twice. She felt like quite an
experienced bather, and she could dream of that wonderful experience of
being lifted high above the swells in Donald’s strong young arms.

She obediently took her nap, and surrendered herself to the hands of
the maid to have the finishing touches put to her toilet. It was the
soft gray voile that she elected to wear to-night, and Donald admired
her when she emerged from her room in the dress, looking every inch a
lady.

A knock sounded at the door before he had had time to give Aunt Crete
a word of his admiration; but his eyes had said enough, and she felt a
glow of humble pride in her new self, the self that he had created out
of what she had always considered an unusually plain old woman. With
the consciousness of her becoming attire upon her she turned with mild
curiosity to see who had knocked; and, behold, her sister and niece
stood before her!

The day had been passed by them in melancholy speculations and the
making and abandoning of many plans of procedure. After careful
deliberation they at last concluded that there was nothing to be done
but go down and find out who these people really were, and if possible
allay the ghost of their fears and set themselves free from their dull
little room.

“If it should be Aunt Crete and Donald, we’ll just settle them up and
send them off at once, won’t we, mother?”

“Certainly,” said Mrs. Burton with an angry snap to her eyes. “Trust me
to settle with your Aunt Crete if it’s really her. But I can’t think
it is. It isn’t like Crete one bit to leave her duty. She’s got a lot
of work to do, and she never leaves her work till it’s done. It must
be some one else. What if it should be those folks you admire so much?
I’ve been thinking. We had some New York cousins by the name of Ward.
It might be one of them, and Donald might have gone to them first, and
they’ve brought him down here. I can’t think he’s very much, though.
But we’ll just hope for the best, anyway, till we find out. If it’s
Aunt Crete, I shall simply talk to her till she is brought to her
senses, and make her understand that she’s got to go right home. I’ll
tell her how she’s mortifying you, and spoiling your chances of a good
match, perhaps——”

“O ma!” giggled Luella in admiration.

“I’ll tell her she must tell Donald she’s got to go right home,
that the sea air don’t agree with her one bit—it goes to her head
or something like that; and then we’ll make him feel it wouldn’t be
gallant in him not to take her home. That’s easy enough, if ’tis them.”

“But ma, have you thought about your sprained ankle? How’ll they think
you got over so quick? S’posing it shouldn’t be Aunt Crete.”

“Well, I’ll tell her the swelling’s gone down, and all of a sudden
something seemed to slip back into place again, and I’m all right.”

This was while they were buttoning and hooking each other into their
best and most elaborate garments for the peradventure that the people
they were to meet might prove to be of patrician class.

They had been somewhat puzzled how to find their possible relatives
after they were attired for the advance on the enemy, but consultation
with the functionary in the office showed them that, whoever Miss Ward
and Donald Grant might be, they surely were at present occupying the
apartments on the second floor front.

For one strenuous moment after the elevator had left them before the
door of the private parlor they had carefully surveyed each other,
fastening a stubborn hook here, putting up a stray rebellious lock
there, patting a puff into subordination. Mrs. Burton was arrayed in an
elaborate tucked and puffed and belaced lavender muslin whose laborious
design had been attained through hours of the long winter evenings
past. Luella wore what she considered her most “fetching” garment,
a long, scant, high-waisted robe of fire-red crape, with nothing to
relieve its glare, reflected in staring hues in her already much-burned
nose and cheeks. Her hair had been in preparation all the afternoon,
and looked as if it was carved in waves and puffs out of black walnut,
so closely was it beset with that most noticeable of all invisible
devices, an invisible net.

[Illustration: “THEY STOOD FACE TO FACE WITH THE WONDERFUL LADY IN THE
GRAY GOWN”]

They entered, and stood face to face with the wonderful lady in the
gray gown, whose every line and graceful fold spoke of the skill of a
foreign tailor. And then, strange to say, it was Aunt Crete who came to
herself first.

Perfectly conscious of her comely array, and strong in the strength of
her handsome nephew who stood near to protect, she suddenly lost all
fear of her fretful sister and bullying niece, and stepped forward with
an unconscious grace of welcome that must have been hers all the time,
or it never would have come to the front in this crisis.

“Why, here you are at last, Luella! How nice you look in your red
crape! Why, Carrie, I’m real glad you’ve got better so you could come
down. How is your ankle? And here is Donald. Carrie, can’t you see
Hannah’s looks in him?”

Amazement and embarrassment struggled in the faces of mother and
daughter. They looked at Aunt Crete, and they looked at Donald, and
then they looked at Aunt Crete again. It couldn’t be, it wasn’t, yet it
was, the voice of Aunt Crete, kind and forgiving, and always thoughtful
for every one, yet with a new something in it. Or was it rather the
lack of something? Yes, that was it, the lack of a certain servile
something that neither Luella nor her mother could name, yet which made
them feel strangely ill at ease with this new-old Aunt Crete.

They looked at each other bewildered, and then back at Aunt Crete
again, tracing line by line the familiar features in their new radiance
of happiness, and trying to conjure back the worried V in her forehead,
and the slinky sag of her old gowns. Was the world turned upside down?
What had happened to Aunt Crete?

“Upon my word, Lucretia Ward, is it really you?” exclaimed her sister,
making a wild dash into the conversation, determined to right herself
and everything else if possible. She felt like a person suddenly
upset in a canoe, and she struggled wildly to get her footing once
more if there was any solid footing anywhere, with her sister Crete
standing there calmly in an imported gown, her hair done up like a
fashion-plate, and a millionaire’s smile on her pleasant face.

But Luella was growing angry. What did Aunt Crete mean by masquerading
round in that fashion and making them ashamed before this handsome
young man? and was he really their Western cousin? Luella felt that a
joke was being played upon her, and she always resented jokes—at least,
unless she played them herself.

Then Donald came to the front, for he feared for Aunt Crete’s poise.
She must not lose her calm dignity and get frightened. There was
a sharp ring in the other aunt’s voice, and the new cousin looked
unpromising.

“And is this my Aunt Carrie? And my Cousin Luella?” He stepped forward,
and shook hands pleasantly.

“I am glad to be able to speak with you at last,” he said as he
dropped Luella’s hand, “though it’s not the first time I’ve seen you,
nor heard your voice, either, you know.”

Luella looked up puzzled, and tried to muster her scattered graces, and
respond with her ravishing society air; but somehow the ease and grace
of the man before her overpowered her. And was he really her cousin?
She tried to think what he could mean by having seen and talked with
her before. Surely he must be mistaken, or—perhaps he was referring to
the glimpse he had of her when Mr. Grandon bowed the evening before.
She tossed her head with a kittenish movement, and arched her poorly
pencilled eyebrows.

“O, how is that?” she asked, wishing he had not been quite so quick to
drop her hand. It would have been more impressive to have had him hold
it just a second longer.

“Why, I saw you the morning you left your home, as I was getting out of
the train. You were just entering, and you called out of the window to
a young lady in a pony-cart. You wore a light kind of a yellowish suit,
didn’t you? Yes, I was very sure it was you.”

He was studying her face closely, a curious twinkle in his eyes, which
might or might not have been complimentary. Luella could not be sure.
The color rose in her cheeks and neck and up to her black-walnut hair
till the red dress and the red face looked all of a flame. She suddenly
remembered what she had called out to the young lady in the pony-cart,
and she wondered whether he had heard or noticed.

“And then,” went on her handsome persecutor, “I had quite a long talk
with you over the telephone, you know——”

“What!” gasped Luella. “Was that you? Why, you must be mistaken; I
never telephoned to you; that is, I couldn’t get any one to the ’phone.”

“What’s all this about, Luella?” questioned her mother sharply, but
Donald interposed.

“Sit down, Aunt Carrie. We are so excited over meeting you at last
that we are forgetting to be courteous.” He shoved forth a comfortable
chair for his aunt, and another for the blushing, overwhelmed Luella;
and then he took Aunt Crete’s hands lovingly, and gently pushed her
backward into the most comfortable rocker in the room. “It’s just as
cheap to sit down, dear aunt,” he said, smiling. “And you know you’ve
had a pretty full day, and must not get tired for to-night’s concert
at the Casino. Now, Aunt Carrie, tell us about your ankle. How did
you come to sprain it so badly, and how did it get well so fast? We
were quite alarmed about you. Is it really better? I am afraid you are
taxing it too much to have come down this evening. Much as we wanted to
see you, we could have waited until it was quite safe for you to use
it, rather than have you run any risks.”

Then it was the mother’s turn to blush, and her thin, somewhat
colorless face grew crimson with embarrassment.

“Why, I——” she began; “that is, Luella was working over it, rubbing
it with liniment, and all of a sudden she gave it a sort of a little
pull; and something seemed to give way with a sharp pain, and then it
came all right as good as ever. It feels a little weak, but I think by
morning it’ll be all right. I think some little bone got out of place,
and Luella pulled it back in again. My ankles have always been weak,
anyway. I suffer a great deal with them in going about my work at home.”

“Why, Carrie,” said Aunt Crete, leaning forward with troubled reproach
in her face, “you never complained about it.”

A dull red rolled over Mrs. Burton’s thin features again, and receded,
leaving her face pinched and haggard-looking. She felt as if she were
seeing visions. This couldn’t be her own sister, all dressed up so, and
yet speaking in the old sympathetic tone.

“O, I never complain, of course. It don’t do any good.”

The conversation was interrupted by another tap on the door. Donald
opened it, and received a large express package. While he was giving
some orders to the servant, Mrs. Burton leaned forward, and said in a
low tone to her sister:

“For goodness’ sake, Lucretia Ward, what does all this mean? How ever
did you get tricked out like that?”

Then Donald’s clear voice broke in upon them as the door closed once
more, and Luella watched him curiously cutting with eager, boyish haste
the cords of the express package.

“Aunt Crete, your cloak has come. Now we’ll all see if it’s becoming.”

“Bless the boy,” said Aunt Crete, looking up with delighted eyes.
“Cloak; what cloak? I’m sure I’ve got wraps enough now. There’s the
cloth coat, and the silk one, and that elegant black lace——”

“No, you haven’t. I saw right off what you needed when we went out in
the auto last night; and I telephoned to that Miss Brower up in the
city this morning, and she’s fixed it all up. I hope you’ll like it.”

With that he pulled the cover off the box, and brought to view a long,
full evening cloak of pale pearl-colored broadcloth lined with white
silk, and a touch about the neck of black velvet and handsome creamy
lace.

He held it up at arm’s length admiringly.

“It’s all right, Aunt Crete. It looks just like you. I knew that woman
would understand. Stand up, and let’s see how you look in it; and then
after dinner we’ll take a little spin around the streets to try you in
it.”

Aunt Crete, blushing like a pretty girl, stood up; and he folded the
soft garment about her in all its elegant richness. She stood just in
front of the full-length mirror, and could not deny to herself that it
was becoming. But she was getting used to seeing herself look well,
and was not so much overpowered with the sight as she was with the
tender thought of the boy that had got it for her. She forgot Carrie
and Luella, and everything but that Donald had gone to great trouble
and expense to please her; and she just turned around, and put her two
hands, one on each of his cheeks, standing on her tiptoes to reach him,
and kissed him.

He bent and returned the kiss laughingly.

“It’s lot of fun to get you things, Aunt Crete,” he said; “you always
like them so much.”

“It is beautiful, beautiful,” she said, looking down and smoothing the
cloth tenderly as if it had been his cheek. “It’s much too beautiful
for me. Donald, you will spoil me.”

“Yes, I should think so,” sniffed Luella, as if offering an apology in
some sort for her childish aunt.

“A little spoiling won’t hurt you, dear aunt,” said Donald seriously.
“I don’t believe you’ve had your share of spoiling yet, and I mean to
give it to you if I can. Doesn’t she look pretty in it, Cousin Luella?
Come now, Aunt Carrie, I suppose it’s time to go down to dinner, or we
sha’n’t get through in time for the fun. Are you sure your ankle is
quite well? Are you able to go to the Casino to-night? I’ve tickets
for us all. Sousa’s orchestra is to be there, and the programme is an
unusually fine one.”

Luella was mortified and angry beyond words, but a chance to go to the
Casino, in company with Clarence Grandon and his mother, was not to be
lightly thrown away; and she crushed down her mortification, contenting
herself with darting an angry glance and a hateful curl of her lip
at Aunt Crete as they went out the door together. This, however, was
altogether lost on that little woman, for she was watching her nephew’s
face, and wondering how it came that such joy had fallen to her lot.

There was no chance for the mortified mother and daughter to exchange
a word as they went down in the elevator or followed in the wake of
their relatives, before whom all porters and office-boys and even head
waiters bowed, and jumped to offer assistance. They were having their
wish, to be sure, entering the dining-hall behind the handsome young
man and the elegant, gray-clad, fashionably coiffured old lady, a part
of the train, with the full consciousness of “belonging,” yet in what a
way! Both were having ample opportunity for reflection, for they could
see at a glance that no one noticed them, and all attention was for
those ahead of them.

Luella bit her lip angrily, and looked in wonder at Aunt Crete, who
somehow had lost her dumpiness, and walked as gracefully beside her
tall young nephew as if she had been accustomed to walk in the eyes of
the world thus for years. The true secret of her grace, if Luella had
but known it, was that she was not thinking in the least of herself.
Her conscience was at rest now, for the meeting between the cousins
was over, and Luella was to have a good time too. Aunt Crete was never
the least bit selfish. It seemed to her that her good time was only
blooming into yet larger things, after all.

Behind her walked her sister and niece in mortified humiliation. Luella
was trying to recall just what she had said about “country cousins”
over the telephone, and exactly what she had said to the girl in the
pony-cart the morning she left home. The memory did not serve to cool
her already heated complexion. It was beginning to dawn upon her that
she had made a mighty mistake in running away from such a cousin and in
such a manner.

All her life, in such a case, Luella had been accustomed to lay the
blame of her disappointments upon some one else, and vent, as it were,
her spite upon that one. Now, in looking about to find such an object
of blame her eyes naturally fell upon the one that had borne the
greater part of all blame for her. But, try as she would to pour out
blame and scorn from her large, bold eyes upon poor Aunt Crete, somehow
the blame seemed to slip off from the sweet gray garments, and leave
Aunt Crete as serene as ever, with her eyes turned trustingly toward
her dear Donald. Luella was brought to the verge of vexation by this,
and could scarcely eat any dinner.

The dessert was just being served when the waiter brought Aunt Crete
a dainty note from which a faint perfume of violets stole across the
table to the knowing nostrils of Luella.

With the happy abandonment of a child Aunt Crete opened it joyously.

“Who in the world can be writing to me?” she said wonderingly. “You’ll
have to read it for me, Donald; I’ve left my glasses up in my room.”

Luella made haste to reach out her hand for the note, but Donald had it
first, as if he had not seen her impatient hand claiming her right to
read Aunt Crete’s notes.

“It’s from Mrs. Grandon, auntie,” he said.

    “‘_Dear Miss Ward_,’” he read, “‘I am sorry that I am
    feeling too weary to go to the concert this evening as we
    had planned, and my son makes such a baby of me that he
    thinks he cannot leave me alone; but I do hope we can have
    the pleasure of the company of yourself and your nephew on
    a little auto trip to-morrow afternoon. My brother has a
    villa a few miles up the shore, and he telephoned us this
    morning to dine with them to-night. When he heard of your
    being here, he said by all means to bring you with us. My
    brother knows of your nephew’s intimacy with Clarence, and
    is anxious to meet him, as are the rest of his family. I do
    hope you will feel able to go with us.

    “‘With sincere regrets that I cannot go with you to the
    Casino this evening,

                                         HELEN GRANDON.’”

For the moment Luella forgot everything else in her amazement at this
letter. Aunt Crete receiving notes from Mrs. Grandon, from whom she
and her mother could scarcely get a frigid bow! Aunt Crete invited
on automobile trips and dinners in villas! Donald an intimate friend
of Clarence Grandon’s! O, fool and blind! What had she done! Or what
had she undone? She studied the handsome, keen face of her cousin as
he bent over the letter, and writhed to think of her own words, “I’m
running away from a backwoods cousin”! She could hear it shouted from
one end of the great dining-hall to the other, and her face blazed
redder and redder till she thought it would burst. Her mother turned
from her in mortified silence, and wondered why Luella couldn’t have
had a good complexion.

Studied politeness was the part that Donald had set for himself that
evening. He began to see that his victims were sufficiently unhappy.
He had no wish to see them writhe under further tortures, though when
he looked upon Aunt Crete’s happy face, and thought how white it had
turned at dread of them, he felt he must let the thorns he had planted
in their hearts remain long enough to bring forth a true repentance.
But he said nothing further to distress them, and they began to wonder
whether, after all, he really had seen through their plan of running
away from him.

It was all Aunt Crete’s fault. She ought to have arranged it in some
way to get them quietly home as soon as she found out what kind of
cousin it was that had come to see them. It never occurred to Luella
that nothing her poor, abused aunt could have said would have convinced
her that her cousin was worthy of her home-coming.

As the concert drew near to its close, Luella and her mother began to
prepare for a time of reckoning for Aunt Crete. When she was safely in
her room, what was to hinder them from going to her alone and having it
out? The sister’s face hardened, and the niece’s eyes glittered as she
stonily thought of the scornful sentences she would hurl after her aunt.

Donald looked at her menacing face, and read its thoughts. He resolved
to protect Aunt Crete, whatever came; so at the door, when he saw a
motion on his Aunt Crete’s part to pause, he said gently: “Aunt Crete,
I guess we’ll have to say ‘Good night’ now; for you’ve had a hard day
of it, and I want you to be bright and fresh for morning. We want to
take an early dip in the ocean. The bathing-hours are early to-morrow,
I see.”

He bowed good-night in his pleasantest manner, and the ladies from the
fourth floor reluctantly withdrew to the elevator, but fifteen minutes
later surreptitiously tapped at the private door of the room they
understood to be Aunt Crete’s.




CHAPTER VII

LUELLA’S HUMILIATION


THE door was opened cautiously by the maid, who was “doing” Aunt
Crete’s hair, having just finished a most refreshing facial massage
given at Donald’s express orders.

Aunt Crete looked round upon her visitors with a rested, rosy
countenance, which bloomed out under her fluff of soft, white hair,
and quite startled her sister with its freshness and youth. Could it
be possible that this was really her sister Crete; or had she made a
terrible mistake, and entered the wrong apartment?

But a change came suddenly over the ruddy countenance of Aunt Crete as
over the face of a child that in the midst of happy play sees a trouble
descending upon it. A look almost of terror came over her, and she
caught her breath, and waited to see what was coming.

“Why, Carrie, Luella!” she gasped weakly. “I thought you’d gone to
bed. Marie’s just doing up my hair for night. She’s been giving me a
face-massage. You ought to try one. It makes you feel young again.”

“H’m!” said her affronted sister. “I shouldn’t care for one.”

Marie looked over Luella and her mother, beginning with the painfully
elaborate arrangement of hair, and going down to the tips of their
boots. Luella’s face burned with mortification as she read the
withering disapproval in the French woman’s countenance.

“Let’s sit down till she’s done,” said Luella, dropping promptly on the
foot of Aunt Crete’s bed and gazing around in frank surprise over the
spaciousness of the apartment.

Thereupon the maid ignored them, and went about her work, brushing
out and deftly manipulating the wavy white hair, and chattering
pleasantly meanwhile, just as if no one else were in the room. Aunt
Crete tried to forget what was before her, or, rather, behind her; but
her hands trembled a little as they lay in her lap in the folds of
the pretty pink and gray challis kimono she wore; and all of a sudden
she remembered the unwhitewashed cellar, and the uncooked jam, and
the unmade shirt-waists, and the little hot brick house gazing at her
reproachfully from the distant home, and she here in this fine array,
forgetting it all and being waited upon by a maid—a lazy truant from
her duty.

Did the heart of the maid divine the state of things, or was it only
her natural instinct that made her turn to protect the pleasant little
woman, in whose service she had already been well paid, against the
two women that were so evidently of the common walks of life, and were
trying to ape those that in the eyes of the maid were their betters?
However it was, Marie prolonged her duties a good half-hour, and
Luella’s impatience waxed furious, so that she lost her fear of the
maid gradually, and yawned loudly, declaring that Aunt Crete had surely
had enough fussing over for one evening.

They held in their more personal remarks until the door finally closed
upon Marie, but burst forth so immediately that she heard the opening
sentences through the transom, and thought it wise to step to the young
gentleman’s door and warn him that his elderly relative of whom he
seemed so careful was likely to be disturbed beyond a reasonable hour
for retiring. Then she discreetly withdrew, having not only added to
her generous income by a good bit of silver, but also having followed
out the dictates of her heart, which had taken kindly to the gentle
woman of the handsome clothes and few pretensions.

“Well, upon my word! I should think you’d be ashamed, Aunt Crete!”
burst forth Luella, arising from the bed in a majesty of wrath.
“Sitting there, being waited on like a baby, when you ought to be at
home this minute earning your living. What do you think of yourself,
anyway, living in this kind of luxury when you haven’t a cent in the
world of your own, and your own sister, who has supported you for
years, up in a little dark fourth-floor room? Such selfishness I never
saw in all my life. I wouldn’t have believed it of you, though we might
have suspected it long ago from the foolish things you were always
doing. Aunt Crete, have you any idea how much all this costs?”

She waved her hand tragically over the handsome room, including the
trunk standing open, and the gleam of silver-gray silk that peeped
through the half-open closet door. Aunt Crete fairly cringed under
Luella’s scornful eyes.

“And you, nothing in the world but a beggar, a _beggar_! That’s what
you are—a beggar dependent upon _us_; and you swelling around as if you
owned the earth, and daring to wear silk dresses and real lace collars
and expensive jewelry, and even having a maid, and shaming your own
relatives, and getting in ahead of us, who have always been good to
you, and taking away our friends, and making us appear like two cents!
It’s just fierce, Aunt Crete! It’s—it’s _heathenish_!” Luella paused in
her anger for a fitting word, and then took the first one that came.

Aunt Crete winced. She was devoted to the Woman’s Missionary Society,
and it was terrible to be likened to a heathen. She wished Luella had
chosen some other word.

“I should think you’d be so ashamed you couldn’t hold your head up
before your honest relatives,” went on the shameless girl. “Taking
money from a stranger,—that’s what he is, a _stranger_,—and you whining
round and lowering yourself to let him buy you clothes and things,
as if you didn’t have proper clothes suited to your age and station.
He’s a young upstart coming along and daring to buy you any—and such
clothes! Do you know you’re a laughing-stock? What would Mrs. Grandon
say if she knew whom she was inviting to her automobile rides and
dinners? Think of you in your old purple calico washing the dishes at
home, and scrubbing the kitchen, and ask yourself what you would say
if Mrs. Grandon should come to call on you, and find you that way.
You’re a hypocrite, Aunt Crete, an awful hypocrite!”

[Illustration: “‘IT’S A LIE! I SAY IT’S A LIE!’”]

Luella towered over Aunt Crete, and the little old lady looked into
her eyes with a horrible fascination, while her great grief and horror
poured down her sweet face in tears of anguish that would not be
stayed. Her kindly lips were quivering, and her eyes were wide with the
tears.

Luella saw that she was making an impression, and she went on more
wildly than before, her fury growing with every word, and not realizing
how loud her voice was.

“And it isn’t enough that you should do all that, but now you’re going
to spoil my prospects with Clarence Grandon. You can’t keep up this
masquerade long; and, when they find out what you really are, what
will they think of _me_? It’ll be all over with me, and it’ll be your
fault, Aunt Crete, your fault, and you’ll never have a happy moment
afterwards, thinking of how you spoiled my life.”

“Now, Luella,” broke in Aunt Crete solemnly through her tears, “you’re
mistaken about one thing. It won’t be my fault there, for it wouldn’t
have made a bit of difference, poor child. I’m real sorry for you,
and I meant to tell you just as soon as we got home, for I couldn’t
bear to spoil your pleasure while we were here; but that Clarence
Grandon belongs to some one else. He ain’t for you, Luella, and there
must have been some mistake about it. Perhaps he was just being kind to
you. For Donald knows him real well, and he says he’s engaged to a girl
out West, and they’re going to be married this fall; and Donald says
she’s real sweet and——”

But Aunt Crete’s quavering voice stopped suddenly in mild affright, for
Luella sprang toward her like some mad creature, shaking her finger in
her aunt’s face, and screaming at the top of her voice:

“It’s a lie! I say it’s a lie! Aunt Crete, you’re a liar; that’s what
you are with all the rest.”

And the high-strung, uncontrolled girl burst into angry sobs.

No one heard the gentle knock that had been twice repeated during the
scene, and no one saw the door open until they all suddenly became
aware that Donald stood in the room, looking from one face to another
in angry surprise.

Donald had not retired at once after bidding Aunt Crete good night. He
found letters and telegrams awaiting his attention, and he had been
busy writing a letter of great importance when the maid gave him the
hint of Aunt Crete’s late callers. Laying down his pen, he stepped
quietly across the private parlor that separated his room from his
aunt’s, and stopped a moment before the door to make sure he heard
voices. Then he had knocked, and knocked again, unable to keep from
hearing the most of Luella’s tirade.

His indignation knew no bounds, and he concluded his time had come to
interfere; so he opened the door, and went in.

“What does all this mean?” he asked in a tone that frightened his Aunt
Carrie, and made Luella stop her angry sobs in sudden awe.

No one spoke, and Aunt Crete looked a mute appeal through her tears.
“What is it, dear aunt?” he said, stepping over by her side, and
placing his arm protectingly round the poor, shrinking little figure,
who somehow in her sorrow and helplessness reminded him strongly of his
own lost mother. He could not remember at that moment that the other
woman, standing hard and cold and angry across the room, was also his
mother’s sister. She did not look like his mother, nor act like her.

Aunt Crete put her little curled white head in its crisping-pins down
on Donald’s coat-sleeve, and shrank into her pink and gray kimono
appealingly as she tried to speak.

“It’s just as I told you, Donald, you dear boy,” she sobbed out.
“I—oughtn’t to have come. I knew it, but it wasn’t your fault. It
was all mine. I ought to have stayed at home, and not dressed up and
come off here. I’ve had a beautiful time; but it wasn’t for me, and I
oughtn’t to have taken it. It’s just spoiled Luella’s nice time, and
she’s blaming me, just as I knew she would.”

“What does my cousin mean by using that terrible word to you, which I
heard as I entered the room?”

Donald’s voice was keen and scathing, and his eyes fairly piercing as
he asked the question and looked straight at Luella, who answered not a
word.

“That wasn’t just what she’d have meant, Donald,” said Aunt Crete
apologetically. “She was most out of her mind with trouble. You see
I had to tell her what you told me about that Clarence Grandon being
engaged to another girl——”

“Aunt Crete, don’t say another word about that!” burst out Luella with
flashing eyes and crimson face.

“For mercy’s sake, Crete, can’t you hold your tongue?” said Luella’s
mother sharply.

“Go on, Aunt Crete; did my cousin call you a liar for saying that? Yet
it was entirely true. If she is not disposed to believe me either,
I can call Mr. Grandon in to testify in the matter. He will come if
I send for him. But I feel sure, after all, that that will not be
necessary. It is probably true, as Aunt Crete says, that you were
excited, Luella, and did not mean what you said; and after a good
night’s sleep you will be prepared to apologize to Aunt Crete, and be
sorry enough for worrying her. I am going to ask you to leave Aunt
Crete now, and let her rest. She has had a wearying day, and needs to
be quiet at once. She is my mother’s sister, you know, and I feel as if
I must take care of her.”

“You seem to forget that I am your mother’s sister, too,” said Aunt
Carrie coldly, as she stood stiff and disapproving beside the door,
ready to pass out.

“If I do, Aunt Carrie, forgive me,” said Donald courteously. “It is
not strange when you remember that you forgot that I was your sister’s
child, and ran away from me. But never mind; we will put that aside
and try to forget it. Good night, Aunt Carrie. Good night, Cousin
Luella. We will all feel better about it in the morning.”

They bowed their diminished heads, and went with shame and confusion to
the fourth floor back; and, when the door was closed upon them, they
burst into angry talk, each blaming the other, until at last Luella
sank in a piteous heap upon the bed, and gave herself over to helpless
tears.

“Luella,” said her mother in a business-like tone, “you stop that
bawling, and sit up here and answer me some questions. Did you or
did you not go riding with Mr. Clarence Grandon last winter in his
automobile?”

Luella paused in her grief, and nodded assent hopelessly.

“Well, how’d it come about? There’s no use sniffing. Tell me exactly.”

“Why, it was a rainy day,” sobbed out the girl, “and I met him on the
street in front of the public library the day I’d been to take back
‘The Legacy of Earl Crafton,’ and that other book by the same author——”

“Never mind what books; tell me what happened,” said the exasperated
mother.

“Well, if you’re going to be cross, I sha’n’t tell you anything,” was
the filial reply; and for a moment nothing was heard in the room but
sobs.

However, Luella recovered the thread of her story, and went on to
relate how in company with a lot of other girls she had met Mr. Grandon
the day before at the golf-links, where a championship game was being
played. She did not explain the various manœuvres by which she had
contrived to be introduced to him, nor that he had not seemed to know
her at first when she bowed in front of the library building. She had
called out, “It’s a fine day for ducks, Mr. Grandon; isn’t it good the
game was yesterday instead of to-day?” and he had asked her to ride
home with him.

That was her version. Her mother by dint of careful questioning finally
arrived at the fact that the girl had more than hinted to be taken
home, having loudly announced her lack of rubbers and umbrella, though
she seldom wore rubbers, and had on a rain-coat and an old hat.

“But how about the big box of chocolates he sent you, Luella? That was
a very particular attention to show you if he was engaged.”

“O,” pouted Luella, “I don’t suppose that meant anything either, for
I caught him in a philopena on the way home that day. We said the same
words at the same time, something like ‘It’s going to clear off,’ and I
told him, when we girls did that, the one that spoke first had to give
the other a box of chocolates; so the next day he sent them.”

“Luella, I never brought you up to do things like that. I don’t think
that was very nice.”

“O, now, ma, don’t you preach. I guess you weren’t a saint when you
were a girl. Besides, I don’t think you’re very sympathetic.” She
mopped her swollen eyes.

“Luella, didn’t he ever pay you any more attention after that? I kind
of thought you thought he liked you, by the way you talked.”

“No, he never even looked at me,” sobbed the girl, her grief breaking
out afresh. “He didn’t even know me the next time we met, but stared
straight at me till I bowed, and then he gave me a cold little touch
of his hat. And down here he hasn’t even recognized me once. I suppose
that lady mother of his didn’t like my looks.”

“Look here, Luella; I wish you’d act sensible. This has been pretty
expensive trying to run around after the Grandons. Here’s the hotel
bills, and all that dress-making, and now no telling how Aunt Crete
will act after we get home. Like as not she’ll think she’s got to have
a maid, and dress in silks and satins. There’s one comfort; probably
some of her clothes will fix over for you when she gets off her high
horse and comes down to every-day living again. But I wish you’d brace
up and forget these Grandons. It’s no use trying to get up in the world
higher than you belong. There’s that nice John Peters would have been
real devoted to you if you’d just let him; and he owns a house of his
own already, and has the name of being the best plumber in Midvale.”

Luella sighed.

“He’s only a plumber, ma, and his hands are all red and rough.”

“Well, what’s that?” snapped her practical mother. “He may have his
own automobile before long, for all that. Now dry up your eyes, and go
to sleep; and in the morning do you go down real early, and apologize
to your silly Aunt Crete, and make her understand that she’s not to
disgrace us under any consideration by going in bathing while she’s
here. My land! I expect to see her riding round on one of those
saddle-ponies on the beach next, or maybe driving that team of goats we
saw to-day, with pink ribbon reins. Come now, Luella, don’t you worry.
Set out to show your cousin Donald how nice you can be, and maybe
some of the silk dresses will come your way. Anyhow, this can’t last
forever, and John Peters is at home when we get there.”

So Luella, soothed in spirit, went to bed, and arose very early the
next morning, descending upon poor Aunt Crete while yet the dreams
of sailing alone with Donald on a moonlit sea were mingling with her
waking thoughts.




CHAPTER VIII

AUNT CRETE’S PARTNERSHIP


LUELLA did her work quietly, firmly, and thoroughly. She vanished
before Marie had thought of coming to her morning duties.

At breakfast-time Donald found a sad, cowed little woman waiting for
him to go down to the dining-room. He tried to cheer her up by telling
her how nice a time they were to have in bathing that morning, for the
water was sure to be delightful; but Aunt Crete shook her head sadly,
and said she guessed she had better not go in bathing any more. Then
she sighed, and looked wistfully out on the blue waves dancing in the
sunshine.

“Don’t you feel well, Aunt Crete?” asked Donald anxiously.

“O, yes, real well,” she answered.

“Did it hurt you to go in yesterday, do you think?”

“No, not a mite,” she responded promptly.

“Then why in the name of common sense don’t you want to go in to-day?
Has Luella been trying to talk some of her nonsense?”

“Well, Luella thinks my figger looks so bad in a bathing-suit. She says
of course you want to be polite to me, but you don’t really know how
folks will laugh at me, and make her ashamed of belonging to me.”

“Well, I like that!” said Donald. “You just tell Miss Luella we’re not
running this vacation for her sole benefit. Now, Aunt Crete, you’re
going in bathing, or else I won’t go, and you wouldn’t like to deprive
me of that pleasure, would you? Well, I thought not. Now come on down
to breakfast, and we’ll have the best day yet. Don’t you let Luella
worry you. And, by the way, Aunt Crete, I’m thinking of taking a run up
to Cape Cod, and perhaps getting a glimpse of the coast of Maine before
I get through. How would you like to go with me?”

“Oh!” gasped Aunt Crete in a daze of delight. “Could I?” Then, mindful
of Luella’s mocking words the night before: “But I musn’t be an expense
to you. I’d just be a burden. You know I haven’t a cent of my own in
the world; so I couldn’t pay my way, and you’ve done a great deal more
than I ought to have let you do.”

“Now, Aunt Crete, once for all you must get that idea out of your head.
You could never be a burden to me. I want you for a companion. If
my mother were here, shouldn’t I just love to take her on a journey
with me, and spend every cent I had to make her happy? Well, I haven’t
mother here; but you are the nearest to mother I can find, and I
somehow feel she’d like me to have you in her place. Will you come?
Or is it asking too much to ask you to leave Aunt Carrie and Cousin
Luella? They’ve got each other, and they never really needed you as I
do. I’ve got plenty of money for us to do as we please, and I mean it
with all my heart. Will you come and stay with me? I may have to take a
flying trip to Europe before the summer’s over; and, if I do, it would
be dreadfully lonesome to go alone. I think you’d like a trip on the
ocean, wouldn’t you? and a peep at London, and perhaps Paris and Vienna
and old Rome for a few days? And in the fall I’m booked for work in my
old university. It’s only an assistant professorship yet, but it means
a big thing for a young fellow like me, and I want you to come with me
and make a cozy little home for me between whiles and a place where I
can bring my friends when they get homesick.”

He paused and looked down for an answer, and was almost startled by
the glory of joy in Aunt Crete’s face.

“O Donald, could I do that? Could I be that to you? Do you really think
I could be of use enough to you to earn my living?”

He stooped and kissed her forehead reverently to hide the tears that
had come unbidden to his eyes. It touched him beyond measure that this
sweet life had been so empty of love and so full of drudgery that
she should speak thus about so simple a matter. It filled him with
indignation against those who had taken the sweetness from her and
given her the dregs of a life instead.

“Dear aunt,” he said, “you could be of great use to me, and more
than earn anything I could do for you many times over, just by being
yourself and mothering me; but as for work, there is not to be one
stroke done except just what you want to do for amusement. We’ll have
servants to do all the work, and you shall manage them. I want you for
an ornament in my home, and you are going to have a good rest and a
continual vacation the rest of your life, if I know anything about it.
Now come down to breakfast, so we can go in bathing early, and don’t
you worry another wrinkle about Luella. You don’t belong to her any
more. We’ll send her a parasol from New York and a party gown from
Paris, and she won’t bother her pompadour any more about you, you may
be sure.”

In a maze of delight Aunt Crete went down to breakfast, and dawned upon
the astonished vision of her sister and niece in all the beauty of her
dainty white morning costume. They were fairly startled at the vision
she was in white, with her pretty white hair to match it. Luella gasped
and held her disapproving breath, but Aunt Crete was too absorbed in
the vision of joy that had opened before her to know or care what they
thought of her in a white dress.

No girl in the new joy of her first love was ever in a sweeter dream of
bliss than was Aunt Crete as she beamed through her breakfast. Luella’s
looks of scorn and Luella’s mother’s sour visage had no effect upon her
whatever. She smiled happily, and ate her breakfast in peace, for had
she not been set free forever from the things that had made her life a
burden heretofore, and shown into a large place of new joys where her
heart might find rest?

After breakfast Donald made them all walk down the board walk to the
various shops filled with curios, where he bought everything that
Luella looked at, and lavished several gifts also upon her mother,
including a small Oriental rug that she admired. They returned to the
hotel in a good humor, and Luella began to have visions of luxurious
days to come. She felt sure she could keep Aunt Crete down about where
she wanted her, and her eyes gloated over the beautiful white dress
that she hoped to claim for her own when they all went home and she had
convinced Aunt Crete how unsuitable white was for old ladies.

She was quite astonished, after her morning talk with her aunt, to
hear Donald say as he looked at his watch, “Come, Aunt Crete, it’s
time for our bath,” and to see Aunt Crete walk smiling off toward the
bath-houses, utterly regardless of her wrathful warning glances. It
was rather disconcerting to have Aunt Crete become unmanageable right
at the beginning this way. But in view of the fact that her hands were
filled with pretty trifles bought by her cousin she did not feel like
making any protest beyond threatening glances, which the dear soul
whose mind was in Europe, and whose heart was in a cozy little home all
her own and Donald’s, did not see at all.

Aunt Crete was happy. She felt it in every nerve of her body as she
stepped into the crisp waves and bounded out to meet them with the
elasticity of a girl.

Luella, following a moment later in her flashy bathing-suit of scarlet
and white, watched her aunt in amazement, and somehow felt that Aunt
Crete was drifting away from her, separated by something more than a
few yards of blue salt water.

Donald kept up a continual flow of bright conversation during the noon
meal, and managed to engage Luella and her mother on the long piazza
in looking through the marine-glass at a great ship that went lazily
floating by, while Aunt Crete was getting ready to go on the ride; and
before Luella and her mother were quite aware of what was happening
they stood on the piazza watching Aunt Crete in her handsome black
crêpe de chine, which even boasted a modest train, and her black lace
wrap and bonnet, being handed into the Grandon motor-car, while Donald
carried her long new gray cloak on his arm. The gray car moved smoothly
away out of sight, and Luella and her mother were left staring at the
sea with their own bitter reflections.

The automobile party did not return until late that night, for the
moon was full and the roads were fine; and Donald saw to it that Aunt
Crete was guarded against any intrusion.

It was at breakfast next morning that Donald told them, and Aunt Crete
sat listening with the rapt smile that a slave might have worn as he
listened to the reading of the proclamation of emancipation.

“Aunt Carrie,” he began as pleasantly as if he were about to propose
that they all go rowing, “Aunt Crete and I have decided to set up a
permanent partnership. She has consented to come and mother me. I
have accepted a position in my old university, and I am very tired of
boarding. I think we shall have a cozy, pleasant home; and we’ll be
glad to have you and Luella come and visit us sometimes after we get
settled and have some good servants so that Aunt Crete will have plenty
of time to take you around and show you the sights. In the meantime,
it is very likely that I may have to take a brief trip abroad for the
university. If so, I shall probably start in about a week, and before
that I want to get a glimpse of the New England coast. I have decided
to take Aunt Crete, and run away from you to-day. We leave on the noon
train; so there is time for a little frolic yet. Suppose we go down
to the board walk, and eat an ice-cream cone. I saw some delicious
ones last night that made my mouth water, and we haven’t had that
experience yet. We’ll get some rolling chairs so that Aunt Crete won’t
be too tired for her journey. Come, Aunt Crete, you won’t need to go
up-stairs again, shall you? I told Marie about the packing. It won’t be
necessary for you to go back until it’s time for you to change to your
travelling-garb.”

In a daze of anger and humiliation Luella and her mother climbed into
their double rolling chair, and ate their ice-cream cones sullenly,
propelled by a large, lazy colored boy; but Aunt Crete had a chair to
herself, and was attended by Donald, who kept up a constant stream of
delightfully funny conversation about the people and things they passed
that made Aunt Crete laugh until the tears came into her happy eyes.

There was no opportunity for Luella and her mother to talk to Aunt
Crete alone, even after they returned to the hotel; for Donald kept
himself in evidence everywhere, until at last Luella made bold to
declare that she didn’t see why Donald thought he had a right to come
and take Aunt Crete away from them, when they had always taken care of
her; and her mother added in an injured tone:

“Yes, you don’t seem to realize what a burden it’s been all these
years, having to support Crete, and her so childish and unreasonable in
a great many ways, and not having any idea of the value of money. I’ve
spent a good deal on Crete, take it all in all; and now, when Luella’s
going out, and has to have clothes and company, it’s rather hard to
have her leave us in the lurch this way, and me with all the work to
do.”

“That being the case, Aunt Carrie,” said Donald pleasantly, “I should
suppose you’d be very glad to have me relieve you of the burden of Aunt
Crete’s support, for it will be nothing but a pleasure to me to care
for her the rest of her life. As for what you have spent for her, just
run it over in your mind, and I shall be quite glad to re-imburse you.
Aunt Crete is really too frail and sweet to have to work any longer. I
should think my cousin was almost old enough to be a help to you now,
and she looks perfectly strong and able to work.”

Luella flashed a vindictive glance at her cousin, and turned haughtily
toward the window; then the porter came for the trunks, and the
travellers said a hasty good-by, and flitted.

As Donald shook hands with Luella in parting, he looked merrily into
her angry eyes, and said:

“I do hope, Luella, that it hasn’t been too much of a trial to have
your ‘backwoods cousin’ spend a few days here. You’ll find a box of
bonbons up in your room, if the porter did his duty, which may sweeten
your bitter thoughts of me; and we hope you’ll have a delightful time
the remainder of your stay here. Good-by.”

       *       *       *       *       *

About three months after Donald had returned from Europe and settled
to his Western university life Aunt Crete received a letter from her
sister. It was brief and to the point, and Aunt Crete could read
between the lines. It read:

    “_Dear Crete_,—Aren’t you about sick of that nonsense, and
    ready to come home? Luella has decided that she can’t do
    better than take John Peters. He has promised to buy an
    auto next year, if the plumbing business keeps up. I think
    at least you might come home and help get her things ready;
    for there’s a great deal of sewing to do, and you know I
    can’t afford to hire it; and Luella’s out so much, now she’s
    engaged. Do come soon.

                                     Your sister, CARRIE.”

Aunt Crete looked sober; but Donald, looking over her shoulder, read,
and then went to his desk for a moment. Coming back, he dropped a check
for five hundred dollars into his aunt’s lap.

[Illustration: “AUNT CRETE WAS AT LAST EMANCIPATED”]

“Send her that from me, Aunt Crete, and another from yourself, if you
like, and let her hire the sewing done. They don’t want you, and I do.”

Aunt Crete had her own bank-account now, thanks to her thoughtful
nephew, and she smiled back a delighted, “I will,” and went off to
write the letter; for Aunt Crete was at last emancipated.


THE END.




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Transcriber’s Notes:

Page 100, “me” changed to “we” (won’t we, mother?)

Page 136, “breakfeast” changed to “breakfast” (her breakfast in peace)





End of Project Gutenberg's Aunt Crete's Emancipation, by Grace Livingston Hill

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