A Young Man in a Hurry, and Other Short Stories Part 2
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"Who took us for--that?" he whispered, fiercely.
"Those people behind you; don't look! I heard that horrid little boy say, 'B. and G.!' and others heard it. I--I think you had better sit down here a moment."
He sat down.
"The question is," she said, with heightened color, "whether it is less embarra.s.sing for us to be civil to each other or to avoid each other.
Everybody has seen the porter bring in our luggage; everybody supposes we are at least on friendly terms. If I go alone to the dining-car, and you go alone, gossip will begin. I'm miserable enough now--my position is false enough now. I--I cannot stand being stared at for thirty-six hours--"
"If you say so, I'll spread the rumor that you're my sister," he suggested, anxiously. "Shall I?"
Even she perceived the fatal futility of that suggestion.
"But when you take off your glove everybody will know we're not B. and G.," he insisted.
She hesitated; a delicate flush crept over her face; then she nervously stripped the glove from her left hand and extended it. A plain gold ring encircled the third finger. "What shall I do?" she whispered. "I can't get it off. I've tried, but I can't."
"Does it belong there?" he asked, seriously.
"You mean, am I married? No, no," she said, impatiently; "it's my grandmother's wedding-ring. I was just trying it on this morning--this morning of all mornings! Think of it!"
She looked anxiously at her white fingers, then at him.
"What do you think?" she asked, navely; "I've tried soap and cold-cream, but it won't come off."
"Well," he said, with a forced laugh, "Fate appears to be personally conducting this tour, and it's probably all right--" He hesitated.
"Perhaps it's better than to wear no ring--"
"Why?" she asked, innocently. "Oh! perhaps it's better, after all, to be mistaken for B. and G. than for a pair of unchaperoned creatures. Is that what you mean?"
"Yes," he said, vaguely.
There came a gentle jolt, a faint grinding sound, a vibration increasing. Lighted lanterns, red and green, glided past their window.
"We've started," he said.
Then a negro porter came jauntily down the aisle, saying something in a low voice to everybody as he pa.s.sed. And when he came to them he smiled encouragement and made an extra bow, murmuring, "First call for dinner, if you please, madam."
They were the centre of discreet attention in the dining-car; and neither the ring on her wedding-finger nor their bearing and att.i.tude towards each other were needed to confirm the general conviction.
He tried to do all he could to make it easy for her, but he didn't know how, or he never would have ordered rice pudding with a confidence that set their own negro waiter grinning from ear to ear.
She bit her red lips and looked out of the window; but the window, blackened by night and quicksilvered by the snow, was only a mirror for a very lovely and distressed face.
Indeed, she was charming in her supposed role; their fellow-pa.s.sengers'
criticisms were exceedingly favorable. Even the young imp who had p.r.o.nounced them B. and G. with infantile unreserve appeared to be impressed by her fresh, young beauty; and an old clergyman across the aisle beamed on them at intervals, and every beam was a benediction.
As for them, embarra.s.sment and depression were at first masked under a polite gayety; but the excitement of the drama gained on them; appearances were to be kept up in the roles of a comedy absolutely forced upon them; and that brought exhilaration.
From mental self-absolution they ventured on mentally absolving each other. Fate had done it! Their consciences were free. Their situation was a challenge in itself, and to accept it must mean to conquer.
Stirring two lumps of sugar into his cup of coffee, he looked up suddenly, to find her gray eyes meeting his across the table. They smiled like friends.
"Of what are you thinking?" she asked.
"I was thinking that perhaps you had forgiven me," he said, hopefully.
"I have"--she frowned a little--"I _think_ I have."
"And--you do not think me a coward?"
"No," she said, watching him, chin propped on her linked fingers.
He laughed gratefully.
"As a matter of cold fact," he observed, "if we had met anywhere in town--under other circ.u.mstances--there is no reason that I can see why we shouldn't have become excellent friends."
"No reason at all," she said, thoughtfully.
"And that reminds me," he went on, dropping his voice and leaning across the table, "I'm going to send back a telegram to my sister, and I fancy you may wish to send one to your wandering brother."
"I suppose I'd better," she said. An involuntary s.h.i.+ver pa.s.sed over her.
"He's probably frantic," she added.
"Probably," he admitted.
"My father and mother are in Europe," she observed. "I hope my brother hasn't cabled them."
"I think we'd better get those telegrams off," he said, motioning the waiter to bring the blanks and find pen and ink.
They waited, gazing meditatively at each other. Presently he said:
"I'd like to tell you what it is that sends me flying down to Florida at an hour's notice. I think some explanation is due you--if it wouldn't bore you?"
"Tell me," she said, quietly.
"Why, then, it's that headlong idiot of a brother of mine," he explained. "He's going to try to marry a girl he has only known twenty-four hours--a girl we never heard of. And I'm on my way to stop it!--the young fool!--and I'll stop it if I have to drag him home by the heels! Here's the telegram we got late this afternoon--a regular bombsh.e.l.l." He drew the yellow bit of paper from his breast-pocket, unfolded it, and read:
"'ST. AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA.
"'I am going to marry to-morrow the loveliest girl in the United States. Only met her yesterday. Love at first sight. You'll all wors.h.i.+p her! She's eighteen, a New-Yorker, and her name is Marie Hetherford. JIM.'"
He looked up angrily. "What do you think of that?" he demanded.
"Think?" she stammered--"think?" She dropped her hands helplessly, staring at him. "Marie Hetherford is my sister!" she said.
"Your--sister," he repeated, after a long pause--"_your_ sister!"
She pressed a white hand to her forehead, clearing her eyes with a gesture.
A Young Man in a Hurry, and Other Short Stories Part 2
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